Young v. Jackson County Assessor

17 Or. Tax 78, 2002 Ore. Tax LEXIS 207
CourtOregon Tax Court
DecidedAugust 9, 2002
DocketTC-MD 011076A.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 17 Or. Tax 78 (Young v. Jackson County Assessor) 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
Young v. Jackson County Assessor, 17 Or. Tax 78, 2002 Ore. Tax LEXIS 207 (Or. Super. Ct. 2002).

Opinion

SCOT A. SIDERAS, Magistrate.

Plaintiffs have appealed Defendant’s act of disqualifying their property 1 from special assessment as lands in farm use for the 2001-02 tax year. Plaintiffs’ counsel was Christian E. Hearn. Their witnesses included Norman Foeller, a consulting forester; Geoffry Dawson, a contractor of off grid electric systems; Patie Milan, a realtor; John Buma, a retired dairy farmer; Lonnie White and Matt Buma, respectively Plaintiffs’ former and current ranch managers; Ed Bemis, a general contractor; and Doug Mason and John Jacob, both professional beekeepers. Ed Good, of the assessor’s staff, represented Jackson County. David Nelson, also of the assessor’s staff, was his witness.

The question posed by this appeal is whether grazing honeybees, as opposed to grazing cows, is a farm use of the land sufficient to qualify it for special assessment in an exclusive farm use zone. The applicable statutory framework is ORS chapter 308A. 2

I. STATEMENT OF FACTS

This property consists of some 1,689.47 acres in Jackson County, approximately three miles to the north of Ashland and some five miles east of Talent, between Myer Creek to the west and Butler Creek to the east, on the northeast side of the Bear Creek drainage. Its terrain slopes from 10 to 50 percent as its elevation ranges from 2,640 to 3,960 feet. The distinctive topographic features are cliffs and rocky soils. Vegetation types include areas of meadow (782 acres), *80 hardwood and brush (509 acres), conifer and hardwood (103 acres), and wetlands and streams (147 acres). With this topography and absence of irrigation, 3 and, as much of its soil is of numbers 27D and higher, the property is not productive farmland. It is zoned for exclusive farm use, with a habitat overlay for Roosevelt elk and blacktail deer.

Historically it has been used for grazing livestock. This was the basis for its previous assessment as lands in farm use. However, the depressed livestock market led to limited returns, which, especially when considered in light of the damage to the land from grazing, caused the decision to find alternate agricultural uses of the property. The last year cattle grazed on the land was in 1999. The next growing season was spent repairing fences and allowing the land to lie fallow to rejuvenate the natural wildflowers and other flora.

Plaintiffs have a professional farm manager. There is a large, newly constructed barn and shop with some $300,000 invested in farm machinery, equipment, and a licensed vehicle. There is an Oregon Stewardship Plan for the subject property. Although Plaintiffs’ thoughts about the property have been as diverse as raising horses to raising koi, their actual activities on the land have consisted of planting trees, cultivating lavender, setting out an organic garden, and beekeeping.

Some 1,250 Ponderosa pine and Douglas fir were planted to assess the land’s potential to raise Christmas trees or marketable timber. Despite careful selection of the planting sites, protection from browsing wildlife by mesh tubing, and hand watering, dry soils and dry weather led to a low survival rate. Approximately 4,000 lavender plants are growing on less than an acre, but the immature plants, while established, have yet to reach a commercial stage. Organic gardening was carried out on some two acres with disappointing results.

The most successful use of the property has been to' raise bees, which began in February 2001. Plaintiffs have a professional beekeeper who operates the propertys three apiaries, which are set approximately two miles apart. Those *81 apiaries each consist of 50 colonies of bees, surrounded by a double layer of fence, part of which is electrically charged by solar power to discourage bears. The apiaries, located to the north, center, and south of the property, each occupy less than an acre.

The bees fly from the .apiary to search for pollen and nectar. Sources include wildflowers, which have become abundant since the removal of the cattle. Expert testimony opined, buttressed by texts and journals, that honeybees will forage distances of two-to-six miles, or more, from their hive. The experts also identified the subject property as good land for keeping bees, with its abundant blooms of wildflowers and vetch followed by star thistles, and that three apiaries were an adequate load for the land, especially during a dry year.

Income from raising bees comes from three sources. Plaintiffs’ bees, like most other Oregon bees, were leased to California almond growers during the flowering season for the pollination of that crop. Honey, of which a colony will produce some 150 to 200 pounds, is an obvious product. Other commodities produced by bees include pollen; propolis, a plant resin gathered by bees; wax; and royal jelly. Bees themselves are also sold. It was opined that the subject property might generate as much as $10,000 from honey production; total gross income from beekeeping could be as high as $37,000 at the wholesale level, with a correspondingly greater return if sold at the retail level.

Expert testimony, from both master beekeepers and experienced livestockmen, was given that bees and cattle both cannot forage off the same land. Cattle eat the wildflowers, vetch, milkweed, and clover that bees use for pollen and nectar before the plants bloom. Star thistle, while extremely valuable to bees as the only source of pollen during the late summer, is categorized as a noxious weed as to cattle.

II. ANALYSIS

Was the Plaintiffs’ beekeeping a sufficiently intensive use of their land to qualify for its assessment as lands in farm use? It is immediately apparent that, if it is not, Plaintiffs may not qualify for the special assessment. Plaintiffs’ *82 plans to board horses on the property, or to breed koi, are insufficient. Preparatory activities are never enough to qualify as a current farm use of the land. ORS 308A.056(1). The planting of Douglas fir and Ponderosa pine seedlings does not qualify the property. The trees were neither planted pursuant to an approved plan that would enable the land to qualify as forestland under an alternative program for special assessment under ORS chapter 321, nor, by virtue of the terrain and soils of the subject property, were they grown on lands capable of preparation by intensive cultivation methods as set out in ORS 308A.056(4)(b)(A). As for the lavender and organic garden, those plantings, done on less than five acres, are not enough to carry the assessment of the property as a whole.

With this focus, can bees foraging upon blooms replace cows grazing upon grasses as a qualifying farm use of this 1,700 acre ranch? The conclusion of the court is that they did. The reasoning behind that conclusion is as follows:

A. Honeybees are a qualifying farm use of the property.

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Related

Wehde v. Jackson County Assessor
Oregon Tax Court, 2012

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Bluebook (online)
17 Or. Tax 78, 2002 Ore. Tax LEXIS 207, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/young-v-jackson-county-assessor-ortc-2002.