Rogers v. Department of Revenue

7 Or. Tax 256
CourtOregon Tax Court
DecidedNovember 1, 1977
StatusPublished

This text of 7 Or. Tax 256 (Rogers v. Department of Revenue) 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
Rogers v. Department of Revenue, 7 Or. Tax 256 (Or. Super. Ct. 1977).

Opinion

CARLISLE B. ROBERTS, Judge.

Plaintiff appealed from the Department of Revenue’s determination on December 16, 1976, found in the defendant’s Order No. G 76-3, of a gift tax deficiency for the calendar year 1974, as set out in the department’s undated notice No. G208682. The asserted deficiency results from defendant’s classification of the donee, Berkeley Lowell Davis, as plaintiff’s nephew, rather than as plaintiff’s son. A gift to a nephew is subjected to an additional or collateral tax by ORS 119.061(3), whereas a gift to a son is exempted from such a tax by ORS 119.061(2), after payment of a basic gift tax pursuant to ORS 119.051.

The facts are neither complicated nor disputed. Plaintiff adopted her nephew, Berkeley Lowell Davis, on May 8,1972. Mr. Davis was over 21 years old when the adoption took place. At that time, ORS 119.005(2) read as follows:

"Any donee related to the donor by chain of relationship, any step or steps of which are created by legal adoption, shall, for the purposes of this chapter, be considered as related in the same degree as though all steps in the relationship were by natural blood.”

Effective October 5, 1973, the following was added to ORS 119.005(2) by Or Laws 1973, ch 344, § 2:

"* * * [HJowever, if the adopted person was 21 years of age or more at the time of the adoption, any transfer of property within three years after the adoption shall be subject to tax under subsection (3) or (4) of ORS 119.061, as though such adoption had not taken place, and the *258 annual exclusion under ORS 119.031 shall be computed during such three-year period as though the adoption had not taken place.”

On November 14, 1974, plaintiff made a gift of property to Mr. Davis.

The issue to be determined by this court is whether the amendment to ORS 119.005(2) applies only to situations where both the adoption and the gift took place after October 5, 1973, or whether it also applies to situations where the adoption took place before, and the gift was made after, October 5, 1973, as in the instant case.

Defendant takes the position that, since the gift was made after the effective date of the amendment to ORS 119.005(2) and within three years of the adoption, the gift tax must be computed as though plaintiff’s adoption of the donee had not. taken place. Consequently, defendant insists that the gift is taxable as a gift to a nephew under ORS 119.061(3).

Plaintiff objects to this computation, contending that the 1973 amendment to ORS 119.005(2) was intended to apply only to adoptions taking place after that amendment went into effect. Therefore, plaintiff claims that the gift should be treated as a gift to a child, which gifts are exempt from the collateral tax under ORS 119.061(2). Plaintiff argues that to apply the 1973 amendment in the present case would amount to a retroactive application of the amendment in violation of the rules of statutory construction and that such application would also constitute a taking of property without due process of law and a denial of equal protection of the laws to the plaintiff and the donee.

Plaintiff relies heavily on the legislative history of Senate Bill 121, which became chapter 344 of Oregon Laws 1973 upon its enactment, in support of her claim that application of the amendment in the instant case constitutes an improper retroactive application. The *259 record contains copies of Senate Bill 121, proposed amendments to Senate Bill 121, the minutes of meetings of both the House and Senate Revenue Committees in which the bill was discussed, a memorandum regarding the bill by the Senate Revenue Committee’s counsel and a letter regarding the bill from the Attorney General’s office to a member of the Senate Revenue Committee.

An examination of the legislative history of Senate Bill 121 reveals only some testimony that the amendment to ORS 119.005(2) was designed to end a scheme of tax avoidance. Prior to the enactment of the amendment in 1973, adopted children enjoyed the same preferential treatment that was accorded natural children under the inheritance and gift tax laws, regardless of the age of the person adopted. This apparently led to a practice where, for example, an aunt or uncle who had no direct descendants would adopt an adult nephew or niece for the primary purpose of reducing the amount of Oregon inheritance tax or gift tax.

It is important to realize that the legislation was concerned with the tax consequences of these adoptions and not with the adoptions themselves. The court concludes that the language of the amendment reflects the legislature’s desire to terminate a possibility of tax avoidance by amending ORS 119.005(2). There is nothing in the legislative history to indicate that the legislature intended to do anything other than to put an end to this scheme of tax avoidance as quickly as possible by applying the amendment to all gifts made after its effective date.

The application of the amendment to the instant transaction does not amount to a retroactive tax. "A retroactive tax is one which is imposed on past transactions or for past periods. * * *” Roosevelt Raceway, Inc. v. Monaghan, 9 NY2d 293, 310, 174 NE2d 71, 78, 213 NYS2d 729, 740 (1961); appeal dismissed, 368 US 12, 82 S Ct 123, 7 L Ed2d 75 (1961). The *260 question of which event in a series of events was the subject of taxation was addressed in Reinecke v. Smith, 289 US 172, 53 S Ct 570,77 L Ed 1109,3 USTC ¶ 1089, 12 AFTR 47 (1933). In holding that a statute which taxed the income of revocable trusts to the settlors of those trusts could constitutionally be applied to the income of five revocable trusts which had been created before the statute was enacted, the Court stated:

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Bluebook (online)
7 Or. Tax 256, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rogers-v-department-of-revenue-ortc-1977.