State Finance Co. v. Department of Revenue

5 Or. Tax 651, 1974 Ore. Tax LEXIS 38
CourtOregon Tax Court
DecidedNovember 22, 1974
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 5 Or. Tax 651 (State Finance 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
State Finance Co. v. Department of Revenue, 5 Or. Tax 651, 1974 Ore. Tax LEXIS 38 (Or. Super. Ct. 1974).

Opinion

Carlisle B. Roberts, Judge.

In its Order No. YL 74-20 (dated January 31, 1974), the defendant Department of Revenue denied the plaintiffs’ appeal on the ground that the defendant was without power to take affirmative action because the plaintiffs had not exhausted their administrative remedies. The plaintiffs have appealed that decision to this court, pursuant to ORS 306.545.

The facts are undisputed. As of the assessment date, January 1, 1972, the County Assessor of Deschutes County, Oregon, had assessed certain real property in Deschutes County owned by the plaintiffs in fee simple, the property being described as Assessor’s Account No. 171233CB and Tax Lot No. 10000, Code 1-1. The assessed value of the improvements on the land was set by the assessor at $450,000. Seeking to reduce the assessment, plaintiffs duly petitioned the county board of equalization in May 1972 (pursuant to ORS 309.100), and then appealed to the Department of Revenue (pursuant to ORS 306.515). A hearing before the department concerning the 1972-1973 assessment was held on November 15, 1972 (pursuant to ORS 306.525). It is incumbent upon the department to enter its order upon the hearing by the end of 12 calendar months following the month in which the appeal to the department has been taken, otherwise the petitioner may treat the appeal as denied. (ORS 306.537.) In fact, the Department of Revenue issued its Order No. VL 73-307, reducing the value of the plaintiffs’ improvements to $323,900, on September 12, 1973.

*653 Following the hearing of November 15, 1972, and before the issuance of defendant’s Order No. VL 73-307 on September 12, 1973, plaintiffs failed to take any steps to protect their position regarding the assessed valuation of the improvements for the following tax year, 1973-1974.

During the hiatus following the hearing on the 1972- 1973 value, held November 15, 1972, and before the issuance on September 12, 1973, of defendant’s Order No. VL 73-307, it was incumbent upon the county assessor to prepare the assessment roll for 1973-1974, showing the true cash value of each item of taxable property as of January 1, 1973. (OES 308.210.) It was the duty of the county assessor to turn the completed assessment roll over to the county hoard of equalization on or before the second Monday in May of 1973. (ORS 309.060.) After the first day of May 1973, the assessor no longer had authority to make changes in the roll. (ORS 308.242.) He was required, if requested by the owner after May 1, to provide a signed statement giving the assessed value of any property. (ORS 308.282.)

It can he assumed that the County Assessor of Deschutes County knew of the pending appeal relating to the subject property, as to which a hearing had been held on November 15, 1972. However, as of January 1, 1973, the assessment date for the tax year 1973- 1974, and prior to the delivery of the assessment roll to the county hoard of equalization in May 1973, the county assessor had no cause to change his assessed value of subject property as of January 1,1972. He continued it on the assessment roll as of January 1, 1973. In the normal course, the tax collector is assumed to have delivered tax statements for 1973- *654 1974 by mail on or before the first day of November 1973 (ORS 311.250). It is assumed that the plaintiffs received such a statement, apprising them that the assessor’s valuation of the improvements upon their real property, assessed at $450,000 for the tax year 1972-1973, was assessed again in that amount for the 1973-1974 tax year. In any event, the plaintiffs filed a petition with the defendant Department of Revenue on December 14, 1973, relying upon ORS 306.520 and 309.090, petitioning the department to grant the same relief for 1973 as had been granted for 1972 in the department’s Order No. VL 73-307, dated September 12,1973.

ORS 306.520, upon which the plaintiffs relied as a basis for jurisdiction for affirmative action by the defendant upon the petition of December 14, 1973, is a measure provided by the legislature to give the right to file a petition with the Department of Revenue to

“(1) [a]ny taxpayer aggrieved by an act or omission of a county assessor or tax collector which affects his property and for which there is no other statutory remedy * * (Emphasis supplied.)

The taxpayers here are aggrieved because the assessed valuation placed upon the subject property by the assessor as of January 1, 1973, was the same as that placed on the property by him as of January 1, 1972 (as to which an order of the defendant was then pending). Plaintiffs’ statutory remedy, plainly, was to utilize the appeal to the county board of equalization (ORS 309.100) and, if deemed necessary, the petition for review of the county board’s order by the Department of Revenue, which was familiar to them and which they had followed with regard to the assessment of January 1, 1972.

*655 The concept implicit in plaintiffs’ appeal to this court is that, under the facts of this case, plaintiffs had no responsibility to protect their 1973-1974 assessment on the subject property while the appeal to the defendant was pending, inasmuch as there was a statutory duty that they be given notice of such continuation of value by the county authorities, and such notice was never given. At the same time, plaintiffs argue, in their brief, at 6, that “* * * [p]laintiff, however, has never contended that prior to the September 12, 1973 ruling by the Department of Revenue which lowered the previous [1972-1973] year’s assessed valuation there was any requirement incumbent on the county assessor to give notice. * * *”

In its petition to the defendant, plaintiffs relied on ORS 309.090. In the opinion accompanying the defendant’s Order No. VL 74-20, the defendant pointed out that ORS 309.090

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Bluebook (online)
5 Or. Tax 651, 1974 Ore. Tax LEXIS 38, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-finance-co-v-department-of-revenue-ortc-1974.