18 Or. Tax 256 | Or. T.C. | 2005
B. Do any other reasons exist to prevent this court from considering the decision of the magistrate?
C. Is the department entitled to attorney fees?
D. Is the department entitled to damages under ORS
1. Timing of Determination
1. In Patton I this court stated that it agrees with the approach taken by the Oregon Court of Appeals in Dimeov. Gesik,
2-4. Under ORS
The language "entirely devoid of legal or factual support" is derived from the Oregon Supreme Court's definition of "meritless" in Mattiza v. Foster,
5,6. More recently,5 the Oregon Supreme Court indicated that "unreasonable" positions and those "without foundation" have a "common requirement": *261
"A court correctly characterizes a party's appeal as frivolous, unreasonable, or without foundation when a reasonable lawyer would know that each of the arguments on appeal is not well grounded in fact or is not warranted either by existing law or by a reasonable argument for the extension, modification, or reversal of existing law."
McCarthy v. Oregon Freeze Dry, Inc.,
7. Although the question of what a reasonable attorney8 knew or should have known could, theoretically, be *262
approached in some cases in a vacuum, the focus is both more realistic and sharpened when the court considers what the attorney had before him in the form of the decision of a magistrate.9 Essentially, the magistrate's decision acts as a baseline against which to operate in determining what a reasonable attorney knew or should have known at the time the complaint was filed. From that baseline, the court may more easily determine if a reasonable attorney "would know that each of the arguments on appeal is not well grounded in fact or is not warranted either by existing law or by a reasonable argument for the extension, modification, or reversal of existing law." McCarthy,
3. "Entirety" Test
8, 9. A further point to note in this discussion is the requirement of Mattiza that the nonprevailing party's claims, defenses, or grounds for appeal must be"entirely devoid of legal or factual support."
4. Conclusion
The court draws three conclusions regarding whether to award attorney fees pursuant to ORS
B. Other Considerations
10. The department makes a number of arguments as to why the Regular Division of the court should not consider a magistrate's decision. The department first asserts that, because ORS
The department also asserts that the court, by stating that it will consider whether the nonappealing taxpayer received a reasoned decision from the magistrate, has placed *264
the party requesting the attorney fees — i.e., the department — "in the uncomfortable position of contending that the magistrate's failure to find the case frivolous was unreasonable." The court never indicated, however, that the magistrate would or must make any finding as to frivolousness. Moreover, the department has confused the court's use of the term "reasoned" with the term "reasonable." In Patton I the court indicated that, at the time he filed his complaint in the Regular Division, taxpayer had before him "a reasoned decision" in which the magistrate "considered and rejected taxpayer's arguments." PattonI,
The court views a "reasoned" decision to be one with explanations. If a party lost before a magistrate but received little or no explanation, that fact — the lack of a reasoned decision — would be taken into account by the court. Moreover, a "reasoned" decision is not necessarily a completely "correct" decision. It may be important to know to what the party is reacting. For example, a taxpayer may not prevail on appeal but be found to have acted in an objectively reasonable manner because the magistrate was incorrect in part as to the law or application of law to the facts of the taxpayer's case — even though the taxpayer ultimately does not prevail in this division. The court concludes that the department's other arguments are without merit.10 *265
C. Attorney Fees
Having concluded that, under the appropriate standard for awarding attorney fees under ORS
At oral argument, taxpayer essentially conceded that all but one of his positions lacked merit. Taxpayer's remaining and so-called "keystone" argument was "that the state cannot impose a county real property tax and a state level timber severance tax on the same timber [because] ORS
11, 12. Here taxpayer made no argument that the text and context of the operative statute at issue was ambiguous.12
Nor did taxpayer argue that any statutory exemption existed for his situation in the actual operative language of the statutes. At most, taxpayer argued that a general statement of legislative intent in ORS
D. Damages
15,16. The department asserts that in cases such as this in which the court has determined that a taxpayer's claims are not objectively reasonable, the court must award damages to the department pursuant to ORS
"(1) Whenever it appears to the Oregon Tax Court that * * * the taxpayer's position in such proceeding is frivolous or groundless, damages in an amount not to exceed $5,000 shall be awarded to the Department of Revenue by the Oregon Tax Court in its judgment. Damages so awarded shall be paid within 10 days after the judgment becomes final. * * *
"(2) As used in this section, a taxpayer's position is `frivolous' if there was no objectively reasonable basis for asserting the position."
The department in argument acknowledged that the award, although required, could be of small amount. The court agrees with the department.15 Here the court has determined that taxpayer's claims were without objectively reasonable bases and, therefore, were frivolous. As a result, the court awards the department damages in the amount of $500.
IT IS ORDERED that Plaintiffs Motion for Reconsideration is denied;
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that Defendant's Motion for Reconsideration is granted in part and denied in part;
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that the department is awarded attorney fees in accordance with this order and that of PattonI; *268
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that the department is awarded damages in the amount of $500; and
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that the conclusion of the previous order is amended to state the "taxpayer's timber harvested in 1999 was not subject to WOSTOT" and, otherwise, the court's previous order is adhered to in accordance with this order.
Costs to neither party.
"This statute is not ambiguous. However, we respectfully ask the court's indulgence to consider with us the important legislative history of ORS 271.272(3) (2001), to demonstrate that the legislature intended exactly what the statute says: the Oregon Department of Revenue is not to pile tax on top of tax on top of tax for Oregon forestland owners."
From this statement it is unclear if taxpayer concedes that the text and context do not support his position, but he nonetheless asks the court to consider legislative history, or if he is merely stating that the statute is not ambiguous because it clearly, in his opinion, states what he asserts it to state.