STATE Ex Rel MEDFORD PEAR CO. v. FOWLER

295 P.2d 167, 207 Or. 182, 1956 Ore. LEXIS 299
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 28, 1956
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 295 P.2d 167 (STATE Ex Rel MEDFORD PEAR CO. v. FOWLER) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
STATE Ex Rel MEDFORD PEAR CO. v. FOWLER, 295 P.2d 167, 207 Or. 182, 1956 Ore. LEXIS 299 (Or. 1956).

Opinion

EOSSMAN, J.

This cause came before the court when the relator, pursuant to Oregon Constitution, Art VII, § 2, filed with our clerk a petition for an alternative writ of mandamus directed to the assessor of Jackson county, and the court, following a study of the petition, assumed jurisdiction. Subsequent to service upon him of the alternative writ, the assessor, Eobert Gr. Fowler, filed an answer, and later the relator presented his reply. The pleadings revealed some issues of fact. Presently the defendant moved “for an order dissolving the alternative writ of mandamus for the reason and on the ground that it is now moot.” Before that motion was determined, the parties, for the purpose of enabling us to decide the entire case, presented a stipulation as to some of the facts and an extensive deposition of defendant Fowler as to the remainder.

A brief statement of some incidents will disclose the issues which await decision. The relator is the owner of a commercial orchard property in Jackson county. Sometime prior to June 3, 1955, the defendant, as assessor, in preparing the county’s assessment roll for the fiscal year beginning July 1, 1955, assessed the value of the relator’s land and entered it as $15,790. That sum included nothing for the orchard trees. Prior to 1955 orchard trees were not assessed in Jackson county. June 3 the Jackson County Board of Equalization, to which we will hereafter refer as the board, received an order from the State Tax Commission *185 directing it to assess the value of the relator’s trees and to add the amount to the aforementioned sum of $15,790. Similar orders were given concerning all other orchard properties. In issuing its orders, the tax commission was prompted by OES 307.010 and a construction of it which had recently been announced by the Attorney General. June 10 the board protested that insufficient time was available to comply with the tax commission’s order and indicated an intention not to assess the trees. June 17 the tax commission reiterated its order, and on July 25 the board complied with the commission’s order. In the instance of the relator it determined the value of the trees as $12,070. The total assessment thus became $27,860 and an appropriate entry was made in the county’s assessment roll. At that juncture the relator contested the increased assessment through an appeal to the tax commission. The basis of the appeal was an alleged failure of the board to have given notice before it made the increases. The tax commission sustained the appeal of the relator and of the other orchard owners who also had appealed; it ruled that the increased assessments were void and cited as the basis of its ruling OES 309.090(1). The condemned assessments, however, were not deleted from the assessment roll. Their removal is demanded in the alternative writ.

We will now mention the second phase of the relator’s prayer for relief. When the defendant assessor calculated the rate per cent as required of him by OES 310.090, he employed in his computations the void assessments which the board had placed upon the orchard trees. The relator claims that inclusion of those sums in the totals rendered the rate per cent inaccurate. It demands a calculation of the rate per cent unaffected by the void assessments.

*186 We come now to the third aspect of the relator’s prayer. When the petition for an alternative writ was filed October 20, 1955, the defendant had not yet delivered the tax roll to the tax collector of the county. OES 311.115 requires the assessor to deliver the tax roll “to the tax collector not later than 30 days prior to the date provided by law when any tax or part of tax appearing in the roll becomes due and payable. ’ ’ The date specified by OES 311.505 for the payment of taxes is November 15.

The alternative writ commanded the defendant (1) to correct the assessment roll “by deleting therefrom all the increases in assessments on commercial orchard property entered by you, or at your direction, upon said assessment roll pursuant to the void order of the Jackson County Board of Equalization dated July 25, 1955”; (2) “immediately after the receipt of this Writ to forthwith deliver said assessment roll to the sheriff of Jackson County”; and (3) “immediately after the receipt of this Writ to compute a rate per cent of levy upon the legally assessed valuation of Jackson County, Oregon, in an amount sufficient to meet the budgeted requirements of Jackson County, Oregon, and the subdivisions thereof.” The alternative which the writ afforded the defendant, in the event he did not obey the commands just mentioned, was opportunity to “show cause before this court on the 31st day of October, 1955, why you have not done so.”

We see from the foregoing that one of the sources of the controversy before us is in the assessment which was made July 25,1955, of the relator’s orchard trees. The relator does not challenge the assessment which was made of its land and does not deny its duty to pay the tax levied upon it.

*187 Previous paragraphs of this opinion state that the assessments which the board made July 25 of the value of the various orchard properties were ruled void by the tax commission. The latter, in fact, ruled twice in condemning the assessment which the board had made of the trees. One ruling occurred September 7 and the other September 14. The following recital of the writ, which is admitted as true by the return, states the situation:

“* * * the Oregon State Tax Commission entered orders dated September 7, 1955 and September 14, 1955, declaring said order of the Jackson County board of equalization dated July 25, 1955 void and held that all proceedings thereunder were illegal.”

The above establishes that the tax commission undertook to relieve the relator and other owners of orchard properties of the assessments upon their trees which the board made July 25. But, notwithstanding the commission’s orders, the increased assessments were not removed from the assessment roll; in fact, the assessment upon the trees as entered in the assessment roll was transferred to the tax roll when the latter was compiled. The relator contends that the presence of the assessments in the assessment roll constitutes a cloud upon the title to the many orchard properties.

Although the tax commission nullified the assessment of the trees which the board had made, it did not declare that the taxes of the owners of the orchard properties should not be based upon the combined value of the land and the trees. It held the challenged assessments void solely because the board had not given the notice demanded by ORS 309.090 before it increased the assessments.

Thus, by not later than September 14 the tax com *188 mission had ruled that the assessments upon the trees which were made July 25 were void.

We now move on to an assessment of the county’s orchard trees which was made by the tax commission. The return states that September 14 the tax commission resolved to embrace the authority granted to it by ORS 309.400 and act as the board of equalization for Jackson county.

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Bluebook (online)
295 P.2d 167, 207 Or. 182, 1956 Ore. LEXIS 299, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-medford-pear-co-v-fowler-or-1956.