15 Or. Tax 284 | Or. T.C. | 2001
Plaintiff Department of Revenue (the department) appeals from a magistrate Decision authorizing Lane County to change its tax rolls for Defendant Oral and Maxillofacial Surgeons, P.C.'s, (taxpayer) property for three different tax years. Prior to trial, the department and taxpayer agreed on all but the 1996-97 tax year.1 The department claims that it is improper to change that tax year's assessment.
Taxpayer instructed its business manager, Diana Sheffield, to find out where to file property tax appeals. Sheffield called the county assessor's office, identified herself and the taxpayer, and asked where to send an appeal of the past eight years' property tax assessments. She was given the Magistrate Division's address. A letter from taxpayer to the Magistrate Division, filed May 14, 1999, was treated as taxpayer's complaint. (Ptf's Ex 1.)
In the Magistrate Division, taxpayer apparently conceded that it could not obtain assessment changes for all eight years. The parties stipulated that if the court found the changes could be made for three years, then taxpayer's 280279 account should reflect the following: *286
From To (1996-97)
Land $112,560 $112,560 Improvements $414,560 $283,840 Total $527,120 $396,400
(1997-98)
Land $124,940 $124,940 Improvements $460,160 $256,760 Total $585,100 $381,700
(1998-99)
Land $128,690 $128,690 Improvements $473,960 $248,560 Total $602,650 $377,250
(Def's Ex B.)
The magistrate issued a written Decision August 11, 1999, finding that taxpayer had good and sufficient cause for failing to appeal to the Department of Revenue under ORS
In the meantime, taxpayer learned that the department also had authority to change assessments for prior unappealed tax years. Taxpayer filed a petition with the department, seeking relief under ORS
The first and easiest "remedy" for a taxpayer is simply to talk with the assessor and try to get any errors corrected informally. If the assessor refuses to make the changes the taxpayer believes should be made, the taxpayer must file *287
a formal appeal. In deciding how to appeal, the first question that must be answered is: What is the issue? If the taxpayer wants to appeal assessed value, real market value, or corrections or omissions on the roll, the taxpayer must file a petition with the Board of Property Tax Appeals (BOPTA), ORS
If a taxpayer fails to exercise the statutory appeal rights, the legislature has provided two separate retrospective or "rescue" provisions. First, the legislature has given the department authority to correct a separate assessment of property if it "discovers reasons * * * which, in its discretion, it deems necessary to conform the roll to applicable law without regard to any failure to exercise a right of appeal." ORS
A second rescue provision, ORS
As can be seen, the department and the Tax Court have overlapping jurisdiction with regard to retrospective changes. Normally, the judicial doctrine that requires parties to exhaust their administrative remedies before appealing to the courts would require taxpayers to petition the department under
ORS
In light of that explanation, the court now turns to the facts in this case. Taxpayer did not exercise its statutory right to appeal to BOPTA because it was ignorant of the real value of its property. When it appealed to the Magistrate Division of the Tax Court in May 1999, it sought relief under the only provision left available to it in the Tax Court, which was ORS
The magistrate held that taxpayer showed "good and sufficient cause" because taxpayer had been mislead by the assessor's office to appeal to the Magistrate Division instead of to the department. In some instances, being given misleading information by a tax official could constitute good and sufficient cause. Here, however, the advice to appeal to the Magistrate Division came long after taxpayer's statutory rights of appeal had expired. Therefore, that advice could not have been the reason taxpayer did not exercise its statutory rights of appeal. In the absence of good and sufficient cause, this court may not order a change of the 1996-97 assessment.
Finally, as an alternative argument, taxpayer asserts that the department should be estopped from claiming that taxpayer failed to make a timely appeal. "To succeed on a claim of estoppel against the state, a taxpayer must establish * * * misleading conduct by the state." Schellinv. Dept. of Rev.,
Taxpayer's agent asked a straightforward question and received the correct answer to her question.
In summary, the court finds that taxpayer failed to timely appeal its 1996-97 assessment to the Tax Court. Taxpayer failed to provide good and sufficient cause for that failure; and therefore, the court may not order a change of that assessment under ORS