Jayne v. State Tax Commission

2 Or. Tax 65, 1965 Ore. Tax LEXIS 93
CourtOregon Tax Court
DecidedJanuary 22, 1965
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 2 Or. Tax 65 (Jayne 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
Jayne v. State Tax Commission, 2 Or. Tax 65, 1965 Ore. Tax LEXIS 93 (Or. Super. Ct. 1965).

Opinion

Peter M. Gttrnar, Judge.

This is an appeal from defendant’s Opinion and Order No. 1-64-12, affirming an assessment of additional personal income taxes against plaintiffs for the calendar year 1960. Defendant demurred to plaintiffs’ complaint and the decision on this demurrer is decisive.

Plaintiffs sold a capital asset in 1960. Within the statutory time, they reinvested the sale proceeds, including profit, in a personal residence in Oregon and *66 ■in the bonds of Ashland, Oregon and Clackamas County School District 62C. Plaintiffs claimed special treatment of the capital gains realized in the 1960 sale. Defendant denies such special treatment.

The issues raised by the demurrer are whether either a personal residence or municipal bonds qualify as “qualifying investments” for capital gain treatment under ORS 316.420(1).

The material parts of ORS 316.420(1) read:

“(1) A qualifying investment under ORS 316.414 is:
“(a) Real property in Oregon.
“(b) Investment in a corporation determined to be a qualifying corporation under ORS 316.426 on the date the investment is made.”

ORS 316.426 directs the tax commission to determine qualification “using the last taxable year for which the corporation has filed a return under Oregon tax law.”

This court has already allowed special treatment of capital gains invested in a personal residence in Christianson v. Commission, 2 OTR 43 (1964); reversed, 240 Or 504, 402 P2d 743 (1965). However, the instant case so clearly points up the statutory construction problems presented that a discussion of both issues will clarify the decision in each.

In the Christianson decision this court set forth the arguments concerning special treatment of capital gains invested in a personal residence as follows:

“The arguments in favor of special treatment are:

“(1) That ORS 316.420 is a definition statute defining the term of art ‘qualifying investment’ and the legislature can define the term in any way it sees fit;
*67 “(2) That the plain, meaning of the term ‘Real property in Oregon’ includes any real property, including a personal residence;
“(3) That ‘Real property in Oregon’ is not modified by the words ‘Investment in’, as are all the other types of ‘qualifying investment’;
“(4) That the court cannot add words to the statute;
“(5) That the bill as originally drafted and presented to the 1959 House Committee on Taxation defined ‘qualifying reinvestment’ and did not precede any of the subparagraphs from (a) through (e) with ‘Investment in’ and it later added ‘Investment in’ to all but subparagraph (a);
“(6) That, though exemption statutes (if this is one) are to be strictly construed, any ambiguities are to be resolved in favor of the taxpayer; and
“(7) That the homebuilding industry is particularly favored in Oregon because it increases the local tax base, it consumes our number one product, lumber, and it provides jobs for Oregonians when it is conducted in Oregon.
“Defendant’s arguments that special treatments should not be allowed are:
“(1) That personal residences are not deemed ‘investments’ in tax statutes, where that term generally is used to mean assets acquired for profit-making purposes;
“(2) Under both state and federal tax laws, personal residences are not entitled to depreciation, deductions for loss, and other business charges, and personal living expenses are generally not deductible ;
“(3) That the 1959 capital gains act, Oregon Laws 1959, chapter 591, speaks exclusively of profit-making investments and is intended primarily to encourage such investments in the state;
“(4) That ORS 316.420 does not define ‘qualifying investment’, but rather sets forth those investments, using the word ‘investment’ as it is *68 ■usually used in the tax law, which ‘qualify’ under this act;
“(5) That such special treatment is like an exemption from tax and should be strictly construed ;
“(6) That the statute itself puts the burden on the taxpayer to bring himself within the terms of the statute for special treatment; and
“(7) That the legislative history indicates a concern with only investments for profit.
“This case has been very ably briefed by counsel and each of the foregoing propositions standing alone has been fully supported by appropriate authority. I will not extend this opinion by a display of erudition gleaned from the briefs. The problem is not accuracy of the arguments but their application to this statute.”

The arguments in favor of allowing municipal bonds to qualify are:

(1) The purpose of the statute is to encourage investment in Oregon.

(2) The legislature would not penalize municipal corporations.

(3) Evidences of indebtedness are investments within the meaning of ORS 316.420(1) (b). Field Emission Corp. v. Commission, 1 OTR 243 (1962).

Defendant’s argument against special treatment is that a municipal corporation cannot qualify under ORS 316.426(3) because it does not file tax returns or pay taxes. Conceding that the legislature probably would treat municipal corporations favorably, if it considered the problem, the commission contends that the failure to “qualify” municipal corporation bonds is a “legislative oversight” which neither this court nor the commission can cure.

The basic issue is whether this court properly can and should rewrite a statute. Stated another way, at *69 what point does a court properly construe a statute beyond its clear language? This question particularly concerns this court.

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Related

Nichols v. State Tax Commission
2 Or. Tax 81 (Oregon Tax Court, 1965)
Emerald Loggers Radio Ass'n v. State Tax Commission
2 Or. Tax 77 (Oregon Tax Court, 1965)

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Bluebook (online)
2 Or. Tax 65, 1965 Ore. Tax LEXIS 93, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jayne-v-state-tax-commission-ortc-1965.