Hood River County v. Department of Revenue

8 Or. Tax 279
CourtOregon Tax Court
DecidedJanuary 29, 1980
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 8 Or. Tax 279 (Hood River County v. Department of Revenue) 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
Hood River County v. Department of Revenue, 8 Or. Tax 279 (Or. Super. Ct. 1980).

Opinion

CARLISLE B. ROBERTS, Judge.

Hood River County appealed from the defendant Department of Revenue’s Order No. VL 79-48A, dated April 23, 1979, contesting the property values established by the Department of Revenue for intervenor’s Mt. Hood Meadows Ski Resort for the tax years 1972-1973 to 1977-1978, inclusive. The Department of Revenue made no appearance herein but the intervenor, Mt. Hood Meadows, Oreg., Ltd., filed an amended complaint in intervention, listing as its first cause of suit the question of jurisdiction (failure of plaintiff to file its complaint in this court within 60 days after issuance of the department’s order as required by ORS 305.560(1)) and, as a second cause, the approval of the true cash value of the subject property as determined by the defendant’s deputy director for the tax years 1972-1973 to 1977-1978, inclusive.

Trial of the question of jurisdiction was heard on December 20, 1979.

*[281] The legal question presented is a common one, but some of the facts necessary to the legal conclusion are so unusual that, for greater clarity, the court has chosen to set out a chronological narrative.

The intervenor, Mt. Hood Meadows, Oreg., Ltd., (hereinafter referred to as Mt. Hood) leases the site of the Mt. Hood Meadows Ski Resort from the U. S. Forest Service and has improved the property by constructing ski lifts, parking areas and the buildings necessary to the business of a ski resort. Mt. Hood appealed to the Hood River County Board of Equalization from the assessed values placed upon the subject property by the county assessor for the six consecutive assessment dates, January 1, 1972, through January 1, 1977, and from the orders of the county board of equalization to the defendant, the Department of Revenue.

The department’s hearing began on November 26, 1976, and was continued on September 7, 1977. At the request of the respondent, Hood River County, the Attorney General assigned, as counsel for the county, Alfred B. Thomas, an assistant attorney general who, for many years, has been associated with the Tax Division of the Department of Justice and has participated in many property tax cases. Richard T. Ligón, County Counsel for Hood River County, also participated, but left the employ of the county before the department’s Order No. VL 78-48 was issued.

Apparently, a lengthy study of the testimony ensued. This is indicated by the date of issuance (February 7, 1979) of the department’s Opinion and Order No. VL 79-48. It may be explained by the number of tax years and the intricacies of the problems involved. 1

In his opinion, the Deputy Director of the Department of Revenue compared and adjudicated specific *[282] conflicting positions of the individual appraisers who testified on behalf of the petitioner, Mt. Hood (Mr. Kane), and the respondent, Hood River County (Mr. Kenney), as follows:

1. Mr. Kane’s upward adjustment to gross income to account for anticipated future economic growth of the facility was approved, "in accord with petitioner’s estimates set out on Exhibits 1 and 3.”

2. The experts disagreed on the amount of annual expenses deductible in the use of the income approach to value. Mr. Kenney assigned operating expense ratios of 62 percent for the years 1972 through 1975 and 64 percent for the years 1976 and 1977. Mr. Kane used the same expense data as Mr. Kenney but "stabilized” expense estimates at 72 percent for 1972 and 1973, 70 percent for each of the years 1974, 1975 and 1976, and 72.3 percent for 1977. The deputy director found Mr. Kane’s conclusions to be better supported and adopted them.

3. The principal area of dispute between Mr. Kane and Mr. Kenney was the selection of the appropriate rate of capitalization. (As is well known, even slight variations in the rate can cause dramatic swings in the valuation result.) After study, the deputy director approved the work of Mr. Kenney (described in detail on pp 7-9 of the opinion, VL 79-48).

The deputy director then concluded:
"Having considered the entire record together with the exhibits incorporated therein, the hearing officer finds, and I agree, that the true cash values for the subject property must be set in accord with the valuation method advanced by Mr. Kenney, except for the modifications to gross income and operating expenses as hereinabove determined. Within 30 days after issuance of this order, respondent [Hood River County] shall forward to petitioner [Mt. Hood Meadows, Oreg., Ltd.] its computations pursuant to the findings set out above. If the parties agree on the result determined, respondent must then proceed to refund any overpaid tax, with *[283] interest, pursuant to ORS 311.806 and 311.812. If the parties are unable to agree, petitioner must file and serve a computation believed to be in accord with the decision herein. The hearing officer may then require written or oral argument to aid him in resolving the disputed computation.” (Emphasis supplied.)

Following the date and signature of the deputy director, the department’s stock form of notice of the statutory time for appeal was appended to the order. It reads:

"Note: If you are dissatisfied with this decision, you may appeal it to the Oregon Tax Court within 60 days of the date of mailing shown above. ORS 305.560.”

It is also important to note that ORS 305.115(1) requires that the Director of the Department of Revenue or his chief deputy (ORS 305.065 and 305.115) "shall make the final determinations on all petitions and appeals which are to be written into orders subject to appeal to a court of law * * *” (emphasis supplied), and that ORS 305.115(4) further provides:

"(4) * * * Subject to judicial review by the Oregon Tax Court and the Supreme Court, the order shall determine finally all the questions of law and fact arising in the appeal under the tax laws of the State of Oregon. * * * The order is binding upon the taxpayer, all county officers and all other persons affected thereby until reversed or modified upon review by the Oregon Tax Court.” (Emphasis supplied.)

If the county had carried out the department’s order, as it was lawfully bound to do (State ex rel. v. Smith et al, 197 Or 96, 109, 252 P2d 550, 556 (1953)), much anquish would have been avoided. But it did not do so. Thirty days passed without the overt action required to meet the reasonable deadline imposed on the county by Order No.

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Related

Rothenfluch v. Department of Revenue
815 P.2d 695 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1991)
Burns v. Department of Revenue
9 Or. Tax 469 (Oregon Tax Court, 1984)

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Bluebook (online)
8 Or. Tax 279, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hood-river-county-v-department-of-revenue-ortc-1980.