Gosnell Development Corp. v. Arizona Department of Revenue

744 P.2d 451, 154 Ariz. 539, 1987 Ariz. App. LEXIS 567
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arizona
DecidedMay 21, 1987
Docket2 CA-CV 87-0026
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 744 P.2d 451 (Gosnell Development Corp. v. Arizona Department of Revenue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arizona primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gosnell Development Corp. v. Arizona Department of Revenue, 744 P.2d 451, 154 Ariz. 539, 1987 Ariz. App. LEXIS 567 (Ark. Ct. App. 1987).

Opinion

OPINION

HOWARD, Presiding Judge.

This is an appeal from the granting of a motion for summary judgment denying Gosnell Development Corporation (Gosnell) a refund of certain transaction privilege taxes. 1 2The question here is whether a taxpayer is entitled to a refund of the taxes it paid on the ground that the Department of Revenue refuses or fails to collect similar taxes from others.

The parties have provided us with an agreed statement of facts which was filed in the superior court. During the time relevant to this action, August 1979 to February 1982, A.R.S. §§ 42-1309 and 42-1310(2)(i) imposed a transaction privilege tax on a prime contractor’s gross proceeds from the business of contracting. Rather than calculating actual labor payments and excluding them from the taxable base of gross proceeds, A.R.S. § 42—1310(2)(i) provided an “in lieu of labor” deduction from the taxable base equal to 35 percent of the gross proceeds (the “labor deduction”). The sale price of land, not exceeding its fair market value, was also excluded, and a *540 tax was imposed on the remaining gross proceeds of contracting.

Gosnell is a contractor and during the period in question built and sold single-family residences. They were built on real property owned by Gosnell, rather than custom homes built on owners’ lots. Gosnell calculated its tax liability for residential sales by subtracting the sales price of the underlying land, then applying the labor deduction percentage to the remaining gross proceeds. This method is referred to as the “net method.”

During the same time period, other home builders, competitors of Gosnell, computed the labor deduction by applying the percentage to gross proceeds before subtracting the sales price of the underlying land. This is referred to as the “gross method.” The labor deduction is larger, and thus the tax payment is smaller, when the gross method of calculation is used.

The Arizona Department of Revenue audited one of Gosnell’s competitors, Knoell Brothers Construction Company (Knoell Brothers) which had used the gross method of computing its sales tax. Knoell Brothers did not timely appeal the audit determination to the Department of Revenue. Instead, it paid the tax deficiency under protest and brought a refund action against the Department. This action was dismissed because Knoell Brothers had not exhausted its administrative remedies, but by stipulation the action was amended to an action for declaratory relief. One of Knoell’s contentions was that the Department was estopped to collect the tax. Pri- or to February 1980, when the Department changed both its forms and its policy, the Department had considered the land as a deductible element of gross income but not an exclusion from gross income. Relying on the Department’s position, the contractors had accepted the 35 percent deduction, which had been empirically established as reasonable. On appeal, Division One of this court ruled that the method used by Knoell was legally incorrect and that there was no estoppel against the state. Knoell Brothers Const., Inc. v. Arizona Department of Revenue, 132 Ariz. 169, 644 P.2d 905 (App.1982). The appellate court reversed the trial court’s judgment in favor of Knoell Brothers and remanded the case with instructions to enter judgment for the State of Arizona Department of Revenue.

Bizarre is the only way to describe what happened thereafter. Instead of following the mandate of the appellate court as it is required to do, the trial court gave the judgment prospective application only, dating it from March 2, 1982, the date of the appellate court decision. This relieved Knoell from any liability for additional taxes owed for 1980 to 1982. The basis for this unusual judgment is found in a cryptic minute entry by the trial court, attached as an exhibit to the Joint Statement of Facts in the instant case:

i< * * *
The Court finds: that based on the record in this case and on matters which the Court can consider by judicial notice, that there exists unique circumstances of great hardship in this cause, which require that the effective date of the judgment herein be made prospective only.
The Court further finds that said unique circumstances of hardship not only will effect [sic] the parties to this action, but an important part of the State’s economy.”

One deduces from the above minute entry that the trial court found that it would be a hardship and burden on the construction industry in the state to pay the taxes owed. We have searched the statutes and law of this state in vain to find any cases which give the court the power to relieve the taxpayer from payment of taxes which are due and owing because it would be a hardship to pay them.

The judgment on remand by the trial court in the Knoell Brothers case is compounded by the inexplicable, unjustified failure of the Department of Revenue to seek relief in a special action, requiring the trial court to adhere to the appellate court’s mandate. Not only did it fail to seek such relief, but according to the agreed facts, the Department determined that it would apply the holding in Knoell Brothers prospectively to all contractors and that as a *541 result, other contractors who had improperly included income attributable to the sales price of land in gross proceeds for purposes of computing the 35 percent in lieu of labor deduction (for tax periods ended prior to March 2, 1982) would, if audited, not be required to pay the correct tax. We have, again, vainly searched the statutes and cases and find no power on the part of the Department of Revenue to forgive a person from the payment of the transaction privilege tax.

Gosnell contends that the conduct of the trial court and the Department of Revenue has resulted in a denial of equal protection under art. 2, § 13 of the Arizona Constitution and the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution, entitling it to a refund of the taxes it paid prior to March 2, 1982. The Department contends that Gosnell cannot receive a refund because it did not pay the taxes under protest. See A.R.S. § 42-1339 (repealed 1985); and Bodco Bldg. Corp. v. Arizona State Tax Commission, 5 Ariz.App. 589, 429 P.2d 476 (1967). Gosnell counters this argument by claiming that a new statute, A.R.S. § 42-124(B)(2), effective July 1, 1986, changed the necessity to pay taxes under protest and that the statute should be given retroactive effect to allow him to prosecute this action.

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Bluebook (online)
744 P.2d 451, 154 Ariz. 539, 1987 Ariz. App. LEXIS 567, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gosnell-development-corp-v-arizona-department-of-revenue-arizctapp-1987.