Beaver County v. Property Tax Division of the Utah State Tax Commission

2006 UT 6, 128 P.3d 1187, 544 Utah Adv. Rep. 3, 2006 Utah LEXIS 6, 2006 WL 163022
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 24, 2006
Docket20040236, 20040241
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 2006 UT 6 (Beaver County v. Property Tax Division of the Utah State Tax Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Beaver County v. Property Tax Division of the Utah State Tax Commission, 2006 UT 6, 128 P.3d 1187, 544 Utah Adv. Rep. 3, 2006 Utah LEXIS 6, 2006 WL 163022 (Utah 2006).

Opinions

WILKINS, Associate Chief Justice:

{1 This case is a cross-petition for a writ of review of the Utah State Tax Commission's determination that it could equitably toll the statutory period on issuing escaped property taxes to allow its Property Tax Division to issue an assessment for such taxes against PacifiCorp, a utility company, after the statutory period for such issuances had expired; that the Utah State Tax Division's assessment of unpaid taxes was incorrect and PacifiCorp actually owed nothing; and that PacifiCorp was time-barred from receiving a tax refund for over-paid taxes.

1 2 Twenty-eight Utah counties, as interve-nors to the action, seek review of the Commission's second ruling. PacifiCorp seeks review of the first and third. We reverse the Commission's determination that the limitations period could be equitably tolled to preserve the issuance of a tax assessment. We accordingly vacate the Division's assessment of the escaped property tax for tax year 1997 because it was issued after the statutory period had expired. Since the determination of whether the limitations period could be equitably tolled is dispositive to this case, and we find that it could not, we dismiss the remaining issues as moot and do not address them.

BACKGROUND

T3 PacifiCorp is a utility company that holds property in the State of Utah. The [1190]*1190Property Tax Division (the "Division") of the Utah State Tax Commission (the "Commission") is charged under Utah Code section 59-2-201 (2004) with the responsibility of centrally assessing PacifiGorp's state property tax liability.

T4 On May 1, 1997, the Division issued a notice of assessment of PacifiGCorp's 1997 total taxable property in the amount of $2,674,851,580. On May 30, 1997, PacifiCorp appealed the Division's tax assessment for that year by filing a Petition for Redetermi-nation of the 1997 Original Assessment. Twenty-eight Utah counties (the "Counties") that benefit from the tax revenue also filed a Petition for Redetermination of the 1997 assessment. Both PacifiCorp and the Counties subsequently withdrew their petitions without comment, and the Commission accordingly dismissed their respective appeals. Pacifi-Corp then paid the tax amount indicated in the Original Assessment without protest.

«[ 5 During a deposition in July of 2000 on a 1999 tax assessment dispute, PacifiCorp, the Counties, and the Division discovered that PacifiCorp had erroneously overstated the amounts of its Deferred Income Tax ("DIT") and Investment Tax Credit ("IT") deductions in its annual report for 1997, 1998, and 1999.1 The Division had relied on the schedule, including the erroneous DIT and IT figures, that PacifiCorp had provided in its annual report to determine the cost approach value in the Division's Original Assessment. The reporting errors could have potentially undervalued the property to the extent that some portion of the property could be considered to have escaped taxation altogether, in which case an escaped property tax assessment should then be issued against Pacifi-Corp.

6 An "eseaped property" is any property that is subject to taxation and is

(i) inadvertently omitted from the tax rolls, assigned to the incorrect parcel, or assessed to the wrong taxpayer by the assessing authority;
(ii) undervalued or omitted from the tax rolls because of the failure of the taxpayer to comply with the reporting requirements of this chapter; or
(ii) undervalued because of errors made by the assessing authority based upon incomplete or erroneous information furnished by the taxpayer.

Utah Code Ann. § 59-2-102(11)(a) (2004). On the other hand, property that is undervalued because the assessing authority used a different valuation methodology or applied the same methodology in a different manner is not an escaped property. Utah Code Ann. § 59-2-102(11)(b). If the assessing authority determines that a property qualifies as an escaped property, that authority can then issue an assessment of the escaped taxes. 1d. § 59-2-217(1).

T7 The 1999 valuation proceeded to a formal hearing, and the Commission issued its final order for that valuation in April of 2001. The Commission found that, despite the misreporting of the DIT and IT deductions in the 1999 Annual Property Tax Report, the property itself had not been undervalued nor, therefore, undertaxed. Thus, there was neither escaped property nor associated tax to be assessed. Instead, the Commission actually reduced the value of the property for that tax year from that determined in the Division's Original Assessment.

T8 Despite the Commission's ruling that the overstated deductions did not undervalue the property and the company's tax liability for 1999, the Counties urged the Division to issue an escaped property tax for tax year 1997 under the theory that the misstatements did undervalue the 1997 Original Assessment of the property. After the Division failed to take action, the Counties filed a request with the Commission in July of 2001 to order the Division to issue an escaped property tax assessment against PacifiCorp for tax year 1997. Though the Commission ultimately determined in April of 2002 that the Counties lacked standing to compel the agency action it requested, the Commission itself nonetheless ordered the Division to "investigate the [Counties] allegation of es[1191]*1191caped property and issue an escaped property tax assessment, which may be a $0 assessment or some other number based on the investigation."

T9 On May 1, 2002, the Counties sought a writ of review in this court of the Commission's ruling that they lacked standing to initiate the agency action. Beaver County v. Property Tax Div. ex rel. PacifiCorp, No. 20020346 (Utah May 1, 2002). On May 24, PacifiCorp moved to intervene in the Counties' appeal, and we granted the company's motion on July 15. On August 28, PacifiCorp filed a suggestion of mootness with us, arguing that the Commission's directive granted the very relief the Counties were now seeking from the state court.

{10 On August 29, while the Counties appeal was still pending, the Division issued the escaped property tax assessment against PacifiCorp for tax year 1997. The Commission, on September 5, then filed a response to PacifiGorp's suggestion of mootness, agreeing that the Counties' appeal was moot. Beaver County, No. 20020346. On November 18, we dismissed the Counties' appeal for mootness.

1 11 On September 25, before we had dismissed the Counties' case, PacifiCorp filed a petition for redetermination to challenge the Escaped Property Assessment the Division had issued against it in August. One of the arguments PacifiCorp made in support of its challenge was that the five-year statute of limitations contained in Utah Code section 59-2-217 barred the Division from trying to collect any escaped property tax for 1997.

{12 The Commission ultimately concluded that, although the limitations period had run, principles of equity required that the period be equitably tolled to avoid prejudice to the Counties. The Commission went on to rule on the merits of the case, holding that the property had not been undervalued for tax year 1997 and that therefore no escaped property or associated tax was owed.

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Bluebook (online)
2006 UT 6, 128 P.3d 1187, 544 Utah Adv. Rep. 3, 2006 Utah LEXIS 6, 2006 WL 163022, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beaver-county-v-property-tax-division-of-the-utah-state-tax-commission-utah-2006.