Jarvie v. State Tax Commission

1 Or. Tax 1, 1962 Ore. Tax LEXIS 15
CourtOregon Tax Court
DecidedJune 6, 1962
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 1 Or. Tax 1 (Jarvie v. State Tax Commission) 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
Jarvie v. State Tax Commission, 1 Or. Tax 1, 1962 Ore. Tax LEXIS 15 (Or. Super. Ct. 1962).

Opinions

Peter M. Gunnar, Judge.

This is an appeal from the State Tax Commission’s opinion and order No. VL 61-374, which denied plaintiff’s claim to a war veteran real property exemption under ORS 307.250. The case comes before this court upon the defendant’s general demurrer to plaintiff’s complaint.

The facts, as alleged in the complaint, establish that the plaintiff is the unremarried widow of one Arthur C. Jarvie, who served in the United States Army from August 27, 1918 to March 7, 1919. Jarvie died on March 7, 1960. At his death, Jarvie left the plaintiff as the surviving tenant by the entirety of certain real property in Multnomah County. On March 29, 1961, the plaintiff filed with the Assessor of Multnomah County, Oregon, the statutory affidavit *4 required by ORS 307.260, claiming a tax exemption on that real property under ORS 307.250. The Multnomah County Assessor denied her claim for exemption, from which denial she appealed to the State Tax Commission.

The plaintiff claims her exemption under subsection (4) of ORS 307.250, which provides that there shall be exempt from taxation, not to exceed $7,500 of true cash value, the homestead or personal property of:

“ (4) The widow remaining unmarried of a war veteran, but her exemption shall apply only to the period preceding the date of her first remarriage.”

The term “war veteran” is not defined in ch 307. A general definition of war veteran is set forth in ORS 174.100. It provides:

“174.100. Definitions. As used in the statute laws of this state, unless the context or a specially applicable definition requires otherwise:
“(7) ‘War veteran’ includes every citizen of the United States who has been a member of the Armed Forces of the United States of America, and in active service for more than 90 consecutive days in time of any war in which this country has been or shall hereafter be engaged, including the period between September 15, 1940, and December 31, 1946, and the period between June 25, 1950, and midnight of January 31, 1955, and who has been discharged or released therefrom under honorable conditions; * * * and provided further, that any such citizen otherwise eligible, who was discharged or released, under honorable conditions, on account of service-connected injury or illness prior to the completion of such 90-day service, shall nevertheless be deemed to be a ‘war veteran.’ ”

*5 There is no contention that Jarvie was discharged prior to 90-day’s service by reason of a service-connected injury or illness.

The plaintiff contends that she is entitled to the exemption by reason of the service by Jarvie between the declaration of World War I and the Congressional Proclamation of 1921 terminating World War I. The State Tax Commission, on the other hand, denied the exemption because, although Jarvie served more than 90 days, only 77 of those days were served between the declaration of World War I and the Armistice on November 11, 1918.

The sole issue in this case, then, is the construction of the words “in time of any war” in ORS 174.100 when applied to World War I.

“In the construction of statutes, when construction is necessary or proper, the primary and governing rule to be followed and the one that is law and binding upon the court is to ascertain and declare the legislative intent. All other rules of statutory construction are secondary in importance and are simply guides to aid in the application of the primary rule. * * *
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“* * * it is only in cases where the language used in the statute is ambiguous and uncertain that resort may be had to rules of statutory construction in ascertaining and declaring the legislative intent. It is elementary that when the legislature, in enacting a law, makes use of plain, unambiguous, and understandable language, it is presumed to have intended precisely what its words imply. There is no occasion to go beyond those words and their plain meaning to ascertain by application of rules of statutory construction the legislative purpose. The words used speak for themselves.” Berry *6 Transport, Inc. v. Heltzel, 202 Or 161, 165-7, 272 P2d 965 (1954).
“In construing a statute words of common use are ordinarily to be taken in their natural, plain and obvious signification, * * City of Portland v. Meyer, 32 Or 368, 370, 52 P 21 (1898).

In other words, they are to be interpreted “ ‘in their ordinary and usual signification,’ as they are ‘popularly used’ * * Fishburn v. Londershausen, 50 Or 363, 370, 92 P 1060, 14 LRA (NS) 1234 (1907).

To the average citizen, war is a state of actual hostility, a time when people are fighting and dying for our country. The average citizen is not concerned with legalistic concepts of declarations of war and signing of peace treaties. As popularly used, the term “World War II” would encompass the period from Sunday morning, December 7,1941, until September 2, 1945, when G-eneral McArthur met the Japanese emissaries in Tokyo Bay. The fact that war was not declared until December 8, 1941, nor was it concluded until substantially after the close of 1945, would not be within his ordinary contemplation.

Similarly, the time of war in World War I would run from the declaration of war by Congress on April 6, 1917, until the fighting stopped on November 11, 1918, even though the legalistic state of war was not terminated until the joint Congressional Eesolution of 1921.

When the legislature provided that a war veteran was a person who had served more than 90 days in time of war, its plain, unambiguous and understandable meaning was that the time of war with reference to World War I ended with the cessation of hostilities on November 11, 1918. The same conclusion has been reached by the California courts in Kaiser v. Hopkins, *7 6 Cal2d 537, 58 P2d 1278 (1936), and by other courts in Scott v. Commissioner, 272 Mass 237, 172 NE 218, and Long v. St. Joseph’s Life Insurance Company, 225 SW 106, 248 SW 923 (1923), all cited by the commission.

Since it first defined “war veteran” in 1943, the legislature has reviewed and amended this definition more than once. Particularly, it did so to specifically define the entitlement dates of World War II and the Korean conflict.

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Bluebook (online)
1 Or. Tax 1, 1962 Ore. Tax LEXIS 15, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jarvie-v-state-tax-commission-ortc-1962.