Hawaiian Land Co. v. Kamaka

547 P.2d 581, 56 Haw. 655, 1976 Haw. LEXIS 191
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 25, 1976
DocketNO. 5647
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 547 P.2d 581 (Hawaiian Land Co. v. Kamaka) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hawaiian Land Co. v. Kamaka, 547 P.2d 581, 56 Haw. 655, 1976 Haw. LEXIS 191 (haw 1976).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT BY

KOBAYASHI, J.

This case has been submitted to this court on an agreed statement of facts and proposed alternative forms of judgment.1 This submission deals with a problem resulting [656]*656from a long standing dispute between Hawaiian Land Company, Ltd., and Dillingham Corporation (petitioners) and the Director of Taxation, State of Hawaii (Tax Director), concerning the valuation of the Ala Moana Center, owned by the Dillingham Corporation, for real property tax purposes.

The following are some of the relevant facts:

From 1963 to and including 1973, the petitioners have paid, under protest, the annual assessment of real property taxes. With a view to eliminate or minimize the need for protracted litigation, the petitioners and the Tax Director entered into negotiation and reached agreement as follows:

1. The assessments for the tax years 1964,1965,1967 and 1968 would stand;

2. The petitioners are entitled to refunds on account of real property taxes paid under protest for the years 1966, 1969-70, 1970-71, 1971-72, and 1972-73, as follows:

1966 $ 71,594.84
1969-70 66,592.19
1970-71 125,451.85
1971-72 84,184.88
1972-73 103,139.30
$450,963.06

[657]*657For the years wherein the petitioners and the Tax Director agreed that the petitioners are entitled to a refund, the petitioners had paid a total sum of 13,404,282.29. Of said amount, “only” $1,816,248.10 was “actually in dispute” within the meaning of HRS § 232-24.2

Though the Director of Finance (respondent or State) escrowed the disputed amount in “special deposit”, the-amount was commingled by the respondent with other deposits into the State of Hawaii Trust Fund and respondent invested amounts therefrom in gross equal to 50% of the aggregate amount during the tax year 1966, and 90% of the aggregate for the tax years 1969 to 1973, all sums so treated on the books and records of the State without regard to source, in interest-bearing bank accounts, certificates of deposit and other securities. It is impossible to identify any given investment in a given bank account, certificate of deposit, or other security as having been of any particular disputed payment made by any particular taxpayer.

The respondent refused to pay petitioners interests on certain refunds.

[658]*658The questions submitted for resolution by this court are:

1. Whether interest is payable upon the amount of a disputed tax paid by a taxpayer under protest, and which is refunded to the taxpayer pursuant to a settlement, for the period the State had possession and use of such sum pending appeal to a board of review (as distinguished from an appeal to the tax appeal court); and if so,

2. Whether the rate of interest so payable is:

a. 8% per annum from the time of payment of the ultimately refunded tax to the date of refund, in accordance with HRS § 232-24; or
b. 2% per annum from the date of payment to January 1, 1968, the effective date of Act 134, Session Laws of Hawaii 1967, which increased the rate of interest on tax refunds from 2% to 8%, and 8% after January 1,1968; or
c. the legal rate of 6% per annum provided in HRS § 478-1, upon money had and received generally; or
d. a rate equal to the actual rate of return earned or earnable by the State from investment of the excess tax money in question.

Respondent contends that under HRS § 232-24, interest is payable only on the amounts of refunds of disputed taxes covered by appeals to the tax appeal court, and that no interest whatever is payable on refunds of disputed taxes covered by appeals to a board of review, or if interest is payable the rate should be 2% per annum before January 1, 1968, the effective date of the amendment to HRS § 232-24, and 8% thereafter.

Petitioners contend, on the other hand, that the State is liable for interest under HRS § 232-24 whenever it enjoys the use and possession of collected tax moneys subsequently refunded, whether the proceeding which pended during such use and possession was one of appeal to the tax appeal court or to a board of review. The petitioners contend that this court would be justified in departing from the literal interpretation of § 232-24 as the court did in Pacific Insurance Company, Ltd. v. Oregon Automobile Insurance Company, 53 Haw. 208, 211, 490 P.2d 899, 901 (1971), because it would be absurd and [659]*659unjust to allow interest on refunds from appeals to the tax appeal court and deny interest if the appeal is made to the boards of review merely because the statute does not provide for interest in the case of boards of review appeals.

In the alternative, petitioners contend that interest is payable upon tax refunds either at the legal rate of 6% provided in HRS § 478-1, or at a rate equal to the State’s actual or potential earnings from investment of excess tax payments received and held by it, as held in Hawaiian Trust Company, Ltd. v. Smith, 32 Haw. 38 (1931).

The dissimilar provisions for appeal to the tax appeal court and to a board of review, as provided in HRS § 232-24, were initially enacted by Act 224, S.L.H. 1951.

The Standing Committee Report accompanying the bill states:

This bill will enable the treasurer to invest moneys paid under protest or held pending an appeal to the tax appeal court, by providing that instead of constituting trust funds, such moneys shall be paid into a fund to be known as the “litigated claims fund.” The result will be that Section 5802.01, as amended by Act 244 (Ser. A-92) of the Session Laws of Hawaii 1947, will apply to and provide for investment of such funds.
The bill will allow persons successful in such protests or tax appeals interest at the rate of 2%. This interest will be paid from the general fund, which will have received the interest earned on the litigated claims fund pursuant to Section 5802.01.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
547 P.2d 581, 56 Haw. 655, 1976 Haw. LEXIS 191, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hawaiian-land-co-v-kamaka-haw-1976.