Luedtke v. Estacada School District 108

16 Or. Tax 114
CourtOregon Tax Court
DecidedDecember 23, 2002
DocketTC 4584,4585
StatusPublished

This text of 16 Or. Tax 114 (Luedtke v. Estacada School District 108) 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
Luedtke v. Estacada School District 108, 16 Or. Tax 114 (Or. Super. Ct. 2002).

Opinion

HENRY C. BREITHAUPT, Judge.

INTRODUCTION

In both of these proceedings, Plaintiff Mark Luedtke (taxpayer) raises challenges to budgetary actions of Defendant Estacada School District No. 108 (the school district). The cases are brought under ORS 294.485, 1 a portion of the local budget law, and challenge the levy certified by the school district to the Clackamas County Assessor for the 2002-03 year. Jurisdiction of such appeals is vested in this court under ORS 294.485(2). Defendant has moved for summary judgment in both cases.

*116 FACTS

The facts on which the court bases its opinion have been established by stipulation or uncontested affidavit submitted by the school district. The parties have stipulated that any exhibit submitted in one of the cases may be considered in both cases. The facts are summarized below by case. In both cases, taxpayer’s complaint included an attached page on which more than 10 individuals had signed their names and provided their addresses below the following statement:

“We, the undersigned as residents and interested taxpayers of Estacada School District #108, do hereby appeal to the Oregon Tax Court as provided by ORS 294.485 concerning the tax certification as filed with the Clackamas County Assessor by the School District on July 15, 2002.”

Case No. 4584

Pursuant to an election held in 2000, $25.4 million of general obligation bonds were issued by the school district on February 15, 2001. The total amount of the tax levy in the 2001-02 tax year was $2,430,843.75, almost all of which had been collected, and all but approximately $642,000 of which had been expended on debt service payments by June 30, 2002.

In preparing a budget for the period July 1, 2002 to June 30, 2003, the school district’s budget director estimated that $400,000 of the approximate $642,000 would be available for payment of debt service in that fiscal year. The remaining $979,000 needed to fund the payments coming due in the 2002-03 year was shown in the budget as an amount to be raised in the levy for the 2002-03 year.

During the 2001-02 fiscal year, the school district transferred $55,922 from a debt-service account for an earlier bond issue to its general fund.

Of the approximate $642,000 on hand from the proceeds of the initial levy, a portion, $14,034, was interest that had been earned on the initial levy proceeds that were invested pending application to debt service installments.

The total amount of interest and principal due and payable on the school district’s bond issue in the year 2002-03 *117 was $1,379,000. The total amount levied by the school district for debt service was $979,000.

Case No. 4585

In preparing the budget for the 2001-02 year, the school district’s prior budget director was aware that the amount of “state support” for the district might be increased by $2 million over the initial projection. Apparently, that budget director therefore increased the district’s contingency account by $2 million.

Upon taking office, the current budget director reviewed that approach and revised the estimated increase in state support for 2002-03 downward to $750,000. The budget director also made offsetting revenue and expense estimates of $1 million so that if the estimate of the amount of state support receipts was too conservative, any additional receipts could be expended without having to adopt a supplemental budget.

The foregoing facts relate to the school district’s general operating budget and do not relate to amounts levied or expended for debt service.

In case 4585, taxpayer has requested that the court order a reduction in the school district’s permanent rate that was used to calculate the 2002-03 levy.

ISSUES

1. Have the persons challenging the action of the school district properly brought these cases before the court?

2. Did the school district substantially comply with its obligations under the local budget law and, if not, may the court award the relief requested?

ANALYSIS

Are These Cases Properly Before the Court?

The school district asserts that the complaining parties did not bring this proceeding in the proper fashion and within the proper time. The school district points to the fact that ORS 294.485(2) requires that 10 or more interested taxpayers must appeal by filing a complaint in this court within *118 30 days of certification of the tax levy to the county assessor. The school district notes that only taxpayer is named as Plaintiff on the complaint, that the complaint makes no reference to or incorporation of the appendix containing the signatures and position of other taxpayers, and that the appendix does not incorporate the substance of the complaint to which it is attached.

Importantly, the school district has not asserted or introduced any proof that the persons who signed the appendix were not “interested taxpayers,” within the meaning of ORS 294.485(2). The connection of the complaint and the appendix is demonstrated by the fact that taxpayer was both the nominal Plaintiff in each complaint and a signatory to each appendix.

ORS 294.485 does not require that all interested taxpayers be listed as plaintiffs or that they all sign as plaintiffs on the signature page of the complaint. Indeed, ORS 294.485 speaks both of an “appealing party” filing a complaint and “a complaint * * * filed under this section by 10 or more interested persons.”

To the extent the matter is one involving the rules of this court, those rules require that pleadings be construed in order so as to achieve substantial justice. TCR 12. The purpose of the local budget law is to involve taxpayers in the budgeting process of local government. It would be an overly harsh result to disqualify this appeal because of possible errors in form where, on the substance of the matter, the requested number of taxpayers clearly expressed their concern with the school district’s actions by reference to a specific levy certification and the appropriate statutory basis for the appeal. The complaints in both cases are properly before this court.

Case 4584: The Levy for Debt Service

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Napier v. Lincoln County School District
4 Or. Tax 221 (Oregon Tax Court, 1970)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
16 Or. Tax 114, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/luedtke-v-estacada-school-district-108-ortc-2002.