95-1005
FEDERAL RETIREE
Signed 3/11/96
BEFORE
THE UTAH STATE TAX COMMISSION
____________________________________
PETITIONER, )
Petitioner, : FINDINGS OF FACT,
) CONCLUSIONS
OF LAW,
v. : AND FINAL DECISION
)
CUSTOMER SERVICE DIVISION OF : Appeal
No. 95-1005
THE UTAH STATE TAX COMMISSION,)
Respondent. : Account No. #####
) Tax
Type: Federal Retiree
_____________________________________
STATEMENT
OF CASE
This matter came before the Utah State Tax
Commission for a formal hearing on February 4, 1997, Gail S. Reich,
Administrative Law Judge, heard the matter for and on behalf of the
Commission. Present and representing
the Petitioner was PETITIONERS REP..
Present and representing the Respondent was RESPONDENT REP..
Based upon the evidence and testimony
presented at the hearing, the Tax Commission hereby makes its:
FINDINGS
OF FACT
1.
The tax in question is income tax.
2.
The period in question is 1985, 1986, 1987 and 1988.
3. As
a federal retiree in the State of Utah, Petitioner was required to pay state
income taxes on federal retirement
income, although state retirees did not pay
income tax on their retirement income.
4.
Respondent=s
taxing of federal retirees but not state retirees was declared illegal in Davis
v. Michigan Dept. of Treasury, 489 U.S. 803 (1989) and Brumley v. State
Tax Commission, 868 P.2d 796 (Utah 1994).
5. In
April 1994, Respondent entered into a stipulated settlement with the class of
federal retirees to refund state income taxes collected on federal retirement
income for the years 1985, 1986, 1987 and 1988.
6. On
April 22, 1994, in the Joint Agreement and Refund Plan filed in Third Judicial
District Court, attorneys for the federal retiree class, acting on behalf of
Petitioners agreed to the following manner in which Petitioners and all other
class members would be contacted:
Notice to Class Members of their Right to
Receive Refunds. As soon as is reasonably possible after
court approval of the Refund Plan, the Tax Commission shall:
(a)
Notify by letter Class Members who have previously filed amended
returns. If complete, they will receive
a status letter, with the appropriate form, telling them how to proceed. . .
.If their returns are incomplete, they will receive a claim form. . .and letter
informing them they will need to file.
(b)
Mail written Notice of Tax Refund. . .and Claim Forms in the form
attached thereto to class members who can be identified from records available
to the Tax Commission and who do not receive notice. . .and
(c)
All others will receive published notice...
7. According
to the Joint Agreement, the Commission was to identify class members in the
following way:
The Tax Commission utilizing best efforts,
shall immediately proceed to identify all class members entitled to a refund
and determine their current addresses.
Class members and their current addresses shall be identified and
determined from information and data obtained from payers of the retirement
income, the Internal Revenue Service and such other information and data
available from the Tax Commission=s records, including previously filed income tax returns, amended
income tax returns and claims for refund, protective claims, and written and
telephone communications to the Tax Commission and class representatives, and
from such other reasonably obtainable lists, as well as information and data
approved by the representatives of the parties.
8.
The stipulation likewise provided that the following information would
be provided to class counsel:
Information to Class Representatives. To enable class representatives to locate
and assist class members in filing returns, the Tax Commission will regularly
provide class representatives with a current list of all identifiable class
members, their mailing addresses, status of refund claims including their name,
address, and all offsets, including attorneys fees. . . . The Tax Commission
shall notify class representatives of those initial notices returned as
undeliverable.
9.
The Tax Commission=s Operations Division and Technology Management Group identified class
members using information from the U.S. Office of Personnel Management, Armed
Forces Retirement Offices, and the Internal Revenue Service. These records were compared with Tax
Commission records to verify class membership.
10. A
list of the status of claims of persons verified as class members was routinely
provided to class representatives, but because of the large number of potential
class members and the potential for confusion in administering claims, it was
only provided for class members as the agreement required.
11.
On April 28, 1994, and May 2, 1994, the Commission mailed 27,820
booklets by third class mail to potential claimants whether or not they could
be verified as class members. All Utah
State Tax Booklets were regularly mailed by third class mail. Third class mail is not returned to the
sender as undeliverable.
12.
The Commission determined that it would mail claim form booklets to many
individuals it could not verify were class members, but who potentially were
class members.
13. In a pleading filed with the Third
Judicial District Court on June 28, 1994, the federal retiree class alleged
that the July 31, 1994, time deadline should be extended because inadequate
notice had been given to claimants who had moved, claimants whose Tax
Commission records were wrong or incomplete, or whose amended returns had been
improperly processed.
14. These allegations relating to inadequate
notice were subsequently resolved by stipulation between Class Counsel and
Counsel for the Tax Commission on July 21, 1994, with additional mailings:
Plaintiffs, by and through class counsel,
Helgesen, Waterfall & Jones, and defendants, by and through the Utah
Attorney General=s Office, hereby stipulate to a resolution of
the issues stated in Plaintiffs= Memorandum in Support of motion to Require the Tax Commission to
Provide Additional Notice to the Class, to Extend the Time to File Refund
Claims and other Relief...
This stipulation required no further notice
for any claimants.
15. In addition to the status letter and
claim booklet mailings, the parties agreed to the following published notice: AThe published legal notices shall be
advertisements appearing four (4) times in the newspapers listed. . .@
16. By stipulation, the parties agreed to the
following final date for claims and extensions:
All class members who desire refunds shall
file a Claim Form or a Request for Extension by July 31, 1994. One extension of 3 months will be given
until October 31, 1994, if requested in writing by July 31, 1994, and an
additional extension shall be granted until January 31, 1995, if requested in
writing by October 31, 1994. Requests
for extensions must be authorized by individual class members.
17. In addition to these published notices,
the Tax Commission conducted five federal retiree claim seminars that were
widely publicized in the media.
Likewise, Class Representatives widely published notices of the
opportunity to submit claim forms. The
resolution of the federal retiree case was widely covered by the media.
18.
The records of the Tax Commission show that Petitioner was identified as
a potential class member through the process invoked in compliance with the
stipulated agreement. Although no
longer able to verify with records, Respondent sent Federal Retiree Claim Forms
between April and May of 1994 to the last known address of each taxpayer so
identified.
19. A
claim form was timely filed in this instance for the 1985 tax year and a refund
was received.
APPLICABLE
LAW
Utah Code Annotated '49-10-201. Governor may negotiate settlement
[Repealed effective July 1, 1997].
(1) The governor may:
(a) conduct settlement negotiations on behalf
of the state to settle the lawsuit; and
(b) until July 1, 1994, enter into a written
settlement agreement on behalf of the state that settles all claims asserted by
federal retirees against the state in that lawsuit.
(2) The governor shall ensure that in
exchange for any benefit received by a claimant under the settlement
affirmatively releases the state from all claims arising of out of the subject
matter of the lawsuit.
(3) Notwithstanding the provisions of Section
59-1-402, as amended by House Bill 7, 1993 Second Special Session of the Utah
Legislature, the governor may authorize payment as part of the settlement
agreement for 100% of all taxes owed retirees under the lawsuit plus interest
through October 11, 1993, in the amount of 9% per annum for a cash payment, and
12% per annum for deferred payment.
Utah Code Annotated '49-10-202. State Tax Commission to administer
settlement-Refundable tax credit [Repealed effective July 1, 1997].
(1) The State Tax Commission shall:
(a) administer any settlement agreement
signed by the governor under this part;
(b) make payments from the Federal Retirees
Settlement Fund as required by the settlement agreement;
(c) obtain waivers, releases, and other
documentation from the claimants as required by the settlement agreement;
(d) develop printed documentation necessary
to accomplish these requirements;
(e) obtain approval from the governor=s general counsel and the attorney general of
the form and substance of all documentation.
(f) include, as part of the written
documentation, language allowing the claimant to direct that any amount owing
to the claimant under the settlement agreement be deposited into a checkoff
rather than being paid to the claimant; and
(g) transfer monies from the Federal Retirees
Settlement Fund to one or more of the checkoffs as directed by claimants.
(2)(a) The tax commission is authorized to
make payments from the Federal Retirees Settlement Fund in the form of
refundable tax credits for tax years 1993, 1994, and 1995 as required by the
settlement agreement.
(b) For those federal retirees electing to
receive their settlement in the form of a tax credit for tax years 1993, 1994,
and 1995, there is created a refundable tax credit for tax years 1993, 1994,
and 1995, in an amount equal to 1/3 of the federal retirees refund amount plus
interest under the settlement agreement.
(c)
The tax commission shall withhold from any settlement amount paid from
the Federal Retirees Settlement Fund up to 15% of the settlement amount for
class member attorney=s
fees. The tax commission shall
distribute the monies withheld for attorney=s fees, less any authorized administrative charges, in accordance with
the district court order.
(3) The attorneys for the class members of
the federal retirees lawsuit may review records or information in the custody
of the commission in accordance with Section 59-1-403.
ANALYSIS
In this case Petitioner is requesting refunds
for 1986, 1987, and 1988. Petitioner
testified at the hearing that she had made some phone calls prior to the filing
date deadline and was told she could only file for those years during which her
husband was alive. Other than that
statement, however, she had very little recollection of any of the
conversations that she had with employees at the Tax Commission. Indeed, her testimony was that the person
she spoke to was difficult to understand , that she had very little
recollection of what was said and had trouble understanding what was said to
her. As a result, she turned over the
matter to her son-in-law who is an attorney.
Her son-in-law testified that he filed forms for 1985 and 1986. However, upon cross-examination and upon
presentation of the records by the Tax Commission that only 1985 had been
filed, Petitioner=s son-in-law
admitted that he may not have filed for 1986 since the records appear to show
that there had been no income reported for that year. Although Petitioner indicated that she had been confused and was
not able to understand the information that was given to her on the telephone,
and although the pamphlets that were sent to Petitioner indicated that
Petitioner is entitled to file as the surviving spouse of the retiree,
Petitioner=s son-in-law made no further inquiries at the
time he filed the claim forms and did not request a refund for the years 1987
and 1988. Petitioner has no specific
dates of conversation with employees of the Tax Commission nor did she have any
specific names of individuals to whom she spoke regarding eligibility to file
claim forms for those years after the retiree was deceased.
CONCLUSIONS
OF LAW
After review of this entire matter and the
petitions of both parties, the Commission concludes that the Petitioner was
provided prior notice of all rights in this matter and no grounds exist to
extend the filing deadline as set out in the agreements reached between the
parties in this class action. The
pamphlets were mailed to Petitioner and were available to her son-in-law when
she turned the matter over to him for filing.
If confusion existed at that time, careful reading of the pamphlet and
further inquiries would have led to a proper understanding of the full extent
of the rights of the Petitioner.
Therefore, the Commission concludes that Petitioner has identified no
valid grounds for varying the terms of the agreement as it applies to this
matter.
DECISION
AND ORDER
Based upon the foregoing, the Tax Commission
finds in favor of Respondent. It is so
ordered.
DATED this 11 day of March, 1996.
BY ORDER OF THE UTAH STATE TAX COMMISSION.
W. Val Oveson Richard
B. McKeown
Chairman Commissioner
Joe B. Pacheco Alice Shearer
Commissioner Commissioner
NOTICE:
You have twenty (20) days after the date of a final order to file a
Request for Reconsideration with the Commission. If you do not file a Request for Reconsideration with the
Commission, you have thirty (30) days after the date of a final order to file
a.) a Petition for Judicial Review in the Supreme Court, or b.) a Petition for
Judicial Review by trial de novo in district court. (Utah Administrative Rule R861-1A-5(P) and Utah Code Ann. ''59-1-601(1), 63-46b-13 et. seq.)
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