Thompson v. Department of Revenue

7 Or. Tax 421
CourtOregon Tax Court
DecidedApril 19, 1978
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 7 Or. Tax 421 (Thompson 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
Thompson v. Department of Revenue, 7 Or. Tax 421 (Or. Super. Ct. 1978).

Opinion

CARLISLE B. ROBERTS, Judge.

Plaintiff appealed from defendant’s Order No. VL 77-272, dated April 27, 1977, which sustained the Columbia County Assessor’s computation of the adjustment tax required by ORS 321.750 1 to be assessed against plaintiff’s forest land immediately following its classification under the Western Oregon Small Tract Optional Tax Act, ORS 321.705 to 321.765 (hereinafter cited as the Optional Tax Act). Plaintiff filed an application with the State Forester in 1973, requesting that his forest land be classified under the Optional Tax Act for property tax purposes. The State Forester inspected plaintiffs forest land, concluded that it was eligible for classification, determined the appropriate site classifications and certified his findings to the Columbia County Assessor. After receiving the State Forester’s certification, the assessor computed the adjustment tax required by ORS 321.750.

Plaintiff appealed the assessor’s computation of the adjustment tax to the Department of Revenue. In its Order No. VL 75-385, dated July 7, 1975, the Department of Revenue determined that, pursuant to ORS 321.765, only the State Board of Forestry could hear plaintiff’s appeal. It, therefore, dismissed plaintiff’s appeal for lack of jurisdiction. Plaintiff appealed the the defendant’s dismissal of his appeal to this court. The defendant’s demurrer to plaintiff’s complaint was sustained on the grounds that the court had no jurisdiction of the subject matter and that the complaint failed to allege facts sufficient to state a cause of suit. Plaintiff thereupon appealed to the Oregon Supreme Court, which reversed this court’s ruling and found that an appeal from the county assessor’s adjustment tax computation should be made to the *423 Department of Revenue, rather than to the State Board of Forestry. Thompson v. Dept. of Rev., 276 Or 371, 554 P2d 510 (1976). The cause was remanded to the defendant Department of Revenue for further hearing and the issuance of a new order. The result of the remand was the issuance of the order presently under appeal.

The Optional Tax Act was enacted by the legislature in 1961 and was designed exclusively in aid of the holder of limited forest lands. (This is in contrast to the Western Oregon Ad Valorem Timber Tax Act, ORS 321.605 to 321.680, hereinafter cited as the Timber Tax Act, which was designed in aid of the larger holders of timber and forest land.) The Optional Tax Act was intended to encourage the owners of smaller tracts of timber to refrain from harvesting their timber before it had properly matured by reducing the tax burden during the growth period. Together with advantages, the act imposes certain restrictions and obligations on the owner. The obligation which is pertinent in this case is the adjustment tax required by ORS 321.750:

"(1) In cases of classification of forest land after the date five years following August 9,1961, an adjustment tax as provided in this section shall be paid by the owner to the appropriate county tax collector within 30 days following issuance of the classification order by the State Forester. If payment is not made within the time limited, the State Forester shall withdraw the classification order.
"(2) The adjustment tax shall be an amount which, in each of the years specified in subsection (3) of this section, equals the amount by which the tax which would have been imposed under ORS 321.720 exceeds the amount of ad valorem tax actually paid on such forest land.
"(3) The computation provided in subsection (2) of this section shall apply to all years in which the timber on the forest land now being proposed to be classified was exempt from ad valorem taxation pursuant to ORS 321.605 to 321.680 [Timber Tax Act]. However, any *424 years previously considered in computing an adjustment tax under this section shall be excluded in computing any later adjustment tax.
"(4) The adjustment tax due under this section shall be computed by the appropriate county assessor or assessors at the time of issuance of a classification order subject to this section, and he shall certify the amount of the adjustment tax to the appropriate county tax collector. After the expiration of the period allowed for payment of the tax, the county tax collector shall report to the State Forester the payment or nonpayment of the tax.”

Plaintiff alleges that the following actions taken by the county assessor when he computed the adjustment tax required by ORS 321.750 were improper: (1) the assessor computed the adjustment tax on the basis of all tax years beginning subsequent to August 9,1961 (the effective date of the Optional Tax Act), rather than limiting his consideration to only those tax years beginning subsequent to August 9, 1966; (2) the assessor computed the adjustment tax separately for each of plaintiffs tax lots classified under the Optional Tax Act and failed to deduct the "negative” tax computed on one of the lots from the total tax computed on the other lots; (3) the assessor did not credit against the adjustment tax the harvest taxes paid by plaintiff pursuant to ORS 321.645 after some timber on the forest land being classified had been harvested; and (4) in computing the adjustment tax, the assessor did not consider excess property taxes paid by plaintiff in the past as a result of the county’s erroneous overstatement of the acreage in some of plaintiffs forest land parcels.

In support of his first allegation of error, plaintiff relies on ORS 321.750(1). Plaintiff claims that ORS 321.750(1) limits the tax years that can be considered in computing the adjustment tax to those tax years beginning after August 9, 1966. The court cannot read any such limitation into ORS 321.750(1). Subsection (1) only defines those taxpayers who will be subject to the adjustment tax. The Optional Tax Act *425

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Related

Thompson v. Department of Revenue
597 P.2d 1250 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1979)

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Bluebook (online)
7 Or. Tax 421, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thompson-v-department-of-revenue-ortc-1978.