Joseph Hydro Associates, Ltd. v. Department of Revenue

11 Or. Tax 49, 1988 Ore. Tax LEXIS 8
CourtOregon Tax Court
DecidedApril 12, 1988
DocketTC 2504 and 2648
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 11 Or. Tax 49 (Joseph Hydro Associates, Ltd. 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
Joseph Hydro Associates, Ltd. v. Department of Revenue, 11 Or. Tax 49, 1988 Ore. Tax LEXIS 8 (Or. Super. Ct. 1988).

Opinion

CARL N. BYERS, Judge.

This case concerns a narrow question of valuation associated with plaintiffs hydroelectric facility. The case has been submitted to the court on stipulated facts. The court has been assisted in its task by the briefs and oral arguments of the parties.

*50 The operative facts are as follows: Plaintiff is an Oregon limited partnership that owns and operates a facility for the generation and transmission of electrical energy (“the Facility”) located in Wallowa County near Joseph, Oregon. The Facility consists of three hydroelectric power stations and associated equipment, including diversion and intake structures, a power canal, real estate, rights-of-way, a Forest Service special use permit, penstocks, powerhouses and interconnection facilities connecting the powerhouses with the existing transmission facilities of the plaintiffs customer, Pacific Power & Light Co.

Plaintiff obtains water for its turbine generators from the Wallowa Valley Improvement District No. 1 (“the District”) which is an irrigation district providing water to its members. By written agreement, the District has granted to plaintiff “the exclusive right to generate electric power” using the water in the District’s irrigation system. In exchange, plaintiff pays the District 10 percent of its gross revenues from the sale of power generated by the facilities located on the District’s system. Plaintiff taps into the District’s canal system at three different points, drawing off water to turn its turbine generators and then returns the water to the canal system.

The parties have stipulated that the capitalized income approach, using the discounted cash flow method, affords the most reliable indicator of value of the Facility as of January 1,1986, and January 1,1987, the assessment dates in question. The parties have also stipulated as to the calculations found in Exhibits D and E attached to the stipulation. Those calculations characterize the payments which plaintiff makes to the District as deductible operating expenses. Defendant agrees that the payments are deductible by plaintiff in calculating the value of the Facility. However, defendant maintains that the water power used by plaintiff constitutes property which is taxable to plaintiff as the “user” under ORS 308.510(1). Defendant has, therefore, calculated a separate value based on the amount of the payments made by plaintiff to the District and added that separate value to the indicated value of the Facility. Plaintiff, although agreeing that defendant’s calculations are correct, does not agree with the value or that the value should be added to the Facility’s value obtained by the income approach.

*51 This dispute raises three issues:

1. Does plaintiffs use of water constitute the use of a property subject to taxation?

2. If the use is of a taxable property, is the value of that property included in the true cash value of the Facility as calculated or must it be added to such value?

3. If the value of the water property must be added to the value of the Facility, what is the value that should be added?

The nature of plaintiffs business, generating electric power, subjects it to assessment under the provisions of ORS 308.515 and the related assessment statutes. ORS 308.510 defines property for purposes of those statutes. Subsection (1) of that section indicates:

“ ‘Property,’ * * * includes all property, real and personal, tangible and intangible, used or held by a company as owner, occupant, lessee, or otherwise, for or in use in the performance or maintenance of a business or service or in a sale of any commodity, * * * and includes but is not limited to * * * water powers * *

The term “water power” is generally defined to mean:

“The water power to which a riparian owner is entitled consists of the fall in the stream when in its natural state, as it passes through his land, or along the boundary of it; or, in other words, it consists of the difference of level between the surface where the stream first touches his land, and the surface where it leaves it.” Black’s Law Dictionary 1762 (4th ed. 1957).
“This natural power is as much the subject of property as is the land itself of which it is an incident.” McCalmont v. Whitaker, 3 Rawle 84, 90, (Pa), 23 AmDec 102 (1831); Rhodes v. Whitehead, 27 Tex 304, 309, 84 AmDec 631 (1863).

The court finds that the grant to plaintiff by the District of the right to use the water to generate electric power is a “property” subject to taxation under ORS 308.510(1). By specifying “water powers” the legislature has recognized this incident of land ownership as an intangible property subject to taxation.

*52 Plaintiff argues that the only thing it is purchasing is the “potential mechanical energy present” in the water which is no different than other forms of energy such as coal, oil or natural gas. However, the water power that plaintiff purchases is not like coal, oil or gas which is consumed in its use. Water power exists by virtue of the combination of different land levels, water and gravity. So long as those three elements are present, this natural power will exist. Plaintiff pays for the use of that power on an annual basis. If plaintiffs agreement with the District was terminated, the District would have the right and ability to use such power itself or sell it to others.

Is the value of the water power used by plaintiff included in the true cash value of the Facility?

The parties have stipulated to the fair market value of the Facility. Plaintiff maintains that the value of the Facility represents the value of all property used by it. Therefore, plaintiff argues, if the water power is taxable to plaintiff, it must be included within the stipulated value. Such would result in a reallocation of, not an increase in, the assessed value. In opposition, defendant maintains that the water power is taxable in addition to the calculated value of the Facility. Defendant argues that the income measures only the value of the Facility. By deducting the cost of the water power as an expense, the value of that property is removed from the indication of true cash value arrived at by discounting the cash flow.

This is a theoretical dispute on which there appears to be two schools of thought. One school holds that deducting lease payments of leased property removes the value of that property from the indication of value arrived at by the income approach. Those who adhere to this school would attempt to treat the leased property as if it were owned by adjusting the deductions from gross revenues.

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Related

Wilsonville Heights Assoc., Ltd. v. Department of Revenue
17 Or. Tax 139 (Oregon Tax Court, 2003)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
11 Or. Tax 49, 1988 Ore. Tax LEXIS 8, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/joseph-hydro-associates-ltd-v-department-of-revenue-ortc-1988.