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NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE APPROVAL OF THE
TAX COURT COMMITTEE ON OPINIONS
TAX COURT OF NEW JERSEY
DOCKET NO. 16-02-00529-92CB
DON DAN CONSTRUCTION CO., :
Plaintiff, :
v. :
DIRECTOR, DIVISION OF TAXATION, :
Defendant. :
Decided April 6, 1995
Harold Leib for plaintiff.
Rene' Y. Blocker for defendant
(Robert J. Del Tufo, former Attorney
General of New Jersey, attorney).
PIZZUTO, J.T.C.
Plaintiff taxpayer contests the denial of a Corporation
Business Tax ("CBT") refund claim as untimely. The parties have
stipulated the material facts concerning the question of
timeliness, and defendant Director seeks summary judgment
sustaining the denial.
On March 28, 1988, taxpayer filed its CBT return for the year
ended May 31, 1987 ("1986" return). This return had been due
originally on September 15, 1987, and an extension of time to file
to March 15, 1988 had been approved by the Division of Taxation
("Division"). The return was accompanied by payment of $30,615,
reflecting a tax liability of $32,348 less credits for previous
payments of $4,013 plus interest on underpayment of estimated tax.
Because the return was not filed within the approved extension
period, late filing and late payment penalties, in accordance with
N.J.S.A. 54:49-4, were also due. The portion of the return calling
for calculation of these penalties together with interest from the
original due date was left blank, and no payment of these items was
made at the time the return was filed.
In response to a title company request in apparent connection
with a transfer of real property by taxpayer, the Division issued
a Certificate of Corporation Franchise Tax Lien, dated October 17,
1988. The certificate recited penalty and interest in the amount
of $9,576.83 due from taxpayer with respect to the tax obligation
reported in its 1986 CBT return. By letter received in the
Division on February 17, 1989, plaintiff requested that the penalty
and interest charges be satisfied from the refund taxpayer had
claimed on its CBT return for the year ended May 31, 1988 ("1987"
return). Pursuant to N.J.S.A. 54:19-11, the Division allowed an
abatement of penalties to 5" for late payment and an abatement of
interest to the minimum rate required by statute. $3,315.19 was
then applied from taxpayer's 1987 CBT overpayment to the 1986
penalty and interest charges, which were thereby satisfied in full.
On September 5, 1990, taxpayer filed an amended 1986 CBT
return, including the refund claim now at issue. The claim was
stated in the amount of $26,809 and was based upon revision of the
1986 reported figures for closing inventory and cost of goods sold.
The Division's final determination, denying the refund claim as
untimely, was issued on October 23, 1991, whereupon plaintiff filed
the instant action.
The Division defends the denial of the refund claim on the
basis that it was filed more than two years after taxpayer's 1986
CBT payment was made and that it was therefore untimely under the
then effective provisions of N.J.S.A. 54:49-14 and N.J.A.C. 18:7-13.8.See footnote 1 Taxpayer contends that the period specified by the cited
statute and regulation runs, in this case, from the time of its
February 1989 payment of penalty and interest, rather than from the
payment of the tax upon the filing of the 1986 CBT return in March
1988. The Division has not addressed the substance of the refund
claim and does not concede the accuracy of the revised inventory
figures or the calculations based on the revised figures. The
parties agree that only the issue of timeliness is before the
Court, and that the Division will examine the particulars of the
claim, if it is found timely. Accordingly, although a formal
motion has not been filed, the parties recognize that the Division
seeks summary judgment. For the reasons explained below, summary
judgment shall be entered in favor of defendant.
This case turns on the distinction between a payment based on
a taxpayer's own calculations, to which the refund claim period
established by N.J.S.A. 54:49-14 applies, and a payment to satisfy
an assessment or other determination made by the Division, to which
the refund statute does not apply. The distinction was clearly
recognized in Vicoa, Inc. v. Director, Division of Taxation,
166 N.J. Super. 496 (App. Div. 1979). In that case, the corporate
taxpayer had paid a CBT assessment made against it by the Director
and contested the Director's denial of a refund claim filed within
two years of the payment. The Appellate Division found that the
limitation period established in the State Tax Uniform Procedure
Law at N.J.S.A. 54:49-14 is applicable to CBT refund claims only
insofar as the claims relate to payments based on the taxpayer's
own calculations. Where, as was the case in Vicoa, the payment is
made after a determination of the Director, the CBT statute limits
further proceedings with respect to the payment to review in the
Tax Court, which must be sought within ninety days of the
determination. N.J.S.A. 54:10A-19.2. After the Director has made
a determination, the taxpayer does not have the option to pay the
assessment and claim a refund at any time within two years. See
also Peoples Express Co. v. Director, Division of Taxation,
10 N.J.
Tax 417, 431-434 (Tax 1989).
The rule has been codified at N.J.A.C. 18:7-13.8(g), which
provides:
(g) Where the Director assesses additional tax
by way of a deficiency assessment or final
determination and the taxpayer pays the
deficiency, the taxpayer may not convert an
assessment proceeding into a refund action by
filing a refund claim within two years of the
date of the payment of the deficiency
assessment or final determination. In such
case, taxpayer's remedy is to contest the
assessment in a timely fashion by filing a
complaint with the Tax Court within 90 days of
the action of the Director to be reviewed.
This is in accordance with N.J.S.A. 54:10A-19.2, N.J.S.A. 54:51A-14a and R.8:4-1(b).
Vicoa concerned a claim for refund of the amount paid to satisfy
the Director's assessment. In Bristol-Myers Co. v. Director,
Division of Taxation,
3 N.J. Tax 451 (Tax 1981), aff'd
9 N.J. Tax 88 (App. Div. 1986). certif. den.
107 N.J. 121 (1987), taxpayer had
paid a CBT assessment made by the Director for given periods. It
later sought by a refund claim filed within two years of that
payment to recover amounts with respect to the assessment periods
which were not part of the assessment and which had been paid more
than two years before the making of the refund claim. The Tax
Court noted the distinction made in Vicoa between a taxpayer's
calculation of its liability and the Division's determination. It
held that, just as the satisfaction of an assessment does not
constitute a payment to which the refund claim period of N.J.S.A.
54:49-14 applies, the payment does not affect the claim period
otherwise established under N.J.S.A. 54:49-14 for matters outside
the assessment.
Taxpayer is essentially in the same situation presented in
Bristol-Myers. It seeks to measure the refund claim period from
the payment of the obligation recited in the certificate of tax
lien, while the refund actually claimed relates to a separate
payment, made more than two years before the presentation of the
claim. Plaintiff, however, resists the characterization of its
February 1989 payment as the satisfaction of an assessment or
determination of the Director because, it contends, the Director
did not give notice of a deficiency assessment or final
determination with respect to the 1986 penalty and interest charges
earlier than the issuance of the Certificate of Corporation
Franchise Tax Lien on October 17, 1988. The parties have made no
stipulation with regard to the question of prior notice, but a
distinction on this basis is, in any event, without substance.
This case does not concern the procedural regularity of a corporate
franchise tax lien or the question of the taxpayer's entitlement to
notice prior to the issuance of the certificate. Neither does this
case concern assertion of otherwise time-barred claims under the
doctrine of equitable recoupment to offset new assessments relating
to the same period. See Pantasote, Inc. v. Director, Division of
Taxation, 8 N.J. Tax 160 (Tax 1985).
Taxpayer had the opportunity to assert any defenses it might
have raised to the penalty and interest charges by appeal to the
Tax Court taken within ninety days of actual notice. N.J.S.A.
54:51A-14. Upon provision of adequate security, its property could
have been released from the lien during the pendency of the appeal.
N.J.S.A. 54:10A-30; 54:51A-15. After the Director's abatement,
however, it chose to satisfy, rather than contest, the charges.
The period for amendment of its 1986 return remained unaffected.
It is clearly established that the satisfaction of a tax
obligation upon final determination by the Division is not a
payment to which the refund claim period established by N.J.S.A.
54:49-14 applies. A taxpayer is permitted to recognize and correct
errors in its own calculations in the relatively long period
allowed for refund claims. On the other hand, once a taxpayer has
notice of a determination made by the Director, it is reasonable to
require the taxpayer to acknowledge or contest the determination
within a relatively short period. See Vicoa, supra, at 502-503.
It is of no consequence that the Director's determination in this
case was the communication, by Certificate of Lien, of unpaid
penalty and interest charges, rather than a formal deficiency
assessment following audit. In either circumstance, the taxpayer
does not require an extended period to correct its own calculations
and therefore is not permitted resort to the refund claim procedure
of N.J.S.A. 54:49-14.
The Division, moreover, does not contend that the taxpayer's
payment of the penalty and interest charges in February 1989 cut
short the two year period allowed by N.J.S.A. 54:49-14 to amend its
1986 CBT return filed on March 28, 1988. That period ran, it would
appear, through March 28, 1990, more than a year following the
payment of the penalty and interest charges. The amended return
and refund claim was, however, not filed until September 5, 1990,
and taxpayer seeks to extend the refund period through the two
years following payment of penalty and interest. This contention
entails the incongruous result that taxpayers who fail to include
penalty and interest (required to be self-assessed) with their
returns have a longer period within which to amend those returns
and claim refunds than taxpayers who paid all tax and any
applicable penalty and interest at the time of filing.
The taxpayer's claim in this action is foreclosed by the clear
authority of Vicoa, Bristol-Myers and N.J.A.C. 18:7-13.8(g). Its
arguments to the contrary and the authorities asserted to support
them are unpersuasive. Taxpayer points to the provision of the
State Tax Uniform Procedure Law (N.J.S.A. 54:49-10) making
penalties and interest "payable to and recoverable by the Director
in the same manner as if they were a part of the tax imposed." It
contends that the refund period specified in N.J.S.A. 54:49-14 does
not begin to run until the tax obligation, including all interest
and penalty, has been fully satisfied. The incongruity of that
result has already been noted, and a statutory provision (N.J.S.A.
54:49-10) intended to facilitate collection of penalty and interest
cannot reasonably be found to support it.
Taxpayer also relies upon a series of decisions concerning
federal estate tax refund claims. Hills v. United States,
55 F.2d 1001 (Ct. Cl. 1932); United States v. Clarke,
69 F.2d 748 (3rd Cir.
1934); Union Trust Co. of Rochester v. United States,
5 F. Supp. 259 (W.D.N.Y. 1933). It is evident that these decisions (finding
refund claims timely as to the entire amount of the tax paid and
not merely as to the portion paid within the applicable limitation
period) deal with the specific terms of the federal estate tax
refund statute as of a given date and its legislative history up to
that date. They are of little assistance in any other context.
Taxpayer cites United States v. Swift,
282 U.S. 468,
51 S.Ct. 202,
75 L.Ed. 464 (1931) to illustrate the running of a refund claim
period from the credit of an overpayment in satisfaction of a
distinct obligation. The source of the payment, however, is not
material here, and the dispositive issue in this case is not
whether a refund claim for an amount paid in portions is timely as
to the entire amount under N.J.S.A. 54:49-14 when only some of the
portions have been paid within two years. The dispositive point is
that N.J.S.A. 54:49-14 has no application to the satisfaction of
the outstanding penalty and interest charges on February 17, 1989.
The refund claim was properly denied because the obligation
satisfied is appropriately considered a deficiency assessment or
final determination under N.J.A.C. 18:7-13.8(g).
Finally, taxpayer advances a number of decisions which it
characterizes as embodying a principle that neither taxpayer nor
taxing authority may benefit from administrative mistakes or
failure to disclose. Rosenman v. United States,
323 U.S. 658,
65 S.Ct. 536,
89 L.Ed. 535 (1945) is another federal estate tax case
in which the Supreme Court held that the refund claim period began
to run when an amount paid on account of taxes and held in a
suspense account was actually applied to a tax rather then when the
payment on account was first made. Ewing v. United States,
914 F.2d 499 (4th Cir. 1990) holds that the failure of the Internal
Revenue Service to make a formal assessment against taxpayers of
amounts paid under closing agreements to settle disputed
deficiencies did not entitle taxpayers to recover the settlement
payments. In addition, taxpayer cites an unreported decision of
the Tax Court in which a corporation was allowed to recover a CBT
overpayment apparent on the face of its return, but not claimed
within the two year period of N.J.S.A. 54:49-14. These cases do
not appear apposite. As explained above, the taxpayer cannot claim
an advantage from its own failure to self-assess and pay penalty
and interest when it filed its return, and it did not suffer
prejudice from the absence of prior notice of the Division's lien
for these items.
Summary judgment shall be entered in favor of defendant.
Footnote: 1A subsequent amendment of N.J.S.A. 54:49-14, effected by L.
1992, c. 175 (the Taxpayers' Bill of Rights), extended the refund
claim period from two years to four years.
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