Oregon Portland Cement Co. v. State Tax Commission

369 P.2d 765, 230 Or. 389, 1962 Ore. LEXIS 295
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 21, 1962
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 369 P.2d 765 (Oregon Portland Cement Co. v. State Tax Commission) 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
Oregon Portland Cement Co. v. State Tax Commission, 369 P.2d 765, 230 Or. 389, 1962 Ore. LEXIS 295 (Or. 1962).

Opinion

GOODWIN, J.

The Oregon State Tax Commission appeals, and the taxpayer cross-appeals, from an order made by the circuit court for Clackamas County which directed the refund of certain property taxes assessed and paid for the tax year 1958-59.

The taxpayer is the Oregon Portland Cement Company, a corporation, and the property in question is the taxpayer’s cement plant in Oswego. The parties have agreed generally on the replacement cost of the plant, less functional obsolescence and deterioration. *391 The Commission seeks to treat this as the final value to which the assessment formula should he applied. The taxpayer seeks to have the 'Commission’s values further reduced by a deduction based upon the taxpayer’s theory of economic obsolescence. The trial court allowed a part, but not all, of the requested reduction in value. The Commission appealed on the ground that any reduction for “economic obsolescence” was improper. The taxpayer cross-appealed, asserting that it did not receive all the relief to which it was entitled.

When the plant was built, in 1915, virtually all the raw material was transported to the plant by the Southern Pacific Company from calcium carbonate (lime) and argillaceous ('clay-bearing) rock sources served by that carrier. In recent years, the principal source of lime has been the taxpayer’s quarry at Lime, Oregon, near Baker. Lime is still shipped by rail. The lime ears now arrive in the Portland yards of the Union Pacific Railroad Company and are then delivered to the Oswego plant by the Southern Pacific, the connecting carrier for that haul. Argillaceous rock, as needed, is hauled via Southern Pacific, and can be disregarded for the purposes of this appeal.

The taxpayer asserts that there would be an annual saving in transportation costs of some $140,000 if its plant were to be removed from Oswego to a hypothetical site in the St. Johns district of Portland. For the purposes of this appeal we accept, without approving, the taxpayer’s figures. The potential saving is computed upon present volumes at carload rates, including switching charges, published by the respective carriers. In the hypothetical Portland location, there would be savings in both freight and car-handling charges. The taxpayer contends that the disadvantage *392 of the Oswego location, 'as compared with the St. Johns site, would lower the price a purchaser would be willing to pay for the assessed property if it were for sale; hence, economic obsolescence.

Accordingly, this operating disadvantage should, or so the argument runs, be capitalized and subtracted from the replacement-cost-less-depreciation value (Commission’s valuation) to obtain the market value of the property. Thus, using a capitalization factor of ten, the taxpayer says $1,400,000 should be subtracted from the $4,678,782 at which the Commission appraised the plant.

The problem lies not so much in deciding whether a taxpayer may obtain relief because of true economic obsolescence in an appropriate case, but rather in determining whether the facts of the case at bar justify the taxpayer’s unusual, if not unique, theory of economic obsolescence. If shown to be relevant in the search for the market value of a given piece of property, real or personal, a deduction for economic obsolescence is justified. Oregon State Tax Commission Ad Valorem Property Tax Regulations (hereafter referred to as Regs.), Art. 8205.1 B-l-b-(2) (1960).

Location ordinarily plays an important part in' fixing the value of real property and fixtures, but does not ordinarily affect the value of movable personal property. However, for the purposes of this case, we shall assume, without deciding, that the property in question is of a type whose proper assessment requires a consideration of its location.

Any discussion of the taxpayer’s theory requires a review of methods of valuation. The basic test is market value. Regs. Art. 8205.1 A; Art. 8205.2 A-3. *393 There is, of course, no established market for cement plants, so some secondary method of arriving at a market value must be used. Both parties have agreed on what the Regulations call the cost approach as the basic valuation method. Regs. Art. 8205.1 B; Art. 8205.2 A-3. This method entails estimating the cost of replacing the entire property and then reducing the resulting figure by the amount of depreciation of the improvements and personal property. As noted above, the Commission contends that there is no economic obsolescence in the present case and that, therefore, the agreed upon figure for replacement cost less deterioration and functional obsolescence is the proper assessment value.

The cost approach does not purport to take into consideration the income-producing potential in arriving at the value of a given property. The Commission sought, however, to obtain income information to answer the taxpayer’s contention of economic obsolescence. The taxpayer successfully resisted this demand in the trial court, contending that its income was irrelevant. As the authorities cited by the taxpayer point out, the general rule is that the capitalization of the income of a going concern is not a proper method of assessing its real and personal property for ad valorem tax purposes. It is very difficult if not impossible to segregate income attributable to the real property and personal property being assessed, to say nothing of trying to make a proper allowance for income resulting from intangibles such as good will and management. There are, however, two exceptions to *394 the general rule: (1) when an income capitalization figure will serve to offset an overvaluation of improvements; Public Market Co. v. Portland, 179 Or 367, 390-393, 170 P2d 586 (1946), approved in State of Oregon v. Cerruti et al., 188 Or 103, 109-110, 214 P2d 346, 349, 16 ALR2d 1105, 1110 (1950); Assessors of Quincy v. Boston Consol. Gas Co., 309 Mass 60, 34 NE 2d 623 (1941); and (2) when the income attributable to the property in question can be segregated with reasonable certainty, e.g., rental income. State of Oregon v. Cerruti et al., supra (farm income); Assessors of Quincy v. Boston Consol. Gas Co., supra, 309 Mass at 65, 34 NE2d at 626 (dictum). In the trial court the Commission did not show that its demand for general income figures fell within either of these exceptions, and thus the Commission was not entitled to such information at the time it was demanded. It does not follow, however, that the taxpayer’s success in keeping out evidence of its net income helps the taxpayer prove its case.

Only if freight costs are an income (expense) factor directly attributable to location could it be argued that higher income because of lower freight costs is relevant in arriving at the market value of a given productive property. Beginning with the general rule that business income is not a reliable indicator of property value, we recognize an exception when the net income is directly related to the property, e.g., net farm income, as in State of Oregon v. Cerruti et al., supra.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Lincoln County v. Department of Revenue
12 Or. Tax 548 (Oregon Tax Court, 1993)
Agripac, Inc. v. Department of Revenue
11 Or. Tax 371 (Oregon Tax Court, 1990)
Department of Revenue v. D. R. Johnson Lumber Co.
617 P.2d 603 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1980)
Southern Oregon Broadcasting Co. v. Department of Revenue
597 P.2d 795 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1979)
Oregon Portland Cement Co. v. Department of Revenue
8 Or. Tax 78 (Oregon Tax Court, 1979)
Publishers Paper Co. v. Department of Revenue
5 Or. Tax 346 (Oregon Tax Court, 1973)
Multnomah County v. Department of Revenue
4 Or. Tax 383 (Oregon Tax Court, 1971)
Reynolds Metals Co. v. Department of Revenue
477 P.2d 888 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1970)
Portland General Electric Co. v. State Tax Commission
437 P.2d 827 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1968)
Georgia-Pacific Corp. v. State Tax Commission
390 P.2d 337 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1964)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
369 P.2d 765, 230 Or. 389, 1962 Ore. LEXIS 295, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oregon-portland-cement-co-v-state-tax-commission-or-1962.