Sal La Sea District Improvement Co. v. Department of Revenue

7 Or. Tax 436, 1978 Ore. Tax LEXIS 48
CourtOregon Tax Court
DecidedMay 1, 1978
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 7 Or. Tax 436 (Sal La Sea District Improvement Co. 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
Sal La Sea District Improvement Co. v. Department of Revenue, 7 Or. Tax 436, 1978 Ore. Tax LEXIS 48 (Or. Super. Ct. 1978).

Opinion

CARLISLE B. ROBERTS, Judge.

The plaintiff purports to be a "not organized for profit” Oregon corporation, created pursuant to ORS 554.010 to 554.600, for the purpose of providing a domestic water supply for unimproved, nonplatted real property, referred to (in the complaint and exhibits) variously as "Sal-La-Sea II” and "Sal-La-Sea Subdivision #2” (hereinafter designated Sal La Sea II). The statute requires that such a corporation, created for the use or control of water, shall specify in its articles of incorporation, pursuant to ORS 554.040:

"(3) The particular land to be improved by the works of the corporation, describing the land by legal subdivisions so far as possible and otherwise by tracts or lots of duly platted land or by metes and bounds, with the acreage thereof and the names of the respective owners as shown by the records of the county, and the total number of acres.”

In its articles of incorporation, the plaintiff described by metes and bounds and specified the 497 acres of Sal La Sea II. The corporate articles were filed with the Corporation Division, Department of Commerce, State of Oregon, on October 17, 1972. *

*438 Mr. Donald Ragan Lucas, at the time of his purchase of the land comprising Sal La Sea II, also purchased from the same seller the existing Sal La Sea Subdivision, Blocks 2 and 3 (hereinafter designated Sal La Sea I), which apparently contained a waterworks and water distribution system. The purchaser took over the operation of this system, commencing on June 1,1972, agreeing to operate and maintain and to perform and carry out the duties and obligations of the seller with respect to the supplying of water to the lots in Sal La Sea I.

The court concludes from the record that the buyer found it was impossible to develop water on the site of Sal La Sea II and that the system within Sal La Sea I was insufficient to supply water to Sal La Sea II (the development of which could not be continued without a water supply meeting the requirements of the state and of the county). Consequently, on March 12, 1973, the plaintiff, Sal La Sea District Improvement Company, purchased from W. H. Day and Agnes H. Day the water system of Roads End, another subdivision already developed to a considerable degree, which lies adjacent to and west of Sal La Sea I and adjacent to a small part of the western boundary of Sal La Sea II.

It is clear that the Roads End purchase was made for the purpose of getting water into Sal La Sea II. However, the Roads End Water System was and is a public utility subject to the jurisdiction of the Public Utility Commissioner of Oregon. It was necessary for the sellers and the buyer to apply to the commissioner for approval of the sale. In their petition, sellers and plaintiff stated that one of the terms of the transaction was "that the available water of Roads End Water *439 System will not be utilized or diverted by or into the subdivision known as Sal-La-Sea #2.” {SeePUC Order No. 73-363, dated June 12, 1973.)

On March 5, 1975, plaintiff filed a supplemental application with the Public Utility Commissioner requesting that PUC Order No. 73-363 be amended to remove the restriction. This application was denied in PUC Order No. 75-834, dated September 30, 1975. In May 1977, an agent of the PUC discovered that approximately 1,700 feet of four- and six-inch main had been constructed into Sal La Sea II and was connected through Sal La Sea I to the Roads End System. The plaintiff was ordered to block the interconnection. A complaint was filed on June 10,1977, by the State of Oregon, acting by and through the Health Division of the Department of Human Resources against plaintiff, seeking an injunction, requiring the district improvement company to remove the water transmission facilities, above described, connecting Roads End and Sal La Sea II.

The defendant Department of Revenue is charged with the duty to assess the property of various water districts which are not otherwise exempt from ad valorem taxation, pursuant to ORS 308.505 to 308.665. While examining its assessment roll for 1977, pursuant to ORS 308.590, the Director of the Department of Revenue discovered that property assessable to Sal La Sea District Improvement Company, having a true cash value of $5,500, had been omitted from the 1977 rolls. Defendant’s Order No. A&AU 77-40. This apparently relates to the plaintiff’s Sal La Sea I water system. In a supplemental order, Order No. A&AU 77-43, omitted assessments were made for the same property for the tax years 1974 ($6,400 true cash value), 1975 ($6,100), and 1976 ($5,800). In a further order, Order No. A&AU 77-41, the plaintiff’s petition to exempt the Roads End Water System for 1977 and past and future years was denied and the value for January 1,1977, was affirmed at $60,000. (Each of the orders is dated July 15, 1977.)

*440 The plaintiff has appealed from the three orders of the defendant Department of Revenue on the ground that plaintiffs water systems in the Roads End District and Sal La Sea I are and were exempt under ORS 554.320 as property of a tax-exempt district improvement company.

The Department of Revenue’s position "is that ORS Chapter 554 is very specific concerning the activities of corporations formed under its provisions and the geographic area to be served by the specific activity * * * ” (Order No. A&AU 77-40, at 1.) The defendant concluded that if a district failed to operate as required by ORS chapter 554, it cannot lawfully claim the benefits of the tax exemption provided in ORS 554.320. The defendant held that, as the plaintiff admittedly provides no water service to or within the land area described in its articles of incorporation, there is nothing to exempt as to Sal La Sea II, and the claim for exemption cannot be carried over to water systems, owned by the district improvement company outside the corporate area, which are not and presently cannot be utilized for the benefit of the area within the boundaries of the corporation.

Plaintiff contends that its articles of incorporation recite the necessary requirements of ORS 554.050, establishing the plaintiff as a nonprofit corporation, and that purchase of the Roads End and the Sal La Sea water systems by plaintiff was a proper and advantageous method of accomplishing its intended corporate purpose. It argues that, under ORS 554.270

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Bluebook (online)
7 Or. Tax 436, 1978 Ore. Tax LEXIS 48, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sal-la-sea-district-improvement-co-v-department-of-revenue-ortc-1978.