Penn Phillips Lands, Inc. v. Commission

3 Or. Tax 399
CourtOregon Tax Court
DecidedMarch 21, 1969
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 3 Or. Tax 399 (Penn Phillips Lands, Inc. v. Commission) 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
Penn Phillips Lands, Inc. v. Commission, 3 Or. Tax 399 (Or. Super. Ct. 1969).

Opinion

Edward H. Howell, Judge.

This case is plaintiff’s second appeal to the Tax Court. The details and background of plaintiff’s development, promotion and sale of land in Christmas Valley in the northern part of Lake County are set forth in the decisions of this court, 2 OTR 373 (1966), and the Oregon Supreme Court, 247 Or 380, 430 P2d 349 (1967).

In the former case involving the tax year 1965-66 the connty assessor, after completing a reappraisal of the southern half of Lake Connty, increased the value of plaintiff’s lands in the Christmas Valley area of the *400 northern portion of Lake County to $60 per acre for January 1, 1965. The Supreme Court found that the evidence supported this value. However, none of the other private ownerships in the northern half of the county were reappraised by the assessor and remained on the rolls at their 1957 values of $1.50 to $5.00 per acre. Their lands were similar in soil, vegetation and topography to plaintiff’s land. In addition other promoters had paid $24.50 per acre for large tracts. The Supreme Court found that the “action of the assessor in reappraising only the land of this one taxpayer, while leaving identical private land in the surrounding desert appraised at values of from $1.50 to $5.00 per acre, resulted in a systematic denial of uniformity to this taxpayer * *

The Court held that plaintiff was entitled to a refund for 1965. (See appeal on Decree on Mandate, 251 Or 583, 446 P2d 670 (1968)).

Begarding the reappraisal of the northern part of the county the Supreme Court stated:

“For tax years after 1965, we assume that the assessor has completed the reappraisal program concerning which testimony was given in the record, and that when the northern half of the county was reappraised, substantial uniformity of assessment was achieved. * * *” Penn Phillips Lands v. Tax Com., 247 Or at 388.

In the instant case the plaintiff contends that the assessment procedures which the assessor used for the tax years 1966 and 1967 again resulted in discrimination against plaintiff and that a lack of uniformity existed for 1966 and 1967 as it did for 1965. The commission disagreed and plaintiff appealed.

The tax commission introduced into evidence a new *401 valuation schedule used by the assessor for the period beginning January 1, 1966. The schedule applied to all the privately-owned land in 21 townships in the Christmas Valley-Fort Rock area of the northern part of Lake County. The tract size and values shown in the schedule were:

5 acre tracts $150 per acre
10 and 20 acre tracts 100 per acre
40 and 80 acre tracts 60 per acre
Over 80 acres 25 per acre

The schedule also stated: “Operating farms and ranches in the area or that extend into the area were appraised on the new 1965 farm values.”

At the trial the plaintiff introduced worksheets showing the number of acres and the assessor’s total and per acre valuations of all ownerships in nine townships in the Christmas Valley-Fort Rock area. The list consists of several hundred ownerships and over 400 tax lots in the nine townships. The exhibits show that plaintiff is the record owner of land in all nine townships listed in the exhibits. Plaintiff is the record owner in 154 sections, owning over 80 acres in 131 sections and 80 acres or less in 23 sections.

The plaintiff contends that a lack of uniformity exists in three areas: (1) that the assessor applied the schedule to the other privately-owned lands in the Christmas Valley-Fort Rock area by grouping such lands into ownerships and applying the schedule based on the total acreage, but treated plaintiff’s lands as separate tax lots resulting in a higher valuation per tax lot; (2) that the assessor did not apply the schedule to other subdividers in the area in the same manner as lie applied it to the plaintiff; and (3) that the assessor failed to follow his own schedule and valued *402 some land in the area at rangeland value of $4.00 and $7.00 per acre and valued plaintiff’s similar land on a tax lot basis.

Regarding the plaintiff’s first contention, the assessor’s schedule is based on valuations ranging from $150 for 5-acre tracts to $25 for over 80-acre tracts. Where the lands of other individuals were segregated into different tax lots the assessor applied the schedule. However, where such lands, regardless of the number of acres involved, were assessed as one tax lot and the total acreage exceeded 80 acres the lands were valued at $25 per acre.

Where plaintiff was the record owner of over 80 acres its lands were valued on a tax lot basis resulting in values ranging from $150 for 5-acre tracts to $100 for 10 and 20-acre tracts and $60 for 40 and 80-acre tracts. For example, in Section 5 of Township 27 South, Range 19 EWM, plaintiff is the record owner of three 80-acre tracts or a total of 240 acres. The assessor valued this property at $60 per acre instead of $25 per acre for ownerships of over 80 acres under the schedule. In the same section, 319.72 acres adjoining the plaintiff’s land were valued at $25 per acre on the basis of one tax lot of over 80 acres under the assessor’s schedule. According to the exhibits the assessor followed this procedure of combining the acreage in over 85% of the tax lots involved. The plaintiff is correct and the application of the schedule results in a lack of uniformity.

A more substantial discrepancy exists between the valuation of plaintiff’s land and land of other owners in the same area who also have subdivided and sold or offered subdivision land for sale. Like plaintiff, most of their sales were by unrecorded contracts with the title remaining in the name of the vendors. The *403 evidence showed that at least 19 other owners in the nine townships were subdividing and selling, or attempting to sell, their land in various sized parcels. In almost every instance where the ownership in the section exceeded 80 acres, the land was valued on a total acreage basis although the other subdividers had offered for sale or sold their land in parcels ranging from 5 acres to over 80 acres. A good example of this discrepancy is the assessor’s treatment of 371.09 acres in one tax lot in Sections 7 and 18 of Township 27 South, Range 16 EWM, owned by a K. 0. Bnick. There was testimony that the owner had platted, subdivided and sold various parcels on contract. The assessor valued this entire acreage at $25 per acre for parcels over 80 acres. By contrast, also in Section 18 the plaintiff is the record owner of 160 acres in eight 20-acre tracts which the assessor valued at $100 per acre.

The tax commission argues that the county assessor was justified in assessing plaintiff’s property on a tax lot basis instead of applying the schedule to the total acreage because in 1964 the plaintiff requested that its property be assessed according to individual tax lots.

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Related

Penn Phillips Lands, Inc. v. Department of Revenue
468 P.2d 646 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1970)
Westward Properties, Inc. v. Department of Revenue
3 Or. Tax 496 (Oregon Tax Court, 1969)

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3 Or. Tax 399, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/penn-phillips-lands-inc-v-commission-ortc-1969.