5 Or. Tax 78 | Or. T.C. | 1972
Decision for plaintiffs rendered June 16, 1972. *79 Plaintiffs appeal from the Department of Revenue's Order No. VL 71-767 which held that certain personal property should be assessed at 40 percent of true cash value for the 1971 tax year. Plaintiffs pray that this court set aside that order and determine that the property in question should be assessed at the stipulated true cash value of $97,900 as of January 1, 1971.
The subject property is a dredge owned by M. P Materials Company, an Oregon corporation, hereinafter referred to as the taxpayer. The dredge is equipped with a hydraulic pump which pulls gravel, sand and silt from lake or river bottoms or flooded gravel pits in which it floats and deposits the severed material at some nearby point through pipes. The dredge itself is made operable by two motors; one operates the cable that pulls the dredge into a desired location and the other runs the hydraulic pump. The hull of the dredge can be disassembled and transported by truck to the various work locations, although the record indicates that the dredge was operating and located in a gravel pit on Turner Road in Marion County, Oregon, during the entire tax year at issue.
In November 1971, the taxpayer filed a petition with the defendant, Department of Revenue, asking it to exercise its general supervisory authority pursuant to ORS
The issues in this case are: (1) Whether the Department of Revenue had jurisdiction to grant the taxpayer a hearing and issue its order and whether this court has the jurisdiction to hear the question of partial exemption and (2) if this court has jurisdiction, whether the property in question should have been assessed at true cash value or at 40 percent of true cash value.
[1, 2.] The question which the taxpayer petitioned the Department of Revenue to answer in November 1971 was the applicability to its property of ORS
Plaintiffs next contend that the subject dredge should have been assessed at true cash value under ORS
ORS
"* * * any ship, vessel, or other watercraft * * * which is employed or used as a plant for the reduction or processing but excluding canning, of deep-sea fish, * * *."
The unusual use of commas in the quoted matter has led the plaintiffs to argue that the words "deep-sea fish" do not modify "reduction" or "processing" and that the taxpayer's production of sand and gravel comes within these descriptions.
[3.] It is the court's opinion that the language of ORS
"Reduce" means to bring to a certain state or condition by grinding, pounding, kneading and rubbing. People v. MontereyFish Products Co.,
Plaintiffs further contend that if the taxpayer's dredge does not come within ORS
"(6) Watercraft falling under subsection (5) *83 of this section shall be assessed at true cash value, except as follows:
"(a) Ships and vessels whose home ports are in the State of Oregon and which ply the high seas or between the high seas and inland water ports or termini shall be assessed at four percent of the true cash value thereof.
"(b) All other ships and vessels whose home ports are in the State of Oregon shall be assessed at 40 percent of the true cash value thereof."
[4.] It must be remembered that we are construing a tax statute, the principal purpose of which is to raise revenue. An examination of ORS
The language of subsection (6) of ORS
A "home port" is the harbor or port from which a ship hails or, more importantly, from which it is documented. Under the "home port doctrine," a vessel plying the high seas may be taxed at its full value in its home port and in no other jurisdiction, including those ports visited by the vessel during its voyages. Star-Kist Foods, Inc. v. Byram,
The parties, including the assessor, stipulated that the true cash value of the subject property on the *85
assessment date was $97,900. ORS
The defendant's order is set aside and the assessor and sheriff are directed to amend the 1971-1972 assessment and tax rolls to show the true cash value of such property as of January 1, 1971. *86