Mt. Sexton Properties, Inc. v. Department of Revenue

760 P.2d 1320, 306 Or. 465
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 30, 1988
DocketOTC 2510; SC S34654
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 760 P.2d 1320 (Mt. Sexton Properties, Inc. 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
Mt. Sexton Properties, Inc. v. Department of Revenue, 760 P.2d 1320, 306 Or. 465 (Or. 1988).

Opinion

*467 JONES, J.

This case presents the question whether plaintiff-taxpayers must receive specific notice of the judicial review of the Department of Revenue’s determination of forest land values before those values can be used by county assessors to determine the property tax assessment for plaintiffs’ land. Plaintiffs claim that the statutory scheme of notice and the notice of judicial review of the Department’s valuations provided through publication were inadequate, so that an application of the Department’s property values to plaintiffs’ land is a violation of plaintiffs’ due process 1 rights when that application comes after judicial review without personal notice to the plaintiffs.

Plaintiffs filed an action seeking declaratory judgment in the Oregon Tax Court, claiming that ORS 321.352(5) was unconstitutional on several grounds. The Tax Court denied plaintiffs’ request for declaratory relief. 10 OTR 467 (1987). Plaintiffs appealed portions of the Tax Court decision to this court. We affirm the decision of the Tax Court.

FACTS

Plaintiffs own several parcels of forest land in Josephine County. Prior to 1977, plaintiffs, or their predecessors in ownership, had received notices of and had paid property taxes on their land. At that time, plaintiffs’ land and timber were taxed on an ad valorem basis, as was all other similar forest land in western Oregon. Former ORS 321.622 {repealed by Or Laws 1977, ch 892, § 51).

Raising the Issue

The following events combined to raise the issue in the present case:

1. Early in 1977, the Department increased the valuation of forest land in western Oregon. These values were used by local assessors to determine the assessed value of forest land.

*468 2. Plaintiffs, on April 28,1977, and many other forest landowners throughout western Oregon at similar times, received notices of land valuation increases leading to significant assessment increases. 2

3. Plaintiffs did not appeal any of these increases. Plaintiffs paid the taxes ultimately assessed against their property.

4. Many other taxpayers appealed the forest land valuations established by the Department.

5. Responding to widespread concern, the Oregon legislature established a special process for appealing the Department’s valuations. Pursuant to this statutory appeal process, the other taxpayers’ appeals of the Department’s valuations were consolidated and given expeditious consideration at all levels.

6. Notices of these consolidated special appeals were published in newspapers of general circulation in each county in western Oregon where the Department’s valuations were being appealed. This included Josephine County, the locus of plaintiffs’ property. 3

*469 7. During the prosecution of these special statutory appeals, the original valuation change was suspended and, therefore, the valuation of plaintiffs’ land was not changed. For the tax years that passed during the special appeals, plaintiffs, or their designated agents, received annual notices of valuation and assessment. The taxes were promptly paid without appeal.

8. The appeal of the Department’s valuation changes for all forest land in western Oregon was resolved by this court’s decision in Publishers Paper v. Dept. of Revenue, 292 Or 836, 644 P2d 1089 (1982), leading to a reduction in the Department’s original valuations, but allowing some increase above the valuation applied to plaintiffs’ land during the appeal of the Department’s action.

9. The Josephine County Assessor, using the values determined by the Department and modified by this court in Publishers Paper, sent plaintiffs a notice of recomputed tax, including amounts owed for the tax years 1977-81.

10. After numerous delays, plaintiffs sought a declaratory judgment from the Tax Court that applying the recomputed tax would violate plaintiffs’ due process rights.

The question before the court is made complex by a mass of intertwined statutes and procedures. 4 Plaintiffs’ basic *470 claim is that the increased valuations cannot be applied to their property for previous tax years because they were not given adequate notice of an opportunity to join litigation concerning these valuation increases. Plaintiffs assert that inadequate notice would prevent the application of the valuation increases for previous years, because application with inadequate notice would violate plaintiffs’ due process rights.

Legislative Background

The controversy in this case concerns the second of two bills the legislature adopted in 1977 to deal with the concerns generated by the Department’s increase in 1977 valuations. The first bill, SB 1077 (Or Laws 1977, ch 753), created a special appeal process for those who sought to challenge the Department’s valuations of forest land. The second bill, HB 3274 (Or Laws 1977, ch 892, codified at ORS 321.257 to 321.372), repealed the first version, but adopted most of the special appeal provisions. It is this process of special appeal that is the subject of controversy in the present case.

The 1977 valuation increases led to a great number of appeals being filed. The prospect of so many appeals, and the certainly even greater number of dissatisfied taxpayers, led the legislature to conclude that the ordinary method of appealing assessments would not be adequate to ensure a rapid and comprehensive review of the Department’s actions. The legislature therefore supplemented the regular appeal process by providing for a special appeal of the Department’s determination of values. It is important to note that the special appeal process did not concern the assessment of individual parcels of forest land or alter the existing method of individual *471 appeals of tax assessments. The special appeals were designed only to test the validity of the Department’s land valuation for each type of forest land classification.

Because this case concerns the process of land valuation, we begin with a brief description of the process before and after the changes wrought by the 1977 legislation. Prior to 1978, ORS 321.622

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
760 P.2d 1320, 306 Or. 465, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mt-sexton-properties-inc-v-department-of-revenue-or-1988.