Keeter Manufacturing, Inc. v. Department of Revenue

13 Or. Tax 124
CourtOregon Tax Court
DecidedJuly 19, 1994
DocketTC 3445
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 13 Or. Tax 124 (Keeter Manufacturing, Inc. 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
Keeter Manufacturing, Inc. v. Department of Revenue, 13 Or. Tax 124 (Or. Super. Ct. 1994).

Opinion

*125 CARL N. BYERS, Judge.

This matter is before the court on cross motions for summary judgment. At issue is the interpretation of the Oregon Enterprise Zone Act. The specific question is whether property becomes disqualified for enterprise zone tax exemption by virtue of being sold.

The legislature enacted the Oregon Enterprise Zone Act in 1985 to encourage businesses to locate in economically lagging areas. 1 ORS 284.130. One of the benefits provided was a limited property tax exemption. The exemption was for a five-year period. The property was 100 percent exempt the first year, 80 percent the second year, and so on, decreasing by 20 percent each year. ORS 284.210. If either the business or the property became disqualified, the property became taxable for the year following disqualification, and the exempted taxes for the prior years were forgiven.

In 1989, the legislature amended the Oregon Enterprise Zone Act. The amendment shortened the exemption period to three years, but exempted the property 100 percent. Also, upon disqualification, 100 percent of the taxes previously exempted were to be recaptured.

FACTS

The material facts are not disputed. In 1989, Automotive Parts Exchange, an Oregon corporation, applied for and received an enterprise zone property tax exemption beginning with the 1989-90 tax year. This company later changed its name to Keeter Manufacturing, Inc. (Old Keeter). The sole shareholders of the corporation were Jimmie and Marilyn Keeter.

In July 1990, Old Keeter sold its assets to Pentadyne Technologies, Inc. (New Keeter), a newly organized Oregon corporation. The shareholders of New Keeter were James D. Nydigger, Kelly L. Nydigger, Pamela J. Harris, Kimberly A. Crandall and Bruce W. Kelm. New Keeter paid cash and assumed certain listed liabilities in exchange for *126 the business assets of Old Keeter. The transaction was structured as an asset purchase to avoid unknown liabilities of Old Keeter.

In the process of negotiating the purchase, New Keeter inquired of the county assessor about the property’s tax-exempt status under the enterprise zone exemption. The assessor’s office wrote a letter indicating that, if the property were disqualified, all of the past taxes would be forgiven. Representatives of the parties signed a copy of this letter as one of the escrow documents. The sale of the assets closed on July 13, 1990. Simultaneously with the purchase of the assets, New Keeter sold part of the assets to its own shareholders and then leased them back. 2 On July 23,1990, New Keeter changed its name from Pentadyne Technologies, Inc., to Keeter Manufacturing, Inc., and Old Keeter changed its name from Keeter Manufacturing to Keeter, Inc.

The assessor learned of the sale and concluded it disqualified the property from tax exemption. The assessor attempted to disqualify the property for the 1990-91 tax year. However, New Keeter appealed to defendant, which ruled that, because the sale took place after July 1, 1990, the property remained exempt for 1990-91. See ORS 311.410. In response, the assessor disqualified the property for 1991-92. Plaintiff again appealed and this time defendant’s opinion and order upheld the assessor’s disqualification of the property.

The issues are: 3

(1) Is property, which is qualified for and receiving an enterprise zone tax exemption, disqualified by its sale?

(2) If the subject property was disqualified, which law governs that disqualification?

SALE OF PROPERTY

As previously indicated, the purpose of an enterprise zone is to “stimulate employment, business and industrial *127 growth in the depressed areas of this state” by providing assistance to businesses and industries and by providing “tax incentives in those areas.” ORS 284.130. The property tax exemption was provided in ORS 284.210. While that section is lengthy, the critical portion states:

“Upon compliance with ORS 284.240(1), qualified property of a qualified business is partially exempt from taxation, * * *. ” (Emphasis added.)

ORS 284.210 sets forth the application process and describes “qualified property.” Generally, qualified property consists of new buildings or modifications to buildings; all real property machinery and equipment that is newly purchased, leased, or transferred into the enterprise zone; and items of personal machinery or equipment which meet the same conditions, plus certain true cash value standards. Land is expressly excluded from qualified property.

The other half of the equation, the qualified business firm, is defined as:

“[A] business firm satisfying the requirements of ORS 284.220(1) to (8).” ORS 284.110(9).

Moving across the statutory framework, we find that ORS 284.220 describes a “qualified business firm” as one which carries on the operation of a trade or business in the enterprise zone, employs a certain percentage of workers from within the zone and employs a certain percentage of workers from special segments of the population. The section excludes retail business.

An eligible business must request an exemption from the Department of Revenue.

“After designation of an enterprise zone, each qualified business firm in such zone shall submit annually to the Department of Revenue a statement on a form supplied by the Department of Revenue requesting the tax exemption allowed under ORS 284.210. * * * The statement shall be accompanied by an approved form stating that the business firm meets the definition of a qualified business firm. A copy of the statement submitted by each business firm to the Department of Revenue shall be forwarded to the governing body of the county or city in which the enterprise zone is located.” ORS 284.230

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
13 Or. Tax 124, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keeter-manufacturing-inc-v-department-of-revenue-ortc-1994.