14 Or. Tax 169 | Or. T.C. | 1997
Decision for defendant rendered April 3, 1997.
Aff'd
The winery building, containing approximately 110,000 square feet, houses a crush pad and equipment used for stemming, crushing, fermenting, storing, and bottling the wine. There is also a laboratory for analysis, a dining room, and guest facilities. The dining room and guest rooms, like the tasting room, are used to entertain guests and clients to promote the sale of the wine.
The tangible personal property in question falls into different classes. Class 6 property consists of barrels, racks, rollers, bungs, staves, portable roto dumps, fume hoods, hoses, fittings, pumps, valves, tanks, seals, washers, and other moveable equipment used to stem and crush the grapes, filter the juice, and ferment and store the wine. Class 9 property consists of furniture and furnishings in the dining room and guest rooms, including bookcases, tables, china, silverware, and chairs. Class 12/14 property consists of computer equipment and related equipment used for making wine, keeping fermentation records, inventory control, sales, accounting, and bookkeeping. Class 15 property consists of *171 rolling stock such as fork lifts, scissor lifts, and an electric generator. Finally, there are materials and supplies constituting both inventory and noninventory items.
ORS
"(a) Farm machinery and equipment used primarily in the preparation of land, planting, raising, cultivating, irrigating, harvesting or placing in storage of farm crops; or
"(b) Farm machinery and equipment used primarily for the purpose of feeding, breeding, management and sale of, or the produce of, livestock, poultry, fur-bearing animals or bees or for dairying and the sale of dairy products; or
"(c) Farm machinery and equipment used primarily in any other agricultural or horticultural use or animal husbandry or any combination thereof[.]" ORS
307.400 (3).
Inventory also includes tangible personal property unrelated to farming which is stock in trade held for sale in the ordinary course of business. ORS
Both parties acknowledge that vineyards qualify as farm use. The question presented here is whether a winery and wine-tasting rooms are farm use. In Girardet v. Dept. of Rev.,
"By statute, farm use means the current employment of land for the primary purpose of obtaining a profit in money by raising, harvesting, and selling crops, among other uses. ORS
215.203 (2)(a). * * * `Current employment' of land includes * * * `[l]and under buildings supporting accepted farm practices.' ORS215.203 (2)(b)(F). * * *"Fermentation of grapes grown and sale of wine on site represent an accepted farming practice as defined. Wineries, which process the yield of vineyards, and tasting rooms, which accompany the winery to promote its product, are `accepted farming practices' because they are `customarily utilized in conjunction with' vineyards. Those uses are included within an EFU zone." Id., 308 Or at 285.
Although the Supreme Court's analysis is unqualified, this court is now persuaded that it no longer represents the law. Moreover, upon further analysis, this court acknowledges thatGirardet went too far and must be overruled.
2. The guiding principle in statutory construction is always legislative intent. PGE v. Bureau of Labor and Industries,
3. If a barn, silo or other farm-type building comes within the description of ORS
4. However, if a specific land use such as breeding of greyhounds or wineries is listed in ORS
*174"Ordinarily, when the legislature includes an express provision in one statute, but omits such a provision in another statute, it may be inferred that such an omission was deliberate." Oregon Business Planning Council v. LCDC,
290 Or. 741 ,749 ,626 P.2d 350 (1981).
5. In 1989, the Oregon legislature specifically added wineries to the list of permitted and conditional uses in ORS
This court erred in Girardet by failing to carry the analysis to its conclusion. The court saw the overlapping general descriptions and relied upon Craven in concluding that a winery was a farm use. However, it failed to recognize that for the year in question, ORS
The court concludes that the legislature did not intend a winery to be a farm use within the meaning of ORS
IT IS ORDERED that plaintiff's Motion for Summary Judgment is denied.
"A winery, authorized under ORS
215.213 (1)(t) and215.283 (1)(r), is a facility that produces wine with a maximum annual production of:
"(a) Less than 50,000 gallons and that:
"(A) Owns an onsite vineyard of at least 15 acres;
"(B) Owns a contiguous vineyard of at least 15 acres:
"(C) Has a long-term contract for the purchase of all of the grapes from at least 15 acres of a vineyard contiguous to the winery; or
"(D) Obtains grapes from any combination of subparagraph (A), (B) or (C) of this paragraph; or
"(b) At least 50,000 gallons and no more than 100,000 gallons and that:
"(A) Owns an onsite vineyard of at least 40 acres;
"(B) Owns a contiguous vineyard of at least 40 acres;
*176"(C) Has a long-term contract for the purchase of all of the grapes from at least 40 acres of a vineyard contiguous to the winery; or
"(D) Obtains grapes from any combination of subparagraph (A), (B) or (C) of this paragraph."