Pacificorp Power Marketing, Inc. v. Department of Revenue

131 P.3d 725, 340 Or. 204, 2006 Ore. LEXIS 178
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 16, 2006
DocketTC 4592; SC S51403
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 131 P.3d 725 (Pacificorp Power Marketing, 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
Pacificorp Power Marketing, Inc. v. Department of Revenue, 131 P.3d 725, 340 Or. 204, 2006 Ore. LEXIS 178 (Or. 2006).

Opinion

*206 CARSON, J.

In this property tax case, we are called upon to decide whether appellant, PacifiCorp Power Marketing, Inc. (PPM), 1 is subject to ad valorem taxation by the Department of Revenue (department) based upon its contract rights relating to a municipally owned electricity cogeneration facility (facility). The department assessed the facility and taxed PPM for the 2002-03 tax year, pursuant to ORS 308.505 to 308.665 (2001) (central assessment statutes), after determining that PPM had “used” the facility, for purposes of those statutes, through its various contracts with the City of Klamath Falls (the city). 2 PPM challenged the assessment in the Oregon Tax Court, where both parties moved for summary judgment. The Tax Court granted the department’s motion and denied PPM’s motion, concluding that the applicable central assessment statutes, set out below, allowed the department to assess PPM’s contract rights in the facility as intangible property. Pacificorp Power Marketing v. Dept. of Rev., 17 OTR 334 (2004). Taxpayer appealed to this court pursuant to ORS 305.445. For the reasons set forth below, we affirm the Tax Court’s decision, but upon grounds different from those relied on by the Tax Court.

We take the following undisputed facts from the record. In 1985, the city, a tax-exempt municipal corporation, first issued revenue bonds for the purpose of building a hydroelectric facility. In the mid-1990s, after an unsuccessful attempt to form a partnership with another energy company, the city endeavored to construct a gas-fired electricity cogeneration facility. Toward that end, the city entered into two contracts with Pacific Klamath Energy, Inc. (PKE), an affiliate of PPM. 3 Pursuant to the first contract, PKE oversaw the *207 construction of the facility. The second contract provided that PKE would operate and maintain the facility following its construction. Construction of the facility began in 1999, after the city issued lien bonds to fond it. The city also signed two contracts with PacifiCorp Group Holdings Company (PacifiCorp Group), PPM’s then-parent: a guarantee agreement for the lien bonds and a credit facility agreement. 4

At around the same time, the city also entered into four separate contracts with PPM: (1) a management contract; (2) a power-purchase contract; (3) a power-brokerage contract; and (4) a fuel supply and services contract. Under the management contract, PPM managed the facility as an independent contractor for a renewable term of 20 years. PPM also performed administrative work for the city, including preparation of the facility’s annual budget. PPM received a management fee from the city, and the city received the profits earned by the facility, if any. PPM also received a “Management Performance Incentive” for “achieving certain performance levels.”

The power-purchase contract required PPM to take or pay for 237.7 megawatts (MW), which was approximately 47 percent of the facility’s output of electric power and energy. The term of the power-purchase agreement was 30 years. In exchange for the percentage of purchased power, PPM agreed to pay certain fees to the city, including a “monthly demand charge,” which was PPM’s allocation of the capital and interest due on the revenue bonds used to construct the facility.

Under the power-brokerage contract, PPM brokered the sale of the remaining 53 percent of the facility’s power. PPM could not purchase any of the brokered power. The city paid PPM a fixed monthly brokering fee, plus an incentive bonus. PPM distributed all revenues from PPM-brokered sales to the city.

Finally, under the fuel supply and services contract, PPM provided the fuel to be burned in the facilitys turbines. *208 The city paid PPM a “fuel management fee” and monthly charges for the fuel supply. If PPM failed to supply the amount of fuel required, the city could obtain it elsewhere.

Based upon the above-described contracts between the city and PPM, PKE, and PacifiCorp Group, the department imposed a property tax on PPM for the 2002-03 tax year. The department asserted its authority under the central assessment statutes, ORS 308.505 to 308.665 (2001), and taxed PPM based upon its “use” of the facility. The department determined PPM’s assessable interest to be 47 percent of the cost of the construction of the facility. That percentage corresponds to the allocation to PPM of the cost of the facility and to the percentage of the facility’s power purchased by PPM, as set out in PPM’s power-purchase contract with the city. 5

PPM appealed the department’s assessment to the Tax Court, challenging the department’s conclusion that it had any taxable interest in the facility. PPM argued that its contracts with the city did not bestow any ownership, use, or possessory interests in the facility. PPM also challenged the department’s attempt to include PKE’s and PacifiCorp Group’s separate contracts with the city as PPM’s property. Additionally, PPM claimed that the department’s assessment violated the constitutional requirements of uniformity and equalization in taxation under Article I, section 1, and Article IX, section 1, of the Oregon Constitution, because the department had taxed none of the three other purchasers of the facility’s electricity. 6 PPM did not challenge either the amount of the assessment or the department’s method of valuation.

The parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment. The Tax Court granted the department’s motion and denied PPM’s motion. Pacificorp Power Marketing, 17 OTR *209 at 347. The Tax Court defined the central legal question as follows: Does PPM “own, hold, or otherwise use some property, whether real or personal, tangible or intangible, so as to be assessable under the central assessment statutes,” or does PPM hold the facility under a lease or other interest less than a fee simple, so as to be assessable under ORS 307.110? 7 Id. at 337 (footnote omitted).

Although the department had imposed an ad valorem tax on PPM based upon PPM’s alleged use of the facility, the Tax Court concluded that PPM’s rights in the “constellation of contracts” themselves, apart from PPM’s alleged use of the facility, were intangible property rights that were taxable under the central assessment statutes. Id. at 340-41.

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Bluebook (online)
131 P.3d 725, 340 Or. 204, 2006 Ore. LEXIS 178, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pacificorp-power-marketing-inc-v-department-of-revenue-or-2006.