Perry v. State Tax Commission

2 Or. Tax 275, 1966 Ore. Tax LEXIS 54
CourtOregon Tax Court
DecidedJanuary 6, 1966
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2 Or. Tax 275 (Perry v. State Tax 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
Perry v. State Tax Commission, 2 Or. Tax 275, 1966 Ore. Tax LEXIS 54 (Or. Super. Ct. 1966).

Opinion

Edward H. Howell, Judge.

Plaintiffs filed this suit to set aside the defendant tax commission’s order directing plaintiffs to strike *276 certain real property from the 1963-64 Multnomah County assessment roll.

The City of Portland, acting through the Portland Development Commission (hereinafter referred to as the Development Commission), which was the Urban Renewal Agency for the City, is undertaking an urban renewal project known as the South Auditorium Urban Renewal Project. In carrying out this project the City became the owner of certain real property and determined to dispose of the project land by competitive bids for redevelopment of the area. The bid of Portland Center Redevelopment Corporation (hereinafter called the Redeveloper) was accepted. The contract between the Development Commission and the Re-developer provided for redevelopment of the area in three phases. The total price to be paid by the Re-developer was $4,100,000 'and $410,000 was paid as ■security at the time of the execution of the contract on April 8, 1963. (The Redeveloper assigned its interest in the contract to Portland Center Development Co., a partnership, the Intervenor herein.)

The Multnomah County Assessor placed part of the lands on the assessment roll for 1963-64. The Development Commission and the Redeveloper appealed to the defendant commission. The commission concluded that the property was not subject to real property taxes and ordered it stricken from the assessment roll. Plaintiffs then filed this suit in this court.

The plaintiffs contend the land is subject to real property taxes under the provisions of ORS 307.100. This statute provides:

“Lands held under a contract for the purchase thereof, belonging to the state or any institution or department thereof, or to any county, municipal *277 corporation or political 'subdivision of the state, together with the improvements thereon, shall be considered, for all purposes of taxation, as the real property of the person so holding the same. No deed to such lands shall be executed until all taxes and municipal charges are fully paid thereon. Any agreement whereby the lessee, vendee or tenant of any such lands may have any payment made or to be made by him applied on an agreed consideration for the purchase of such lands is a contract for the purchase thereof, within the meaning of this section.”

As of January 1, 1963, the property was owned by the Development Commission as the Urban Renewal Agency, and exempt from taxation. ORS 311.410(4) provides in substance that if exempt property is transferred between January 1 and June 30 to nonexempt property it shall become taxable. Subsection (1) of the same statute also provides that real property exempt from taxation on July 1 shall remain exempt for the ensuing fiscal year.

The main thrust of the plaintiffs’ argument is that the execution of the contract of April 8, 1963, between the Development Commission and the Redeveloper, plus the payment of the security deposit, constituted a vendor-purchaser land sale contract with the Redeveloper becoming the owner and holder of the land under the doctrine of equitable conversion. In Panushka v. Panushka, 221 Or 145, 149, 349 P2d 450 (1960), the court described an equitable conversion as follows:

“An equitable conversion, therefore, takes place when a contract for the sale of real property becomes binding upon the parties. Thenceforth, the purchaser of the land is deemed the equitable owner thereof, and the seller is considered the owner of the purchase price. Upon the execution of the eon- *278 tract, the two contracting parties change positions. The purchaser’s interest is ‘land’, and the right and interest conferred by the contract upon the vendor is ‘personal property,’ i.e., ownership of the right to receive the purchase money. * * *”

The court also set forth a test of an equitable conversion to be:

“A test as to the existence of a conversion under •an executory contract is the mutuality of the agreement, the purchaser agreeing to buy and the seller agreeing to sell, thereby vesting either party to such a contract with the right to specific performance. * '* *” 221 Or at 152. (Emphasis supplied.)

The Tax Commission, the Development Commission and the Redeveloper all argue that the contract of April 8,1963, is a special type of contract, that neither party could have maintained a suit for specific performance under the contract as the conditions existed on July 1, 1963, because of certain outstanding conditions precedent, and that the lands were not being “held” by the Redeveloper under the contract as required by ORS 307.100.

Before discussing the contract it should be noted that the transfer of the real property and the redevelopment of the area were to be consummated in three stages or phases. According to the testimony the redevelopment of the land was divided into phases because it was impossible to determine exactly how fast the local market could absorb the apartments, commercial buildings and other improvements to be constructed by the Redeveloper. Approximately one-third of the land was to be conveyed to die Redeveloper to start phase one of the contract.

The contract contained certain conditions precedent to be performed by both parties before title to the *279 property could be conveyed to the Redeveloper and phase one started.

The Development Commission was required to prepare the property for the Redeveloper by removing the existing buildings, sidewalks, utility lines and similar structures. As of July 1,1963, the Development Commission had not completed the required site improvements and the Redeveloper could not proceed. The Development Commission was responsible for any necessary rezoning of the land. Some rezoning was required to cany out the redevelopment plans but this was not completed until December, 1963. The contract also required the Redeveloper to submit preliminary architectural and site plans to the Development Commission for its approval. These were not submitted until June, 1964. The Redeveloper was required to furnish evidence that it had the necessary equity capital and mortgage commitments for financing the construction of the buildings and this evidence was not submitted until August or September, 1964.

The Redeveloper did not secure title and go into possession of the phase one land until September, 1964. The delay on all sides was generally attributed to the size and complexity of the project.

According to McClintock, Equity, 287 (2d ed, 1948), “Where there is a condition precedent to the binding effect of the contract, the vendor-purchaser relationship does not exist until that condition has been performed, and conversion, therefore, does not take place.” See also Deitz v. Stephenson,

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Related

Mendelson v. Department of Revenue
9 Or. Tax 20 (Oregon Tax Court, 1981)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2 Or. Tax 275, 1966 Ore. Tax LEXIS 54, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/perry-v-state-tax-commission-ortc-1966.