County of Los Angeles v. Raytheon Co.

70 Cal. Rptr. 3d 788, 159 Cal. App. 4th 27
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 18, 2008
DocketB195536
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 70 Cal. Rptr. 3d 788 (County of Los Angeles v. Raytheon Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
County of Los Angeles v. Raytheon Co., 70 Cal. Rptr. 3d 788, 159 Cal. App. 4th 27 (Cal. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

Opinion

PERLUSS, P. J.

The County of Los Angeles (County) appeals from the judgment entered in this property tax refund action, contending the trial court erred in ruling Raytheon Company and the DirecTV Group, Inc., successors in interest to Hughes Aircraft Company (Hughes), have standing to seek a *30 refund of property tax levied in the tax year 1991-1992 on parcels occupied by Hughes under long-term leases that require Hughes to pay the real property taxes. The County also contends the refund action is time-barred notwithstanding the parties’ written stipulation to waive any limitations defense to this refund action. We affirm.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

1. Hughes’s Long-term Leases

In December 1983 Hughes entered into a 55-year triple net lease (consisting of an initial term of 25 years plus six additional five-year options) to occupy two office buildings on land identified as Los Angeles County Assessor’s parcel Nos. 4138-004-014 (014) and 7310-016-066 (066) and reported to the county assessor as locations 01-11 and 01-14 for personal property tax purposes. In accordance with the express terms of the lease, Hughes (or Raytheon, Hughes’s successor, which took over the lease in 1997) has paid all real and personal property taxes on the properties, including the real property tax for the fiscal year 1991-1992.

In December 1986 Hughes’s Space & Communications Group, a division of Hughes, entered into a long-term lease (consisting of an initial term of 10 years, plus three additional five-year options) to occupy a building on land identified as Los Angeles County Assessor’s parcel No. 4139-017-042 (042) and reported to the county assessor as location 01-17 for personal property tax purposes. In accordance with the terms of the lease, Hughes (or DirecTV, Hughes’s successor, which took over the lease in 1994) has paid all real property taxes on the property, including the tax for property tax fiscal year 1991-1992.

2. The County Assessor’s Issuance of Escape Assessments in 2001

Prior to 2001 the County conducted a mandatory audit of Hughes’s personal business property at the three locations involved in this litigation (locations 01-11, 01-14, 01-17). In June 2001, at the conclusion of the audit, the assessor issued escape assessments pursuant to Revenue and Taxation Code section 531 1 with respect to some of Hughes’s business personal property that, according to the assessor’s office, had escaped taxation during the fiscal year 1991-1992.

*31 3. Raytheon’s and DirecTV’s Applications for Reduction in Assessments

Following the June 2001 issuance of the escape assessments, on August 2, 2001, Hughes, on behalf of its successors in interest, Raytheon and DirecTV, filed with the County Assessment Appeals Board (AAB) applications for a reduction in the 1991-1992 tax assessments as to parcels 014, 066 and 042 (collectively, affected parcels) pursuant to sections 469, subdivision (b)(3), and 1605, subdivision (e), authorizing a taxpayer to seek review of an earlier assessment following the issuance of an escape assessment concerning property at the same location. 2 In those applications Hughes sought to reduce the assessment issued on parcels 066 and 014 in the 1991-1992 tax year from $15,457,128 and $93,320,758 to $3,014,520 and $52,100,000, respectively, and to reduce its real property tax assessment for the same year on parcel 042 from $21,949,182 to $13,625,000. In each of the applications Hughes stated its intent that the applications be considered a claim for refund under section 5097. (See § 5097, subd. (b) [“application for a reduction in an assessment filed pursuant to Section 1603 shall also constitute a sufficient claim for refund under this section if the applicant states in the application that the application is intended to constitute a claim for refund . . .”].)

On November 18, 2002, the AAB rejected each of the three applications for reduction of assessment without holding an evidentiary hearing, concluding each of the applications seeking reassessment of properties assessed 10 years earlier was untimely.

4. Hughes’s Claim for Refund

On January 17, 2003 Hughes, on behalf of Raytheon and DirecTV, filed with the County Board of Supervisors multiple claims for refund of real and personal property taxes for each of the tax years 1991-1992 through *32 1994-1995 pursuant to section 5097, once again asserting, among other things, the county assessor had overassessed the value of the affected parcels for the 1991-1992 fiscal tax year. For parcel Nos. 014 and 066, Hughes requested refunds of $419,806.11 and $161,005.89, respectively. For parcel No. 042, Hughes requested a refund of $84,823.83. Hughes explained in its claim for refund that it had exhausted its administrative remedies by seeking a hearing before the AAB, but the AAB had denied its applications for reduction in assessments without a hearing on November 18, 2002.

On April 2, 2003 the County denied the claims for refund relating to the properties assessed during the 1991-1992 fiscal tax year on the ground the claims “did not meet the provisions in the Revenue and Taxation Code for granting a refund.” The denial letter advised Raytheon and DirecTV that, under section 5141, they had six months from the April 2, 2003 denial of their claim (or until Oct. 2, 2003) to commence an action in the superior court “seeking judicial review of this denial.” 3

5. The Parties’ Stipulation Waiving Any Statute of Limitations Defense to a Refund Action in Superior Court

Because the County’s April 2, 2003 denial of the refund claims for the 1991-1992 tax fiscal year did not address all of Hughes’s pending claims, on September 30, 2003, just prior to the October 2, 2003 deadline to file a refund action in superior court, Raytheon and DirecTV (as successors to Hughes), on the one hand, and the County, on the other hand, entered into a stipulation waiving any statute of limitations defense in any action challenging the County’s denial of the refund claims. The stipulation provided, “The parties recognize . . . that many of the issues involved in the claim(s) for refund which have been denied may be rendered moot or changed substantially by further actions of the [AAB] regarding the Applications for Changed Assessments that are still pending before the [AAB] (on related rulings or determinations). Moreover, depending on the [AAB]’s action in those pending appeals, the possibility exists that additional claims for refund may be filed, [f] Therefore, in order to avoid piecemeal litigation of the issues involved in the 1991 through 1994 audit and the Assessor’s issuance of escape assessments, to minimize costs and attorney’s fees and to conserve judicial resources, the parties stipulate and agree as follows: [f] ... HI] ...

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
70 Cal. Rptr. 3d 788, 159 Cal. App. 4th 27, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/county-of-los-angeles-v-raytheon-co-calctapp-2008.