Thomas v. Commission

3 Or. Tax 333
CourtOregon Tax Court
DecidedDecember 27, 1968
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 3 Or. Tax 333 (Thomas v. Commission) 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
Thomas v. Commission, 3 Or. Tax 333 (Or. Super. Ct. 1968).

Opinion

Edward H. Howell, Judge.

The Polk Connty Assessor and the State Tax Commission denied a special farm use assessment under *334 ORS 308.370 to 14 acres of plaintiff’s land and plaintiff appealed to this court. The assessment date involved is January 1, 1967.

The 14-acre tract on which the special assessment was denied was purchased by plaintiff in 1961 for $15,130 and lies within a farm use zone. Until January 1, 1967, the assessor had given the tract a farm use classification and assessed it under the special provisions of ORS 308.370, supra. On January 1, 1967, this farm use classification was removed and the property valued at $17,500. Upon appeal to the board of equalization this valuation was reduced to $15,000.

On December 31, 1966, plaintiff purchased an additional 24 acres of land contiguous to the 14-acre tract and also within the farm use zone. The contract for this purchase, however, was not recorded until December, 1967. The parties agree that this tract was receiving the special assessment as farm land on January 1, 1967.

The 14-acre parcel and the 24-acre parcel are carried as two separate tax lots. Before plaintiff’s purchase the two tracts had been part of a large farm operated by the former owner. The 24-acre parcel was receiving a farm use classification on January 1, 1967, because plaintiff’s purchase contract had not been recorded until December, 1967, and the assessor believed the 24 acres were still part of the large farm.

The plaintiff presents three contentions: (1) that *335 the 14-acre tract by itself was entitled to the farm use classification; (2) that the assessor should have considered both tracts of land together for the purpose of determining the farm use classification; and (3) that she was denied uniformity of assessment on the 14-acre tract as required by Art I, § 32, and Art IX, § 1, of the Oregon Constitution.

The undisputed evidence showed that 11 acres of the 14-acre tract were steep, rocky, and not suitable for cultivation. The remaining 3 acres had been planted to grain since 1961. Plaintiff received no income from these 3 acres as they were farmed by the original owner who did some road grading and mowing of weeds in exchange for the crop.

The only income plaintiff received in 1967 from the 24-aere tract acquired in December of 1966, was $60 to $70 from the sale of one ton of prunes.

To be entitled to the farm use classification allowed by ORS 308.370, supra, land must be “used exclusively for farm use.” The definition of “farm use” is found in subsection (2) of ORS 215.203 which states:

“(2) As used in this section, ‘farm use’ means the use of land for raising and harvesting crops or for the feeding, breeding and management of livestock or for dairying or any other agricultural or horticultural use or any combination thereof and includes the preparation of the products raised thereon for man’s use and disposal by marketing or otherwise. It includes the construction and use of dwellings and other buildings customarily provided in conjunction with the farm use.”

*336 Complying with the provisions of ORS 308.380 directing them to enact regulations providing a “more detailed definition of farm use * * * to be used by county assessors in determining entitlement” to the special farm use assessment, the tax commission enacted Reg 308.380 (1965) which listed various factors to be considered by assessors in determining what constitutes a bona fide farming operation.

It is clear that the 14-acre tract is not entitled to a farm use classification whether it is considered separately or as a whole with the larger parcel. According to the plaintiff’s own witness, 11 of the 14 acres are not suitable for cultivation. The remaining 3 acres have yielded nothing for plaintiff except the minor road grading and mowing by the former owner in exchange for the crop. The eligibility of the 14-acre tract for a farm use classification is not enhanced when considered with the other parcel because, with the exception of harvesting one ton of prunes, no farm use was made of the 24-acre parcel during 1967. (Although as mentioned previously, this parcel had received a farm use classification on January 1, 1967, and is not directly involved herein.)

It is true that both parcels were within a farm use zone in Polk County; the 14-acre parcel had received a farm use classification until the assessor changed it on January 1, 1967; the 24-acre parcel had received a farm use classification when it was part of a large farm owned by plaintiff’s vendor. However, the fact that two parcels of land had or had not received a farm use classification does not mean that in subsequent years in the hands of a different owner or under different conditions the classification of the lands could not be reviewed and the farm use classification allowed or disallowed as the case may be.

*337 The more difficult question presented by the plaintiff is whether she has been denied uniformity of assessment of the 14-acre tract in violation of Art I, § 32, and Art IX, § 1, of the Oregon Constitution.

ORS 308.370 was enacted by the legislature in 1963 (Or Laws 1963, ch 577). It was the obvious intention of the legislature in enacting this statute and other farm valuation statutes that farm property which met the statutory qualifications should be valued on a basis of farm use and not some other highest and best use.

The Polk County Assessor testified that before he started a review and study of lands within a farm use zone under ORS 308.370, if land was within a farm use zone it was given a farm use classification. This was improper because ORS 308.370 requires not only that the land involved be within a farm use zone but that it also be “used exclusively for farm use.” By January 1, 1967, the assessor had reviewed and reclassified 35 separate ownerships, including plaintiff’s 14 acres, as nonfarm use lands. By January 1, 1968, he had completed the reclassification of an additional 300 parcels which had received the farm use classification on January 1, 1967, and reclassified them as nonfarm use lands for January 1, 1968.

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Related

Benson v. Department of Revenue
9 Or. Tax 129 (Oregon Tax Court, 1982)
Price v. Department of Revenue
7 Or. Tax 18 (Oregon Tax Court, 1977)
Vogler v. Department of Revenue
4 Or. Tax 334 (Oregon Tax Court, 1971)
Westward Properties, Inc. v. Department of Revenue
3 Or. Tax 496 (Oregon Tax Court, 1969)
Reter v. Commission
3 Or. Tax 477 (Oregon Tax Court, 1969)
Bohnert v. Commission
3 Or. Tax 423 (Oregon Tax Court, 1969)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
3 Or. Tax 333, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thomas-v-commission-ortc-1968.