A. W. Chesterton Co. v. Commissioner of Revenue

703 N.E.2d 228, 45 Mass. App. Ct. 702, 1998 Mass. App. LEXIS 1204
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedNovember 12, 1998
DocketNo. 95-P-2139
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 703 N.E.2d 228 (A. W. Chesterton Co. v. Commissioner of Revenue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Appeals Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
A. W. Chesterton Co. v. Commissioner of Revenue, 703 N.E.2d 228, 45 Mass. App. Ct. 702, 1998 Mass. App. LEXIS 1204 (Mass. Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

Lenk, J.

A. W. Chesterton Company (Chesterton) appeals from a decision of the Appellate Tax Board (board) favorable to the Commissioner of Revenue (commissioner). The board upheld the commissioner’s denial of Chesterton’s application to abate its corporate excise tax for the 1982 tax year. Chesterton’s abatement application was based, in relevant part, on its contention that the commissioner had not timely assessed the tax and that the limitations period of G. L. c. 62C, § 26, accordingly barred the deficiency assessment.

All agree that, to be timely, the assessment had to have been made by the commissioner no later than December 31, 1985. It is also agreed that the notice of assessment (NOA) sent to Chesterton by the commissioner bore the date of January 10, 1986, ten days past the deadline. The NOA did not indicate the date on which the actual assessment, an act entirely internal to the Department of Revenue (department), took place. The nub of the dispute on appeal is the board’s determination that, notwithstanding the date on the NOA, the assessment had actu[703]*703ally been made no later than December 27, 1985, and, as such, was timely. Chesterton maintains that, absent contemporaneous departmental tax records, firsthand knowledge, or other reliable evidence concerning the act of assessment, the date of the NOA is controlling and the board’s decision to the contrary is not supported by substantial evidence. We reverse.

1. Background. This dispute arises in the context of a lengthy history of controversy between Chesterton and the commissioner concerning the department’s unitary assessment practice, see, e.g., A. W. Chesterton Co. v. Commissioner of Rev., 37 Mass. App. Ct. 936 (1994), and, in the wake of Polaroid Corp. v. Commissioner of Rev., 393 Mass. 490 (1984), the appropriate method for apportionment of income. Initially, in October, 1983, the commissioner, pursuant to G. L. c. 62C, § 26(b),1 issued a notice of intention to assess (NIA) an additional tax for the 1982 tax year in the amount of $347,482. This NIA was later withdrawn. Almost two years later, in March of 1985, the commissioner issued a second NIA in the lesser amount of $162,859. Presumably to facilitate the communication process between the taxpayer and the department envisioned by G. L. c. 62C, § 26(b), in the period of time following receipt of a NIA, Chesterton consented, on June 26, 1985, to extend until December 31, 1985, the time within which the commissioner could assess an additional corporate excise tax for the 1982 tax year. On December 20, 1985, without having yet received a NOA from [704]*704the commissioner pursuant to G. L. c. 62C, § 31,2 Chesterton hand-delivered a check in the amount of $240,800.07 to the department. On January 10, 1986, the commissioner sent Chesterton a NOA reflecting an “excise before credits” of $162,859 and “interest” of $108,636, together resulting in a “total excise” of $271,495, as well as “total payments” of $240,800.07, and a “balance due” of $30,694.93. Chesterton paid the “balance due” on February 7, 1986, and thereafter timely filed an application for abatement based in pertinent part upon its contention that the assessment was untimely because not made on or before December 31, 1985. The commissioner denied the abatement application on August 16, 1989, without comment on the issue of the timeliness of the assessment. Chesterton appealed to the board from the commissioner’s refusal to abate the tax.3

The board4 conducted an evidentiary hearing on August 13, 1992. Three years later, on October 16, 1995, the board5 issued its decision affirming the commissioner and, one year later, on [705]*705October 24, 1996, the board6 issued its findings of fact, report, and opinion.

2. The evidence. At the evidentiary hearing, the board heard from three witnesses, two. for Chesterton and one for the commissioner, and received in evidence five exhibits. We recite this evidence and the board’s findings in some detail because our review as to whether substantial evidence supports the board’s conclusion must be of the entire record.

(a) Chesterton’s evidence. Chesterton’s controller, Gary Hutchins, was responsible for preparing its tax returns and had knowledge of the company’s State audit history and the controversy stemming from the unitary tax method of income allocation affecting tax years 1977 through 1982. He testified that the controversy as to tax year 1982 had not been resolved by the end of 1985 and that, while Chesterton had received a NIA for tax year 1982 in March of 1985, it had not received a NOA before the end of 1985. Nonetheless, in anticipation of the assessment being made and in order to avoid further accumulation of eighteen per cent interest and to take a deduction on its Federal income tax return for tax year 1985, Chesterton paid the contested State tax liability for tax year 1982 on December 20, 1985. Chesterton thereafter received the NOA dated January 10, 1986, having received no other notice, oral or written, that an assessment had been made prior to the end of 1985.

John Riley, Chesterton’s vice-president of finance, also testified. Riley was deeply involved in the State tax audits for tax years 1977 through 1982 and testified that, as of December 20, 1985, when Chesterton paid the contested tax liability for tax year 1982, the audits for tax years 1977 through 1982 were actively in dispute. He and Hutchins were in regular contact and exchanged information with the department following receipt of the NIAs for those tax years. Indeed, the commissioner stipulated that the controversy as to tax year 1982 was an ongoing matter from 1983 until the date of assessment. Riley testified that on January 28, 1986, he had a telephone conversation with Jeremiah Donovan, a department auditor who had been involved in the case, to determine the date on which the department had assessed Chesterton for the 1982 tax year. Donó[706]*706van informed him that the assessment had been entered on the department’s computer on January 22, 1986. A contemporaneous memorandum of this conversation was admitted in evidence.

(b) The commissioner’s evidence. The only witness called by the commissioner was Edward Lepore. Lepore had not had any involvement at all with the deficiency assessment at issue and consequently could not testify as to his recollection of events relating to the assessment for tax year 1982. Nor was Lepore called to meet foundational requirements for the introduction of original departmental records with respect to that assessment, such as the original notice of intent to assess, instruction to bill, memorandum, worksheets, audit assessment or audit file, for Lepore testified that all such internal documents had been destroyed under circumstances which he could not explain. Instead, Lepore was called because, at the time of the hearing, he was assistant chief of the department’s Masstax Bureau which monitors Masstax and its computer system, and could opine as to the meaning of an archived computer printout relied upon by the commissioner to show that timely assessment had been made.

Lepore testified that the Masstax computer system did not come into use until 1988, well after the time of the assessment at issue here.

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Bluebook (online)
703 N.E.2d 228, 45 Mass. App. Ct. 702, 1998 Mass. App. LEXIS 1204, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/a-w-chesterton-co-v-commissioner-of-revenue-massappct-1998.