Lead Opinion
The City of Portland brought this action to recover unpaid business license fees from defendant. Defendant filed a counterclaim seeking a declaration that imposing the business license fee on him violates the state and federal constitutions. On cross-motions for summary judgment, the trial court granted the city’s motion and denied defendant’s. The court entered judgment accordingly but did not include a declaration addressing defendant’s counterclaim in its judgment. We affirm the trial court’s ruling on the merits but vacate its judgment so that it may enter a declaration consistent with this opinion.
The City of Portland prohibits persons from doing business within the city unless they have a business license and have paid a license fee. Portland City Code (PCC) § 7.02.300(A).
Defendant is an attorney whose office is located outside the City of Portland. Between 1992 and 1996, he appeared at various local, state, and federal hearings within the city. He also took depositions and other steps within the city to prepare for his cases. During those tax years, defendant’s unadjusted net annual income varied from a low of $91,528 to a high of $125,904. Defendant’s activities within Portland account for at least five percent of his income during those years.
In 1997, plaintiff initiated this action to recover unpaid business license fees from 1992 through 1996, along with penalties and interest. Defendant filed an answer denying that he did business within Portland and a counterclaim for a declaratory judgment. On cross-motions for summary judgment, the trial court found that defendant did a substantial amount of legal work in Portland that amounted to “a continuous course of business in the solicitation and carrying out of services.” Relying on Wittenberg et al v. Mutton et al,
Defendant raises essentially four arguments on appeal. First, he argues that, to the extent he was acting as an officer of the court within the city, he was either not engaging in business or was exempt from the business license fee. Second, he argues that a business license fee is a poll or head tax that violates Article IX, section la, of the Oregon Constitution. Third, he argues that the business license fee violates the Due Process Clause. Finally, he argues that the trial court erred in not including a declaration
The first issue defendant raises is narrow. Defendant does not dispute that Portland has the authority to tax attorneys. See Abraham v. City of Roseburg,
The conclusion defendant reaches is at odds with the premise he accepts — that cities have authority to tax revenue generated by attorneys. To be sure, the cases recognizing that authority did not specifically consider a separation of powers argument. See Abraham,
Amicus Multnomah County Bar Association raises a related but separate issue. It argues that “[f]or the phrase ‘doing business’ to have any rational application to the practice of law, it must refer only to the location of a lawyer’s principal place of business.” The Portland City Council, however, has specifically defined what the phrase “doing business” means. It “means to engage in any activity in pursuit of profit or gain, including * * * [the] rendering of services[.]” PCC § 7.02.100(B). That definition can rationally be applied to defendant’s activities with the City of Portland even if his principal place of business is elsewhere. Amicus’s argument appears to reflect older notions that a municipality or state is limited to taxing a person’s principal place of business. See, e.g., Franklin v. Peterson, 87 Cal App 2d 727, 734,
Portland’s business license fee is not a head or poll tax. It is not assessed per capita. Rather, it is assessed only on those persons or corporations who choose to do business within the city. Moreover, although there is a minimum tax, the tax is proportional. The amount of the tax is generally a function of the income a licensee earns. The tax does not possess the same characteristics that prompted the people to add Article IX, section la, to the Oregon Constitution.
Defendant argues next that Portland’s business license fee violates the Due Process Clause.
“For a State to tax income generated in interstate commerce, the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment imposes two requirements: a ‘minimal connection’ between the interstate activities and the taxing State, and a rational relationship between the income attributed to the State and the interstate values of the enterprise.”445 US at 436-37 .
Portland’s code meets both parts of that test. A minimal connection is established “if the
The second part of the due process test is also satisfied. Under the Court’s analysis, the question of apportionment focuses on whether a taxing jurisdiction has sought to tax income that is reasonably related to the taxpayer’s activities within the jurisdiction. Mobil Oil,
Defendant argues finally that the trial court should have included a declaration in the judgment that resolved his declaratory judgment counterclaim. Defendant is correct. Because there was a justiciable controversy, the trial court should have disposed of his declaratory judgment counterclaim “by a judgment containing a declaration as to the matter in dispute.” Advance Resorts of America, Inc. v. City of Wheeler,
Judgment dismissing claim for declaratory relief vacated and remanded with instructions to enter a judgment declaring the parties’ rights; otherwise affirmed.
Notes
Although the code uses the terms “license” and “license fee,” PCC § 7.02.010 makes clear that a “license” does not mean a permit and that the “fees prescribed herein are for revenue purposes, and are not regulatory permit fees.”
The code contains a number of exemptions. Among other things, if a person’s “gross receipts from all business, both within and without the City, amounts to less than $25,000 in any tax year,” that person does not have to pay a license fee. PCC §7.02.400(0.
The code provides the following formula to determine the portion of the licensee’s income that is subject to the fee: It directs the licensee to “multipUyl the total net income from the applicant’s business by a fraction, the numerator of which is the total gross income from business activity in the City during the tax year, and the denominator of which is the total gross income of the licensee from business activity everywhere during the tax year.” PCC § 7.02.610(B). The code also provides for alternative methods of apportionment if the method described above violates the licensee’s rights under the state or federal constitution. PCC § 7.02.610(E).
Defendant cites a number of state constitutional provisions but does not explain their relevance. He does, however, cite Monaghan v. School District No. 1,
To the extent defendant argues that attorneys are, by definition, public officers whose income is exempt from tax, other courts have not accepted that definitional argument. See Franklin v. Peterson, 87 Cal App 2d 727,
Article IX, section la, provides: “No poll or head tax shall be levied or collected in Oregon.”
In Douglas Electric v. Central Lincoln PUD,
As part of his fifth assignment of error, defendant argues that “the minimum fees are unlawful takings in violation of defendant’s due process rights under the fFifthl and [Fourteenth] Amendments to the U.S. Constitution and deny defendant equal protection of the laws, thereby violating Article 11,1 rslection20 of the Oregon Constitution and the TFifthl and TFourteenthl Amendments to the U.S. Constitution.” Defendant did not raise a takings or an equal protection claim below. We will not consider either claim for the first time on appeal. See ORAP 5.45(2); State v. Moore,
Although defendant’s argument is not completely clear, he appears to bring an as-applied rather than a facial challenge to Portland’s business license fee; he raises the constitutional issue as a defense to applying the license fee to him.
These cases address a jurisdiction’s ability to impose a unitary business tax on a multi-jurisdictional business. Portland does not impose a unitary business tax but instead apportions income earned inside the city using a less complex geographical formula. See Container Corp.,
We note one other issue. The record, viewed in the light most favorable to defendant, discloses that defendant’s adjusted net annual income attributable to activities within the city (the income that is subject to the business license fee) is greater than $100 but less than $4,550 (the amount of income necessary to produce a license fee greater than $100). Imposing a minimum $100 license fee on income within that range effectively imposes a variable tax rate on businesses depending on where within the range a business’s income falls. The effective tax rate increases as the business’s income approaches $100; conversely, the effective tax rate decreases as the business’s income approaches $4,550. Imposing such a variable tax rate does not present a due process problem; it may result in a higher tax rate for lesser amounts of income, but it does not purport to tax income attributable to business activities outside the jurisdiction. See Hunt-Wesson,
Concurrence Opinion
concurring.
I agree with the majority’s analysis and result, with one caveat. The majority implicitly assumes that the federal Due Process Clause imposes a limit on the authority of municipalities to tax people or entities whose contacts with the municipalities do not meet the “minimum contact” standard of the Due Process Clause. I do not question that the Due Process Clause prevents a state and its municipalities from imposing burdens or consequences on people or entities who have not had the requisite level of contact with the state, but I am less certain that it
