Telfer v. Department of Revenue

CourtOregon Tax Court
DecidedMay 13, 2014
DocketTC-MD 130478C
StatusUnpublished

This text of Telfer v. Department of Revenue (Telfer 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
Telfer v. Department of Revenue, (Or. Super. Ct. 2014).

Opinion

IN THE OREGON TAX COURT MAGISTRATE DIVISION Income Tax

TIFFANY C. TELFER, ) ) Plaintiff, ) TC-MD 130478C ) v. ) ) DEPARTMENT OF REVENUE, ) State of Oregon, ) ) Defendant. ) FINAL DECISION

The court entered its Decision in the above-entitled matter on April 24, 2014. The court

did not receive a request for an award of costs and disbursements (TCR-MD 19) within 14 days

after its Decision was entered. The court’s Final Decision incorporates its Decision without

change.

Plaintiff appeals Defendant’s Notice of Determination and Assessment (Assessment)

dated June 26, 2013, for the 2008 tax year. Trial was held on March 17, 2014, in the courtroom

of the Oregon Tax Court, Salem, Oregon.1 Chris Telfer, CPA, appeared on behalf of Plaintiff.

Plaintiff Tiffany C. Telfer (Telfer) testified on her own behalf. Debbie Smith (Smith) appeared

and testified on behalf of Defendant. No exhibits were received from Plaintiff. Defendant’s

Exhibits A to I were received without objection. Defendant also submitted a document with her

///

1 Trial in this matter was originally scheduled for February 10, 2014, but set over to March 17, 2014, due to inclement weather. Plaintiff did not submit any exhibits to the court or Defendant prior to the February 10, 2014, trial date.

FINAL DECISION TC-MD 130478C 1 exhibits titled Trial Presentation, that is an overview of the nine exhibits exchanged prior to trial,

portions of which were offered and admitted.2

I. STATEMENT OF FACTS

Plaintiff was living in Oregon and initially registered to vote in this state in 1992, when

she turned 18. Plaintiff obtained an Oregon driver’s license in 1989. (Def’s Ex A at 1.)

The court found Plaintiff’s testimony confusing as to when she was living in the state of

Washington. Plaintiff testified that she attended college in the state of Washington between

1992 and 1996. According to Plaintiff’s sworn testimony she “lived” in Washington during

those years. Plaintiff apparently returned to Oregon after graduating. Plaintiff testified that she

moved back to Washington in January 1997 and lived and worked in that state until December

2003. There was no testimony or evidence offered by either party as to what transpired in

Plaintiff’s life (e.g., where Plaintiff lived or worked) between 2003 and 2007.

Depending upon whether Plaintiff calculated the amount of time she was in Washington

by months or calendar years, the timeline set forth immediately above suggests Plaintiff was

living in Washington for 10 or 11 years. However, Plaintiff on several occasions testified that

she had spent a total of nine years living in the state of Washington prior to the year at issue

(2008). And, during Plaintiff’s testimony on direct examination as to her voting activity and

states in which she was registered to vote, Plaintiff testified that she was registered to vote in

Washington between 1996 and 2006.

The parties agree Plaintiff was living in Oregon in 2007, and was unemployed at the end

of that year. Plaintiff testified that she decided to move back to Washington sometime in early

2 That document is akin to an opening statement. Although the court does not treat it as such, the document does nonetheless have significance because it provided Plaintiff with insights into issues and concerns Defendant would likely address at trial. The issues were also addressed at the case management hearing with the parties on November 4, 2013.

FINAL DECISION TC-MD 130478C 2 December 2007. On cross-examination she testified that she was not working at the time, and

that she had ended a relationship with her then “previous boyfriend” on December 6, 2007.

Plaintiff also testified on cross-examination that she registered a 2001 Audi automobile in

Oregon on December 24, 2007, four days before she moved some of her belongings to

Washington (see discussion immediately below). Defendant’s Exhibit G is a computerized

printout of the Oregon Department of Motor Vehicles (DMV) record showing that Plaintiff

registered a 2001 Audi on December 24, 2007. Smith asked Plaintiff why she registered that

vehicle in Oregon on December 24, 2007, if she was planning to move to Washington within a

few days. Plaintiff responded that she “had just registered and paid all of the money to register

[her] car in Oregon [and] wasn’t financially able to pay Washington the Washington registration

fee, which is significantly more than in Oregon.”

Plaintiff testified that she “went up [to Washington] on December 28, 2007, with some of

[her] belongings and officially took residence at the home that [she] resided in the entire year of

2008 on January 1, 2008.” Plaintiff further testified that she “was a resident of Washington for

nine years prior to moving back to Washington in 2008.”

According to her sworn testimony, the reason Plaintiff moved from Oregon to Seattle,

Washington, in January 2008 was to find employment. Plaintiff testified that her father paid her

moving expenses, which included the rental of a U-Haul truck, because Plaintiff did not have the

funds to pay for the move herself. There are no receipts, rental contracts, or other documents to

corroborate that testimony, and neither Plaintiff’s father, mother, or any other individual testified

about Plaintiff’s alleged move to Washington.

Plaintiff testified that when she moved to Washington in January 2008, she rented a

three-story, two-bedroom home located at 5242 37th Avenue NE, Seattle, pursuant to a verbal

FINAL DECISION TC-MD 130478C 3 contractual agreement with the owner of the home, Josh Vall-Spinosa (Vall-Spinosa).3 (Def’s

Ex C at 1.) According to the testimony and a letter written by Vall-Spinosa, admitted into

evidence by Defendant at trial, Plaintiff and Vall-Spinosa “had a verbal contractual lease

agreement for a period of time in 2008 and 2009 * * *” pursuant to which Plaintiff agreed to pay

Vall-Spinosa rent in the amount of $500 per month. (Def’s Ex C at 1) (emphasis added).

Vall-Spinosa’s letter indicates that he had known Plaintiff “since September of 2002,” and that

“[i]n December of 2007, Miss Telfer contacted [Vall-Spinosa] to inquire about possible

availability of any of my rental properties as she was to be moving to Seattle from Bend

[Oregon] in January 2008.” (Id.) According to the evidence, the rent was established at the price

of $500 per month because the home was undergoing a major renovation that converted the

home from two bedrooms to five and added a bathroom.

According to testimony, on August 12, 2008, Plaintiff personally visited the Oregon

DMV office in Bend, to request a duplicate copy of her Oregon driver’s license. Testimony from

direct and cross-examination reveals that Plaintiff did indeed go into the office in Bend on

August 12, 2008, to request a duplicate of her Oregon driver’s license, and that she asked the

DMV to mail the license to the address of her boyfriend’s home in Bend, Oregon. Plaintiff

testified that she had put in a change of address request with the U.S. Postal Service because she

was living in Washington, but that the duplicate of her Oregon license was returned to the DMV

as undeliverable, notwithstanding that change of address notification. There is no documentary

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