Westbrook v. Department of Revenue

5 Or. Tax 590, 1974 Ore. Tax LEXIS 45
CourtOregon Tax Court
DecidedAugust 21, 1974
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 5 Or. Tax 590 (Westbrook 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
Westbrook v. Department of Revenue, 5 Or. Tax 590, 1974 Ore. Tax LEXIS 45 (Or. Super. Ct. 1974).

Opinion

*591 Carlisle B. Roberts, Judge.

The plaintiffs appealed from the defendant’s Order No. VL 73-510 (dated October 19, 1973), presenting the question of the amount of yield tax payable by plaintiffs for cutting and removing timber from specified property in Coos County in 1973, pursuant to ORS 321.315.

The statute cited is a part of ORS 321.255 to 321.360, originally enacted as Gen Laws of Oregon 1929, ch 138. It is often referred to as the “Forest Fee and Yield Tax Law” and involves the taxation of “reforestation lands.” Useful descriptions of the statute and its purposes are found in Gooch et al v. Rogers et al., 193 Or 158, 238 P2d 274 (1951), and Erickson v. Commission, 1 OTR 626 (1964).

The plaintiffs are experienced loggers. Prior to 1972, they purchased the cutting rights for all the merchantable timber on certain real property owned by Weyerhaeuser Company located at:

“Lot 1, Ny2NWy:NEi4, SW%NWy4NEy, Ny2SEiiNWy4NEy4, Fr. sy2NEy4, N'y,NEy4 NW14, Nwy4NWy4, sy2NEy4 sy4 Nwy4, nw% swyNWiy, sy2SEy4swy4nwy4, se%nwi/4, Fr. N1/2SE14, SWiySEiy, Ny2 Lot 4, Section 36, Township 27 South, Range 11 West, Coos County, Oregon, also known as Steel Creek.”

The property had been classified as reforestation lands and, prior to cutting, plaintiffs obtained from defendant a cutting permit for 1972, as required by ORS 321.310. In 1972, they removed timber from the premises, made the reports required by ORS 321.315 and paid taxes on the harvest. A dispute as to the tax due ensued and it was settled by agreement of the parties to use an immediate harvest value for Douglas fir, 3M or better, of $71 MBF.

*592 In February 1973, a renewal of the 1972 permit (No. 72-12EA) was requested by and issued to plaintiffs by defendant several months prior to the time (June 1973) when it was possible to begin cutting (because of inaccessibility of the timber). There was a change in market during that period, increasing log prices, accompanied by offsetting increases in logging costs. The 1973 renewal permit, as issued by defendant, assumed that the several species and grades of timber had been harvested uniformly in 1972, but the testimony shows that the old growth Douglas fir had been “creamed” in that year, greatly diminishing the value of the remaining stand.

OES 321.310 specifies that no person shall harvest any forest crop from classified reforestation lands without first having obtained a written permit from the defendant. Subsection (2) requires that, at time of issue, the department place on the permit the “unit value” of the respective kinds of forest crops which the permit allows to be harvested. The defendant recognizes that, in setting value, it must utilize “immediate harvest value,” although that phrase, in those words, is not found in the statute. However, it is derived from the statute by consideration of three different sections:

OES 321.255 (11) (1971 Eeplacement Part). “ ‘Yield tax’ means that percentage of the gross value, immediately prior to harvesting, of any forest crop in addition to all ad valorem taxes and forest fees previously paid on land and crop.” (Emphasis supplied.)
*593 ORS 321.310 (2). “The permit shall set forth the unit value, by units of proper measurement, of the respective kinds of forest crops on the premises. The unit value of a particular grade and species is the retail market value thereof for 1,000 board feet * * * for current harvesting and conversion into wood products. The retail market value per unit of measurement of a particular grade and species of timber upon a tract shall be determined by a method which makes reasonable allowance for species, quality, growing conditions, age, volume after allowance for defect and breakage, costs of removal, accessibility to point of conversion, topography, costs of conversion into logs, and any other relevant factors.”
ORS 321.315 (1). “* * * [A]ll forest crops harvested from lands classified as reforestation lands shall be subject to a yield tax of 12.5 percent of the value, as determined by the department [Department of Revenue], of every unit thereof. * * *”

It has been accepted by the parties that “unit value” means “true cash value” as defined in ORS 308.205, OAR 150-308.205-(A), and OAR 150-308.205-(B), “immediately prior to harvesting,” and this value may be obtained by the use of comparable sales of like timber; adjusted for the date of harvesting, or by the log-return-conversion method, with suitable adjustment for dates. Either method, ordinarily, will automatically take into account the factors described in ORS 321.310 (2) and for other proper costs, if truly comparable sales are used; otherwise, carefully determined adjustments must be made for them. (Compare 27 Op Atty Gen 135 (No. 3141, 8-24-55).) Thus, the statute imposes upon the defendant an onerous duty of determining a value several months in advance of the statutory valuation date, relating to *594 an infinitely varied product, the value of which, defendant admits, fluctuates throughout the year.

For 1973, defendant’s unit values under the renewal permit and the plaintiffs’ asserted values were:

Defendant’s Plaintiffs’ Unit Unit Units Value, MBF Value, MBF

Douglas fir, 3M or better $140 $70

Douglas fir, culls 21 15

Hemlock 80 60

Alder 19 12

The emphasis of the testimony was placed on the Douglas fir, the other species being de minimus in amount and value.

The testimony, in toto, presented a confusing picture, in large part because of the lack of uniform accounting methods used in logging and lumbering. Many figures obtained from the industry were adduced (and, in the case of the defendant particularly, with a great reliance upon hearsay), without the necessary detail to enable the court to make a factual determination of comparability. However, plaintiffs’ testimony was straightforward, and presented by witnesses of integrity and experience who could testify at firsthand with respect to necessary data.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
5 Or. Tax 590, 1974 Ore. Tax LEXIS 45, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/westbrook-v-department-of-revenue-ortc-1974.