5 Or. Tax 503 | Or. T.C. | 1974
Decision for defendant rendered April 19, 1974. The plaintiff has appealed to the Oregon Tax Court from the defendant's Order No. PTR 73-83, dated August 14, 1973, which denied his claim for the homeowner's property tax relief benefits for 1972.
At the trial before this court, plaintiff appeared as his own attorney and sole witness. His testimony was marked by candor. He testified, and the court finds, that he has a Bachelor of Arts degree in Economics and has had some accounting training. He customarily made his own income tax returns. However, during the early months of 1973, he was involved in the contracting business with a partner, an experienced carpenter, and he found that it was impossible *504
to allocate the time necessary to maintain his personal and business records properly. He engaged a firm of certified public accountants to handle these matters and, on their recommendation, he obtained extensions of time for filing his federal and state income tax returns. It was his understanding that such an extension would also cover a claim to be made by him under the Homeowner's Property Tax Relief Act, ORS
Tax returns and claims for refund for the 1972 tax year, normally due on April 15, became due on April 16, 1973, because April 15, 1973, fell on Sunday. ORS
Although he still had time in which to place the claim in the United States mail for delivery to the Department of Revenue, pursuant to ORS
He delivered the claim form to a secretary in the Department of Revenue and left the building but presently returned and asked the secretary to aid him in turning the claim over to some responsible person who would take note of his special effort. The secretary introduced him to Mr. James N. Francis, an experienced auditor in the Department of Revenue, who stamped the return as received on April 17 and advised the plaintiff that he had no authority whatsoever to waive the time limitation.
Plaintiff then returned to Portland and advised his partner of what he had done and recommended to him that, since he was in the same position as the plaintiff, he should take immediate steps to file his own homeowner's property tax relief form. Plaintiff testified that, inasmuch as the partner was unaccustomed to making returns, he aided him in the preparation of the form, that they agreed that it should be dated as of April 16, 1973, and thereafter, on the same day, April 17, the partner took the form to Salem and filed it. Within a few weeks he received his claimed refund. None was received by plaintiff because of tardy filing. Plaintiff's claim being denied, he obtained a hearing before the hearing officer of the department on July 12, 1973, and on August 14, 1973, his appeal was denied.
[1.] Plaintiff's testimony proves to the court his strong desire, once he found that he had been remiss, to overcome his tardiness in filing in the best way *506 which occurred to him. Unfortunately, this was not enough. The court has no power to waive the period of limitation and would be able to find for the plaintiff only upon some particular showing, such as estoppel, where the act of the Department of Revenue would have given some equitable ground upon which a favorable determination for plaintiff could be made. Plaintiff, in his reply, stated that "the plaintiff's application was filed before several known applications that have since been paid, and most probably before many others that have also since been paid." However, the plaintiff produced no testimony whatsoever which would corroborate this plea and he recognized that it was hearsay upon which the court could not act.
Experience has proved the efficacy of clearly stated due dates for filing items important in the administration of laws. The legislature, in ORS
Why must this be? Why should relief be denied the well-intentioned taxpayer whose affairs precipitate him into crises of time? It seems that the law, formulated by human beings, must ever be imperfect. It is not able to provide a formula to compensate for the infinite variations in human fallibility. The law's administrator, whose chief protection is found in nondiscriminatory *507 application of the legislature's requirements, does not dare to deviate from the dictates of the statutes. If he allows one taxpayer an extra day, he logically must accept all others on an equal basis. And if one day can be granted, why not two or three? Soon the law is eroded and uncertain and administrative feasibility is impaired. The most perfect justice is found in determining the rule to be followed and adhering to it. It then becomes known to all, its seeming intricacies are untangled, and it is soon accepted as a matter of course by the citizen.
Such situations as here presented tempt the equity-minded judge to seek for ways of relief in individual cases, but none has been found in this situation short of curative legislation.
The plaintiff's appeal is dismissed and he can take nothing by his complaint. *508