Haynie v. Dept. of Rev.

19 Or. Tax 488, 2008 WL 2894498, 2008 Ore. Tax LEXIS 123
CourtOregon Tax Court
DecidedJuly 28, 2008
DocketNo. TC 4790
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 19 Or. Tax 488 (Haynie v. Dept. of Rev.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Tax Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Haynie v. Dept. of Rev., 19 Or. Tax 488, 2008 WL 2894498, 2008 Ore. Tax LEXIS 123 (Or. Super. Ct. 2008).

Opinion

I. INTRODUCTION
This matter is before the court on the Motion for Summary Judgment of Plaintiffs Charles C. Haynie and Sandra E. Haynie (taxpayers) and the Cross-Motion for Summary Judgment of Defendant Department of Revenue (the department). Defendant Hood River County Assessor (the county) filed an Answer but did not otherwise participate in the matter.

II. FACTS
The following facts have been stipulated by the parties. Taxpayers, who are husband and wife, own real property identified in the county's records as property tax account number 3572. The property is a single-family dwelling that was built in 1936 in an Art Deco design unique to that time. In 1990 taxpayers applied for and obtained a historic property special assessment under Oregon's historic property preservation statute. Beginning in the 1991-92 tax year, the property was specially assessed as historic property for 15 years. From the 1997-98 tax year until the expiration of the historic special assessment, the county kept records of what the property's MAV would be were the property not in the historic special assessment program (Rollback MAV) in addition to keeping records of the amount of the property's MAV as specially assessed (MSAV) as required by statute.1 *Page 492

The special assessment ended June 30, 2006, at the expiration of the 15-year historic special assessment term and not because of any wrongdoing on the part of taxpayers. Taxpayers did not reapply for special assessment. For the following tax year, 2006-07, the county set the property's MAV at $498,335, an increase of $290,584 from the property's MSAV from the prior tax year. The county did not set the MAV at the Rollback MAV value, but calculated a new MAV using a changed property ratio (CPR) of 0.5460. The newly calculated MAV is greater than what the Rollback MAV would have been. The property's real market value (RMV) for the 2006-07 tax year was $912,704, and so the county set the property's assessed value (AV) at the lower MAV value of $498,335 (the product of $912,704 and 0.5460).

Taxpayers timely appealed to the Board of Property Tax Appeals. Their appeal was denied, and taxpayers appealed that decision to the Magistrate Division of this court. On July 9, 2007, the matter was specially designated for hearing in the Regular Division.

III. ISSUE
What is the correct AV of the property for the 2006-07 tax year?

IV. ANALYSIS
1, 2. Prior to the adoption of Article XI, section 11, of the Oregon Constitution (Measure 50), the basic, or default, position for determining the base for property taxation was RMV. Property that was exempt or subject to special assessment — that is, some other method of assessment based on a value other than RMV — could, of course, lose the benefit of exemption or special assessment. In such an event, the default rule of RMV supplied the base for taxation after exemption or special assessment ended. *Page 493

3-5. Measure 50 was first effective for the 1997-98 tax year and set forth a new set of basic, or default, rules for property that was in existence and subject to taxation under the old RMV system as of July 1, 1995. Under Measure 50, such property was to have a MAV equal to 90 percent of its 1995 RMV, subject to limited increases of three percent per year. Such property was to have an AV base for taxation of the lesser of the MAV or RMV.

The census of property subject to the rule of Measure 50, was not, however, logically or factually complete for years after the effective date of Measure 50. For the "future" time period there would be, for example, newly constructed property. There would also be property that, as of July 1, 1995, was exempt, but after July 1, 1995, lost such exemption. There would also be property subject to special assessment as of July 1, 1995, that would cease to be qualified for special assessment sometime after July 1, 1995. In all such cases, property would be entering the new Measure 50 system belatedly and, very possibly, without there having been determined a meaningful July 1, 1995, RMV.2 Without a 1995 RMV figure, an initial MAV figure (90 percent of 1995 RMV) could not be reliably derived.

6-8. The provisions of Measure 50 anticipate that problem. In section 1(c), Measure 50 provides that for new property, certain other property, and property "that becomes disqualified from exemption, partial exemption, or special assessment," for the first year of transition, 3

(1) the rule that MAV is equal to 90 percent of the 1995 RMV does not apply;

(2) the rule limiting increases in MAV to, at most, three percent from the previous year rule does not apply; and

*Page 494

(3) such property shall be valued at the ratio of average MAV to average RMV of property of the same class in the local area (the CPR).

Those provisions create a MAV for such property that, for the year of transition, is also the AV.4 Measure 50 goes on to provide that, for years following the year of transition, the limitation on growth of MAV to three percent each year applies.

The legislature has implemented Measure 50 by statutes, the validity of which are not challenged by taxpayers. Nor does the court see any basis for concluding that, for purposes of this case, the statutory implementations, especially those in ORS308.1465 and ORS 308.156, are not true to Measure 50.

9. The question becomes, then, how do the statutory rules apply to the property in question for the year of transition, remembering that it started its special assessment before Measure 50 and passed from special assessment to regular assessment after Measure 50 became effective? That question in turn becomes, for the reasons discussed below, a question of whether the property became disqualified from special assessment when the period of special assessment terminated by the passage of the statutory period of 15 years. The question comes to that because both Measure 50 and its implementing statutes provide that in the event of disqualification, the MAV and AV are to be the product of RMV and the CPR.

The department contends such disqualification occurred and that the AV and MAV for the first year of transition is to be determined by applying the CPR defined in ORS 308.156(5)(b) to the RMV of the property. The department takes as support for its position both the ordinary meaning of the word "disqualified" and the provisions of ORS 358.540, which, as amended in 2001, provide: "Property that has received special assessment under ORS 358.480 to 358.545 for 15 years, at the completion of the 15-year term, is *Page 495 disqualified from historic property special assessment." (Emphasis added.) On the basis of the plain meaning and statutory definition of "disqualified," the department concludes that ORS 308.156 must apply. The court agrees with the department's position as an initial matter, subject to a valid objection.

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Bluebook (online)
19 Or. Tax 488, 2008 WL 2894498, 2008 Ore. Tax LEXIS 123, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/haynie-v-dept-of-rev-ortc-2008.