Hickel v. Halford

872 P.2d 171, 1994 WL 122793
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedApril 18, 1994
DocketS-6124, S-6134
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 872 P.2d 171 (Hickel v. Halford) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hickel v. Halford, 872 P.2d 171, 1994 WL 122793 (Ala. 1994).

Opinion

OPINION

MATTHEWS, Justice.

This case requires us to interpret article IX, section 17 of the Alaska Constitution, which establishes the budget reserve fund. 1 *173 The voters adopted article IX, section 17 in the 1990 general election. It was placed on the ballot after being passed by a legislative resolution approved by a two-thirds vote of each house of the 1990 legislature.

Section 17 requires deposit into the budget reserve fund of all money received by the State after July 1, 1990, “as a result of the termination, through settlement or otherwise, of an administrative proceeding or of litigation ... involving mineral lease bonuses, rentals, royalties ... or involving taxes imposed on mineral income, production, or property_” § 17(a). Appropriations from the fund require a super legislative majority, i.e., three-fourths of each house. § 17(c). However, if the amount available for appropriation for a given fiscal year is less than the amount appropriated for the previous fiscal year, an appropriation from the budget reserve fund can be made by a majority vote of each house of the legislature. Such an appropriation is limited to the difference between the amount available for appropriation for the fiscal year and the amount appropriated “in the previous calendar year for the previous fiscal year.” § 17(b).

The primary issue in this case is the meaning of the term “administrative proceeding” as used in article IX, section 17(a) with respect to mineral taxes. The dispute can only be understood in the context of the applicable statutory and administrative procedures for collection of such taxes.

For all taxes, the tax collection process begins with the filing of the return by the taxpayer. Oil and gas production returns must be filed monthly. AS 43.55.020-.030. Income tax returns must be filed annually. AS 43.20.030. Payments of taxes due must accompany the tax returns. See AS 43.20.-030; AS 43.55.020. The oil and gas audit division generally audits all taxpayers for all tax periods, with a single audit covering from one to three years, or twelve to thirty-six tax periods. The income and excise audit division also generally audits every oil and gas return filed under AS 43.20. When an audit is complete, the taxpayer is notified of any deficiency by a notice of assessment and demand for payment (hereinafter referred to as the assessment). This is provided for in AS 43.05.245. Assessments must be issued within three years after a return is filed or collection is barred. AS 43.05.260(a).

When a taxpayer receives an assessment, the taxpayer is presented with a number of choices. It may pay the taxes in accordance with the assessment; it may appeal the assessment within sixty days by filing a request for appeal under AS 43.05.240 and 15 AAC 05.010; or it may do nothing. If the taxpayer does nothing, the Department of Revenue (DOR), after the sixty-day period for appeal has expired, may proceed to levy on the taxpayer’s property until the tax is collected. AS 43.05.270.

When a taxpayer files a request for appeal with DOR, it may request either an “informal conference” or a “formal hearing.” AS 43.-05.240(a)(b). If a taxpayer requests an informal conference and the conference does not resolve the dispute to the taxpayer’s satisfaction, the taxpayer may request a formal hearing within thirty days after the decision resulting from the informal conference. AS 43.05.240(b)(2). If a taxpayer fails to request a formal hearing within thirty days after the decision of the informal conference, the informal conference decision becomes the final decision of DOR and it may be enforced as such. Informal conference decisions may not be appealed to the courts. AS 43.05.240(d); 15 AAC 05.020(c), .040. Where a formal hearing is requested, either following an informal conference or directly upon filing a request for appeal, the taxpayer is given a formal adjudicatory hearing. 15 AAC 05.030. If the taxpayer is dissatisfied with the result of the formal hearing, the taxpayer may ap *174 peal to the superior court within thirty days after the decision. AS 43.05.240(d).

At any point in this process DOR and the taxpayer may agree on the taxes owed, or the taxpayer may decide to pay the amount claimed by the State either as a result of the assessment, the informal conference decision, or the decision following a formal hearing. DOR has taken the position that funds received after a request for formal hearing must be deposited in the budget reserve fund while funds received before a request for formal hearing are paid into the State general fund. DOR, in other words, is of the view that an administrative proceeding is not initiated for the purposes of article IX, section 17(a) until a request for formal hearing is made.

During the 1993 legislative session, the legislature appropriated virtually all of the anticipated revenues from the general fund for the fiscal year 1994. Subsequently, a group of legislators who constitute the majority coalition of the Senate (hereafter referred to as the Senate Majority) filed a suit against Governor Walter J. Hickel and Commissioner of Revenue Darrel J. Rexwinkel (hereafter referred to as the State). The suit challenged the deposit into the general fund of funds received after a request for appeal but before a request for formal hearing. Former Governor Steve Cowper filed a similar action. The cases were consolidated. The Senate Majority and Gov. Cowper moved for summary judgment and the State cross-moved for summary judgment.

Following a hearing, the superior court granted the plaintiffs’ motions for summary judgment, holding that for the purposes of section 17, administrative proceedings begin once a request for appeal is filed by a taxpayer. The court ordered the State to restore wrongfully allocated funds to the budget reserve fund, with interest, not later than the end of the regular session of the current state legislature. 2 The court noted that preliminary indications were that at least $924,-051,580.19 in principal would be required in order to accomplish this. From this order the State has appealed.

The superior court’s Final Order and Judgment also ordered the State to provide plaintiffs with an accounting of the receipt and disposition of all monies received after July 1, 1990, as a result of the termination, through settlement or otherwise, of all informal conferences. The accounting is to include the date and amount of money received for each termination. The court also ordered the State to produce its interest computations for settlements received through informal proceedings and “any documents referring to that part of the 1993 settlement of the oil and gas tax dispute with British Petroleum which was allocated to preinformal conference general fund revenues.” The court also subjected the accounting and document productions to a protective order, prohibiting the plaintiffs or their attorneys from disclosing the contents of any of the documents.

The State appealed from that portion of the Final Order and Judgment which required the production of the British Petroleum Company (BP) settlement documents. 3 Gov. Cowper cross-appealed, objecting to the confidentiality aspect of the protective order.

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Bluebook (online)
872 P.2d 171, 1994 WL 122793, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hickel-v-halford-alaska-1994.