8 Or. Tax 221 | Or. T.C. | 1979
Affirmed
During each of the years mentioned, petitioner was required to report the areas of Section 36 which had been logged during the preceding year and to subtract the amount harvested from the original alleged total of 31,006,000 board feet of timber. Messrs. David Burwell and Bryce Weissert, experienced foresters employed by the petitioner, both of whom testified to their close acquaintance with the property from the time harvesting began in 1970, stated that, until the summer of 1974, it appeared to them that the 1959 cruise was probably correct. In 1974, the petitioner sold a part of the tract to a third party and it was called to the attention of the petitioner by the purchaser that there was a great discrepancy in recovery from that which had been expected on the basis of board feet ascertained in the State Tax Commission cruise. Petitioner's employees inspected the third party's logs and found many culls from "frost split" and "wind shook." It was too late for petitioner to appear before the county board of equalization to protest the assessed value in 1974 (ORS
When petitioner learned of the error in the cruise and the Department of Revenue had effected a correction, the petitioner applied to the County Commissioners of Marion County for a refund of the property taxes it had paid in the tax years 1971-1972 to 1975-1976, inclusive, by filing a claim for refund under the provisions of ORS
[2.] In May 1976, the petitioner appealed to the Department of Revenue from the action of the county commissioners. A hearing was held by the department on September 27, 1976, at which the respondents herein contended that the Department of Revenue lacked jurisdiction and, on October 6, 1976, the petitioner accepted this objection and withdrew. The department dismissed the petitioner's appeal.
After a lapse of more than two years, following the dismissal, on August 15, 1978, the petitioner sought an alternative writ of mandamus from the Oregon Tax Court. An order allowing the writ was issued by the court on September 6, 1978, resulting in the present proceeding. After several pleadings had been filed in the court and oral arguments had been heard, the court agreed with the respondents that the jurisdiction of the court to act on the merits must first be considered. ORS
The petitioner now contends that this court can take original jurisdiction to try this cause on the merits (because of the broad language of ORS
[3.] Basically, we are dealing with the question of the value of real property for tax purposes. The administrative procedure which must be followed in the typical dispute between taxpayer and the tax administrator is clearly established by the statutes. First, a written appeal must be made to the county board of equalization for a specific tax year and within that year, pursuant to ORS
The petitioner never availed itself of these provisions for relief. The petitioner never filed a protest to the board of equalization. It explains this failure on the ground that it had no reason to distrust the department's timber cruise until 1974.
[4.] The court questions the petitioner's rationale. A taxpayer has a duty to make a timely inspection of each year's valuation. This is implicit in the statutory provisions designed for the taxpayer's protection. Moore Paulson v.Dept. of Rev.,
[2.] Over a period of years, in each of which it could have raised objections, the petitioner failed to act with due care in this case. Cf Pacific Conference v. Dept. of Rev.,
As above stated, the petitioner did file a claim for a refund with the County Commissioners of Marion County on July 24, 1975, relying upon ORS
"(1) The county court shall refund to a taxpayer, out of the general fund, taxes collected by an assessor or tax collector pursuant to a levy of the assessor or of any taxing district or tax levying body plus interest thereon as provided in ORS
311.812 , in the following cases:
"* * * * *
"(b) Whenever taxes are collected against real or personal property not within the jurisdiction of the tax levying body; or
"(c) Whenever any person, through excusable neglect, or through an error subject to correction under ORS
311.205 [relating to clerical errors only] pays taxes on property in excess of the amount legally chargeable thereon, and then only in the amount of money collected in excess of the amount actually due; * * *."
No objection has been raised to the petitioner's following this procedural route. However, the petitioner's claim was rejected by the county commissioners on January 7, 1976, upon advice of counsel, and, upon appeal to the Department of Revenue, the petitioner eventually agreed that the department did not *227
have jurisdiction to hear the claim on its merits. The reason for this decision has not been stated but it appears that ORS
"The decisions of the county court made in the transaction of county business shall be reviewed only upon the writ of review provided by the civil procedure statutes."
See ORS
In arguing that it did not omit an opportunity to use the legal remedy available to it, prior to appealing to this court, the petitioner has contended that a writ of review is required only for decisions made in "the transaction of county business" and that a refund of taxes is not included in the items listed as "county business" in ORS
[5.] Petitioner's statutory construction appears to be a narrow one. The Oregon Supreme Court resisted a similar limiting attempt in Russell v. Crook County Court,
"* * * It is fair to presume that, when the framers of the Constitution used this term, they meant to include all business pertaining to the county as a corporate entity, and, if this be so, it is not in the power of the legislature to limit its meaning by definition. * * *"
[3.] ORS
Petitioner also contends that it could not petition for a writ of review due to the lack of any record. It maintained that, although an opportunity to present its case before the county commissioners was requested, it was not granted; therefore, there was no record of the proceedings to be submitted for a review. ORS
"* * * upon the petition of the plaintiff, describing the decision or determination with convenient certainty, and setting forth the errors alleged to have been committed therein. * * *"
ORS
Considering the above statutes, it is concluded that the petitioner was not forestalled from initiating a petition for a writ since petitioner's allegations are that the commissioners lacked jurisdiction over the assessed property due to its nonexistence or that the petitioner's tax payments were made through excusable neglect. The contentions could have been "described with convenient certainty" as required in a writ of review.
[6.] The court finds that the taxpayer did not utilize or exhaust the administrative and legal remedies available to it within the time limitations allowed and the court lacks jurisdiction to try the issue on the merits. For these reasons,
IT IS ORDERED that the petitioner's writ should be and hereby is dismissed, with prejudice.