City of Seattle v. Dept. of Rev. , 357 Or. 718 ( 2015 )


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  • 718	                       September 11, 2015	       No. 35
    IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE
    STATE OF OREGON
    CITY OF SEATTLE,
    a municipal corporation of the State of Washington,
    acting by and through its City Light Department,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    v.
    DEPARTMENT OF REVENUE,
    State of Oregon,
    Defendant-Respondent.
    (TC-RD 4946, 4957)
    PUBLIC UTILITY DISTRICT NO. 1
    OF SNOHOMISH COUNTY, WASHINGTON,
    a municipal corporation of the State of Washington,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    v.
    DEPARTMENT OF REVENUE,
    State or Oregon,
    Defendant-Respondent.
    (TC-RD 4959)
    CITY OF TACOMA,
    a municipal corporation of the State of Washington,
    acting by and through its Department of Public Utilities,
    Light Division, dba Tacoma Power,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    v.
    DEPARTMENT OF REVENUE,
    State of Oregon,
    Defendant-Respondent.
    (TC-RD 4958)
    (SC S061813)
    En Banc
    On appeal from the Oregon Tax Court.*
    ______________
    *  
    21 OTR 269
     (2013).
    Cite as 
    357 Or 718
     (2015)	719
    Henry C. Breithaupt, Judge.
    Argued and submitted November 3, 2014.
    Gregory A. Chaimov, Davis Wright Tremaine LLP,
    Portland, and Gregory C. Narver, Assistant City Attorney,
    Seattle, Washington, argued the cause and filed the briefs
    for appellants.
    Keith L. Kutler, Assistant Attorney General, Salem,
    argued the cause for respondent. Melisse S. Cunningham,
    Senior Assistant Attorney General, filed the brief for
    respondent. With her on the brief was Ellen F. Rosenblum,
    Attorney General.
    BALDWIN, J.
    The decision of the Tax Court is affirmed.
    Kistler, J., concurred in part and concurred in the judg-
    ment in part and filed an opinion, in which Landau, J., joined
    Case Summary: In 1994, taxpayers entered into agreements with the BPA
    and purchased life-of-the facility transmission rights to move specific amounts
    of electricity for commercial purposes over the power grid known as the Pacific
    Northwest AC Intertie (Intertie). In 2000, the Oregon Supreme Court decided
    Power Resources, and held that any entity possessing such rights in the Intertie—
    much of which is located in Oregon—”held” a possessory interest in that system
    that could, as a statutory matter, be assessed and taxed as Oregon property.
    Taxpayers contested the tax assessments that followed, but their litigation was
    cut short in 2005 when the Oregon legislature expressly exempted foreign munic-
    ipal corporations like taxpayers from taxation on Intertie-related property. In
    2009, Oregon legislators, seeking to broaden that exemption to include domestic
    electric cooperatives, introduced Senate Bill (SB) 495 for the legislature’s consid-
    eration. SB 495 passed the Senate but, upon reaching the House, the bill’s sub-
    stantive provisions were removed and replaced with provisions that effectively
    repealed the 2005 tax exemption. In its altered form, the bill passed the Oregon
    House and Senate and was signed into law by the Governor in July 2009. In 2010,
    with the tax exemption no longer in effect, the Oregon Department of Revenue
    (department) renewed its efforts to tax the value of taxpayers’ Intertie transmis-
    sion rights.
    Taxpayers’ efforts to challenge those tax assessments were ultimately
    unavailing. The Tax Court found, despite taxpayers’ arguments to the contrary,
    that (1) because the amendments to SB 495 had originated in the House, those
    provisions complied with Article IV, section 18, and (2) Power Resources was,
    indeed, controlling with regard to taxpayer’s intertie interests. An appeal to the
    Oregon Supreme Court followed. Taxpayers first argued that their only role in
    transmitting power over the Intertie was to tender a request for that service to
    BPA and then either (1) make electricity available to the agency for transmission
    from Washington State, or (2) ready the facilities needed to receive electricity
    transmitted to Washington State. That limited degree of use, taxpayers argued,
    was inconsistent with any kind of possessory interest in a system that was, they
    720	                                       City of Seattle v. Dept. of Rev.
    claimed, used, and controlled exclusively by the entities that had built it. Second,
    taxpayers reiterated their position that repeal of the 2005 property tax exemp-
    tion that had once benefitted them was enacted in violation of Article IV, section
    18, of the Oregon Constitution. Held: The judgment of the Tax Court is affirmed.
    Among other things, taxpayers’ agreements with the BPA allow them to (1)
    assign their capacity rights as security for financing purposes, (2) engage in cer-
    tain capacity transfers with other capacity owners, and (3) with BPA consent, sell
    their capacity rights outright. That degree of exclusivity and control is sufficient
    to establish the taxability of taxpayers’ intertie shares under Power Resources.
    A majority of the Court also concludes that, because the essential characteristic
    of SB 495 was to remove a tax exemption—and not expressly levy a tax—the bill
    does not offend Article IV, section 18, of the Oregon Constitution.
    The decision of the Tax Court is affirmed.
    Cite as 
    357 Or 718
     (2015)	721
    BALDWIN, J.
    In this appeal from the Oregon Tax Court, appel-
    lants are three municipal corporations located in Washington
    State: The City of Seattle, the City of Tacoma, and Public
    Utility District No. 1 of Snohomish County (taxpayers).
    Respondent is the Oregon Department of Revenue (depart-
    ment). Each taxpayer owns an interest in electrical trans-
    mission capacity that was purchased from the Bonneville
    Power Administration (BPA) and is used for transmitting
    electricity over the Northwest’s federally-administered
    power transmission grid. Together, they appeal from a sum-
    mary judgment ruling in which the Tax Court, citing Power
    Resources Cooperative v. Dept. of Rev., 
    330 Or 24
    , 996 P2d
    969 (2000), concluded that taxpayers’ interest in electrical
    transmission capacity could—because much of that grid is
    located in Oregon—be taxed by the department as a prop-
    erty interest “held” by taxpayers, under ORS 307.060.
    On appeal, taxpayers argue that: (1) Power Resources
    was wrongly decided; (2) this court’s decision in Pacificorp
    Power Marketing v. Dept. of Rev., 
    340 Or 204
    , 131 P3d 725
    (2006)—holding that contracts between a taxpayer and
    a municipally-owned electric power plant demonstrated
    the taxpayer’s “use” of the facility for taxation under ORS
    308.505 to 308.565—does not apply in this case; and (3) the
    Oregon legislature’s repeal of the 2005 property tax exemp-
    tion benefitting out-of-state power-generating municipali-
    ties was enacted in violation of Article IV, section 18, of the
    Oregon Constitution, a provision that requires that bills for
    raising revenue originate in the House of Representatives.
    For reasons we explain below, we reject taxpayers’ argu-
    ments and affirm the Tax Court’s judgment.
    I. BACKGROUND
    Before turning to the pertinent facts in this matter,
    we provide some necessary background about the relation-
    ship between taxpayers, the Pacific Northwest AC Intertie,
    and our earlier decisions in Power Resources and Pacificorp
    Power Marketing. As part of their municipal functions, tax-
    payers in this case generate and sell electricity to local
    consumers. They also buy and sell electricity on a whole-
    sale basis, trading with other public and private entities
    722	                                    City of Seattle v. Dept. of Rev.
    throughout the western United States. Taxpayers, however,
    do not own transmission networks of sufficient scope and
    capacity to transmit that electricity between their various
    trading partners. Consequently, to commercially transport
    electric power throughout the region, taxpayers rely on the
    Pacific Northwest/Pacific Southwest Intertie, a system of
    power lines and substations that stretches from the state of
    Washington to southern California.
    The Pacific Northwest portion of the Intertie is
    located primarily in Oregon and is owned by three entities.
    BPA owns 100 percent of the Pacific Northwest DC Intertie,
    the part of the system that transmits power only in DC,
    or direct current. Another part of the system, the Pacific
    Northwest AC Intertie, transmits only AC, or alternating
    current. That part of the Intertie is jointly owned by BPA,
    Portland General Electric Company (PGE), and PacifiCorp.
    Each of the three owners maintains its own facilities and
    equipment that collectively make up the regional power grid
    for commercially transmitting AC electrical power around
    the Northwest and south to the Oregon/California border.
    By the early 1990s, capital improvements to the
    Pacific Northwest AC Intertie had substantially increased
    the system’s transmission capacity. In response, the fed-
    eral government gave select nonfederal regional entities
    that traded electricity on a wholesale basis an opportunity
    to secure rights to a permanent portion of that system’s
    excess transmission capacity. Eight such utilities—called
    Capacity Owners—entered into contracts with BPA known
    as Capacity Ownership Agreements (COAs).
    Prior to 1996, those agreements required Capacity
    Owners to tender an upfront lump sum payment to BPA
    reflecting that user’s estimated pro-rated share of BPA’s cap-
    ital and related costs. A Capacity Owner was also required
    to pay 21 percent of the system’s annual operating and main-
    tenance costs. In return, a Capacity Owner received a life-
    of-the-facility right to use a specific portion of the system’s
    excess transmission capacity. According to BPA’s Record of
    Decision addressing the actual ownership agreements,1 the
    1
    A Record of Decision is a public document setting out a federal agency’s
    decision concerning any proposed action that comes before it.
    Cite as 
    357 Or 718
     (2015)	723
    agency’s policy goal in entering into COAs with the utilities
    was
    “to ensure that potential New Owners had an equitable
    opportunity to acquire a share of transmission capacity in
    the Intertie that is as close to full ‘ownership’ as possible.”
    In addition to a life-of-the-facility right of use, the
    Record of Decision regarding each COA also generally pro-
    vided that Capacity Owners:
    •	 Retained exclusive use of their respective megawatt
    shares of Intertie capacity;
    •	 Possessed the option to purchase additional capac-
    ity when Intertie facilities were upgraded;
    •	 Possessed a one-time opportunity to choose between
    (1) the right to use Intertie capacity for themselves
    and to transmit power for third parties, or (2) the
    right to retain transmission capacity solely for their
    own use. (Under the actual draft contracts, electing
    to abstain from third party transmissions expressly
    authorized BPA to transmit electricity on a capacity
    owner’s unused capacity in exchange for compensa-
    tion. In practice however, at least two of the parties
    in this case—the City of Tacoma and Snohomish
    PUD No. 1—amended their original COAs to allow
    each of them to transmit for third parties and allow
    BPA to use spare capacity.)
    •	 Could, with BPA consent, sell their capacity rights;
    and
    •	 Could, without BPA consent, assign their capacity
    rights as security for financing purposes, or other-
    wise engage in certain transfers to other new owners
    and select Pacific Northwest utilities.
    In 2000, this court decided Power Resources, hold-
    ing that any taxpayer possessing permanent rights to the
    Intertie in Oregon “held” a possessory interest in that sys-
    tem that should be included in the assessed value of the tax-
    payer’s property. Six years later, this court decided Pacificorp
    Power Marketing—a utility-related tax matter that did not
    involve the Intertie—and held that a taxpayer’s “use” of a
    724	                                       City of Seattle v. Dept. of Rev.
    power facility also could serve as a basis for taxation under
    Oregon’s tax statutes. Combined, those two cases estab-
    lished alternative bases for taxing facilities in Oregon that
    are used to generate and/or transmit electricity. That kind
    of property interest ordinarily is subject to Oregon property
    taxes and is centrally assessed by the department. Central
    assessments2 can be based either on a taxpayer’s posses-
    sory interest in such facilities under Power Resources or on
    the taxpayer’s use of such facilities under Pacificorp Power
    Marketing. However, as explained in greater detail below,
    taxpayers contend that neither of those decisions applies to
    the circumstances here.
    We now turn to the facts of this case. Like the tax-
    payer in Power Resources, taxpayers entered into COAs
    relating to the Pacific Northwest AC Intertie with BPA in
    1994. The parties do not dispute the fact that, except for dif-
    ferences in megawatts of capacity, the material provisions
    of the COAs at issue here are essentially the same as the
    provisions of the COA at issue in Power Resources.
    In 2001, following this court’s decision in Power
    Resources, the department levied property taxes on tax-
    payers based on the assessed value of the Intertie connec-
    tion that each taxpayer possessed. Taxpayers challenged
    the department’s assessment, but their litigation ended in
    2005 when the legislature enacted Oregon Laws 2005, chap-
    ter 832, section 1. Taxpayers’ controversy ceased to exist
    because the newly-enacted law expressly exempted foreign
    municipal corporations like taxpayers from taxation on
    Intertie-related property rights conferred by COAs.
    In 2009, several Oregon legislators, seeking to
    broaden that exemption to include domestic electric cooper-
    atives, introduced Senate Bill (SB) 495. SB 495 passed the
    Senate but, when it went through the House, the bill’s sub-
    stantive provisions were removed and replaced with provi-
    sions that effectively repealed the tax exemption enacted in
    2005.3 In its altered form, the House passed the bill and
    2
    Taxes are “centrally assessed” against a taxpayer when property assess-
    ments are levied by the department—as opposed to the counties—under ORS
    308.505 to 308.665. See ORS 308.505(2) (so stating).
    3
    In legislative parlance, that process is often referred to as “gut and stuff.”
    Cite as 
    357 Or 718
     (2015)	725
    returned it to the Senate, where it also passed. Signed by
    the Governor in July 2009, the bill was enacted into law as
    Oregon Laws 2009, chapter 804.
    In 2010, with the statutory Intertie tax exemp-
    tion no longer in place, the department renewed its efforts
    to tax the value of taxpayers’ Intertie transmission rights.
    Taxpayers responded by again filing actions in the Tax
    Court challenging those assessments. Among their various
    claims, taxpayers contended that SB 495—the enactment
    that had repealed their tax exemptions—was void because
    it was a bill for raising revenue that had improperly origi-
    nated in the Senate rather than in the House, as required
    by Article IV, section 18, of the Oregon Constitution.4
    Taxpayers also contended that their right to access electri-
    cal transmission capacity over the Intertie did not constitute
    a possessory interest in Intertie capacity, facilities, or equip-
    ment sufficient to subject them to Oregon tax assessments,
    notwithstanding this court’s contrary decision in Power
    Resources.
    In 2011 and 2013, the Tax Court resolved taxpayers’
    claims in the department’s favor in two written opinions
    arising out of cross-motions for partial summary judgment.
    See City of Seattle v. Dept. of Rev., 
    20 OTR 408
     (2011), and
    City of Seattle II v. Dept. of Rev., 
    21 OTR 269
     (2013) (setting
    out the respective Tax Court judgments). In its first opinion,
    the Tax Court examined, among other things, taxpayers’
    arguments that SB 495 violated the Oregon Constitution’s
    revenue origination clause. For analytical purposes, the Tax
    Court began by assuming that the amended version of SB
    495 was, indeed, a bill for raising revenue. 20 OTR at 411.
    The Tax Court concluded, however, that the amendments
    supplying that effect were not the product of the Senate
    but had, in fact, originated in the House. The Tax Court
    explained:
    “The vehicle constituting SB 495, although created in
    the Senate, had its entire cargo relating to raising revenue
    4
    Article IV, section 18, of the Oregon Constitution provides:
    “Bills may originate in either house, but may be amended, or rejected in
    the other; except that bills for raising revenue shall originate in the House of
    Representatives.”
    726	                             City of Seattle v. Dept. of Rev.
    loaded on in the House. Indeed, as the vehicle came to the
    House its cargo, far from being a raising of revenue, was
    further extension of tax exemptions. Accordingly, all of
    the substantive concerns that lay behind the Origination
    Clause are satisfied. The burden of taxation on the people
    originated in the House and emanated from that body.”
    Id. at 412.
    In its second summary judgment opinion, the Tax
    Court addressed, among other things, taxpayers’ contention
    that they did not, as a matter of law, hold, use, or other-
    wise have any possessory interest in the Intertie that was
    subject to Oregon taxation. Taxpayers’ primary argument
    was that Power Resources had been wrongly decided. The
    department’s response was that taxpayers were subject to
    taxation either under Power Resources or Pacificorp Power
    Marketing.
    The Tax Court rejected taxpayers’ argument and
    held that “Power Resources controls as to whether the con-
    tract relationships under the COAs result in taxpayers hav-
    ing property taxable in this state.” 21 OTR at 273. Given
    that holding, the Tax Court did not find it necessary to
    rule on the applicability of Pacificorp Power Marketing. Id.
    Taxpayers then appealed to this court under the direct
    review provisions of ORS 305.445.
    II. ANALYSIS
    A.  Power Resources
    On appeal, taxpayers first contend that that this
    court wrongly decided Power Resources because the under-
    lying Tax Court decision in that case had been based on the
    taxpayer’s “incomplete and inaccurate and, therefore mis-
    leading” stipulation that its contract with BPA had given it
    the right to “use” a portion of the Intertie. According to tax-
    payers, that ill-advised stipulation led this court to incor-
    rectly “assume” that the taxpayer in Power Resources pos-
    sessed an “exclusive right to a definable part” of the Intertie.
    Taxpayers set out to rectify that claimed error by argu-
    ing that the COAs at issue here vest taxpayers only with
    “Scheduling Rights,” i.e., the right to add to and/or with-
    draw from the electricity being transmitted on the Intertie.
    Cite as 
    357 Or 718
     (2015)	727
    Consequently, taxpayers assert that their contracts with the
    BPA are simply transmission agreements that provide tax-
    payers with services no different from the untaxed trans-
    mission services available to noncapacity owning utilities
    under the federal government’s Open Access Transmission
    Tariffs (OATTs).5 According to taxpayers, under both taxed
    and untaxed transmission agreements, their only role in
    transmitting power over the Intertie is to tender a request
    for that service to BPA and then either (1) make electricity
    available to the agency for transmission from Washington
    State, or (2) ready the facilities needed to receive electricity
    transmitted to Washington State. That limited degree of use,
    taxpayers argue, is inconsistent with any kind of possessory
    interest in a system that is, they claim, “owned, used, and
    controlled exclusively by its owners—BPA, Portland General
    Electric Company, and PacifiCorp.”
    A central premise underlying taxpayers’ arguments
    is that use of the Intertie is the sine qua non of possession
    for purposes of establishing taxation under ORS 307.060.
    Indeed, taxpayers’ position appears to be that establishing
    the fact of the taxpayer’s Intertie use in Power Resources
    was somehow central to this court’s decision in that case. A
    brief discussion of Power Resources, however, demonstrates
    why taxpayers’ position in that regard is not well taken.
    In Power Resources, the taxpayer was a Portland-
    based cooperative that owned shares in a number of elec-
    trical generation facilities, among them, the Boardman
    Coal Plant near Boardman, Oregon. In 1992, the taxpayer
    entered into a long-term agreement to sell electricity from
    the Boardman plant to a California irrigation district.
    Among other things, that agreement required the taxpayer
    5
    In 1996, pursuant to the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission’s (FERC)
    statutory authority to remedy unduly discriminatory or preferential rates, prac-
    tices, or contracts affecting public utility rates for transmission in interstate
    commerce, the agency issued Order No. 888 requiring all public utilities owning
    and/or controlling transmission facilities to offer nondiscriminatory, open access,
    transmission services. As part of that order, FERC required every transmission-
    owning public utility to file nondiscriminatory OATTs that were either consistent
    with or superior to the pro forma OATT set out in Order No. 888. FERC’s pro
    forma OATT contains the minimum terms and conditions for nondiscriminatory
    electrical transmission service, and every transmission-owning public utility is
    required to abide by that tariff in providing transmission services for itself and
    others.
    728	                                     City of Seattle v. Dept. of Rev.
    to use its “best efforts” to transmit the power it sold over the
    Intertie.
    To meet that obligation, the taxpayer entered into a
    COA with the BPA in 1994. Under that agreement, the tax-
    payer received 50 megawatts (MW) of transmission capacity
    for the physical life of the Intertie in exchange for a lump
    sum advance payment of approximately $10.75 million and
    the promise to pay a proportionate share of the Intertie’s
    operating, maintenance, and replacement expenses. The
    agreement expressly defined taxpayer’s resulting capacity
    share in terms of transfer capability on the Intertie that was
    “owned by [taxpayer] pursuant to this agreement.”
    Under that COA, BPA retained all rights to oper-
    ate, maintain, and manage the Intertie. Although tax-
    payer was entitled to 50 MW of Intertie capacity, it was
    required to schedule its electrical transmissions with BPA
    in advance and to abide by BPA’s scheduling procedures. An
    amendment to the COA subsequently clarified that the tax-
    payer had a right to use its capacity share to “wheel”—i.e.,
    transmit—electricity for other entities. The agreement also
    permitted BPA to use any other capacity unscheduled by the
    taxpayer, but required the agency to compensate the tax-
    payer for its use.
    In 1996, the department assessed the total value
    of the taxpayer’s properties at over $45 million, an amount
    that included nearly $11 million as the assessed value of
    the taxpayer’s Intertie share. In upholding that assessment
    over the taxpayer’s challenge, the Tax Court concluded that,
    because the taxpayer had exclusive control, subject to rea-
    sonable limitations, over a part of the Intertie, the taxpayer
    “held” that part of the Intertie within the meaning of ORS
    307.060 (1995).6 Then, as now, ORS 307.060 (1995) sets out
    6
    In that regard, the Tax Court observed:
    “Although Plaintiff shares the Intertie with others, it retains exclusive
    control over a portion of it. Also, much like the owner of a time-share prop-
    erty, when Plaintiff uses the property it uses it to the exclusion of others.
    Plaintiff’s characterization of control would require that it have exclusive
    control over the entire Intertie. This is unreasonable. Such a construction
    would similarly require that the ranchers have exclusive control over all fed-
    eral grazing land or that the summer home owners have exclusive control of
    the National Forest. This definition of control is too broad and does not take
    into account the character of the property. Here, Plaintiff has exclusive use
    Cite as 
    357 Or 718
     (2015)	729
    an exception to ORS 307.040, the statute that generally
    exempts all property of the United States from taxation in
    Oregon. ORS 307.060 (1995) provided, in relevant part:
    “Real and personal property of the United States or any
    department or agency thereof held by any person under a
    lease or other interest or estate less than a fee simple * * *
    shall be assessed and taxed as for the full assessed value
    thereof subject only to deduction for restricted use.”
    On appeal to this court, the taxpayer in Power
    Resources argued that, as used in ORS 307.060 (1995), the
    phrase “held by any person” should be construed to mean
    some degree of actual physical possession and occupation of
    a property. Under that construction, the taxpayer continued,
    only BPA could be said to physically “hold” the Intertie, a
    circumstance that effectively prevented anyone else, includ-
    ing the taxpayer, from “holding” it in the same sense.
    This court disagreed. In doing so, the court articu-
    lated two salient points:
    “(1) [A]lthough a ‘possessory’ interest always is marked by
    some degree of control and some degree of exclusivity, nei-
    ther absolute control nor absolute exclusivity is required;
    and (2) the test for the existence of a possessory interest
    necessarily varies with the nature of the property at issue.”
    Power Resources, 
    330 Or at 31
    . The court recognized that,
    among the indicia of exclusivity and control evident in the
    taxpayer’s agreement with BPA, the 50 MW of electrical
    transmission capacity allotted to the taxpayer: (1) consti-
    tuted an “exclusive right to a definable part” of the Intertie;
    (2) could be used—or not used—in any way that the tax-
    payer wished; and (3) existed as an irrevocable right for the
    life of the Intertie, a right that could not be diminished by
    adding other capacity owners to the system. 
    Id.
     After noting
    that the transmission of electricity over the Intertie consti-
    tuted its only apparent beneficial use, the court concluded:
    “The property involved in this case—an electric transmis-
    sion grid—cannot physically be divided usefully among
    of a portion of the premises; that is, its capacity ownership share. While it
    shares the total capacity with eight others, so does the rancher share the
    grazing land and the summer home owner share the forest.”
    Power Resources Cooperative v. Dept. of Rev., 
    14 OTR 479
    , 485 (1998).
    730	                                City of Seattle v. Dept. of Rev.
    its owners. However, that limitation has not prevented
    taxpayer from investing in the expansion of the system,
    sharing the costs of its upkeep, and thereby obtaining an
    exclusive right to use and control the system to the extent
    necessary to permit transmission of 50 MW of electricity
    for taxpayer’s own benefit. In this context, that is sufficient;
    taxpayer’s 50 MW capacity ownership share in the Intertie
    is a possessory interest in that entity. Put differently, tax-
    payer ‘holds’ a share of the property that makes up the
    Intertie and may be assessed and taxed for that share to
    the extent provided in ORS 307.060.”
    Id. at 32 (internal citation omitted) (emphasis added).
    Given the importance of stare decisis to the judicial
    decision-making process, taxpayers shoulder a substantial
    burden in attempting to persuade us that Power Resources
    was incorrectly decided. As we observed in Farmers Ins. Co.
    v. Mowry, 
    350 Or 686
    , 698, 261 P3d 1 (2011):
    “Few legal principles are so central to our tradition as the
    concept that courts should ‘[t]reat like cases alike,’ and
    stare decisis is one means of advancing that goal. For those
    reasons, we begin with the assumption that issues consid-
    ered in our prior cases are correctly decided, and ‘the party
    seeking to change a precedent must assume responsibility
    for affirmatively persuading us that we should abandon
    that precedent.’ ”
    (Internal citations omitted.) Taxpayers have not persuaded
    us that we should abandon Power Resources as precedent.
    Nor have taxpayers persuaded us that Power Resources is
    not controlling precedent in this case.
    As our discussion in Power Resources makes clear,
    the features of exclusivity and control—not use—supported
    our conclusion that the taxpayers in that case held a pos-
    sessory interest in the Intertie. That the fact of usage was
    stipulated to by the parties in Power Resources is not help-
    ful to taxpayers here. In this case, those same features of
    exclusivity and control of transmission capacity are present
    under facts that are virtually identical to the facts in Power
    Resources. In addition, the record shows that taxpayers’
    agreements with BPA allows them to (1) assign their capac-
    ity rights as security for financing purposes, (2) engage in
    certain capacity transfers with other capacity owners and
    Cite as 
    357 Or 718
     (2015)	731
    select Pacific Northwest utilities, and (3) with BPA con-
    sent, sell their capacity rights outright. Consequently, we
    hold that the degree of exclusivity and control enjoyed by
    taxpayers here with regard to their capacity shares in the
    Intertie establishes the taxability of those shares under
    Power Resources.7
    B.  Article IV, Section 18
    We now address taxpayers’ contention that the
    Oregon legislature’s repeal of the 2005 property tax exemp-
    tion benefitting out-of-state municipal corporations was
    enacted in violation of Article IV, section 18, of the Oregon
    Constitution. That provision requires that “bills for raising
    revenue shall originate in the House of Representatives.” Or
    Const, Art. IV, § 18.
    As previously noted, taxpayers—as foreign munici-
    pal corporations—were exempted from taxation on Intertie-
    related property rights by the enactment of Oregon Laws
    2005, chapter 832, section 1. However, in 2009, some legis-
    lators sought to broaden that exemption to include electric
    cooperatives and, to that end, introduced Senate Bill (SB)
    495 in the Oregon Senate. SB 495 passed the Senate and
    then moved to the House. The House subsequently removed
    all of the bill’s substantive provisions and replaced them
    with provisions that effectively repealed the prior 2005 tax
    exemption. The House then passed the bill and returned it
    to the Senate, where it also passed. The bill was signed by
    the Governor and became law. Or Laws 2009, ch 804. As a
    result, taxpayers were placed on the same footing as in-state
    entities holding Intertie property rights and no longer had
    the benefit of the tax exemption. On appeal, taxpayers reprise
    their arguments made below that SB 495 was a “bill[ ] for
    raising revenue” and that the bill did not “originate in the
    House of Representatives” in violation of Article IV, section
    7
    As previously mentioned, taxpayers separately argue that this court’s deci-
    sion in Pacificorp Power Marketing—holding that contracts between a taxpayer
    and a municipally-owned electric power plant demonstrated the taxpayer’s “use”
    of the facility for taxation under ORS 308.505 to 308.565—does not apply in this
    case. Because we conclude that Power Resources establishes the taxability of tax-
    payers’ shares in the Intertie, we need not address taxpayers’ arguments regard-
    ing the taxability of those shares under Pacificorp Power Marketing.
    732	                                      City of Seattle v. Dept. of Rev.
    18. We therefore turn to whether SB 495 was a “bill[ ] for
    raising revenue” under the origination clause.8
    In Bobo v. Kulongoski, 
    338 Or 111
    , 107 P3d 18 (2005),
    this court adopted an analytical framework for determining
    whether a bill was written for raising revenue:
    “Considering the wording of Article IV, section 18, its
    history, and the case law surrounding it, we conclude that
    the question whether a bill is a ‘bill for raising revenue’
    entails two issues. The first is whether the bill collects or
    brings money into the treasury. If it does not, that is the
    end of the inquiry. If a bill does bring money into the trea-
    sury, the remaining question is whether the bill possesses
    the essential features of a bill levying a tax. See Northern
    Counties Trust[ v. Sears, 
    30 Or 388
    , 402, 
    41 P 931
     (1895)]
    (stating test). As Northern Counties Trust makes clear, bills
    that assess a fee for a specific purpose are not ‘bills raising
    revenue’ even though they collect or bring money into the
    treasury.”
    Bobo, 
    338 Or at 122
    .
    Without question, by eliminating the 2005 tax
    exemption, SB 495 will “bring[ ] money into the treasury,”
    thus satisfying the first prong of the analysis that Bobo
    adopted. We must determine, then, “whether the bill pos-
    sesses the essential features of a bill levying a tax.” 
    Id.
     We
    therefore examine Northern Counties Trust to elucidate the
    second prong of the test adopted in Bobo.
    In Northern Counties Trust, this court concluded
    that a bill exacting court fees from parties in litigation
    was not “a bill[ ] for raising revenue” within the meaning of
    Article IV, section 18. 30 Or at 403. In doing so, the court
    adopted the federal test for determining whether a bill raises
    revenue for purposes of Article I, section 7, of the United
    States Constitution (Origination Clause):
    “[T]he history of the [origination clause] * * * abundantly
    proves that it has been confined to bills to levy taxes in the
    8
    As previously noted, the tax court assumed that the amended version of
    SB 495 was a “bill for raising revenue,” but that the amendments supplying that
    effect originated in the House. Because we conclude that SB 495 was not a “bill[ ]
    for raising revenue,” we do not reach the question of whether that bill originated
    in the House or the Senate.
    Cite as 
    357 Or 718
     (2015)	733
    strict sense of the words, and has not been understood to
    extend to bills for other purposes, which may incidentally
    create revenue. Story on the Constitution, § 880.”
    30 Or at 402 (emphasis supplied).
    The court also cited federal cases establishing a
    “trend” in favor of that narrow interpretation of the orig-
    ination clause. In particular, the court quoted from The
    Nashville, 
    4 Biss 188
     (1868), and Dundee Mortgage Trust
    Investment Co. v. Parrish, 24 Fed 197 (1885):
    “In The Nashville the court [stated]: ‘It is certain that
    the practical construction of the provision by congress has
    been to confine its operation to bills, the direct and prin-
    cipal object of which has been to raise revenue, and not as
    including bills out of which money may incidentally go into
    the treasury, or revenue incidentally arise.’ Deady, J., in
    Investment Co. v. Parrish, [stated]: ‘A bill for raising reve-
    nue, or a “money bill,” as it was technically called at com-
    mon law, is a bill levying a tax on all or some of the persons,
    property, or business of the country, for a public purpose;
    and the assessment or listing and valuation of the polls or
    property preliminary thereto, and all laws regulating the
    same, are merely measures to secure what may be deemed
    a just or expedient basis for the levying of a tax or raising a
    revenue thereon.’ This was predicated of the ‘mortgage tax’
    law, which formerly prevailed in this state. * * * Considering
    the similarity of the state and national constitutions touch-
    ing bills for raising revenue, and the high and unbroken
    line of authority upon the proper construction of the lat-
    ter, it is certainly a very persuasive and weighty argument
    for applying the same construction to the former. The very
    cogent reasoning employed undoubtedly has application
    here, and impels us to the same conclusion touching our
    own state constitution.”
    30 Or at 400-401.
    The “mortgage tax” law at issue in Dundee Mortgage
    Trust was a statute that changed where mortgage taxes
    were owed, shifting them from the county where the lender
    lived to the county where the property securing the debt
    was located. Thus, taxable mortgages were placed on the
    tax rolls of the latter counties. As noted, that change was
    viewed as a measure “to secure what may be deemed a just
    734	                            City of Seattle v. Dept. of Rev.
    or expedient basis for the levying of a tax or raising revenue
    thereon” rather than as a direct levy of a tax. 24 F at 201. In
    so holding, the court drew a distinction between bills that
    actually levy taxes and the laws that collaterally provide
    for an assessment or the regulation of such levies. See also
    Mumford v. Sewall, 
    11 Or 67
     (1883) (“[I]t is not sufficiently
    clear that a law which merely declares that certain property
    heretofore exempt from taxation shall thereafter be subject
    to taxation is strictly a law for raising revenue. We do not
    feel warranted, therefore, as at present advised, in declar-
    ing the law unconstitutional on this ground.”).
    With that case law in mind, we turn to whether SB
    495 possesses the essential features of a bill levying a tax.
    Bobo, 
    338 Or at 122
    . Before SB 495 was enacted, taxpayers,
    as out-of-state municipal corporations, enjoyed a tax exemp-
    tion for their property interests in the Pacific Northwest AC
    Intertie. Here, as in Dundee, the subject bill was a measure
    “to secure what may be deemed a just or expedient basis
    for the levying of a tax” rather than the direct levy of a tax.
    Dundee, 24 F at 201. The repeal of taxpayers’ exemption put
    taxpayers on the same taxation footing in Oregon as domes-
    tic electric cooperatives. Applying the narrow rule that this
    court adopted in Northern Counties Trust, we conclude that,
    in declaring that a property interest held by taxpayers pre-
    viously exempt from taxation is now subject to taxation, the
    legislature did not levy a tax.
    Taxpayers nevertheless argue for a different result,
    portraying the bill’s purpose as generating additional reve-
    nue by repealing taxpayers’ tax exemption. Taxpayers note
    that, in amending the Senate’s original version of SB 495,
    members of the House Committee on Revenue were cogni-
    zant of the need to exploit “legitimate, lawful, and reason-
    able opportunities to provide revenues for badly needed pub-
    lic services.” (Quoting comments of Gil Riddell, Association
    of Oregon Counties.) Taxpayers also point out that the leg-
    islature listed the bill as a revenue measure that would
    increase estimated property tax revenues by more than
    $1.2 million per biennium, and that those revenues were not
    earmarked for any specific purpose. See Revenue Measures
    Passed by the 75th Legislative Assembly 34 (LRO Aug 2009).
    Taxpayers contend that applying the framework set out in
    Cite as 
    357 Or 718
     (2015)	735
    Bobo leads to the conclusion that, because SB 495 ended a
    tax exemption, it was a bill for raising revenue.
    The department counters that the purpose
    underlying SB 495 was to level the playing field between
    taxpayers—all of whom were once tax-exempt out-of-state
    entities—and Intertie capacity owners in Oregon—none of
    whom enjoyed the same tax exemption. The department con-
    tends that, although the original bill called for that goal to be
    met by extending exemptions to the Oregon-based entities,
    the goal was nevertheless achieved by removing taxpayers’
    exemptions instead. The department argues that that intent
    is demonstrated by the fact that the original version of SB
    495 introduced in the Senate extended the 2005 tax exemp-
    tion beyond taxpayer’s Intertie holdings to include Oregon
    electric cooperatives that also had Intertie capacity agree-
    ments with BPA. In testimony before the House Revenue
    Committee, SB 495 was referred to as a “tax equity bill.”
    See Audio Recording, House Revenue Committee, SB 495,
    May 26, 2009, at 9:27:39 (testimony of Sandy Flicker, Oregon
    Rural Electric Cooperative Assoc., discussing Senate ver-
    sion of Bill (A-Engrossed SB 495) as a “tax equity bill” to
    remedy inequitable treatment of electric cooperatives and
    stating “it’s not about the money”). During the Senate floor
    debate following the amendment, Senator Burdick stated
    that the amended bill “will put everybody on the same play-
    ing field in terms of the Intertie.” Audio Recording, Senate
    Floor Debate, SB 495, June 18, 2009 (statement of Senator
    Burdick in support of concurrence with House amendments
    and passage of B-Engrossed version of SB 495).
    To be sure, the legislature likely had more than one
    purpose in enacting SB 495. However, under Bobo, our task
    is not to determine the primary legislative purpose for enact-
    ing SB 495. Rather, where a bill does generate revenue—
    as it does indeed here—our task is to determine “whether
    the bill possesses the essential features of a bill levying
    a tax.” 
    338 Or at 122
    . In this case, SB 495 removes a tax
    exemption—it does not directly levy a tax. See Northern
    Counties Trust, 30 Or at 403 (law that exacts fees from
    parties to legal proceedings is not one for raising revenue
    under Article IV, section 18, when funds deposited into gen-
    eral fund); see also Dundee Mortgage Trust Co., 24 F at 201
    736	                                      City of Seattle v. Dept. of Rev.
    (distinguishing between bills that levy taxes and bills that
    collaterally provide for assessment or regulation of levied
    taxes).
    We note that taxpayers question the vitality of
    Northern Counties Trust and Dundee, citing the transition
    that occurred in Oregon from a levy-based property tax sys-
    tem to a rate-based system. According to taxpayers, in the
    state’s former levy-based system, the state determined its
    budget needs and then levied the taxes necessary to meet
    that specific goal. Because the resulting revenues were
    finite, repeal of a tax exemption did not create a greater
    influx of money into the treasury; instead, it redistributed
    tax burdens among taxpayers. The same is not true, tax-
    payers contend, of the rate-based system put into place
    following passage of Measure 50 in the late 1990s. Under
    that system, levies have been replaced by permanent tax
    rates, and revenues are no longer finite. As a result, tax-
    payers argue, repealed tax exemptions now increase reve-
    nues for the entire system, with the result that the burden
    of increased taxes falls solely on the newly-taxed entities.
    We think, however, taxpayers’ argument misses the
    mark because it focuses exclusively on the revenue effect of
    SB 495. As we stated in Bobo, the revenue effect of a bill,
    in and of itself, does not determine if the bill is a “bill[ ] for
    raising revenue.” 
    338 Or at 122
     (“If a bill does bring money
    into the treasury, the remaining question is whether the bill
    possesses the essential features of a bill levying a tax.”).9 As
    9
    Taxpayers also cite to the Oregon legislative Bill Drafting Manual for the
    proposition that a repealed tax exemption in a rate-based system is a revenue
    raising endeavor:
    “At the time Mumford and Dundee were decided, Oregon had a pure levy-based
    property tax system. Under a levy-based system, the repeal of an exemp-
    tion would not raise any more revenue. Instead, the repeal would reduce the
    amount of property taxes paid by all property owners other than the own-
    ers of the formerly exempt property. Oregon’s current property tax system
    is a rate-based system. See Article XI, section 11, Oregon Constitution. The
    repeal of an exemption in a rate-based system would raise more revenue.”
    Bill Drafting Manual 15.2 n 1 (Legis Counsel 2012); see also 49 Op Atty Gen 77,
    84 n 4 (1998) (noting that, under rate-based tax system, “it is conceivable that
    a bill repealing an exemption could result in an increase in the total amount of
    taxes collected and, thus, constitute a bill for raising revenue”).
    The department responds that taxpayers’ argument was drawn from the
    legislature’s bill drafting manual on form and style, does not reflect the law
    Cite as 
    357 Or 718
     (2015)	737
    we have explained, SB 495 repeals taxpayers’ tax exemption
    as out-of-state municipal corporations and places taxpayers
    on the same footing as domestic electric cooperatives. The
    bill does not directly levy a tax on taxpayers.
    III. CONCLUSION
    Taxpayers have not demonstrated that this court’s
    opinion in Power Resources was wrongly decided. Under
    Power Resources, taxpayers’ interest in transmission capac-
    ity purchased from BPA and used to transmit electricity
    over the Northwest’s federally administered power grid may
    be taxed by the department as a property interest “held” by
    taxpayers under ORS 307.060. Additionally, the Oregon leg-
    islature’s repeal of the 2005 property tax exemption previ-
    ously benefitting taxpayers did not violate Article IV, section
    18, of the Oregon Constitution; SB 495 was a “bill[ ] raising
    revenue” within the meaning of that provision.
    The judgment of the Tax Court is affirmed.
    KISTLER, J., concurring in part and concurring
    in the judgment in part.
    Relying on a 1885 federal district court deci-
    sion, the majority holds that a bill that caused a tax to be
    imposed on plaintiffs’ property was not a “bil[l] for raising
    revenue” within the meaning of Article IV, section 18, of the
    Oregon Constitution.1 It follows, the majority concludes, that
    Article IV, section 18, did not require that bill to originate
    regarding bills for raising revenue, and is not relevant to this court’s analysis.
    However, even if it were, the department argues, the manual does not support
    taxpayers’ position in this case. The department notes that the manual requires
    that a bill intended for the purpose of raising revenue to say as much in its title
    and contain a clause indicating that a three-fifths majority is required for its
    passage. Because those requirements were not in SB 495, the department posits
    that the legislature would not have considered the bill to be a revenue-raising
    law, a conclusion in fact confirmed by Legislative Counsel and subsequently made
    a part of the legislative record in this case.
    As we have explained, taxpayers’ argument based on the change that trans-
    pired in Oregon from a levy-based property tax system to a rate-based system is
    not a legally sufficient argument under the test this court adopted in Bobo.
    1
    Article IV, section 18, provides:
    “Bills may originate in either house, but may be amended, or rejected in the
    other; except that bills for raising revenue shall originate in the House of
    Representatives.”
    738	                                        City of Seattle v. Dept. of Rev.
    in the House of Representatives. In my view, the persua-
    sive value of the 1885 federal decision on which the majority
    bases its holding is doubtful. Moreover, even if the district
    court’s decision were correct as applied to a levy-based tax
    system, applying that decision to a modern rate-based tax
    system eliminates much of the protection found in Article IV,
    section 18, and perhaps also in Article IV, section 25(2).2
    However, we need not resolve those issues to decide plain-
    tiffs’ Article IV, section 18, claim. It is sufficient in this case
    to hold that, even if the 2009 bill were a “bill for raising rev-
    enue,” the bill complied with Article IV, section 18, because
    it effectively originated in the House of Representatives.
    In Power Resources Cooperative v. Dept. of Rev., 
    330 Or 24
    , 996 P2d 969 (2000), this court held that public and
    private entities with certain contractual rights in the Pacific
    Northwest Intertie have a taxable property interest in that
    transmission line. In 2005, the Oregon legislature exempted
    out-of-state public bodies from paying a tax on that interest.
    Or Laws 2005, ch 832, § 1.3 Four years later, the legislature
    repealed that exemption. Or Laws 2009, ch 804, § 1. As a
    result of Power Resources and the 2009 repeal of the exemp-
    tion, plaintiffs (out-of-state public bodies) must pay Oregon
    property taxes on their interests in the Intertie.
    On review, plaintiffs raise two issues. First, they
    argue that we should overrule Power Resources. Alterna-
    tively, they argue that the 2009 bill repealing the 2005
    exemption was a “bill for raising revenue” that, under
    Article IV, section 18, had to (but did not) originate in the
    House of Representatives. See Or Const, Art IV, § 18. I
    concur in the majority’s opinion to the extent that it reaf-
    firms Power Resources. However, I would resolve plaintiffs’
    Article IV, section 18, argument on a narrower ground than
    the majority does. I would hold, as the Tax Court did, that
    the 2009 bill, in effect, originated in the House.
    2
    Article IV, section 25(2), provides that “[t]hree-fifths of all members elected
    to each House shall be necessary to pass bills for raising revenue.”
    3
    ORS 307.090(1) generally exempts property owned by state and local
    Oregon governments from property taxes. That exemption does not apply to out-
    of-state public bodies, however. As noted, the 2005 legislature added a specific
    exemption for out-of-state public bodies that hold otherwise taxable interests in
    the Intertie. See former 307.090(3) (2005).
    Cite as 
    357 Or 718
     (2015)	739
    In Bobo v. Kulongoski, 
    338 Or 111
    , 122, 107 P3d
    18 (2005), this court identified two criteria to determine
    when a bill will be a “bil[l] for raising revenue” that, under
    Article IV, section 18, must originate in the House. First,
    the bill must “collec[t] or brin[g] money into the treasury.”
    
    Id.
     Second, it must “posses[s] the essential features of a
    bill levying a tax.” 
    Id.
     In this case, there is no dispute that
    the 2009 bill repealing the 2005 tax exemption “collects
    or brings money into the treasury.” Repealing the exemp-
    tion will result in plaintiffs paying a tax that, since 2005,
    they have not had to pay. The dispute turns on the second
    criterion—whether the 2009 bill possesses the “essential
    features of a bill levying a tax.”
    The majority relies on the federal district court’s
    decision in Dundee Mortgage Trust Co. v. Parrish, 24 F 197
    (D Or 1885), in determining that the 2009 bill does not
    possess the “essential features of a bill levying a tax.” In
    Dundee, the district court held that a bill that added prop-
    erty to the tax rolls was not a bill that levied a tax.4 The
    district court reasoned:
    “True, [the act] provides that when revenue is to be raised
    mortgages shall contribute thereto as land; but it does not
    authorize or provide for levying any tax or raising a cent of
    revenue.”
    4
    The Department of Revenue argues that the 1882 act at issue in Dundee
    and also in Mumford v. Sewall, 
    11 Or 67
     (1883), repealed a tax exemption and
    that bills that repeal a tax exemption are not bills for raising revenue. The
    department misperceives the nature of statute at issue in Dundee and Mumford.
    Before 1882, Oregon statutes provided that “personal property, including debts
    secured by [a] mortgage, was listed to the owner in the county where he lived,
    and real property in the county in which it was situated.’ ” Dundee, 24 F at 201.
    In 1882, the legislature changed those statutes by providing that “a mortgage,
    deed of trust, [and the like] * * * shall be assessed and taxed to the owner of such
    security and debt in the county, city or district in which the land or real property
    affected by such security is situated.” Or Laws 1882, pp 64-65, §§ 1, 2.
    The 1882 act had little effect on in-state lenders. For in-state lenders, the
    1882 act did not change their obligation to pay state property taxes on all debts,
    including mortgages. It merely shifted the county in which the tax was due from
    the county where the in-state lender lived to the county where the land that
    secured the debt was located. For out-of-state lenders, however, the 1882 act had
    a greater effect. Before that time, out-of-state lenders may have owed personal
    property taxes on the mortgages in their home states, but they did not owe prop-
    erty taxes on their mortgages in Oregon. The 1882 act thus added mortgages held
    by out-of-state lenders to the class of property listed on the Oregon tax rolls; the
    act did not repeal an exemption.
    740	                             City of Seattle v. Dept. of Rev.
    Dundee, 24 F at 201. The court thus distinguished, in a levy-
    based tax system, between bills that put a class of property
    on the tax rolls and bills that actually “lev[y] a tax” on that
    property. Cf. Clackamas Cty Assessor v. Village at Main St.
    Phase II, 
    349 Or 330
    , 338-39, 245 P3d 81 (2010) (explain-
    ing that, in 1907, taxation consisted of a three-step process:
    listing property on the assessment rolls, determining the
    amount of taxes needed, and then levying a tax on the listed
    property to raise the amount of taxes needed). Put differ-
    ently, the court recognized, perhaps somewhat cryptically,
    that the act of listing a new class of property on the tax rolls
    is distinct from the act of levying a tax on that property and
    that only the latter act is subject to Article IV, section 18.
    See Dundee, 24 F at 201.
    In my view, the persuasive value of the district
    court’s decision in Dundee is limited. The decision simply
    states a conclusion. It does not explain it. Although this
    court has quoted the general principles that the district
    court stated in Dundee, which it drew from Justice Story’s
    treatise on constitutional law, until today, this court has
    never adopted the specific holding in Dundee. In Northern
    Counties Trust v. Sears, 
    30 Or 388
    , 403, 
    41 P 931
     (1895), the
    court held only that a bill imposing a fee for services was
    not a bill for raising revenue. And in Bobo, the court held
    that a bill that redistributed money already in the treasury
    was not a bill for raising revenue because it did not collect
    or bring money into the treasury. 
    338 Or at 122
    . The court’s
    holding today goes beyond those more limited decisions.
    Beyond that, even if the federal district court’s rea-
    soning were correct in a levy-based tax system, applying
    that holding in a rate-based tax system is problematic, as a
    example will illustrate. Personal income taxes are a famil-
    iar example of a rate-based tax. Under the federal district
    court’s reasoning in Dundee, the only bill that would be a
    bill for raising revenue would be the bill that set or changed
    the tax rate. Bills that expanded the definition of “income”
    to which the rate applied would not be subject to Article IV,
    section 18. However, in a rate-based system, where the tax
    rate is set, making property subject to that rate automati-
    cally results in its being taxed. It thus becomes more difficult
    Cite as 
    357 Or 718
     (2015)	741
    in a rate-based system to say that a bill that increases the
    property subject to a tax is not a bill for raising revenue.
    We need not decide that potentially far-reaching
    issue to resolve this case. Rather, we may resolve this case
    on the narrower ground that the Tax Court identified.
    Specifically, given the unique history of the 2009 bill that
    repealed the 2005 tax exemption, I would hold that the 2009
    bill “originated” in the House.
    As noted above, former ORS 307.090(3) (2005)
    exempted from taxation certain out-of-state public entities
    that owned
    “tangible or intangible property, property rights or property
    interests in or related to the Pacific Northwest AC Intertie,
    as referenced in a written capacity ownership agreement
    executed before November 4, 2005, between the United
    States Department of Energy and [those out-of-state public
    entities].”
    In 2009, the legislature passed a bill that repealed former
    ORS 307.090(3) (2005). See Or Laws 2009, ch 804, § 1.
    The bill began in the Senate but in a completely different
    form. See Bill File, SB 495, Feb 11, 2009. As introduced
    in the Senate, the bill added property tax exemptions to
    ORS 307.090 for local service districts, people’s utility dis-
    tricts, electric cooperatives, and private utilities that had
    taxable interests in the Pacific Northwest Intertie. See
    id. § 1 (adding additional exemptions to ORS 307.090). As
    passed out of the Senate, the bill added an exemption only
    for electric cooperatives. See Bill File, SB 495, May 4, 2009
    (A-Engrossed bill).
    When the bill went to the House, the House made a
    different policy choice. The House rejected the Senate’s pro-
    posed bill, which would have added an exemption for elec-
    tric cooperatives that have taxable interests in the Intertie.
    Instead of adding another exemption, the House deleted the
    existing exemption for out-of-state public entities that have
    taxable interests in the Intertie. Bill File, SB 495, June 3,
    2009 (B-Engrossed bill). The bill returned to the Senate,
    which concurred in the House’s changes, and the Governor
    signed the bill.
    742	                                      City of Seattle v. Dept. of Rev.
    Given that history, I would hold that, when the
    House removed all the operative provisions of a bill that had
    originated in the Senate and replaced those provisions with
    a bill that raised taxes, the bill “originated” in the House for
    the purposes of Article IV, section 18. This is not a case in
    which the House merely amended a bill that originated in
    the Senate; rather, the process that occurred here was far
    closer to a “gut and stuff” where the operative provisions of
    the Senate bill were “gutted” and the House “stuffed” new
    operative provisions into SB 495.5 To be sure, the title of the
    bill remained unchanged. However, all the operative provi-
    sions of the bill were added in the House. Given that cir-
    cumstance, I would hold, as the Tax Court did, that the bill
    repealing the 2005 tax exemption “originated” in the House.
    Accordingly, I concur in the court’s opinion to the extent it
    reaffirms Power Resources, but I concur in the court’s judg-
    ment to the extent it upholds the 2009 act against plaintiffs’
    Article IV, section 18, challenge.
    Landau, J., joins in this opinion.
    5
    “Gut and stuff” refers to “removing the text of a measure and inserting
    entirely new language which, while it may change the nature of the measure com-
    pletely, still must fall under the measure’s title, also known as the ‘relating-to’
    clause.” Oregon Legislature, Legislative Glossary, available at https://
    www.oregonlegislature.gov/citizen_engagement/Pages/Legislative-Glossary.
    aspx (last accessed July 8, 2015); see State v. Medina, 
    357 Or 254
    , 261 & n 6, 324
    P3d 526 (2015) (explaining that gutting and stuffing frequently occurs to take
    advantage of a favorable relating clause). Although the revisions in SB 495 were
    not a classic gut and stuff, they accomplished the same result.