11 Or. Tax 245 | Or. T.C. | 1989
Defendant's Motion To Dismiss denied July 28, 1989. *246 This matter comes before the court on defendant's Motion To Dismiss. The underlying facts are:
Plaintiff appealed to the Umatilla County Board of Equalization for the assessment dates of January 1, 1985, and January 1, 1986. After hearings, the board issued its order for 1985 on July 10, 1985, and its order for 1986 on July 21, 1986. Plaintiff did not appeal from those orders within 30 days, as provided by ORS
The question raised by defendant's motion is whether a taxpayer may seek relief under ORS
1. There are four steps in the "normal" property tax appeal process. Two are administrative; first to the board of equalization (ORS
2. Defendant has long had supervisory authority over property taxes throughout the state. In 1983, the legislature consolidated the department's supervisory powers and made *247
other changes.2 Three separate statutes, ORS
"The department discovers reason to correct the roll 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." Or Laws 1983, ch 605, § 1(3)(b).
One of the circumstances which the department deemed correctable was "gross error." The department struggled with the definition of "gross error" for some time. In 1984 it adopted OAR
Defendant argues that ORS
"Because ORS
306.115 (3) involves an extraordinary remedy and provides the Department with authority to correct errors outside the normal appeals procedure, an appeal under the normal procedure, standing alone, does not invoke supervisory authority." 307 Or at 645.
That argument, however, does not answer the question. Plaintiff's petition to the department under ORS
Defendant also points to the rather extensive legislative history which indicates that the legislature assumed ORS
3. In construing a statute, the first question for a court is: What does the statute provide? It is the statute, not the legislative history, which controls. Whipple v. Howser,
4. Defendant's position would require the court to read a condition into the statute that is not there. Nowhere does the statute limit appeals for gross error to those cases where the taxpayer failed to appeal to the board of equalization. In fact, the statute in 1985 expressly stated "without regard toany failure to exercise a right of appeal." (Emphasis added.) Moreover, subsection (5) of ORS
"The remedies provided under this section are in addition to all other remedies provided by law, including but not limited to those available under ORS
305.285 ."
It is worth noting that under subsection (3) of ORS
*249"(a) The assessor or taxpayer has no statutory right of appeal remaining and the department determines that good and sufficient cause exists for the failure by the assessor or taxpayer to pursue the statutory right of appeal[.]"
In its rule, OAR
"(a) For purposes of ORS
306.115 (3)(a): (A) The assessor or taxpayer has no statutory right of appeal remaining if;"(i) the statutory time limit for appealing to the department has passed, or if,
"(ii) the taxpayer or assessor has not properly exhausted prior administrative remedies and the deadline for exhausting such remedies has passed."
This rule allows a taxpayer who has appealed to the board of equalization to later seek relief under ORS
In view of the above, the court concludes that a taxpayer may petition the department for relief under ORS
5. The court notes that its ruling in this area is intentionally narrow. The court is not ruling on whether a taxpayer may appeal under ORS
It is also worth noting that an appeal under ORS
In view of the above, the court finds that defendant's Motion To Dismiss must be denied. Now, therefore,
IT IS ORDERED that defendant's Motion To Dismiss be, and hereby is, denied.
"(3)(a)(B) The department discovers that with respect to the value given to the separate assessment of property on the assessment or tax roll that a gross error in value exists; * * *
"* * * * *
"(5)(b) A 'gross error in value' exists if the difference between the value claimed or requested for the property and the true cash value of the property as it appears on the assessment or tax roll is equal to or greater than 20 percent of the true cash value as it appears on the assessment or tax roll."
*251"But under the old law, I mean, that's what's so confusing. You've got a system set up to go through a board of equalization. * * * Okay, now you're talking about when you skip the board of equalization then you're in another system called the supervisory, or under the supervisory powers." Minutes, Joint Interim Committee on Revenue and School Finance, Tape 66, Side A, July 11, 1986.