First National Bank of Fredericksburg v. Commonwealth

520 A.2d 895, 103 Pa. Commw. 337, 1987 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 1887
CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 27, 1987
DocketAppeal, No. 562 C. D. 1985
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 520 A.2d 895 (First National Bank of Fredericksburg v. Commonwealth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
First National Bank of Fredericksburg v. Commonwealth, 520 A.2d 895, 103 Pa. Commw. 337, 1987 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 1887 (Pa. Ct. App. 1987).

Opinion

Opinion by Judge Craig,

The First National Bank of Fredericksburg appeals an order of the Board of Finance and Revenue which refused the banks petition for review of Resettlement of Single Excise Tax for the year ended 1983, as settled by the Department of Revenue and approved by the Department of Auditor General.

This case, and the statute which the bank here challenges, arose as a result of the Pennsylvania Supreme Courts decision in Dale National Bank v. Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, 502 Pa. 170, 465 A.2d 965 (1983). In that case, the Supreme Court held, in accordance with the United States Supreme Courts decision in American Bank and Trust Co. v. Dallas County, 463 U.S. 855 (1983), that, when the Commonwealth is computing the amount of bank shares tax which a taxpayer bank owes, it may not, under 31 U.S.C. §742,1 consider obligations of the United States owned by the bank.

As in American Bank and Trust Co., the court in Dale National Bank concluded that the bank shares tax imposed on the taxpayer bank was invalid because the amount was computed on the basis of equity capital, which in turn was determined, in part, by United States obligations. “Congress intended ... to invalidate all taxes measured directly or indirectly by the value of [340]*340federal obligations, except those specified in [section 742].” Dale National Bank, 502 Pa. at 175, 465 A.2d at 968 (quoting American Bank and Trust Co., 463 U.S. at 867).

Under Article XIII of the Tax Reform Code of 1971, entitled “A Single Excise Tax on Certain Banks, Title Insurance Companies, Bank and Trust Companies and Trust Companies,” as amended in 1983,2 the express purpose of the single excise tax is

to provide revenues to the Commonwealth to match the anticipated revenues under Articles VII and VIII, as formerly in effect, which may be lost by reason of, or arising out of or supported by the interpretation of the provisions of such articles as construed by, the decision of the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania in Dale National Bank v. Commonwealth, 502 Pa. 170, 465 A. 2d 965 (1983), and if for any reason no such revenues shall be lost, the tax imposed by this article shall be abated.

72 P.S. §8305.

According to the Stipulations of Fact entered into by the parties, the department settled bank shares taxes against the bank which the bank paid for the tax years 1978 through 1983, inclusive. On August 30, 1983, the bank filed petitions for refund of shares taxes for those dates because, in determining the tax owed by the bank, the department had considered the value of the banks United States securities in violation of 31 U.S.C. §742. On February 1, 1984, the bank timely filed a “Report of Banks Shares Tax Refunds Claimed or to be Claimed Pursuant to Act No. 66 of 1983,” and later timely filed a Single Excise Tax Report for 1983. Ac[341]*341cording to the petitions and report filed by the bank, the total refund sought by the bank for the years 1978 through 1983 was $155,807.32.3 On May 1, 1984, the department settled the banks Single Excise Tax at $155,807.28, which the Department of the Auditor General then audited and approved. The department mailed a copy of the settlement to the bank on May 11, 1984.

On May 30, 1984, the board granted the banks Petitions for Refund for the Years 1978 through 1983, thereby resettling the amount of shares taxes owed by the bank for those years at “NONE.” That resettlement resulted in a reduction of the banks shares tax liability for those six tax years of $155,807.28.

In March of 1984, the department sent to the bank a form entitled “Request and Authorization for Transfer of Shares Tax Refunds and Credits,” which, if completed by the bank, would authorize the department “to transfer any refund or credit of shares tax, granted to the above named taxpayer as a result of the decision of the Pennsylvania Supreme Court in Dale National Bank v. Commonwealth, ... to satisfy the Single Excise Tax liability of such taxpayer imposed by Article VIII of the Tax Reform Code of 1971, added by the Act of December 1, 1983 (No. 66, P.L. 228).” The form further pro[342]*342vided that the Department of Revenue would take no further action to compel payment of the Single Excise Tax if the refunds and credits claimed by the taxpayer under Dale National Bank fully satisfied the taxpayers Single Excise Tax liability and the taxpayer had in feet transferred the refunds and credits due him in accordance with this authorization form. However, the bank did not execute the form or otherwise request that the department apply the banks shares tax credits to its single excise tax liability.

The bank had timely filed a petition for resettlement of the Single Excise Tax with the Board of Appeals. However, the board denied that petition by an order dated September 5, 1984. The bank then timely filed a petition for review from that order with the Board of Finance and Revenue. The board denied the petition by an order dated January 30, 1985.

Although the bank had not executed the departments “Request and Authorization for Transfer of Shares Tax Refunds and Credits,” by letter dated November 29, 1984, the department advised the bank that the “Department has applied Act 66 of 1983 ...” and an Account Review showing a Single Excise Tax debit of $155,807.32, Shares Tax Credits for the 1978 through 1983 tax base of $155,807.32 and a balance of “$0.00.”

Consistent with those actions by the department against the bank, the Stipulations of Fact provide:

8. If Taxpayer had not claimed refunds of Shares Tax as set forth in Paragraph 4 hereof, Taxpayers single excise tax would have been settled at $-0-.
9. Taxpayers which did not claim Shares Tax Refunds and Taxpayers which withdrew their claims for refunds after the passage of Act 66 had their Single Excise Taxes settled at $-0-.

[343]*343 Due Process

The bank first contends that the departments application of the Single Excise Tax deprives the bank of a vested legal right and is thereby inconsistent with the due process clauses of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution and art. I, §9 of the Pennsylvania Constitution.

In Dale National Bank, the Supreme Court established that a petition for refund is a cause of action which the legislature may not extinguish after it has accrued to a claimant. 502 Pa. at 177-78 n.3, 465 A.2d at 969 n.3. Act 317 of 1982,4 sought to tax, for the privilege of doing business in this Commonwealth, the actual value of capital stock paid in, surplus, and undivided profits, in an attempt to create a tax which fell within the exception to 31 U.S.C. §742

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Related

First Trust Savings Bank v. Commonwealth
586 A.2d 1000 (Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania, 1991)
First National Bank v. Commonwealth
553 A.2d 937 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1989)

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Bluebook (online)
520 A.2d 895, 103 Pa. Commw. 337, 1987 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 1887, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-national-bank-of-fredericksburg-v-commonwealth-pacommwct-1987.