ORS 673.615 and ORS 673.643 require that paid tax preparers register with and be licensed by the Oregon Board of Tax Practitioners (board).
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ORS 673.705 prohibits unlicensed persons from holding themselves out as licensed tax consultants. After the board notified plaintiffs that it was initiating administrative proceedings to determine whether they had violated those three statutes, plaintiffs filed an action in the trial court seeking a declaration that those statutes were preempted by federal law. Plaintiffs also sought an injunction to prevent the board from proceeding against them. After unsuccessfully moving to dismiss plaintiffs’judicial action, the board moved for summary judgment, which the trial court granted. On
On May 30, 2000, the board sent Thomas and Paula Eppler and their company, Eppler & Eppler, LLC, a notice of proposed action and right to hearing. The notice alleged that, over the past five years, the Epplers and their company had repeatedly violated three statutes. Specifically, the notice alleged that, without being licensed to do so, the Epplers had prepared or helped prepare personal income tax returns for consideration, see ORS 673.615(1); that the Epplers had falsely held themselves out as licensed tax consultants, see ORS 673.705(3); and that their company had operated as a tax preparation business without having registered with the board, see ORS 673.643(1). The notice advised the Epplers and their company that the board sought to assess a civil penalty against them for violating those statutes and that they had a right to a hearing.
Approximately two months later, the Epplers and their company (plaintiffs) filed this action in the trial court. 2 They sought a declaration that federal law preempts the state statutes that the board sought to enforce and an injunction preventing the board from proceeding against them. The board moved to dismiss plaintiffs’judicial action because the Oregon Administrative Procedures Act (APA) required plaintiffs to raise their preemption argument in the contested case proceeding before the board. The APA, the board argued, did not permit plaintiffs to seek a judicial declaration on a defense that could be resolved in the pending board proceeding. The trial court denied the board’s motion. Later, on cross-motions for summary judgment, the trial court ruled that federal law does not preempt the state statutes that the board sought to enforce and entered judgment in the board’s favor. On appeal, plaintiffs challenge the trial court’s ruling on the merits of their preemption claim. The board defends that ruling but also cross-assigns error to the trial court’s ruling on its motion to dismiss. We begin with the board’s cross-assignment of error.
The governing principles are well established. We have long recognized that the APA “establishes a comprehensive pattern for the judicial review of administrative decisions. The various APA statutes governing judicial review provide the sole and exclusive methods of obtaining judicial review.”
Bay River v. Envir. Quality Comm.,
Plaintiffs do not dispute those general principles. They argue instead that this case comes within an exception to the rule in
Bay River.
Plaintiffs contend that, because the board lacked authority to decide their federal preemption claim, they were not required
Plaintiffs argue initially that ORS 673.730, which defines the board’s powers, does not authorize it to resolve preemption claims. In analyzing that argument, we start with the text of ORS 673.730.
See PGE v. Bureau of Labor and Industries,
The authority to decide whether a civil penalty should be assessed includes the authority to resolve all issues that are “necessary or proper” to making that decision. 5 Textually, there is no reason to distinguish plaintiffs’ preemption claim from any other issue or defense that the board must resolve in the course of deciding whether to impose a civil penalty. The resolution of those issues is “necessary” to the decision that ORS 673.730(7) expressly commits to the board—whether to impose a civil penalty. See ORS 673.730. Under the plain language of ORS 673.730, the board has the authority to decide plaintiffs’ preemption claim.
Plaintiffs advance a second, related argument. Relying on
Sunshine Dairy v. Peterson,
Contrary to plaintiffs’ argument, the more recent decisions have repeatedly held that agencies have authority to decide the constitutionality of the statutes they are charged with enforcing. A
fortiori,
the board had authority to decide plaintiffs’ claim that federal law preempted the state statutes it sought to enforce against plaintiffs.
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It follows that, under
Bay River,
plaintiffs’ sole recourse was to raise their preemption claim in the contested case proceeding
before
the board and seek judicial review, under the APA, of any adverse ruling by the board. Plaintiffs could not circumvent the APA by seeking declaratory and injunctive relief in the trial court. We accordingly vacate the trial court’s judgment.
See Bay River,
Judgment vacated; remanded with instructions to dismiss case for lack of jurisdiction.
Notes
The Board of Tax Practitioners was formerly known as the Board of Tax Service Examiners. See Or Laws 2001, ch 136, § 8.
In addition to filing this action, plaintiffs appeared in the administrative proceeding, which resulted in a final order assessing a civil penalty against them.
The rule is more complex when a plaintiff initiates a declaratory judgment proceeding in advance of agency action. We have held that, when a party brings a declaratory judgment action to determine the constitutionality of the land use law independently of any agency action, the issue is properly before the trial court.
Clatsop County v. LCDC,
ORS 673.735(2) provides that “[c]ivil penalties under this section shall be imposed as provided in ORS 183.090.” ORS 183.090(4) provides that civil penalties may be imposed after a contested case proceeding, and ORS 183.090(5) provides that judicial review of an order imposing a civil penalty “shall be as provided in ORS 183.480 to 183.497 for judicial review of contested cases.”
In arguing that the board lacks statutory authority to resolve preemption claims, plaintiffs neither quote nor address the portion of ORS 673.730 that gives the board “all powers necessary or proper to carry the granted powers into effect.”
Although plaintiffs characterize their preemption claim as a constitutional challenge, that characterization is somewhat strained. Preemption requires an examination of congressional intent, not constitutional validity.
See Shaw v. Delta Air Lines, Inc.,
The court reasoned that the legislature had implicitly authorized agencies to decide constitutional questions when, in enacting the APA, it “require [d] a final order in a contested case to include the agency’s conclusions of law, ORS 183.470(2), and subject[ed] the order to reversal if it violates a constitutional provision, ORS 183.482(8)(b)(C).”
Cooper,
Plaintiffs seek to distinguish this ease from Cooper, Nutbrown, and Rogue Valley by characterizing their preemption claim as a challenge to the board’s enabling act. Plaintiffs, however, have not argued that the legislature lacks authority to create the board. Rather, they have argued that the statutes that the board is charged with enforcing are preempted, as the plaintiffs in Cooper, Nutbrown, and Rogue Valley did. Beyond that, plaintiffs offer no principled basis for saying that an agency may consider constitutional challenges to one class of statutes but not to another.
