Moore & Paulson v. Department of Revenue

4 Or. Tax 573, 1971 Ore. Tax LEXIS 42
CourtOregon Tax Court
DecidedNovember 19, 1971
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 4 Or. Tax 573 (Moore & Paulson 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
Moore & Paulson v. Department of Revenue, 4 Or. Tax 573, 1971 Ore. Tax LEXIS 42 (Or. Super. Ct. 1971).

Opinion

Loren D. Hicks, Judge pro tempore.

Plaintiffs appeal from an order of the Department of Revenue holding that the department was without jurisdiction to hear the matter in question. The dis *574 pnte concerns a small house in Lane County belonging to the plaintiffs which is located on land owned by plaintiffs’ landlord. The house was placed on the property by a former tenant who sold his lease and the house to plaintiffs. The lease treated the building as personal property and the plaintiffs reported it as such on their 1964 personal property tax return. The assessor struck the item from the return and assessed it to the landlord as real property. The landlord paid the taxes for 1964 through 1969,

In the fall of 1970, after the assessment roll had been returned to the assessor by the board of equalization, the assessor, evidently learning that the plaintiffs owned the house, assessed it to plaintiffs as real property without any increase in valuation and without any notice to them of his action. Plaintiffs first learned of the change when they received the 1970-71 tax statement. They objected to the valuation and appealed directly to the Department of Revenue pursuant to ORS 306.520 which provides in part:

“(1) Any taxpayer aggrieved by an act or omission of a county assessor or tax collector which affects his property and for which there is no other statutory remedy may * * * appeal to the Department of Revenue * *

The Director of the Department of Revenue dismissed plaintiffs’ appeal on the ground a challenge of the assessor’s valuation is normally made by an appeal to the board of equalization and then to the Department of Revenue. ORS 309.100; ORS 306.515. The director concluded that even though plaintiffs learned of the change too late to appeal to the board under ORS 309.100, they had their statutory remedy in that section because they knew they owned the property and should have been paying taxes on it.

*575 The situation presented here is different than in T & R Service v. Commission, 3 OTR 271 (1968), where the taxpayer had failed to appeal a subsequent tax year while an appeal for the previous year was pending. This court held there that the taxpayer had a remedy under ORS 309.100 because he had a duty without additional notice to make a timely inspection of the subsequent year’s assessment to determine if he wished to appeal it to the board of equalization. In the case now before the court the plaintiffs had made no objection to previous actions of the assessor and nothing had occurred to give them cause to inspect the county’s assessment records.

A case more nearly similar to the instant one is Hult Lumber v. Dept. of Rev., 3 OTR 507 (1969), where the assessor had changed the valuation of property without notifying the taxpayer who learned of the change after the time to appeal to the board of equalization had expired. This court held that the taxpayer had no other statutory remedy at the time of learning of the assessor’s action and therefore was entitled to appeal under ORS 306.520.

In the present case, a significant change of position by the assessor affecting the property of plaintiffs occurred too late to allow plaintiffs to appeal to the board of equalization. Plaintiffs had no notice of their substitution as taxpayers in place of the owner of the land who had been assessed for, and paid, the taxes for the previous six years. The record does not reveal why the plaintiffs had not previously questioned the assessment, or why the assessor had not assessed the property to the plaintiffs in 1964. So far as can be determined from the record, at the time of the particular act of the assessor that gave them personal cause to want to appeal, plaintiffs, through no *576 fault of their own, were without any other statutory remedy and therefore were entitled to appeal to the Department of Revenue under ORS 306.520.

The parties stipulated at trial that if the court found that the department had jurisdiction, it should rule on the remaining issue of the valuation of the house. The parties also stipulated that valuation depended upon whether the house is held to be personal property or real property, and that if it is personal property its true cash value is $1,300 and if it is real property, its true cash value is $6,820 as set by the assessor for January 1, 1970.

The lease of the land and other buildings was entered into in 1960. Its present term expires in August 1973. It provides that the lessee shall have the right to construct buildings on the property and that any such improvements shall be considered personal property and may be removed by the lessee at the termination of the lease. The house in question was moved onto the property from another location by the original lessee. At that time it contained only a sales office and a bedroom. It was placed on a pre-existing cement slab without being bolted or otherwise fastened down. The cement slab served both as support and as the interior floor. Later plaintiffs installed an unattached wooden floor and added a dining room and another bedroom, bringing the building’s overall measurements to about 27 feet by 35 feet. The house is used by one of the plaintiffs, Mr. Moore, as his family residence. The rest of the leased premises, including other buildings, is used in plaintiffs’ monument business. Mr. Moore testified that he plans to move the house to a new location at the termination of the lease.

The plaintiffs contend that, pursuant to the lease and the intention of the parties, their interest is sever- *577 able and the house is personal property because it is a “movable” chattel rather than an “improvement” to real property. Defendant contends that the house is not a “movable” even though it can and may be moved and that the house being placed and used upon land makes it an “improvement” to the land and thus real property.

As a general rule, a building is considered to be an improvement to the land and to have the character of real property. It is also well recognized that interested parties may agree that a structure placed on land may be considered personalty. Gen. Petroleum Corp. v. Schefter, 141 Or 349, 352, 16 P2d 645 (1933). 35 Am Jur2d, Fixtures, §§ 78, 80, 86 and 90; 41 Am Jur2d, Improvements, § 3. However, such an agreement does not cause a structure to become personalty for all purposes as to all persons. Warm Sprgs. Lbr. Co. v. Tax Com.,

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Bluebook (online)
4 Or. Tax 573, 1971 Ore. Tax LEXIS 42, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moore-paulson-v-department-of-revenue-ortc-1971.