3 Or. Tax 523 | Or. T.C. | 1969
Decision modifying order of defendant rendered November 4, 1969.
Plaintiff is the owner of 18.72 acres of land located in Polk County in an area zoned for farm use. The county assessor assessed the land at market value instead of farm use value believing that the land did not meet the income requirements established by ORS *524
The land, purchased by plaintiff in 1964, consists of three acres surrounding plaintiff's home, implement shed and barn; five acres of immature fruit trees with some Christmas trees interspersed among the fruit trees; an irrigation pond consisting of one acre; two to three acres of pasture; one acre of Christmas trees and six and a half acres of fallow or unused land.
The pasture has been used for grazing two riding horses. The six and a half acres of fallow land were rented in 1965 and 1966 to a neighbor for raising grain, but plaintiff's share of the income was less than $100 per year. Since 1966 the land has been unused and uncultivated except for some plowing and rototilling to control the weeds. Plaintiff testified that eventually he intended to plant trees on the six and a half acres; at the time of trial the land had not been planted to trees.
The Department of Revenue allowed the farm use classification to the five acres of fruit trees and denied a farm classification to the balance.
ORS
ORS
1. The six and a half acres of fallow or unused land is not entitled to the special farm use assessment. As the land had been used to grow grain in 1965 and 1966 and was unused during 1967, it had been "fallow" for one year. However, the statute also requires that the land must have been lying fallow as a "normal and regular requirement of good agricultural husbandry." Undoubtedly the legislature contemplated the customary farming practice of leaving the land unplanted for one year and working it in order to destroy weeds, conserve moisture and restore the soil nutrients preparatory to raising a crop the following year. Plowing and rototilling the six and a half acres to destroy the weeds with the intention to plant a crop at some uncertain time is not the type of "agricultural husbandry" contemplated by the statute.
The question of whether land used to grow Christmas trees constitutes farm use within the meaning of ORS
Chapter 321 of ORS relates to the taxation of timber within this state. Part of the chapter, ORS
2. Plaintiff has not petitioned for a reforestation classification, consequently his Christmas tree land is not subject to the provisions of chapter 321.
Assuming, without deciding, that raising Christmas trees constitutes horticultural use of the land, the land has not produced any income for plaintiff and in order to receive a farm use classification it must fall within the exception for "land planted in orchards or other perennials prior to maturityfor bearing crops." (Emphasis supplied.)
It is difficult to understand what the legislature intended by the phrase "other perennials prior to maturity for bearing crops." It is common knowledge that orchards do not produce a marketable crop until they are several years old. However, with the possible exception of grapes, all other perennials which bear crops in the usual sense of the word will bear at least a small amount of produce the first year.
"Crops" has been defined as " 'that which is gathered from a single field, or a single kind of grain or fruit, for a single season; especially the valuable produce of what is planted in the earth; fruit; harvest.' " *527 Jackson Perkins Co. v. Stanislaus Co. Bd. of Sup'rs,
3. In common and ordinary parlance the growing and harvesting of Christmas trees would not be the growing and harvesting of a perennial which bears crops.
It is concluded that Christmas trees are not within the provisions of ORS
The one-acre pond is used to irrigate plaintiff's orchard and is an integral part of the orchard. It falls within the exclusion mentioned in paragraph (c) of ORS 213.203(2) as land planted in orchards, and is entitled to the farm use classification.
The plaintiff's two acres of pasture have not produced a gross income of $500 for three of the past five calendar years preceding January 1, 1968, and the land is not within the exceptions mentioned in paragraph (c) of ORS
The order of the defendant Department of Revenue is affirmed as modified herein.