Lymp v. Dept. of Revenue

4 Or. Tax 466
CourtOregon Tax Court
DecidedJuly 13, 1971
StatusPublished

This text of 4 Or. Tax 466 (Lymp v. Dept. 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
Lymp v. Dept. of Revenue, 4 Or. Tax 466 (Or. Super. Ct. 1971).

Opinion

Carlisle B. Roberts, Judge.

Plaintiff appeals from the Department of Revenue’s Order No. VL 69-372 which denied his application to have certain property in Clackamas County designated as “forest land” for the fiscal year 1968-1969 and assessed at the percentage of true cash value prescribed by ORS 321.617.

At the trial, it was orally stipulated that, except for two acres of the 317.14 acres involved (used by *467 the plaintiff as the site of a personal residence), the assessor would have classified the property as forest land if timely application (as that term is understood by the assessor) had been made by the plaintiff pursuant to ORS 321.618.

The plaintiff argued (1) that the application for designation as forest land was timely made or, in the alternative, (2) that the assessor was estopped to deny that the application was not timely made, pursuant to the rule of Johnson v. Commission, 2 OTR 504 (1967), aff’d 248 Or 460, 435 P2d 302 (1967).

The Western Oregon ad valorem tax on timber and forest land was substantially amended by Or L 1961, ch 659. Subsection (2) of section 7 of the 1961 Act, codified as ORS 321.635, required the owner who sought to bring himself within the provisions of the Act to file a description of each tract with the county assessor on or before January 1 of each year. The statute further provided that the owner was required to file with the county assessor a description of any additions or deletions to the tract or a statement that the tract was unchanged. If a description or statement was not filed with the assessor by January 1, then the owner’s old-growth timber would be assessed at a true cash value of 30 percent of its immediate harvest value (as compared to a 25 percent assessment if particular application was made therefor and the necessary facts were shown). In practice, the assessor did not require that the “no change” filing be made annually. Amendment was made by Or L 1967, ch 543, § 2, codified as ORS 321.618 (1), first applicable to the tax year involved in the present case, 1968-1969, requiring a single application for forest land classification. The subsection reads:

“(1) An owner of land desiring that it be desig *468 nated as forest land shall make application to the county assessor on or before April 1 following the assessment date on which the assessment based thereon is first desired, and he may also do so within 20 days of receipt of notice of its assessment as omitted property or notice of an increase in its assessed valuation, or by December 15 of the year of increased assessment if he does not receive such notice.”

A new subsection (4) of ORS 321.618 gave to the assessor a new area of discretion, as follows:

“(4) The application shall be approved by the assessor, and he shall designate the land as forest land, except as to land which he finds is not properly classifiable as forest land. The application shall be deemed to have been approved unless, within three months of the date such application was delivered to the assessor, he shall notify the applicant in writing of the extent to which the application is denied.” (Emphasis supplied.)

A new ORS 321.619 (1) (a) and (b) was codified from the 1967 amendment of ORS 321.620, which reads:

“(1) (a) When land has once been designated as forest land as a result of an application being filed therefor it shall be valued as such until: (A) notification by the taxpayer to the assessor to remove such designation; (B) sale or transfer to a new owner who does not make a new application as to such land within 60 days of the sale or transfer; (C) sale or transfer to an ownership making it exempt from ad valorem property taxation; or (D) removal of the designation by the assessor upon discovery that the land is no longer forest land.
“(b) Within 30 days after removal of a designation of forest land, the assessor shall so notify in writing both the taxpayer and the Department of Bevenue and shall specify the reasons for the removal.”

*469 The subject land had previously been determined by the then Oregon State Tax Commission, over the objection of the assessor, to be forest land pursuant to the 1961 law; see Commission Order No. VL 66-48, dated April 21, 1966. With the new authority vested in him by subsection (4) of ORS 321.618, the assessor determined that a number of tracts, heretofore classified as forest land (including the property of the plaintiff), should be declassified as forest land and taxed in accordance with ORS 308.205 and 308.232, with an increase in value made pursuant to ratio studies in the county. The statutes referred to read as follows:

ORS 308.205:

“True cash value of all property, real and personal, means market value as of the assessment date. * * •”

ORS 308.232:

“All real or personal property within each county shall be assessed at 100 percent of its true cash value.”

A long-established definition for market value is to be found in the Department of Revenue’s regulation R308.205(A):

“Market Value as a basis for true cash value shall be taken to mean the amount of money or money’s worth for which property may be exchanged within a reasonable period of time under conditions where both parties to the exchange are able, willing and reasonably well-informed.”

ORS 308.280 provides for the notice to be given by the assessor to the taxpayer where there has been an increase in assessed valuation:

“(1) Whenever, in any year, the county assessor increases the assessed valuation of any *470

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Related

Cal-Roof Wholesale, Inc. v. State Tax Commission
410 P.2d 233 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1966)
Kankkonen v. HENDRICKSON
374 P.2d 393 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1962)
Johnson v. State Tax Commission
435 P.2d 302 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1967)
Johnson v. State Tax Commission
2 Or. Tax 504 (Oregon Tax Court, 1967)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
4 Or. Tax 466, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lymp-v-dept-of-revenue-ortc-1971.