Village at Main Street Phase II, LLC v. Department of Revenue

387 P.3d 374, 360 Or. 738, 2016 Ore. LEXIS 826
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 30, 2016
DocketTC 5054; SC S063163 (Control); TC 5055; SC S063164; TC 5056; SC S063165; TC 5057; SC S063174
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 387 P.3d 374 (Village at Main Street Phase II, LLC v. Department of Revenue) 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
Village at Main Street Phase II, LLC v. Department of Revenue, 387 P.3d 374, 360 Or. 738, 2016 Ore. LEXIS 826 (Or. 2016).

Opinion

NAKAMOTO, J.

The order of the Tax Court in Village at Main Street Phase II, LLC II v. Dept. of Rev., 22 OTR 52 (2015), is vacated. The general judgment of the Tax Court dismissing the cases is reversed. The cases are remanded to the Tax Court to enter the assessor’s amended answers and for further proceedings.

*741 NAKAMOTO, J.

These four consolidated property tax appeals return following remand to the Oregon Tax Court in Village at Main Street Phase II v. Dept. of Rev., 356 Or 164, 339 P3d 428 (2014) (Village I). In Village I, this court addressed whether the Tax Court had erred by denying defendant-intervenor Clackamas County Assessor’s (assessor) motion for leave to file amended answers on the ground that the answers contained impermissible counterclaims challenging the value of taxpayers’ land. This court determined that the assessor should have been allowed to challenge the land valuations, and it reversed and remanded the cases to the Tax Court. Id. at 166, 185. Before the assessor filed amended answers, taxpayers served notices of voluntary dismissal of their cases pursuant to Tax Court Rule (TCR) 54 A(l). 1 The Tax Court then entered a judgment of dismissal, over the assessor’s objection. The court denied the subsequent motions for relief from the judgment by defendant Department of Revenue (department) and the assessor.

Under TCR 54 A(l), a plaintiff may, without order of the court or consent of the other party, dismiss its appeal “if no counterclaim has been pleaded.” The Tax Court concluded that Village I did not prohibit dismissal of the cases under TCR 54 A(l), because neither the assessor nor the department had filed counterclaims with the Tax Court. Village at Main Street Phase II, LLC II v. Dept. of Rev., 22 OTR 52, 60-62, 2015 WL 1810580 (2015) ('Village II). On appeal, we address whether, as defendants argue, the Tax Court erred by giving effect to taxpayers’ notices of voluntary dismissal rather than to the decision in Village I concerning the assessor’s counterclaims pending in the motions for leave to file amended answers. As explained below, we conclude that the Tax Court erred in dismissing the appeals given the decision and remand in Village I. Accordingly, we vacate the Tax Court’s order denying defendants relief from the judgment, reverse the general judgment of dismissal, and remand for further proceedings.

*742 I. BACKGROUND

To provide context for the discussion of these appeals, we first briefly review the property tax appeals process before the Tax Court before laying out the facts relevant to these appeals. Finally, we summarize the Tax Court’s most recent ruling in these cases. 2

A. Property Tax Appeals Before the Tax Court

Under Oregon law, a taxpayer may challenge the assessor’s valuation of its property by filing an appeal before the local board of property tax appeals (BOPTA). ORS 309.100(1). If either party is unhappy with the outcome of the BOPTA proceedings, an appeal is permitted to the Magistrate Division of the Tax Court. ORS 305.275; ORS 309.110(7). Within 60 days after the entry of a magistrate’s written decision, either party may file an appeal with the Regular Division. ORS 305.501(5)(a).

Although characterized as an “appeal,” the review by the Regular Division is de novo, with proceedings there conducted as “original” and “independent.” ORS 305.425(1); see also Reed v. Dept. of Rev., 310 Or 260, 265, 798 P2d 235 (1990) (stating that the court must “consider all properly admitted evidence and reach its own independent conclusions”). Unlike the Magistrate Division, the Regular Division is a court of record and follows formal rules of evidence. ORS 305.405(1); TCR Preface. The Regular Division has the powers and, generally speaking, follows the procedures of a circuit court. ORS 305.405(2)-(3); ORS 305.425(3).

The Tax Court Rules guide litigants before the Regular Division. Although the Oregon Rules of Civil Procedure (ORCP) do not apply to Tax Court proceedings, many of the TCRs mirror their ORCP counterparts. See ORS 305.425(3) (“hearings and proceedings” in the Regular Division “shall be in accordance with the rules of practice and procedure promulgated by the court, which shall conform, *743 as far as practical to the rules of equity practice and procedure in this state”); see also TCR Preface (so stating).

B. Factual and Procedural History

The relevant facts are primarily procedural and are undisputed. Taxpayers are three limited liability companies — Village at Main Street Phase II, LLC, Village at Main Street Phase III, LLC, and Village Residential, LLC — that own real property located in Clackamas County. By filing appeals with BOPTA, taxpayers challenged the real market value of only the improvements on their real property, not the land, for tax years 2006-07 through 2008-09.

After BOPTA affirmed the values of the improvements set by the assessor, taxpayers appealed first to the Magistrate Division and then to the Regular Division, where their appeals were consolidated. In the Regular Division, the department responded by filing answers, and, after successfully moving to intervene in all four cases, the assessor also filed answers. The department denied the allegations forming taxpayers’ claims and asked the Tax Court to uphold the assessments. However, in three of the four answers filed by the assessor, the prayer for relief contained a request for an increase in the values of the improvements over those determined by BOPTA or by the magistrate.

Intending to seek a determination of the values of the related land components, which the assessor also believed were undervalued, the assessor sought a preliminary ruling from the Tax Court as to whether a then-newly enacted statute, ORS 305.287

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
387 P.3d 374, 360 Or. 738, 2016 Ore. LEXIS 826, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/village-at-main-street-phase-ii-llc-v-department-of-revenue-or-2016.