Hoggard II v. Dept. of Rev.

23 Or. Tax 543
CourtOregon Tax Court
DecidedDecember 10, 2019
DocketTC 5336
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 23 Or. Tax 543 (Hoggard II 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
Hoggard II v. Dept. of Rev., 23 Or. Tax 543 (Or. Super. Ct. 2019).

Opinion

No. 24 December 10, 2019 543

IN THE OREGON TAX COURT REGULAR DIVISION

John T. HOGGARD and Mary T. Burry, Plaintiffs, v. DEPARTMENT OF REVENUE, State of Oregon, Defendant. (TC 5336) Following the court’s order in Hoggard I v. Dept. of Rev., 23 OTR 406 (2019) (Hoggard I), Plaintiffs submitted a request for attorney fees, costs and disburse- ments. After reviewing the factors enumerated in ORS 20.075, the court deter- mined that Plaintiffs were entitled to attorney fees, costs, and disbursements because the county assessor’s legal position was objectively unreasonable and an award of fees in this case would deter assessors from asserting similar positions in the future. The court agreed with Defendant that any award of fees should be capped at amounts attributable to the timeliness issue in Hoggard I, except that the court also awarded to Plaintiffs reimbursement for the fees incurred by Plaintiffs’ counsel in requesting the fee award. The court also awarded costs and disbursements to Plaintiff for charges related to requesting and obtaining public records. However, the court rejected Plaintiffs’ request for fees for “post- judgment proceedings.”

Submitted on Plaintiffs’ Request for Award of Attorney Fees, Costs, and Disbursements. Jason A. Wright and Melina Martinez, Richardson Wright LLP, Portland, filed the request for Plaintiff. Daniel Paul, Senior Assistant Attorney General, Depart- ment of Justice, Salem, filed the response for Defendant. Decision rendered for Plaintiff December 10, 2019.

ROBERT T. MANICKE, Judge. This opinion should be read in conjunction with this court’s order dated June 7, 2019 (the June 7 Order); the facts recited below supplement those in the June 7 Order. Following judgment entered June 26, 2019, Plaintiffs (tax- payers) have filed a statement of attorney fees under ORS 544 Hoggard II v. Dept. of Rev.

305.490(4)1 and ORS 20.105. Taxpayers seek: (1) $29,956.50 in fees incurred to date; (2) costs and disbursements of $768.25; and (3) an additional $3,600 in anticipated fees that taxpayers estimate they will incur in “post-judgment pro- ceedings.” Defendant Department of Revenue (the depart- ment) argues that no fees or costs are warranted, and that in any event the attorney fee statutes “cap” the amount of any award. I. BACKGROUND Taxpayers initially appealed to the Magistrate Division from a “Notice of Omitted Property” that the Clackamas County Assessor mailed to them on June 29, 2017. That notice informed taxpayers that any appeal must be filed by October 17, 2017, but taxpayers appealed on December 19, 2017, which was within 90 days after they received their annual property tax bill. The assessor defended the accuracy of the October 17 deadline before the magistrate and maintained that position in a motion to dis- miss even after (1) the assessor’s counsel cautioned that the notice procedure on which the deadline was based was “vul- nerable to a challenge”; and (2) the department informed the assessor unambiguously that the assessor’s notice pro- cedure was inconsistent with the statute and failed to trig- ger any appeal deadline. Before the magistrate ruled on the assessor’s motion to dismiss, Taxpayers conceded that their appeal was untimely and sought relief under an alternative statute that required them to prove “good and sufficient cause” for having filed late. Even after taxpayers publicly revealed substantial personal information about health and family problems in an effort to prove good and sufficient cause, the assessor did not concede that the June 29, 2017, notice was ineffective and that there was no October 17 deadline. The magistrate dismissed taxpayers’ case for two reasons: because taxpayers had conceded that their complaint was untimely, and because they failed to show “good and sufficient cause” for late-filing relief under ORS 305.288(5).

1 The court’s references to the Oregon Revised Statutes (ORS) are to 2017. Cite as 23 OTR 543 (2019) 545

Taxpayers represented themselves in the Magis- trate Division but hired counsel to appeal to the Regular Division. In this division, taxpayers alleged that their com- plaint in the Magistrate Division was timely, and they also challenged the addition of omitted property on the merits. The department’s answer in this division admitted that taxpayers had filed their Magistrate Division complaint timely. The parties undertook factual investigations and negotiations over the underlying omitted property dispute but failed to resolve it. The assessor then withdrew the omitted property assessment, subject to the possibility of issuing a new notice at some future date. Taxpayers filed a motion that the court treated as a motion for summary judgment, and the department resisted on the grounds that the case was moot because (1) the department had admit- ted that the Magistrate Division complaint was timely, and (2) the assessor had withdrawn the assessment. The court’s June 7 Order expressly “found in favor” of taxpayers that their Magistrate Division complaint had been timely, but the order did not reach the merits of the omitted property dispute. II. ISSUES (1) Is any fee award limited to the amount related to the timeliness of taxpayers’ appeal to the Magistrate Division? (2) Should the court award fees attributable to timeliness? (3) What amount of fees is appropriate? (4) May costs and expenses include the public records charge that Clackamas County imposed on taxpayers to obtain internal emails? (5) May a fee award include taxpayers’ claim for “post- judgment proceedings”? III. ANALYSIS A. Fees are “capped” at amounts attributable to timeliness issue. The department asserts that, because it admit- ted in its answer in the Regular Division that taxpayers’ 546 Hoggard II v. Dept. of Rev.

complaint in the Magistrate Division was timely, any fee award is “capped” at $5,877.50, which is the amount tax- payers claim to have incurred through the date on which taxpayers’ counsel reviewed the department’s answer. The department thus asserts that fees attributable to the under- lying dispute over potential omitted property are not eligi- ble for an award because the court has not “found in favor” of taxpayers, nor are they “prevailing” parties with respect to that issue. (Citing Comcast Corp. V v. Dept. of Rev., 23 OTR 8 (2018).) The court agrees in principle with the department’s analysis that a cap applies. Taxpayers’ fee statement shows extensive services related to obtaining facts about whether any omitted property exists and the value of any work on the property, hosting a site inspection, and settlement negotia- tions. The court’s June 7 Order expressly left a ruling on the underlying omitted property issue for another day, should the county assessor issue a new notice that taxpayers choose to contest. B. Whether to Award Fees Attributable to Timeliness? The court now applies the standards governing ORS 305.490(4)(a)2 to determine whether to award fees through October 3, 2018, when taxpayers’ counsel reviewed the department’s answer. ORS 305.490

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Bluebook (online)
23 Or. Tax 543, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hoggard-ii-v-dept-of-rev-ortc-2019.