Oakway Golf, Inc. v. Lane County Assessor

CourtOregon Tax Court
DecidedOctober 3, 2024
DocketTC-MD 240038G
StatusUnpublished

This text of Oakway Golf, Inc. v. Lane County Assessor (Oakway Golf, Inc. v. Lane County Assessor) 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
Oakway Golf, Inc. v. Lane County Assessor, (Or. Super. Ct. 2024).

Opinion

IN THE OREGON TAX COURT MAGISTRATE DIVISION Property Tax

OAKWAY GOLF, INC., ) ) Plaintiff, ) TC-MD 240038G ) v. ) ) LANE COUNTY ASSESSOR, ) ) Defendant. ) DECISION

On summary judgment, Plaintiff challenges whether Defendant properly changed the

taxpayer named in Account 1901865 (subject account) on the 2019–20, 2020–21, and 2022–23

rolls.

I. STATEMENT OF FACTS

Plaintiff owns a warehouse in Springfield that it leased to STEM Holdings, Inc., in 2016

for use as a marijuana grow facility. (Ptf’s Mot Summ J at 5; Def’s Mot Dismiss, Ex B at 1.) In

2019, in consultation with Plaintiff, Defendant established the subject account as an

improvements-only account for the interior improvements within Plaintiff’s warehouse. (Ptf’s

Mot Summ J at 5; Def’s Response at 3.) At that time, Defendant placed the subject account in

the name of STEM Holdings. (Id.) The property taxes on the subject account remained unpaid

until Defendant began foreclosure proceedings in 2023. (Ptf’s Response, Ex 1 at 2.)

While foreclosure was pending, STEM Holdings contacted Defendant and requested that

Plaintiff be substituted for it as the taxpayer named on the subject account. (Ptf’s Response, Ex

1 at 2.) Defendant’s internal emails show that a copy of Plaintiff’s lease agreement with STEM

Holdings was shared among Defendant’s staff on October 20, 2023. (Def’s Surreply, Ex D at 2.)

The next day, a member of Defendant’s staff emailed her interpretation of the lease and asked:

DECISION TC-MD 240038G 1 “Since the contract doesn’t actually include that the tenant is responsible for the taxes on the TI’s

[tenant improvements], should we change the name on the TI account back to Oakway Golf?”

(Id.) Additional emails followed, and Defendant herself (Mary Vuksich-Shafer) replied to her

staff with the following email on October 25, 2023: “I do think we should change the name on

the TI account (1901865) back to Oakway Golf.” (Id.)

On November 9, 2023, Defendant (through counsel) sent a letter to STEM Holdings and

to a retired lawyer who had formerly represented Plaintiff. (Ptf’s Response, Ex 1 at 2.) In that

letter, Defendant explained its interpretation of the lease and stated: “Assessment and Taxation

has reviewed the account and has determined that the improvement only account was not

appropriate. The account has been changed to reflect ownership of the account has reverted to

Oakway Golf, Inc.” (Id., Ex 1 at 3.) A 2023 tax statement enclosed with that letter billed

Plaintiff $56,176.07 for four years of tax, interest, foreclosure penalty, foreclosure costs, and

“clerical error” associated with the subject account. (Id., Ex 1 at 4–5.)

II. ANALYSIS

The issue is whether Defendant’s changes to the tax rolls satisfied the requirements of

ORS 311.205. 1 Plaintiff challenges Defendant’s action on two grounds: (1) that Defendant’s

direction to correct the roll did not comply with ORS 311.205(2)(a), and (2) that Plaintiff was not

given adequate notice.

A. Direction for the Correction

In general, tax assessors “may not make changes in the roll after September 25 of each

year” except to reduce property value, to settle an appeal, “or as otherwise provided by law.”

ORS 308.242(1). Defendant’s internal emails show that it changed the subject account no earlier

1 The court’s references to the Oregon Revised Statutes (ORS) are to 2021.

DECISION TC-MD 240038G 2 than October 25, 2023, so the change would be prohibited by ORS 308.242(1) unless some other

law provided Defendant with authority.

In its Response to Plaintiff’s Motion for Summary Judgment, Defendant asserts that it

“changed the name on the roll pursuant to ORS 311.205(1)(b)(C)(i)[.]” That provision allows

assessors to correct errors other than valuation judgment errors, including “[t]he elimination of

an assessment to one taxpayer of property belonging to another on the assessment date[.]” ORS

311.205(1)(b)(C)(i).

ORS 311.205(2)(a) describes the process for correcting the roll pursuant to ORS 311.205:

“The officer in charge of the roll shall make corrections with the assent and concurrence of the assessor or the department. The direction for the correction must be made in writing and state the type of error and the statutory authority for the correction. The officer may correct the roll for any year or years not exceeding five years prior to the last certified roll.”

ORS 311.205(2)(a) (emphasis added). Thus, the statute’s terms require that a direction to correct

the roll be written and contain two elements: (1) a statement of the error type, and (2) a statement

of the statutory authority for the correction.

In the present case, the direction for the correction was written; it occurred in the

assessor’s email. As Defendant acknowledges in its surreply, nowhere in that email or in the

string of emails to which that email replied was there a statement of the statutory authority for

correcting the roll. The direction therefore does not comply with ORS 311.205(2)(a).

Defendant “strongly disagrees with any notion that failure to include a citation to a statute

in an internal communication will expressly invalidate the directive and subsequent action taken

to correct the name on the roll to the accurate owner.” (Def’s Surreply at 5.) Defendant does not

justify that disagreement with the support of a statute or other source of law.

Defendant’s “strong[] disagree[ment]” here evokes the position of the Department of

DECISION TC-MD 240038G 3 Revenue in Preble v. Department of Revenue, 331 Or 320, 14 P3d 613 (2000). When the

department intends to assess an income tax deficiency after an examination or audit, it is required

by statute to give taxpayers notice containing the following information:

“Except as provided in subsection (3) of this section, the notice shall:

“(a) State the reason for each adjustment;

“(b) Give a reference to the statute, regulation or department ruling upon which the adjustment is based; and

“(c) Be certified by the department that the adjustments are made in good faith and not for the purpose of extending the period of assessment.”

ORS 305.265(2). In Preble, the department’s notice to the taxpayer had omitted the third

component, the certificate of good faith. Preble, 331 Or at 324. The department argued that its

notice remained valid, even though it lacked the certificate. Id. Our Supreme Court disagreed

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Related

Preble v. Department of Revenue
14 P.3d 613 (Oregon Supreme Court, 2000)

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Oakway Golf, Inc. v. Lane County Assessor, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oakway-golf-inc-v-lane-county-assessor-ortc-2024.