Hеndra KUSUMA and Megawati Hasan, Plaintiffs, v. DEPARTMENT OF REVENUE, State of Oregon, Defendant, and WASHINGTON COUNTY ASSESSOR Defendant-Intervenor.
(TC 5439)
IN THE OREGON TAX COURT REGULAR DIVISION
November 6, 2023
25 OTR 426
ROBERT T. MANICKE, Judge.
No. 27
Trial was held remotely on November 29, 2022.
Hendra Kusuma, Plaintiff, argued the cause pro se.
Jason Bush, Washington County Counsel, Hillsboro, argued the cause for Defendant-Intervenor.
Decision rendered November 6, 2023.
ROBERT T. MANICKE, Judge.
I. INTRODUCTION
Plaintiffs (taxpayer) appeals from a Magistrate Division decision denying the three-percent discount under
II. FACTS
In acсordance with Tax Court Rule (TCR) 56 B, several days before trial the parties exchanged documents to be proffered as exhibits in their respective cases in chief. At the start of trial, the parties agreed to waive objections to the admission of all exchanged documents. taxpayer’s exhibits are numbered 1 through 7 and the assessor’s exhibits are numbered I-1 through I-9. Based on the exhibits and on testimony at trial, the court finds that the facts recited in this section are not in dispute.
For tax year 2020-21 and for all relеvant prior tax years, the assessor offered an online option to pay property tax bills, using “e-checks, also known as ACH or *** the automated clearinghouse system.” The assessor used a vendor known as FIS as part of the online payment process.4 One role FIS played was to “front the money” to the assessor during the period of up to seven to ten days needed for an e-check to clear the ACH process. FIS’s practice was to provide payment to the assеssor on the next business day after the taxpayer completed the taxpayer’s portion of the online process. If the taxpayer’s e-check eventually cleared, FIS would retain that amount for its own account; if not, FIS would notify the assessor and recover the amount of the payment from the assessor. The assessor then would reverse the record of having been paid and notify the taxpayer that payment remained due and owing.
On November 11 or 12, 2020, approximately five days before the November 16 due date, taxpayer sought to pay online the discounted amount due for his property for tax year 2020-21.56 Taxpayer obtained a document entitled “Tax Receipt,” bearing a “Payment Date” of “11/12/2020” and an “Effective Date” of “11/11/2020,” and showing a “Levied Tax” of $13,257.07, a “Discount” of $397.71, an “Amount Paid” of $12,859.36, and a “Balanсe” of $0.00.7 On November 12, 2020, taxpayer transferred $13,501.32 to a bank account for the purpose of paying the tax, and an amount in excess of $12,859.36 remained in that account through the November 30, 2020, bank statement closing date; however, the bank account statement shows no withdrawal or subtraction, or combination of withdrawals or subtractions, that match, or even roughly approximate, the amount of the levied or discounted tax.
On or about November 19, 2020, taxpayer received an email from thе assessor notifying him that his bank had rejected the payment. Taxpayer called the assessor’s office that day, and an employee offered to try to find out what had happened. On November 20, the employee called back and informed taxpayer that the assessor’s payment
Sometime before November 30, 2020, the manаger called taxpayer and stated that she, too, would not be able to reinstate the discounted bill. On November 30, 2020, taxpayer went through a new online session to pay the undiscounted amount of tax and all other amounts owing for tax year 2020-21 in order to avoid further charges. The November 30 attempt was successful.
III. ISSUE
Is taxpayer entitled to the three percent discount under
IV. BURDEN OF PROOF
In the Tax Court, the “party seeking affirmative relief” bears the burden of proving its casе by a “preponderance of the evidence.”
V. ANALYSIS
At trial, the parties framed the dispute as whether, in an online session on November 11 or 12, 2020, taxpayer succeeded in accurately completing all necessary steps in the assessor’s оnline payment processes to receive the discount with respect to the bill for the subject property for tax year 2020-21. Before addressing that factual issue, the court reviews the governing law.
A. Legal Background
1. Discount statute: ORS 311.505(3)
The right to a discount is found in
“(3) Discounts shall be allowed on partial or full payments of [all taxes on property], made on or before November 15 as follows:
“(a) Two percent on two-thirds of such taxes so paid.
“(b) Three percent where all of such taxes are so paid.”
The statute does not define “paid” or “payment,” nor does it state at what point, in an online transaction, the tax is considered paid. Cf.
2. Other relevant law governing “payment” of a debt: ORS chapter 74A
The Uniform Commercial Code—Funds Transfers (UCC-FT) in ORS chapter 74A applies to automated clearinghouse transactions. See
“(1) [T]he originator of a funds transfer pays the beneficiary of the originator’s payment order:
“(a) At the time a payment order for the benefit of the beneficiary is accepted by the beneficiary’s bank in the funds transfer; and
“(b) In an amount equal to the amount of the order accepted by the beneficiary’s bank ** *.
“(2) If payment * * * is made to satisfy an obligation, the obligation is discharged to the same extent discharge would result from payment to the beneficiary of the same amount in money [.]”
3. Initial conclusions based on governing law and undisputed facts
Under the assessor’s practice involving FIS, a taxpayer or other person using the online payment process never “pays” the assessor, within the meaning of the UCC-FT.
The court thus proceeds to the case as presented by the parties.
B. Factual Analysis
The assessor presented two witnesses who testified about the online payment process by reference to exhibits that includеd screen shots showing the information and instructions presented to taxpayers using the assessor’s portal. Taxpayer testified that the assessor’s evidence is inaccurate; therefore, the court reviews the testimony and makes factual findings.
1. Was the six-step process in Intervenor’s Exhibit I-3 in place during taxpayer’s online session November 11-12?
a. Assessor’s evidence
The Washington County Tax Division Manager, Gary Hubbard, testified that the online process in place on
The first screen (Step 1) described the options of payment by credit card (subject to a 2.45% surcharge) or by “E-check ACH Transactions” (subject to a $.95 surcharge). Included on this screen was a notification stating: “Please ensure your bank routing & account number are entered correctly. If an entry error occurs, loss of discount and interest may apply.”
The second screen (Step 2) required the user to enter the applicable property tax account number. Taxрayer’s property tax account number starts with the letter “R.”
The third screen (Step 3) required the user to verify the property tax account number, enter the amount to be paid, and select whether to pay by “Visa/MC/Discover/American Express” or by “e-Check (ACH).” Immediately beneath the selection box appeared the following notice, preceded by the word “IMPORTANT,” in red capital letters: “If paying by E-Check/ACH, please allow 7-10 business days to process. Please ensure your bank routing and аccount number are entered correctly. If an entry error occurs, loss of discount and interest may apply.”
The fourth screen (Step 4) required the user to:
- Enter the user’s bank routing number;
- Re-enter the user’s bank routing number;
- Enter the user’s bank account number;
- Re-enter the user’s bank account number;
- Enter the user’s billing information (name, address, phone, email address); and
- Click “Continue” to advance to the next screen.
The routing and account numbers were required to be entered manually; the portal did not allow them to be cut and pasted.
The fifth screen (Step 5) asked the user to review the information just entered on lines 1 through 5 in the
Finally, after the user clicked “Process Payment,” a sixth screen appeared, bearing the label: “(Step 6 of 6) Thank you for your payment. Please print this receipt and keep it for your records.” The screen displayed the property account number, the amount paid, the date and time, the payment type (such as “eCheck”), and the bank account number (or a portion thereof) entered earlier. A paragraph in the middle of the screen stated:
“By consenting with the processing of this transaction, you are authorizing to debit your account for a one-time payment that may be processed as early as today. If you need to stop payment on this transaction you may contact your financial institution. If stop payment is not received in a timely manner, it may not be stopped. If you have any questions, you may contact our Customer Support.”
b. Taxpayer’s evidence
Taxpayer testified that the process he went through on November 11 or 12, 2020, was “quite different” from the рrocess that Hubbard described. Taxpayer’s evidence for this assertion consists of one document; otherwise, he bases his position on logic. The document on which taxpayer relies is the “Tax Receipt” showing a “Payment Date” of 11/12/2020 and an “Effective Date” of 11/11/2020. Taxpayer testified that he captured an image of this document as a screen shot during his online session on November 11 or 12, 2020, implying that the six-step process could not have been in place because the Tax Reсeipt he received is not part of that process pursuant to the assessor’s testimony. As a matter of logic, taxpayer argues that it is highly unlikely that he could have entered the wrong account number in Step 4 of the six-step process shown on Intervenor’s Exhibit I-3, pages 5 and 6. The screen at Step 4 has a heading “Bank Account Information,” followed by four fields that require the user to enter numbers. The first field is labeled “Routing Number.” The second field is labeled “Re-enter Routing Number.” The third field is labeled “Account Number.” The fourth field is labeled “Re-enter Account Number.” Taxpayer did not
c. Assessor’s rebuttal evidence
The assessor’s witness Hubbard testified that the same six-step process was in place on both November 30, 2020, when taxpayer made his successful payment and on November 11 and 12, stating, “Did we have two systems in place at that time? No, we didn’t. We had оne payment system in place.” He based his testimony on his 20-year tenure as the assessor’s Tax Division Manager, and on his participation in preparing the screen shot exhibits. Hubbard did not directly address taxpayer’s assertion that the “Tax Receipt” in Plaintiffs’ Exhibit 3 at 1 and Intervenor’s Exhibit I-4 proves that a different process was in place. However, Hubbard testified that the assessor’s practice was to provide such a receipt “if requested,” which allows for a fact scenario consistent with both рarties’ positions: Taxpayer could have both gone through the six-step process and also obtained the Tax Receipt through a separate process at or around the same time. Most importantly, the assessor also presented direct evidence that taxpayer entered his property tax account number in the space provided for his bank account number. Nathan Friedman, Director of Operations at the assessor’s payment processing comрany FIS, testified that he researched whether taxpayer had correctly entered his account data on November 11 or 12, 2020. According to Friedman, FIS maintains “Transaction Details” reports that reflect a user’s entries in Steps 4 through 6 above. Friedman presented screenshots of those reports for November 11, 2020, and November 30, 2020, as well as November 14, 2017,
d. Court’s findings as to six-step process
Weighing the evidence discussed above, the court finds that taxpayer has failed to carry his burden of proof that he completed all necessary steps as instructed in his online session on November 11 or 12, 2020. First, the cоurt finds persuasive the assessor’s documentary evidence and the testimony of Hubbard and Friedman that the six-step process was in place on November 11 and 12, 2020 and that it functioned as those witnesses described. Taxpayer’s direct evidence that a different process was in place consists only of his own testimony of his personal recollection and one document: the Tax Receipt in Plaintiffs’ Exhibit 3 and Intervenor’s Exhibit I-4. However, the issuance of the Tax Receipt, which the assessor doеs not dispute, does not prove that the six-step process was not in place. The assessor’s witness Hubbard testified that the assessor’s practice was to issue a receipt in the form of the Tax Receipt “if requested.” The court finds that this testimony implies that the assessor could have issued the Tax Receipt to taxpayer after taxpayer went through the six-step process.9 Taxpayer did not prove otherwise.
2. Did taxpayer successfully complete the six-step process?
Having found that the six-step process was in place, the court turns to whether taxpayer successfully completed
3. Taxpayer’s statistical arguments
Finally, taxpayer also alleged that statistical data he obtained from the assessor indicate that a system failure occurred, during or after his November 11 or 12 online session, that caused his payment to be rejected. Much of taxpayer’s argument is based on his view that an anomalous number of payment failures occurred at or near taxpayer’s November 11 or 12 online session. The assessor presented testimony and documentary evidence that rebuts that view, including evidence that apparent clusters of transaction failures may be attributed to lags in reporting due to the occurrence of weekends, the Veterans’ Day holiday (November 11, 2020), and the possible absence of input staff on November 12, 2020. The court finds that the weight of the evidence supports the assessor’s position that no systemic failure affected taxpayer’s attempt to pay his bill on November 11 or 12, 2020.
VI. CONCLUSION
Now, therefore,
IT IS THE OPINION OF THIS COURT that Plaintiffs’ appeal must be denied, and the three percent discount described in
