5 Or. Tax 482 | Or. T.C. | 1974
Decision for plaintiffs rendered March 28, 1974.
Plaintiffs appealed from the defendant's Order No. VL 73-282, dated June 5, 1973. The order denied the plaintiffs the partial exemption from taxation for *483
1972-1973 which is allowed qualified nonprofit homes for the elderly pursuant to ORS
The court finds the following statements to be true:
1. ORS
2. ORS
3. ORS
4. A highly experienced member of the Lane County Assessor's staff, designated as the "exemption clerk," upon being apprised of the authorization of the plaintiffs to obtain the benefits of the statute, as certified in the Department of Revenue's letter of March 3, 1970, immediately thereafter, of her own volition, as a service to the taxpayers, mailed copies, in triplicate, of the exemption forms to each of the plaintiffs for the tax year 1970-1971. Each plaintiff filled in the forms as requested, filed them on or before April 1, 1970, and obtained the contemplated benefits for the corporations and for certain residents of the homes. The process was repeated for the tax year 1971-1972, initiated by the voluntary mailing of forms to the plaintiffs by the exemption clerk. No mailing of forms was made by the exemption clerk for the 1972-1973 tax year, the year here in question.
5. The form provided to the assessors by the Department of Revenue for the years 1970-1971 and 1971-1972 *485
contained no notice of the due date for filing the form as set forth in ORS
6. The assessor's exemption clerk testified that in the spring of 1972, "* * * for some reason, probably due to the work load, I neglected to notify" the plaintiffs by sending copies of the application forms to them as she had done in the spring of 1970 and in 1971. She became aware of this fact in June 1972 when she began entering various exemptions in the assessment roll, whereupon she notified the assessor and he, in turn, after conferring with the Lane County District Attorney, orally notified the officers of the plaintiffs of their failure to file claims for the ORS
7. Immediately thereafter, representatives of the plaintiffs went to the exemption clerk and requested the necessary forms required by ORS
8. The forms were filled in by the respective corporations and filed with the assessor with reasonable diligence and speed, after which they were officially rejected by the assessor as not timely filed. The letter of rejection states: "We would strongly recommend you appeal this to the State Department of Revenue, * * *."
9. Certain eligible veterans or veterans' widows, residing in Cascade Manor, had independently filed with the assessor the claims for veterans' benefits *486
under ORS
[1.] In answer to the first question of law presented, the court holds that the provisions of ORS
[2.] The second question is, whether, under the facts in the present suit, the Lane County Department of Assessment and Taxation is estopped to deny to the plaintiffs the benefits of ORS
Defendant points out that the following elements must normally be present in order to justify the application of the doctrine of equitable estoppel: (1) There must be a false representation or misleading conduct on the part of the official; (2) the misrepresentation must be made with knowledge (actual or constructive) of the true facts and with intention to mislead; (3) the party claiming the estoppel must not have knowledge of the true facts and have no reasonable means of ascertaining the truth; (4) there must be reliance, in good faith, upon the conduct of the party to be estopped; and (5) there must be injury to the party claiming the estoppel.
The facts in the present case show that there was no false representation but there was misleading conduct. The second element is lacking, in that the court finds that there was no intention to mislead; there was merely negligence to carry out an assumed duty. As to *487 the third element, the parties claiming the estoppel did not have knowledge of the true facts but they did have reasonable means of ascertaining the truth if it had occurred to them to ask. The court has no doubt that the fourth and fifth elements are met since there was reliance, in good faith, upon the conduct of the exemption clerk and there has been injury to the parties claiming the estoppel.
Based on the total testimony of the several witnesses (all of whom impressed the court by their candor and frankness), the court finds that the plaintiffs had come to rely upon the procedure followed in the first two years by the exemption clerk and that they reasonably relied thereon. The clerk herself intended to continue the practice of placing the forms in the hands of the corporate officers but failed to do so through oversight.
The principles of Johnson v. Tax Commission,
As stated in Johnson v. Tax Commission, supra, at 463-464:
"* * * The policy of efficient and effective tax collection makes the doctrine of rare application. It could only be applied when there is proof positive that the collector has misinformed the individual taxpayer and the taxpayer has a particularly valid reason for relying on the misinformation and that it would be inequitable to a high degree to compel the taxpayer to conform to the true requirement. * * *"
The court finds that the facts within the present case bring it within the exception thus enunciated. See also the discussion in Johnson v. Commission,
The defendant's order is set aside as void. The Lane County Department of Assessment and Taxation and the County Commissioners of Lane County are directed and required to take the necessary steps to give effect to the plaintiffs' applications for exemption under ORS