Rogue River Packing Corp. v. Department of Revenue

6 Or. Tax 293
CourtOregon Tax Court
DecidedJanuary 21, 1976
StatusPublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 6 Or. Tax 293 (Rogue River Packing Corp. 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
Rogue River Packing Corp. v. Department of Revenue, 6 Or. Tax 293 (Or. Super. Ct. 1976).

Opinion

Carlisle B. Roberts, Judge.

Plaintiff appealed to this court from defendant’s Order No. VL 75-112, dated March 18, 1975, in which the defendant refused to apply the relief-of-hardship provisions of ORS 307.475 to the plaintiff’s personal property tax assessment for 1974-1975.

The plaintiff is a food-packing corporation which has obtained the benefits of the “processor’s statute,” ORS 308.250, without interruption from 1944 until the 1974-1975 tax year. The testimony showed that, dur *295 ing the last third of 1973 and the first half of 1974, a concatenation of events, none of which appears to have been within the control of the plaintiffs management, brought about a failure to file the request for cancellation of assessment of a substantial part of plaintiff’s inventory which actually had been transported or shipped to another point before May 1 of the year of assessment, thus losing the OES 308.250 tax exemption. (No effort is made to set out the facts fully herein, since they must be ascertained by the defendant upon remand.)

The plaintiff discovered the failure upon receipt of its personal property tax statement in October 1974. It immediately applied to the Jackson County Assessor for cancellation of the assessment, but the application was denied. The plaintiff thereupon petitioned the defendant for a recommendation to the county assessor for relief under ORS 307.475. Hearing *296 on the petition took place in Medford on November 20, 1974, with the general manager of petitioner, Mr. A. L. James, the only witness for the petitioner, present, together with two members of the county assess- or’s staff.

The department’s opinion recites that the facts were not in dispute, the petitioner alleging that the inventory of canned pears in the amount of $1,202,856 was shipped before May 1, 1974, but not reported for cancellation of assessment because of failure to submit the required form to the county assessor. With respect to the application of ORS 307.475, the defendant’s opinion states:

“The Department, pursuant to ORS 307.475, may make a recommendation only where failure to make a timely filing was due to absence, disability or illness of such an extent as to prevent filing of the claim (or proof) during a substantial portion of the filing period. In this case it is evident that Petitioner failed to file the proof of assessment *297 either through mere inadvertence, oversight or perhaps because of the bookkeeper’s ignorance of the law. Under the circumstances, the Department must refuse to grant Petitioner’s request.” (Emphasis supplied.)

There is no question but that the value of the canned goods shipped would have been stricken from the assessment roll, exempting it from personal property taxes, had “there been a timely filing of a valid claim for exemption or cancellation of assessment, * * This creates the statutory “hardship” situation as to which the department can provide relief if “the failure to make timely application for the exemption or cancellation was by reason of good and sufficient cause.” (Emphasis supplied.) Note should be taken that the determination is made in the “director’s discretion.” ORS 307.475(4).

The plaintiff presents alternative contentions: It first argues that the court erred in its decision in Pratum Co-Op Whse. v. Dept. of Rev., 6 OTR 130 (1975), when it held that it would only reverse a decision of the Director of the Department of Eevenue under the hardship statute if there was “caprice or a clear wrong.” The plaintiff contends that it is entitled to a trial de novo on the issue of whether there was “good and sufficient cause.” If the court declines to overrule its decision in Pratum Co-Op Whse., plaintiff then seeks to show that it was “caprice or a clear wrong” for the director to find that there was no “good and sufficient cause” for plaintiff’s failure to make a timely filing under the processor’s statute.

The court is first confronted with a question as to what powers it can exercise in the premises. Eeviewability of an administrator’s discretion is *298 fraught with problems. The determination of “hardship” is the determination of a question of fact. The legislature has vested discretion in the Director of the Department of Revenue to determine this question. There is no reason to believe that the court’s judgment should supplant the judgment of the director. Any attempt to do so might well be regarded as an infringement by the judiciary of the executive branch’s jurisdiction, in violation of the constitutional separation of powers. See Pratum Co-Op Whse., supra.

The court is not lacking in jurisdiction but it is concerned as to the scope of review. ORS 307.475 itself contains no specific limitation thereon but the question is presented to the court by the legislative use of the phrase in subsection (4), “* * * the director, in his discretion, * *

Appeals to the Tax Court are ordinarily tried de novo in accordance with ORS 305.425. The use of the words “de novo” suggests that the court seeks to supplant the administrator’s role, a suggestion which the court rejects as contrary to legislative intent. But without trying the case de novo, it would seem obvious that a court, having jurisdiction of an appeal from a discretionary judgment of an administrative agency, submitted without a record, may take evidence to determine whether the agency acted within the scope of its jurisdiction, legally, or upon sufficient evidence. 2 Am Jur2d Administrative Law § 699. Intelligent determination by the trial court requires it. (The plaintiff’s testimony was completely presented in this suit.)

*299 Nevertheless, this court should take notice that, in interpreting a law whose administration falls peculiarly within the expertise of an agency, and as to which the agency’s chief officer is specifically granted “discretion,” a judge should defer to the agency’s construction.

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6 Or. Tax 293, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rogue-river-packing-corp-v-department-of-revenue-ortc-1976.