Niemela v. Dept. of Rev.

CourtOregon Tax Court
DecidedMay 2, 2019
DocketTC-MD 180091R
StatusUnpublished

This text of Niemela v. Dept. of Rev. (Niemela v. Dept. of Rev.) 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
Niemela v. Dept. of Rev., (Or. Super. Ct. 2019).

Opinion

IN THE OREGON TAX COURT MAGISTRATE DIVISION Income Tax

CHAD A. NIEMELA ) and MICHAELA M. NIEMELA, ) ) Plaintiffs, ) TC-MD 180091R ) v. ) ) DEPARTMENT OF REVENUE, ) State of Oregon, ) ) Defendant. ) FINAL DECISION1

Plaintiffs appealed Defendant’s Notice of Deficiency, dated December 20, 2017, for the

2014 tax year. A telephonic trial was held on August 2, 2018. Kevin Brown, CPA, represented

Plaintiffs. Chad Niemela (Niemela) testified on behalf of Plaintiffs. Stacie Rush appeared and

testified on behalf of Defendant. Plaintiffs’ Exhibits 1 to 11 were admitted into evidence.

Defendant’s Exhibits A to I were admitted into evidence.

I. STATEMENT OF FACTS

During the 2014 tax year Niemela was a resident of Washington and employed by the

Port of Portland as a dredge boat engineer. For approximately half the year (May 28, 2014

through October 25, 2014) Niemela worked on dredges at various locations on the Columbia

River between Oregon and Washington. During dredging season, he worked aboard the dredge

on the Columbia River five days a week and often performed maintenance and other tasks for

several dredge boats docked on the Oregon shore during weekends. During the off-season he

performed maintenance and duties on the dredges while they were docked on the Willamette

1 This Final Decision incorporates without change the court’s Decision, entered April 11, 2019. The court did not receive a statement of costs and disbursements within 14 days after its Decision was entered. See Tax Court Rule–Magistrate Division (TCR–MD) 16 C(1).

FINAL DECISION TC-MD 180091R 1 River or in a dry dock in Portland. Plaintiffs’ 2014 Oregon tax return reported $32,381 in

Oregon source wages based on the theory that part of Niemela’s income during the dredging

season was exempt from taxation in this state pursuant to 46 USC §11108(b) known as the

“Waterway Exclusion Act.” (Ex F at 3, 6.)

During the dredging season, Niemela drove his personal vehicle from his home in

Cathlamet, Washington, to various locations in Oregon and Washington where the dredging

operations were ongoing and took a deduction of $17,682 for his travel miles. Niemela testified

that he kept a daily log of his miles, but did not include the log in the exhibits presented to the

court. Instead, Niemela presented a hand-written log of miles that was based on the employer’s

records of Niemela’s specific work locations and activities along with an employer printout of

his daily work pay, location, and activity codes. Niemela’s travel miles are as follows:

Date from Date to location miles / days total Jan. 1, 2014 Jun 18, 2014 Portland yard 146.8 x 123 days 18,056

Jun 19, 2014 Aug 4, 2014 Vista 22.4 x 47 days 1,053

Aug 5, 2014 Aug 13, 2014 Bradwood 124.4 x 9 days 1,120

Aug 14. 2014 Sept 11. 2014 Willowgrove 44.6 x 29 days 1,293

Sept 12, 2014 Nov 7, 2014 Tongue Point 114.6 x 57 days 6,532

Nov 8, 2014 Nov 30, 2014 Woodland 97.2 x 16 days 1,555

Dec 1, 2014 Dec 31, 2014 [unreadable] 63.4 x 31 days 1,965

Rush testified that she is employed by Defendant and conducted the audit of Plaintiffs’

2014 Oregon return. She testified that only wages Niemela earned while he was aboard a vessel

operating in the navigable waters of more than one state (i.e., the Columbia River) were exempt

from Oregon taxation. She testified that the remainder of his earnings were not exempt. She

FINAL DECISION TC-MD 180091R 2 testified that it was difficult to determine what work Niemela performed on a daily basis. Using

a summary of work locations and pay codes provided by Niemela’s employer, she determined

that he was primarily on the dredge on weekdays during the dredging season and exempted those

wages from Niemela’s Oregon income. She further determined that Niemela’s work on

weekends during the dredging season consisted of performing maintenance and other tasks on

the dredges while they were docked on the Oregon side of the Columbia River and were not

exempt. She testified that there was no risk of duplication of taxes as it was clear Niemela

worked on the Oregon side of the river on weekends. Rush created a spreadsheet of Niemela’s

daily work during the dredge season and added the hours he worked on weekends during the

dredging season along with his off-season dry dock work, and increased Niemela’s Oregon

source wages to $75,140. (Ex C at 1, 2.)

Rush testified that she denied Niemela’s travel expenses because he did not provide a

mileage log and did not substantiate the travel. (Ex H at 24.) Additionally, Rush found Niemela

did not show that any temporary work locations he traveled to were outside his “normal

metropolitan area.” (Id. citing Rev Rul 99-7.)

II. ANALYSIS

The primary issue in the case is whether Niemela’s earnings from work he performed as a

dredge boat engineer are exempt from Oregon income tax. Defendant’s position is that

ORS 316.127(10)2 and 46 USC §11108(b), the Waterway Exclusion Act, only exempt income

that Niemela earned while he was actively operating a dredge on the Columbia River and all

other work he performed in Oregon was taxable by this state. Plaintiffs’ position is that only

wages earned while he was at dry dock in Oregon are taxable in this state and the remaining

2 The court’s references to the Oregon Revised Statutes (ORS) are to 2013.

FINAL DECISION TC-MD 180091R 3 wages, even when the dredge was docked on the Oregon side of the Columbia River, are exempt

from taxation in this state by the Waterway Exclusion Act. A secondary issue in this case is

whether Niemela is entitled to a deduction for miles he drove from his home to the Portland Yard

and various work locations along the Columbia and Willamette rivers.

Oregon generally imposes a tax upon the income of nonresidents earned from Oregon

sources. ORS 316.127. The Commerce Clause of the United States Constitution empowers

Congress to limit states from taxing the income of interstate workers. US Const, Art 1, § 8.

Congress has done so in several instances, limiting the power of states to tax the income of

nonresidents such as railroad carriers (49 USC § 11502); motor carriers (49 USC § 14503), and

waterway workers (46 USC § 11108). Under those statutes, qualifying employees who perform

regularly assigned duties in more than one state may only be taxed in their state of residence. Id.

The statutes were adopted to relieve both employers and employees from the burden of paying,

respectively, employment and income taxes in multiple states. S Rep No 91–1261, 91st Cong,

(1970) 5039–40 (discussing multiple state tax withholding burden on both employers and

employees); see Butler v. Dept. of Rev., 14 OTR 195 (1997); Etter v. Dept. of Rev., 360 Or 46,

52, 377 P3d 561 (2016).

The primary issue in this case turns on the meaning of a federal statute. “In construing

and applying a federal tax statute, federal law, rather than state law, governs.” Etter 360 Or

at 52. (citations omitted). “In interpreting a statute, the federal courts may examine the statute's

text, its structure, and its legislative history. See, e.g., Dept. of Revenue of Or. v. ACF Industries,

510 US 332, 339–46, 114 S Ct 843, 127 L Ed 2d 165 (1994) (examining text, structure, and

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Commissioner v. Flowers
326 U.S. 465 (Supreme Court, 1946)
Julian v. Department of Revenue
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Glenn Bogue v. Commissioner of Internal Reven
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Julian v. Department of Revenue
17 Or. Tax 384 (Oregon Tax Court, 2004)
Butler v. Department of Revenue
14 Or. Tax 195 (Oregon Tax Court, 1997)
Etter v. Department of Revenue
377 P.3d 561 (Oregon Supreme Court, 2016)

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