Multnomah County v. Department of Revenue

15 Or. Tax 5, 1999 Ore. Tax LEXIS 2
CourtOregon Tax Court
DecidedJanuary 26, 1999
DocketTC 4282
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 15 Or. Tax 5 (Multnomah County 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
Multnomah County v. Department of Revenue, 15 Or. Tax 5, 1999 Ore. Tax LEXIS 2 (Or. Super. Ct. 1999).

Opinion

*7 CARL N. BYERS, Judge.

Plaintiffs (county) appeal from Defendant Department of Revenue’s (the department) Opinion and Order holding that historic property shall be reclassified at its assessed value at the time of reapplication, rather than at its real market value. County claims that ORS 358.505 1 and subsequent legislation make it clear that real market value is to be used for the second-frozen assessment period. Taxpayers intervened and the matter was submitted to the court on cross motions for summary judgment.

FACTS

Unidentified prior owners of the subject property had it classified and specially assessed as a historic property for a 15-year period ending June 30, 1996. Under ORS 358.505, the value is specially assessed or frozen for 15 years. Intervenor Hawaii T & S Enterprises, Inc. (Hawaii) purchased the property during this frozen-assessment period. 2

By 1995, the Americans with Disabilities Act, and laws and standards concerning energy conservation and seismic safety, required significant additional investments in commercial properties. Acknowledging this, the legislature amended ORS 358.505 and provided for an additional 15-year special-assessment period for historic commercial properties. Hawaii applied for reclassification and special assessment for a second 15-year period effective beginning July 1, 1996. The county assessor approved the application for special assessment but determined that the taxable value, which would become the frozen value, should be the real market value of the property at the time of reapplication. Therefore, the assessor placed the 1995-96 real market value of $1,530,000 on the tax roll. Intervenors contend that the specially assessed or frozen value should be $391,900, the assessed value at the time of reapplication.

*8 ISSUE

Is the specially assessed value for the second 15-year period to be the assessed value at the time of reapplication or the real market value at the time of reapplication?

ANALYSIS

Beginning in 1975, the legislature declared that as a matter of policy, it is in the best interest of the state to preserve historic properties. It has since further declared that to the extent special assessment encourages the preservation of historic properties “it creates a positive partnership” between the public and the private owners. ORS 358.475.

Initially, if a property was classified as historic property and approved for special assessment, then the specially assessed value of the property for 15 years was “the assessed value of the property at the time application under ORS 358.485 was made.” ORS 358.505(1) (1985). Inasmuch as ORS 308.232 required property to be assessed at 100 percent of its true cash value, the assessed value would have been the true cash value on the roll at the time the application was filed. The statute did not require the assessor to reappraise the property as of the time of application.

The 1995 Legislature made a number of changes to the historic-property statutes. Before 1995, a property classified as historic was not entitled to any other exemptions or special assessments, although it could obtain special historic property assessment more than once. See ORS 358.540 (1993). In 1995, those provisions were reversed. ORS 358.540(1) now provides that historic property “shall be” entitled to any other exemptions or special exemptions provided by law. However, ORS 358.540(2) provides that property that has received special assessment “for 15 years is not again eligible for special assessment under ORS 358.475 to 358.545.” The only exception to the latter rule is that commercial property can “reapply under ORS 358.487 for one additional 15-year period of special assessment * * *.” 3 ORS 358.540(3)(a).

*9 At the time Hawaii reapplied for special assessment, ORS 358.505(l)(b) clearly provided that:

“* * * the county assessor shall, for 15 consecutive assessment years after the date of the filing of the reapplication, value the property * * * at the assessed value of the property at the time reapplication under ORS 358.540(3) was made.” (Emphasis added.)

Under that language, if there was not a hiatus between the two 15-year periods, then the assessed value for the second period would be the same as that for the first period. That conclusion follows because the “assessed value” at the time of reapplication would have been the frozen assessed value for the prior period. If there had been a hiatus between the two periods of special assessment, then the assessed value could be either the real market value or some other specially assessed value.

That relatively clear administrative direction turned cloudy with the adoption of Measure 50 in 1997. That measure adopted Article XI, section 11, of the Oregon Constitution, imposing new limits on property taxes. For the tax year beginning July 1, 1997, Measure 50 imposed a new maximum assessed value equal to the property’s 1995 real market value, less 10 percent. The maximum assessed value could not thereafter increase by more than 3 percent per year. Also, the property’s assessed value could never exceed its real market value. Or Const, Art XI, § ll(l)(f).

In 1997, the legislature enacted implementing legislation establishing maximum assessed values for tax years after the 1997-98 tax year. ORS 308.146

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Related

Waldo Block Partners v. Motion for Summary Jud.
16 Or. Tax 33 (Oregon Tax Court, 2002)

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Bluebook (online)
15 Or. Tax 5, 1999 Ore. Tax LEXIS 2, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/multnomah-county-v-department-of-revenue-ortc-1999.