2 Or. Tax 347 | Or. T.C. | 1966
Decision for defendant rendered January 21, 1966.
*348 Pursuant to ORSAffirmed 83 Adv Sh 777 (December 7, 1966).
Plaintiff was incorporated on May 24, 1961, and on May 31, 1961, exchanged all of its stock for all of the assets and liabilities of Columbia River Packers Association (hereinafter referred to as CRPA). On the same day, immediately subsequent to the exchange between plaintiff and CRPA, the shareholders in the latter corporation exchanged all of their stock for stock in Castle Cooke, Inc., a Hawaiian corporation, resulting in CRPA being merged into Castle Cooke, Inc. The business operated by plaintiff was the same as that conducted by CRPA except for minor, inconsequential changes.
On January 1, 1961, personal property taxes were assessed on CRPA inventory and these taxes were paid by plaintiff on November 15, 1961. Plaintiff claimed the personal property tax offset under ORS
*349"(a) Each corporation subject to subsection (1) of this section which is primarily engaged in manufacturing, processing or assembling materials into finished products for purposes of sale is entitled to an offset against the tax imposed by subsection (1) of this section.
"(b) The offset shall equal either (A) the amount assessed to and actually paid by it upon its properly classified tangible personal property located in this state and allocable to its personal property comprising the materials, goods in process and finished goods produced and held for sale described in the preceding paragraph or (B) one-third of its excise tax payable under this chapter, whichever is the lesser." (Emphasis supplied.)
Tax Commission Reg 317.070(2) (b) concerning the personal property tax offset states in part:
"In order to qualify for the offset, the corporation must show that it was the legal owner of the personal property and that the taxes were assessed to any (sic) paid by it. The offset will be disallowed where the legal entity assessed and the legal entity paying the taxes are different, or where either of these is different from the legal entity claiming the offset." (Emphasis supplied.)
1. The tax, assessed on the personal property of CRPA as of January 1, 1961, became a lien as of that date. ORS
The defendant contends that as the tax was assessed against personal property of CRPA and paid by plaintiff, the plaintiff cannot offset the amount paid because the statute and the defendant commission's regulation require the tax be assessed to and paid by the same corporation. The plaintiff contends the words "assessed to and actually paid by it" refer to the same business enterprise.
2, 3, 4. The issue is one of first impression because the personal property tax offset is peculiar to Oregon law. The statute ORS
Under the facts in this case the plaintiff cannot claim the offset and the order of the tax commission must be affirmed. *351