18 Or. Tax 100 | Or. T.C. | 2005
In a series of recorded case management conferences and hearings in this division, the court requested or ordered taxpayer to specify the relief that he requests and to set forth the potential legal and factual bases for such relief. In response, taxpayer and the department represented to the court that the only year remaining at issue was the 1990 income tax year, although other years had initially been specified in taxpayer's complaint. Taxpayer also admitted that the dispute as to the 1990 income tax year was with respect to penalties and interest, and not as to the underlying tax liability.
Initially, in case management conferences, taxpayer asserted that he was proceeding under ORS
Following those discussions, taxpayer made three assertions in writings given to the court: (1) he was proceeding under only ORS
Taxpayer's Second Amended Complaint contained one section asserting perpetration of fraud, one section questioning application of garnished funds, and one section asserting forgery. That complaint did not address the factual elements of claims under ORS
In his third amended complaint, taxpayer made three claims: (1) a request for a refund of tax, penalties and interest, and damages and punitive damages under ORS
The department has moved to strike the first and third sections of taxpayer's Third Amended Complaint. This matter is before the court on that motion.
B. Should the court strike those portions of taxpayer's Third Amended Complaint relating to tort allegations?
C. If the court strikes a portion of taxpayer's Third Amended Complaint, does taxpayer have the right to replead those or other claims?
1-3. First, a motion to strike may be used to raise challenges similar to those raised by a motion to dismiss. As the Oregon Supreme Court has stated:
"A motion to strike, as defined in ORCP 21 E[, upon which TCR 21 E is modeled], is directed as `any sham, frivolous or irrelevant pleading or defense or * * * any insufficient defense * * *.' Although ORCP 21 E does not specifically state that the motion is used to test the `legal sufficiency' of an allegation, `[a] legally insufficient allegation * * * is, in effect, a nullity, and may by stricken as either frivolous or irrelevant.' Davis v. Tyee Industries, Inc.,
295 Or 467 ,482-83 n 14,668 P2d 1186 (1983)."We have held that the motion to dismiss for failure to state ultimate facts sufficient to constitute a claim, ORCP 21 A[, upon which TCR 21A is modeled], also tests the `legal sufficiency' of the pleadings and `is equivalent to the [former] demurrer.' Paddock v. McDonald,
294 Or 667 ,672 ,661 P2d 545 (1983)."
Lane v. Maass,
4,5. Here the department has not alleged that taxpayer's pleadings are a "sham" and, therefore, the court will address whether those arguments are "frivolous or irrelevant." TCR 21 E. The court will analyze whether taxpayer's claims are "frivolous or irrelevant" under the same legal standard as that of a TCR 21A motion to dismiss. For the purposes of this motion only, the court accepts allegations in taxpayer's pleadings as true and gives taxpayers "the benefit of all reasonable inferences that may be drawn from those allegations."Lourim v. Swenson,
A. First Section: ORS
In its written and oral arguments related to the first section of taxpayer's Third Amended Complaint, the department observes that taxpayer had been permitted to replead under only ORS
As to ORS
6, 7. Taxpayer's position is not well taken. During all potentially relevant times, ORS
8-11. Taxpayer then asserts that because he ultimately filed a return for 1990 in 2001, long after the issuance of the NODA by the department, he is entitled to relief under ORS
12. ORS 305.265(10X0 does provide that if a late return is filed and accepted, the department may reduce the assessment made in the NODA. ORS
At the hearing on this motion, taxpayer indicated that his reliance on ORS
As to all assertions made under ORS
B. Taxpayer's Tort Claims and Claims for Damages
13. In the first and third sections of his Third Amended Complaint, taxpayer made claims for relief in the form of compensatory and punitive damages for alleged wrongful behavior by employees of the department.3 This court has jurisdiction only in respect of issues arising under the tax laws of this state. Taxpayer asserts that this court has jurisdiction to hear what he concedes are tort claims because the alleged torts occurred in the process of tax administration. That is not the law. The Oregon Supreme Court stated over 20 years ago that: *108
"A tort is not a tax matter simply because the tortfeasors are tax assessors. Plaintiffs tax claims are unaffected by whether the assessors committed any torts. Even if defendants maliciously harassed plaintiff, the assessment may be correct."
Sanok v. Grimes,
The holding and reasoning of Sanok is fully applicable in this case. The court in Sanok demonstrated the proper method of inquiry in such matters. In that case, qualification of property for special assessment had been denied and the plaintiff complained about the denial and allegedly tortious actions of the assessment officials during the process of the denial. Id. at 697-98. The court noted:
"The regulations * * * define that status in terms of the objective uses of the land * * *. Eligibility for the tax status depends on the actual or planned use of the land for growing marketable trees, not on misdeeds of officials. Tortious misconduct of the assessors, however heinous, does not qualify plaintiffs land for that tax status."
Id. at 698.
Here, the facts giving rise to taxpayer's tax claim are distinct from those potentially relevant to any tort claim he might have. Taxpayer was provided an opportunity to plead facts relevant to a claim for interest and penalty elimination under ORS
Based on the foregoing, the court concludes that insofar as the first section of taxpayer's complaint makes a claim for tort damages, that is a claim over which this court has no jurisdiction. The court concludes that is also true for the third section of taxpayer's complaint. As such, those *109
claims are, in this court, a legal "nullity, and may be stricken as either frivolous or irrelevant." Lane,
C. Effect of Striking a Portion of Taxpayer's Complaint
Taxpayer asserts that if, as concluded above, only part of his pleading is stricken, he has a right to amend his pleading and that he may replead any or all of his claims. In support of that assertion, taxpayer cites TCR 25 A, which states:
"When a motion to dismiss or a motion to strike an entire pleading or a motion for a judgment on the pleadings under Rule 21 is allowed, the court may, upon such terms as may be proper, allow the party to amend the pleading. In all cases where part of a pleading is ordered stricken, the pleading shall be amended in accordance with Rule 23 D. By amending a pleading pursuant to this section, the party amending such pleading shall not thereby be deemed to have waived the right to challenge the correctness of the court's ruling."
(Emphasis added.) Here the court has stricken only a portion of taxpayer's complaint and, therefore, the applicable amendment rule is TCR 23 D, which provides:
"When any pleading is amended before trial, mere clerical errors excepted, it shall be done by filing a new pleading, to be called the amended pleading, or by interlineation, deletion, or otherwise. Such amended pleading shall be complete in itself, without reference to the original or any proceeding amended one."
(Emphasis added.)
14. Read together neither TCR 25 A nor TCR 23 D permits repleading as a matter of right. Those rules merely contemplate an amendment, which may be accomplished by "interlineation, deletion, or otherwise." TCR 23 D. Here, the court will delete by interlineation the material contained in the department's motion, as supplemented by its letter to the *110 court dated September 28, 2004. The resulting pleading is section two of taxpayer's Third Amended Complaint.
This result is especially applicable here when the court has granted taxpayer numerous opportunities to plead his case and has considered claims beyond those he was specifically permitted to replead.
IT IS ORDERED that Department's Motion to Strike Plaintiffs Third Amended Complaint is granted; and
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that trial will proceed as scheduled.