7 Or. Tax 242 | Or. T.C. | 1977
Submitted on stipulation and briefs. *243 Decision for plaintiffs rendered October 17, 1977.
Affirmed
The subject property in both orders consists of parking lots owned by the State of Oregon, located in the Capital Mall area of Salem, Oregon.2 The lots are identified in the county records as Assessor's Account Nos. 25125-000, 25142-000, 25160-000, 25190-000, 25205-000, 25220-000, 25185-701, 25185-702, 25185-703, 25185-704, 25187-701, 25187-702, 25188-700, and 34770-000.
The County Assessor of Marion County had assessed the subject property as of January 1, 1975, for the tax year 1975-1976, at $1,498,000. The State of Oregon, as owner, petitioned the county board of equalization for a reduction in values and then, on June 9, 1975, appealed to the Department of Revenue for a reduction, pursuant to ORS
It was necessary for the county assessor to assess the property for the 1976-1977 roll, as of the assessment *244
date of January 1, 1976, before the Department of Revenue acted upon the state's petition. Having received no order at that date from the Department of Revenue, he assessed the subject property at the value he used in the prior tax year, 1975-1976. As there was no change in the assessed value, there was no necessity to notify the taxpayer of the assessment under ORS
On January 23, 1976, the defendant department held its formal hearing on the value of the subject property as of the assessment date January 1, 1975.
On or about the second Monday in May 1976, the county board of equalization convened to act upon the assessment roll for the tax year 1976-1977. The roll for 1976-1977 was delivered by the assessor to the board as required by ORS
On June 18, 1976, the department issued its Order No. VL 76-403, reducing the assessed value of the subject property for the 1975-1976 tax year to $554,600.
Now follows a familiar pattern: The taxpayer, although engaged in contesting a prior year's assessment of the subject properties, failed to protect the current tax year's assessments by filing a petition with the county board of equalization. It did not follow the provisions of ORS
"The State of Oregon has requested that the Department of Revenue exercise its general supervisory authority pursuant to ORS
305.090 and306.111 to correct certain grossly excessive Marion County real property investments for the tax year 1976-1977."
The order described the subject property and referred to the former order, No. VL 76-403, for the tax year 1975-1976, and required the assessor and tax collector to "take such steps as are necessary to correct the Marion County Tax Roll for the tax year 1976-1977 * * *" in accordance with the values established for 1975-1976 in defendant's Order No. VL 76-403 issued on June 18, 1976.
Plaintiffs have appealed the defendant's Order No. VL 76-809 on the ground that the defendant was without jurisdiction to entertain the taxpayer's "request" for a remedy, and was without authority to grant the remedy sought and, as a second ground, that the defendant's treatment of the taxpayer's "request" was procedurally defective, even if the defendant had the power to act in the premises.
As has been said, in a substantial number of petitions, over a period of years, the defendant consistently has held that the taxpayer in the State of Oregon's position, who has failed to exhaust its administrative remedies, must be refused aid because of a lack of jurisdiction in the department to act upon such a request. Larson v. Dept. of Rev.,
[1.] The provisions on which defendant's order relies, "the general supervisory authority vested in the *246
Department by ORS
[2, 3.] No rules have been promulgated by defendant under ORS
[4, 5.] The court takes judicial notice of administrative interpretations of tax statutes by the Department of Revenue.Keyes v. Chambers et al,
Defendant's arguments to the court are extremely weak. It raises the disputable presumption, ORS
"* * * This presumption does not relate to the correctness of the value ascribed to property by the assessor. It does pertain to the procedural steps established by statute or those outlined by an administrative body not inconsistent with the statutory law."
However, as noted above, defendant has never established any procedural steps for the issuance of supervisory orders. It lacks a procedure and has acted inconsistently within the statutory law (i.e., ORS
"We have heretofore held that when an assessor has notice of a lawful determination of assessed values made *248 by superior authority, he is bound to implement the same of record on the assessment roll. * * *"
This, of course, begs the question of "lawful determination," raised in this suit.
[6.] Defendant's counsel, in Defendant's Brief 2-4, states that, in its Order No. VL 76-809, the defendant did not rely solely on its supervisory power (as plainly stated in so many words in the defendant's order), but acted under the statutory authority of ORS
Defendant's Order No. VL 76-809 was and must be considered void, a nullity, without force or effect, to be disregarded by the plaintiffs.6
"The Department of Revenue shall exercise general supervision of the system of taxation throughout the state, and general supervision and control over the administration of the assessment and tax laws and over county assessors and county boards of equalization in the performance of their duties relating to taxation to the end that all taxable property is assessed uniformly according to law and equality of taxation according to law is secured."
ORS
"The Department of Revenue may do any act or give any order to any county board of equalization or county assessor as to the valuation of any property or class of property which the department deems necessary so that all taxable property is assessed according to law and equalized between taxpayers, between counties and between taxing units to the end that equality of taxation according to law shall be secured."