Mathias v. Department of Revenue

817 P.2d 272, 312 Or. 50, 1991 Ore. LEXIS 62
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 29, 1991
DocketOTC 2910; SC S37159
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 817 P.2d 272 (Mathias v. Department of Revenue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mathias v. Department of Revenue, 817 P.2d 272, 312 Or. 50, 1991 Ore. LEXIS 62 (Or. 1991).

Opinions

[52]*52FADELEY, J.

Taxpayers complain that their fully developed, vacant residential subdivision lot was valued and taxed at higher amounts than identical lots adjacent to it in the same subdivision. Defendant Department of Revenue does not contest that taxpayers’ lot was valued for real property tax purposes at a substantially higher amount than the taxable valuation applied to adjacent lots, or to lots located elsewhere in the same subdivision, or to very similar lots in other nearby subdivisions within the boundaries of the same taxing authority. Instead, the department defends the dispariiy in taxable value of the otherwise similar, fully developed, vacant lots by relying on a 1989 statutory amendment. The amendment added a new subsection (3) to ORS 308.205, providing that:

“If the property consists of four or more lots within one subdivision, and the lots are held under one ownership, the lots shall be valued under a method which recognizes the time period over which those lots must he sold in order to realize current market prices for those lots.”

Taxpayers allege that the 1989 amendment mandates a “double standard of valuation, for the same class of property (subdivision lots),” thereby violating the rule of uniformity of taxation for the same class of property required by Article I, section 32,1 and the uniform assessment, levy, and collection required by Article DC, section l,2 of the Oregon Constitution. The department and taxpayers filed cross-motions for summary judgment on the constitutional issues thus raised.

The taxable value of taxpayers’ lot is based on market value established by comparable sales. Where a single owner held multiple lots, the taxing authorities also started with a value based on the same comparable sales but then substantially reduced that value for tax purposes for all situations in which four or more lots had the same owner. Taxpayers’ lot received no reduction from market value. Other lots held in [53]*53ownerships of one through three lots likewise received no reduction from comparable-sales market value.

Rejecting the department’s claim that the disparate valuations were permissible for four or more lots because the disparity was authorized by the numerical-ownership classification in the new statute, the tax court stated:

“The court finds that the statute directly violates the basic protection afforded by Article I, section 32, of the Oregon Constitution. Property of the same class, i.e., lots in subdivisions, are not subject to uniform taxation. Owners of lots of equal true cash value would not pay taxes on equal values. This is not because the properties are different or are used differently but simply because the owners are different. It is difficult for this court to imagine a more discriminatory scheme.” Mathias v. Dept. of Rev., 11 OTR 347, 352 (1990).

The tax court entered a declaratory judgment that:

“ORS 308.205(3) violates the uniformity of taxation requirements of Article I, section 32, and Article IX, section 1, of the Oregon Constitution, and is, therefore, null and void.”

The issue presented by the department’s appeal of the tax court decision is whether the classification attempted — treating four or more lots differently for ad valorem tax purposes than one, two, or three otherwise identical lots — is constitutionally permissible. We agree with the tax court that it is not and, therefore, affirm.

HISTORY OF THE CONTROVERSY LEADING TO THIS CASE

The background of this case starts with a memorandum that one of the department’s managers sent to county assessors in 1983. The department’s 1983 memorandum indicated that a “discount” could be used to reduce the assessed value of two or more fully developed lots in a subdivision, where the lots had a single owner. That memorandum did not réquire that four or more lots be commonly owned. It did not limit the discount to an original subdivider. It described the reduction or discount method as different from valuation by comparable sales of groups of lots in bulk in one transaction.

The memorandum described the “discount” approach as based on comparable sales of individual lots. The true cash [54]*54value of each and every individual lot was first obtained by actual comparable sales. Then, if the assessor estimated that it would take more than one year to sell all of the lots in a multiple-lot ownership, the memorandum permitted a percentage discount to be applied to the true cash value of each lot to reduce taxable value of each and every lot below the value derived from comparable sales. The percentage of reduction was increased to allow for the fact that property taxes were to be paid annually. That is, the reduction or discount as applied offset future taxes that assumedly would be paid on the lot prior to its sale to a new owner. In effect, at least part of the taxes on the lots held in multiple-lot ownership would be shifted onto the individually owned lots.

Thereafter, the tax court limited this so-called developer’s discount approach to “those cases where the value sought is the present worth of property which is yet to be developed” and held that “the tax authority has no legal or rational basis for discounting the value of each unit because of who owns the unit.” CKW Enterprises v. Dept. of Rev., 10 OTR 49, 51 (1985).

Two years later, the tax court decided another case in which a taxpayer urged that a discount, or calculated cost to hold until sale, should be deducted from market price to reduce taxable value. In First Interstate Bank v. Dept. of Rev., 10 OTR 452, 455 (1987), the tax court stated: “The issue before the court is whether the assessed value of each lot should be discounted or reduced because two or more lots are owned by the same party.”

The taxpayer in that case, who was not the original subdivider, but who had come into possession of multiple fully developed lots by foreclosure, relied on the department’s 1983 memorandum. The tax court rejected the memorandum and the taxpayer’s contentions based on it, stating:

“Perhaps the most compelling reason for rejecting the* * * memorandum is the constitutional requirement of uniformity in taxation. * * * If the individual’s lot is contiguous to one of plaintiffs $14,000 lots, and both lots are listed for sale at $14,000, but plaintiffs lot is assessed at $9,000, there is no uniformiiy.” 10 OTR at 456-57 (footnote omitted).

[55]*55On appeal to this court, the taxpayer argued that the value of the real property, as fixed by the department, was too high because it failed to allow for either a “developer’s discount” or a reduction in value for an assumed cost to hold until an undetermined future time when the property might be sold. This court rejected the argument:

“We agree with the Tax Court that the developer’s discount is not a permissible method of valuation in the present case.

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Bluebook (online)
817 P.2d 272, 312 Or. 50, 1991 Ore. LEXIS 62, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mathias-v-department-of-revenue-or-1991.