KISTLER, J.
Two petitioners seek review of the Attorney General's certified ballot title for Initiative Petition 28 (2012). See ORS 250.085(2) (specifying requirements for seeking review of certified ballot titles). We review the ballot title to determine whether it substantially complies with ORS 250.035(2). See ORS 250.085(5) (stating standard of review). For the reasons explained below, we refer the ballot title to the Attorney General for modification.
Before 2009, Oregon imposed a 6.6 percent tax rate on a corporation's "taxable income."
Initiative Petition 28 (IP 28), if adopted, would change one aspect of Measure 67.
The Attorney General certified the following ballot title for IP 28:
Petitioner Green raises a single challenge to the caption, the "yes" vote result statement, the "no" vote result statement, and the summary. He contends that each part of the ballot title is defective because it refers to a tax on "corporate income" rather than a tax on corporate "profits" or "taxable income." Green reasons that the use of the phrase "corporate income" is misleading because it fails to communicate that the tax would fall only on corporate profits. See Kain v. Myers, 336 Or. 116, 120, 79 P.3d 864 (2003) (discussing that standard). In support of his argument, Green notes that a corporation could have more than $11 million in gross income but still operate at a loss. Under IP 28, that corporation would have no "profit" or "taxable income" and thus would owe no tax. Green reasons, however, that the term the certified ballot title uses—"income"—can include
Petitioner Harmon raises a similar challenge to the caption, "yes" vote result statement, "no" vote result statement, and summary. He notes that the tax that IP would modify is a corporate excise tax and contends that the ballot title should have either referred to an excise tax or used the phrase "taxable income." In his view, either phrase would have been more accurate and less misleading than the use of the unmodified term "income."
The Attorney General raises two arguments in response. The Attorney General notes initially that Green did not object to using the phrase "corporate income" when he filed comments with the Secretary of State regarding the draft ballot title. The Attorney General reasons that, having failed to raise that objection before the Secretary of State, Green cannot raise it here. See ORS 250.085(6) ("When reviewing a title certified by the Attorney General, the Supreme Court shall not consider arguments concerning the ballot title not presented in writing to the Secretary of State unless the court determines that the argument concerns language added to or removed from the draft title after expiration of the comment period provided in ORS 250.067."). Although Green did not raise that objection in his comments to the Secretary of State, the draft ballot title used the phrase "taxable income." The Attorney General did not remove the word "taxable" until he issued the certified ballot title. ORS 250.085 specifically provides that that we can consider arguments "concerning language * * * removed from the draft title after the expiration of the comment period." Id. Green's objection is properly before us.
On the merits, the Attorney General argues that the state and federal tax returns refer to "income tax," not "profits tax." As we understand the Attorney General's argument, he reasons from that premise that the word "income" in the ballot title is sufficient, standing alone, to communicate to the voters that the increased tax rate would apply only to a corporation's profits or taxable income. We reach a different conclusion.
As an ordinary matter, "income" includes, among other things, gross income, net income, and capital gains, each of which may be treated differently for tax purposes. For example, Measure 67 imposed a tax both on gross income and on taxable income; specifically, it imposed a business minimum tax based on a corporation's gross income, and it modified the tax rate that a corporation owes on its taxable income or profits. See Livingston v. Kroger/Devlin, 347 Or. 307, 310-11, 220 P.3d 418 (2009) (explaining that Measure 67 imposed a tax on both a corporation's gross income and on its taxable income). Under Measure 67, a corporation that had more than $500,000 in gross income in a tax year would owe a business minimum tax of 0.1 percent of its gross income, but it would owe no excise tax if it earned no profit or taxable income that year.
The ballot title for Measure 67 distinguished those two concepts. It referred to the tax on gross income as a "business minimum tax" and, alternatively, as a tax on "total Oregon revenues," while it referred to the increased tax rate on taxable income as a "corporate profits tax." See id. at 312, 220 P.3d 418 (setting out the ballot title). IP 28 affects the corporate profits tax that was part of Measure 67. Yet, the ballot title for IP 28 does not refer to the increased tax rate that IP 28 would enact as a tax on a corporation's profits or taxable income. Rather, the caption refers to "rais[ing] the tax rate on corporate income." (Capitalization and boldface omitted.) The "yes" vote result statement similarly refers to the "tax rate that will apply to corporate income." The "no" vote result statement states that a "no" vote means that "corporate income over $10 million will be taxed" at a lower rate. And the summary says that currently "corporate income is taxed" at a certain rate and that, if the measure passes, "the tax rate on income
In each instance, the certified ballot title uses the term "income," even though that term can refer to more than one type of income and even though those differing types of income may have significantly different tax consequences. The Attorney General advances no legitimate reason for not using a more accurate term, which would reduce the potential for misleading the voters that the certified ballot title currently presents.
Ballot title referred to the Attorney General for modification.