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NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE APPROVAL
OF THE TAX COURT COMMITTEE ON OPINIONS
TAX COURT OF NEW JERSEY
DOCKET NO. 16-02-0920-91ST
HARRY SKAPERDAS, GEORGE :
SKAPERDAS, AND BARRY :
BIRKENHOLTZ, :
:
Plaintiff(s), :
:
v. :
:
DIRECTOR, DIVISION OF :
TAXATION, :
:
Defendant(s). :
Decided: May 27, 1994
Harold Leib, for plaintiff
(Harold Leib, P.A., attorney,
Harold Leib, Elisa Leib, and
Richard I. Miller on the Brief)
Lillian E. Brown, Deputy Attorney
General, for defendant
(Deborah T. Poritz, Attorney General
of New Jersey, attorney)
SMALL, J.T.C.
The issue for determination in this case is whether three
individuals who were officers, directors, and shareholders of a
corporation are personally liable for that corporation's unpaid New
Jersey Sales and Use Tax. N.J.S.A. 54:32B-1 et seq.
Plaintiffs appeal from a determination of the Director that
they are each personally liable for sales tax of GBF Factory
Outlet, Inc., for the period 1984 through 1988, in the amount of
$57,836 plus penalty and interest. By agreement of the parties,
the only issue before the court at this point is the existence of
personal liability of each of the three plaintiffs. Only if
personal liability is found will the court address the issue of the
amount of such liability.
The statutory language imposing personal liability for
corporate sales tax liability, N.J.S.A. 54:32B-2(w) and -14,
provides a standard for that determination. The first of these
sections defines a person required to collect sales taxes as
[E]very vendor of tangible personal property or
service. . . . includ[ing] any officer or employee of a
corporation or of a dissolved corporation who as such
officer or employee is under a duty to act for such
corporation in complying with any requirement of this
act. . . .
[N.J.S.A. 54:32B-2(w).]
The second section relevant to the present inquiry provides
that
Every person required to collect any tax imposed by this
Act shall be personally liable for the tax imposed,
collected, or required to be collected under this act.
[N.J.S.A. 54:32B-14.]
Unfortunately, the Director has never promulgated detailed
regulations defining personal liability, pursuant to N.J.S.A.
54:32B-24(1). This court addressed the issue of personal liability
for the first time in a reported decision in Cooperstein v. Div. of
Taxation,
13 N.J. Tax 68, 71 (Tax 1993), appeal docketed, No. A-4088-92T3 (App. Div. April 23, 1993).
The determination of the issue of personal liability is, by
its nature, extremely fact-sensitive. Accordingly, the court's
discussion of the legal issues must follow a careful description of
its factual findings. Particular attention should be paid to these
facts, as this court's ultimate conclusion is that two of the
plaintiffs in this case are personally liable for the sales tax and
the third plaintiff is not.
Plaintiffs, Harry Skaperdas, George Skaperdas and Barry
Birkenholtz were involved as business associates in several
ventures in the fur industry. In late 1983 and early 1984, they
established a corporation known as GBF Factory Outlet, Inc.
("GBF"), a subchapter S corporation for federal income tax
purposes.
The principal activity of GBF was the operation of a retail
store selling fur coats in Secaucus, New Jersey. During the period
for which the underlying tax assessment was made, each of the three
plaintiffs was a director and corporate officer of GBF, and owned
corporate shares as detailed in the chart at page 8, infra.
During the relevant time period, there was a fourth "partner,"
Michael Simons, who was employed as the general manager of the
retail facility of GBF. Although Simons was not an officer,
shareholder, or director of GBF, he ran the day-to-day operations
of the corporation. Simons, whose employment could be terminated
by any of the three plaintiffs in this case, hired and fired all
store personnel, arranged for the acquisition of all goods to be
sold, and arranged for lines of credit for the corporation.
However, actual signatures for the lines of credit were made by the
three plaintiffs.
Simons visited with George Skaperdas and Barry Birkenholtz in
their Manhattan office at least once a week, and more often during
the busy fall season. At those meetings, it appears that Simons
reported to George Skaperdas and Barry Birkenholtz about the
business and may have submitted checks for their signatures. Check
signing authority was vested with the three plaintiffs but not with
Simons. It appears that the information necessary to prepare sales
tax returns was furnished by Simons to Sheldon Friedman, the
corporation's accountant, who prepared those returns which were
signed at different times by Friedman, Simons or one of the three
plaintiffs.
Although GBF's corporation business tax returns show that the
three plaintiffs devoted 5" to 50" of their time to GBF, they
testified that they devoted less than that amount of time. While
corporate business tax returns indicated that corporate-owned
vehicles were used for corporate purposes, Birkenholtz and George
Skaperdas testified that those vehicles were used exclusively for
personal purposes. I conclude that George Skaperdas and Barry
Birkenholtz took a cavalier attitude with regard to conforming
their actual activities to which they testified and their tax
reporting obligation. This brings into question the accuracy of
their testimony. Thus, although they testified that Michael Simons
ran the GBF operation, I conclude that during their weekly meetings
they were kept informed of the business operations in Secaucus.
On the other hand, Harry Skaperdas apparently did not
participate or have knowledge of these business meetings. In
addition to his signing corporate documents, his sole involvement
with GBF was that during busy periods he would go to the Secaucus
store and perform certain tailoring or alterations on the furs as
well as assist the sales staff.
Additionally, it should be noted that all three plaintiffs
used GBF losses to reduce their personal income tax liability, and
they received substantial (between $10,000 and $30,000) cash
distributions from GBF in 1988.
The uncontradicted testimony at trial indicates that for
certain retail sales involving cash, there was a pattern of under
reporting gross receipts for various tax purposes. The plaintiffs
indicate that Simons, their former "partner," was responsible for
this scheme, which appears to have resulted in an understatement of
gross receipts for sales tax purposes. Only after the three
plaintiffs sold their interests in GBF to Simons did they discover
these alleged misdeeds. The terms of the sale of GBF to Simons
from the three plaintiffs involved Simons giving notes to the
plaintiffs. Payments on those notes are delinquent. Plaintiffs
and Simons are in litigation concerning this delinquency.
Thus, it appears that Simons gave false information to
Friedman, the accountant, as well as to the three plaintiffs, which
resulted in their signing tax returns reflecting understated gross
receipts, gross sales, and gross profits. There is no evidence
that the amount of sales tax remitted differed from the sales tax
liability reported on the sales tax returns. Thus, at the time
plaintiffs signed checks as payment of sales tax, the returns and
the checks matched up. The questions for this court to resolve, in
part, are whether plaintiffs knew or should have known of the sales
tax deficiency, and whether they derived any benefit from GBF's
failure to accurately report its sales tax liability.
In Cooperstein v. Div. of Taxation, supra, Judge Andrew
thoughtfully discussed the law imposing personal liability for
persons required to collect sales taxes, such persons being defined
under N.J.S.A. 54:32B-2(w) as:
[E]very vendor of tangible personal property
or services....Said terms shall also include
any officer or employee of a corporation...who
as such officer or employee is under a duty to
act for such corporation in complying with any
requirement of this act (emphasis added).
Judge Andrew carefully distinguished between those who had a
"duty" or "obligation" to collect a tax and those who had the
"authority" to do so. 13 N.J. Tax at 79-81. Citing relevant
federal and New York case law, he concluded that officers of a
corporation, by virtue of their office alone, had the authority to
collect sales tax. However, the duty or obligation to collect the
tax could only be determined after an examination of the facts in
each case. As Judge Andrew stated:
[U]nexercised authority, without more, is
insufficient to impose personal liability upon
a corporate officer. The statutory language
implicitly requires a fact-sensitive pragmatic
inquiry into the corporate activities of an
officer or employee before personal liability
can be imposed.
[Cooperstein, supra, 13 N.J. Tax at 81.]
Judge Andrew then listed nine factors which should be considered in
analyzing whether a corporate officer has a duty or obligation to
collect sales tax. 13 N.J. Tax at 88.
I find no better way to analyze the case at bar than by
constructing the following table, which analyzes the authority and
activity of each of the three plaintiffs relative to the nine
factors (I note at the outset, that although the plaintiffs wish to
have this court consider the liability of Michael Simons, he is not
before this court. Although he may have personal liability for
these taxes, such liability does not in itself diminish the
obligations of the three plaintiffs, who are in fact before me).
An analysis of the above table shows that all three plaintiffs
had authority to collect taxes, and that they received financial
benefits from the corporation, but George Skaperdas and Barry
Birkenholtz played significantly different roles in the affairs of
the corporation than did Harry Skaperdas.
George Skaperdas (47.25") and Barry Birkenholtz (37.00") held
over 84" of the corporation's outstanding stock. They each
received a company car. As supervisors of store manager Michael
Simons, they received frequent reports from him and were kept
apprised of his activities. Michael Simons did not have carte
blanche to run the store. He reported the details of the New
Jersey operations to George Skaperdas and Barry Birkenholtz . They
signed checks and other financial documents submitted to them which
Michael Simons did not have the authority to sign. On the other
hand, Harry Skaperdas was a tailor who played no managerial role in
the operation of the New Jersey retail operations. He held less
than 16" of the outstanding stock, and he had no company car.
In his thorough opinion in Cooperstein, Judge Andrew explained
why this court would look to New York and Federal interpretive case
law but would not consider Ohio law. 13 N.J. Tax at 77 n.3.
Accordingly, I now compare the facts in this case to those in other
reported cases which have found corporate officers either
responsible for, or absolved from, personal liability for sales
tax.
The reported cases where individual corporate officers have
avoided liability for unpaid corporate taxes are all factually
distinguishable from this case as it relates to Messrs. George
Skaperdas and Barry Birkenholtz.
In Cooperstein v. Div. of Taxation, supra, the plaintiff was
not involved in day-to-day operations, did not sign checks, nor was
he consulted as to the payment of corporate debts. Moveover, he
received no income, salary, or commission, and he was not a
shareholder. 13 N.J. Tax at 76-77. As in Cooperstein, it appears
that in the present case plaintiffs did not have knowledge of the
deficient sales taxes until after the deadline for the payment of
such taxes. However, George Skaperdas and Barry Birkenholtz
exercised a level of supervision over Michael Simons and GBF's
daily operations far greater than did Mr. Cooperstein over his
subordinates. In Chevlowe v. Koerner,
95 Misc 2d 388, 407 N.Y.S.2d
427 (N.Y. Sup. Ct. 1978), the officer of the corporation did not
participate in the day-to-day management of the corporation, did
not sign checks, and did not sign sales tax returns. In Vogel v.
New York State Department of Taxation and Finance, 98 Misc.2d 222,
413 N.Y.S.2d 862 (N.Y. Sup. Ct. 1979), the officer shareholder did
not participate in the day-to-day operations of the corporation.
On the other hand, a review of the reported cases imposing
personal liability for unpaid sales tax reveals a greater
similarity to the facts in this case. In Cohen v. State Tax
Commission, 128 A.D.2d 1022, 513 N.Y.S.2d 564 (App. Div. 1987), the
officer taxpayer argued that because he was not involved in the
day-to-day operations of the corporation, he should not be held
responsible for unpaid sales taxes. The New York appellate court,
operating under a statutory standard identical to New Jersey's (see
Cooperstein, supra), found that responsibility would attach to an
individual who negotiated loans, was consulted about the
corporation's activities, and participated in the hiring of at
least one employee. In the case at bar, the participation of both
Birkenholtz and George Skaperdas with the management of GBF was at
least as great as that of the plaintiff in Cohen.
In In re Blodnick, 124 A.D.2d 437, 507 N.Y.S.2d 536 (App. Div.
1986), a New York Court found personal liability in part because
the officers could point to no one, other than themselves, who
would have personal responsibility for the collection of tax. In
contrast, plaintiffs here point to Michael Simons as a responsible
person. But even if plaintiffs are correct, I find no case which
stands for the proposition that: if another individual is also
responsible, or perhaps has greater responsibility, the lesser
involved individuals are absolved of all liability. On the
contrary,
the statute expressly applies to "any"
responsible persons not just to the person
most responsible for the payment of taxes.
There may be - indeed there usually are
multiple responsible persons in any company.
[Barnett v. Internal Revenue Service, 988 F.2d
1449, 1455 (5th Cir. 1993)(emphasis added).]
See also, In re Ragonesi v. New York State Tax Commission, 451
N.Y.S.2d 301 (App. Div. 1982), In re Massa, 477 N.Y.S.2d 838 (App.
Div. 1984), In re Malkin, 412 N.Y.S.2d 186 (App. Div. 1978), In re
Capoccia,
481 N.Y.S 2d 476 (App. Div. 1984).
This court finds that Barry Birkenholtz and George Skaperdas
derived significantly different benefits from GBF than did Harry
Skaperdas, and that their involvement in the management of GBF was
also significantly different from that of Harry Skaperdas. Michael
Simons reported directly, periodically, and frequently to Barry
Birkenholtz and George Skaperdas as the operators of GBF. They
were sophisticated businessmen with a comprehensive understanding
of business and finance. Although they may not have known about
Simons' underreporting, their failure to detect it was a result of
their inattention to their managerial and monitoring
responsibilities, given their active role in receiving reports from
Simons. On the other hand, Harry Skaperdas was a skilled tailor
who received no business reports, although he did occasionally sign
checks, tax returns, and other documents. His lack of
sophistication and involvement make his role in the running of GBF
analogous to that of the "innocent spouse" in federal income tax
liability cases. See
26 U.S.C.A.
§6013(e) (Internal Revenue Code
§ 6013(e)).
Although Barry Birkenholtz, George Skaperdas, and Harry
Skaperdas had apparently similar roles as shareholders and officers
of GBF, and the dividends they received were proportional to their
shareholdings, Barry Birkenholtz and George Skaperdas had company
cars, whereas Harry Skaperdas did not. Although use of the company
cars was intended for business purposes, the evidence reveals that
these not inexpensive vehicles (a BMW and a Chevy Trail Blazer)
were used for the personal tax-free benefit of Barry Birkenholtz
and George Skaperdas, rather than for the business of GBF. In
fact, the use of the cars by Birkenholtz and George Skaperdas, but
not by Harry Skaperdas, may be reflective of the greater role they
played in the management of GBF. One could speculate that the
corporation's payment for these cars was in lieu of compensation to
Birkenholtz and George Skaperdas. In short, they derived
substantially different financial benefits from the corporation
than did Harry Skaperdas.
In sum, the different managerial roles and the various
benefits received are the bases for this court's conclusion that
the personal liability of Barry Birkenholtz and George Skaperdas,
on the one hand, was different from that of Harry Skaperdas on the
other.
Moreover, a careful analysis of the facts in this case, as
compared to the facts in the decided cases reviewed by this court,
reveals that the involvement of George Skaperdas and Barry
Birkenholtz falls on the side of those officers held liable because
of their involvement in the actual and financial management of the
company. On the other hand, Harry Skaperdas, although he had
authority similar to the other two plaintiffs, played a distinctly
different role. As this court stated in Cooperstein, authority
alone is not sufficient to impose personal liability for unpaid
corporate sales tax. 13 N.J. Tax at 81. Having further heard the
testimony and observed the demeanor of all three plaintiffs, I
have concluded that George Skaperdas and Barry Birkenholtz were
under a duty and obligation to collect sales tax. Harry Skaperdas
was not.
Plaintiffs raise several additional arguments:
1. Plaintiffs should be absolved of individual liability
because they discharged their corporate responsibilities
under the New Jersey Business Corporation Act (N.J.S.A.
14A:1-1 et seq).
The definitions of those who are responsible for the
collection of sales tax and the imposition of liability are found
in the sales tax statute. There is no reason why corporate
officers and directors who meet their obligations under one statute
should be absolved of obligations under another statute. There is
no reason why obligations under the two statutes should be
identical. There is no reason why obligations under the sales tax
statute should be limited by the obligations under the Business
Corporation Act.
2. Plaintiffs should be absolved of liability because
their action was not the proximate cause of the sales tax
deficiency.
Assuming that Michael Simons was falsifying records, and
assuming that his activities were the proximate cause of the
corporate understatement of sales tax, is he the only responsible
party? The statute does not speak of a single responsible
individual. There may be one or more. See quotation from Barnett
v. Internal Revenue Service, supra, at this slip opinion page 11.
Clearly, all of the plaintiffs and Michael Simons had authority to
collect sales tax, yet authority alone is not sufficient to impose
individual liability. Cooperstein, supra, 13 N.J. Tax at 81. I have
determined that because of their intimate involvement in day-to-day
operations of GBF, George Skaperdas and Barry Birkenholtz had a
duty and obligation to supervise Michael Simons and to inform
themselves of his activities. George Skaperdas and Barry
Birkenholtz may have been inattentive to that duty, and thus
permitted sales tax to remain unpaid. The fact that Mr. Simons may
have lied to them and cheated them does not absolve them of their
legal responsibility. The fact that they may have an independent
cause of action against him for his activities which may be the
proximate cause of the corporate sales tax deficiency does not
absolve them of their duty and obligation.
3. Because the Director has not adopted regulations with
respect to personal liability, no one can be held
personally liable for sales tax.
Our Supreme Court's formulation of the factors which would
lead an administrative agency to adopt regulations clearly suggests
that the better practice would be for the Division of Taxation to
adopt regulations defining a responsible corporate officer under
the New Jersey Sales and Use Tax. See Metromedia, Inc. v.
Director, Div. of Taxation,
97 N.J 313, 331 (1984). Nevertheless,
failure to follow the better practice will not in itself invalidate
the agency's action when the existing statutory language and
interpretive case law is sufficiently clear to put taxpayers on
notice of the standards to be applied. See Equitable Life Mortgage
v. N.J. Div. of Taxation,
151 N.J. Super 232, 240 (App. Div.
1977), certif. denied,
75 N.J 535 (1977), and Chemical Realty Corp
v. Taxation Div. Director, 5 N.J. Tax 581 (Tax 1983), aff'd o.b.,
6 N.J. Tax 448 (App. Div. 1984).
The fact that this court can discern from the decided case law
nine specific factors to be considered in determining personal
liability makes it clear that no further detailed regulation was
required under the Administrative Procedures Act, N.J.S.A. 52:14B-1
et seq., for the Director's imposition of personal liability on a
corporate officer. Cooperstein, supra, 13 N.J. Tax at 88.
4. The statute imposing sales tax liability on the
plaintiffs violates due process because it is
unconstitutionally vague.
For the same reasons that a regulation is not required under
the Administrative Procedures Act, the statute and existing
interpretive case law are adequately specific to resist an argument
that the standards are unconstitutionally vague.
In determining whether a statute is unconstitutionally vague,
our Supreme Court has set out a hierarchy of tests. Criminal
statutes are subject to greater scrutiny than are civil statutes;
statutes limiting fundamental constitutional rights (i.e., free
speech or free exercise of religion) are subject to greater
scrutiny than those which infringe on rights not protected by the
Constitution; different standards apply when the challenge to a
statute is based on a specific application as opposed to a facial
challenge for all applications of the statute. See generally,
State v. Cameron,
100 N.J. 586, 592-594 (1985). See also, Town
Tobacconist v. Kimmelman,
94 N.J. 85, 118 (1983); State v. Lee,
96 N.J. 156, 164-167 (1984); State v. Afanador,
134 N.J. 162, 170
(1993); Village of Hoffman Estates v. Flipside, Hoffman Estates,
Inc.,
455 U.S. 489, 498-499,
71 L.Ed.2d 362, 372 (1982) and cases
cited at footnotes 10 through 15.
In this case, a statute imposing personal liability (an
economic regulatory function as opposed to a statute imposing
criminal liability) is challenged as it is applied to three
individuals. No fundamental first amendment rights are at issue.
The level of scrutiny to be applied by the reviewing court is of
the lowest level in determining if the statute is
unconstitutionally vague. The application is based on an
intelligent reading of the statute and an analysis of existing
sister state interpretive case law. This court in an earlier
determination was able to discern specific areas for analysis
required by the statute.
[I]f a statute is not vague as applied to a particular
party, it may be enforced even though it might be too
vague as applied to others.
[State v. Cameron, supra, 100 N.J. at 593.]
By accepting corporate cars, receiving reports from Michael
Simons, providing general supervisory oversight of Michael Simons'
activities, reserving for themselves signing authority and
exercising that authority, George Skaperdas and Barry Birkenholtz
had a duty to act for GBF in complying with New Jersey's Sales and
Use Tax Act. The standards of the statute are not vague when
applied to these acts.
As applied to Harry and George Skaperdas and Barry
Birkenholtz, the statute imposing personal liability for New Jersey
sales tax, when viewed through the lens of prior interpretive case
law, is in sharp focus. Persons of common intelligence need not
guess at its meaning nor could they differ as to its application.
See State v. Afanador, supra, 134 N.J. at 170 (citing Connally v.
General Constr. Co.,
269 U.S. 385, 391 (1926)).
Harry Skaperdas is relieved of personal liability with respect
to the sales tax obligation of GBF. The court will proceed to the
issue of the amount of the liability for George Skaperdas and Barry
Birkenholtz.
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