Oregon Administrative Rules
Chapter 150 - DEPARTMENT OF REVENUE
Division 311 - COLLECTION OF PROPERTY TAXES
Section 150-311-0140 - What Is a Clerical Error
Current through Register Vol. 63, No. 9, September 1, 2024
(1) Clerical errors are those procedural or recording errors which do not require the use of judgment or subjective decision making for their correction. A clerical error is an arithmetic or copying error or an omission on the roll or misstatement of property value that is apparent from assessor office records without speculation or conjecture, assumption or presumption, and that is correctable without the use of appraisal judgment or the necessity to view the property.
(2) Clerical errors are those which, had they been discovered by the assessor prior to the certification of the assessment and tax roll of the year of assessment, would have been corrected as a matter of course.
(3) An error is a clerical error or omission on the roll if all the facts necessary to correct the error or omission on the roll are contained in the records and could be readily determined by an impartial person examining these records.
This comes within the definition of clerical error because it can be corrected solely from the records of the assessor as these records reflect the correct situation which, if discovered by the assessor before certification of the assessment and tax roll, would have been corrected as a matter or course and is correctable without the use of appraisal judgment or the necessity to view the property.
Evidence shows that at the last appraisal the appraisal jacket of the taxpayer's property had the residential zone still on the outside but that there was a note inside of the appraisal jacket indicating the agricultural zoning. Had the appraiser looked inside of the jacket, the appraiser would have seen the latest rezoning note and would not have relied on the residential zone on the outside of the jacket.
This comes within the definition of clerical error because it can be corrected solely from the records of the assessor as these records reflect the correct situation which, if discovered before certification of the assessment and tax roll, would have been corrected as a matter of course. The correction can be made without the use of appraisal judgment or the necessity to view the property because the correct value (i.e., value based on an agricultural zone) appears in the records of the assessor.
Stat. Auth.: ORS 305.100
Stats. Implemented: ORS 311.205