Jones v. State, Department of Revenue

441 P.3d 966
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedMay 24, 2019
DocketSupreme Court No. S-16860
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 441 P.3d 966 (Jones v. State, Department of Revenue) 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
Jones v. State, Department of Revenue, 441 P.3d 966 (Ala. 2019).

Opinion

CARNEY, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

A husband and wife appeal denials of their Permanent Fund Dividends (PFDs) for 2014 and 2015. The husband's 2014 PFD application was denied because he had been absent from the state for more than five years, creating a presumption of nonresidence that he was unable to rebut. The wife's application was denied because her PFD eligibility as an accompanying military spouse depended on her husband's. After the denials were affirmed by an Administrative Law Judge (ALJ), the couple appealed to the superior court.

While this appeal was pending they both applied for 2015 PFDs and were again denied. The husband's 2015 application was denied because his residency for PFD purposes was severed in the 2014 PFD proceedings and he had not reestablished it. The wife's application was again denied because of her accompanying-spouse status. They appealed the 2015 denials as well; the superior court consolidated the 2014 and 2015 cases and affirmed both denials.

The husband and wife appeal. They argue that the requirement that they be physically present in Alaska for 30 days in the five years preceding their application, pursuant to AS 43.23.008(d)(1), is unconstitutional. They also argue that we should interpret the relevant statutes and regulations in the light most favorable to them, which they claim would entitle them to both 2014 and 2015 PFDs. Finally, they argue that even if we uphold the statute as constitutional, we *969should nevertheless award them 2014 and 2015 PFDs through our "equitable powers."

Because neither spouse meets the residency requirements to qualify for either a 2014 or a 2015 PFD under the plain language of the statute, and because we find that the statute is constitutional, we affirm the ALJs' decisions. As our equitable powers do not extend to ignoring a valid and unambiguous statute duly enacted by the legislature, we decline to award PFDs on this ground.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

A. Facts

Donald Jones first came to Alaska in 1998 when he was stationed at Elmendorf Air Force Base. In 2000 he married Annette Gwalthney-Jones, a long-time Alaska resident. Jones was transferred out of the state in 2001; despite numerous requests he was never reassigned to Alaska. The Joneses nonetheless maintained significant ties to the state: they registered their vehicles in Alaska, held Alaska driver's licenses, owned real property in Anchorage, and cast absentee ballots in Alaska elections. There is no dispute that since Jones's 2001 transfer both he and his wife "have intended to return to the state and to remain indefinitely." They returned permanently on November 29, 2014, shortly before Jones retired from the Air Force.

Jones was eligible for and received a PFD from 2001 to 2013. Gwalthney-Jones was eligible for and received a PFD from 1982 to 2013. Despite being largely absent from 2001 until their return to Alaska in 2014, they remained eligible for PFDs until 2013 because their absences were allowed by a special exception for military service members and their spouses under AS 43.23.008(a)(3).1 Following their return, they both applied for and received 2016 PFDs.

B. Proceedings

1. 2014 PFD applications and administrative proceedings

In March 2014 Jones and Gwalthney-Jones applied for 2014 PFDs. Eligibility for 2014 PFDs depended upon their qualifying as residents during 2013.2 In June 2013 the Alaska Legislature revised the PFD eligibility statutes and adopted AS 43.23.008(d), which states:

After an individual has been absent from the state for more than 180 days in each of the five preceding qualifying years, the department shall presume that the individual is no longer a state resident. The individual may rebut this presumption by providing clear and convincing evidence to the department that
(1) the individual was physically present in the state for at least 30 cumulative days during the past five years; and
(2) the individual is a state resident as defined in AS 43.23.295.3

The legislature made this statute retroactive to January 1, 2013.4

Alaska Statute 43.23.008(d) codified a Division regulation that had been in place since 1999, 15 Alaska Administrative Code (AAC) 23.163, with one key difference.5 The regulation had imposed the same 30 days/5 years requirement to rebut a presumption of nonresidence, but it had allowed an exception if an individual could show "that unavoidable circumstances prevented that individual from *970returning" for the required 30 cumulative days.6 The 2013 statute does not contain the "unavoidable circumstances" exception.7

The Division, reading AS 43.23.008(d)(1) to eliminate any exception from the 30 days/5 years rule, denied Jones's 2014 PFD application. It is undisputed that Jones had been absent from the state for more than 180 days in each of the previous five qualifying years for the 2014 PFD, i.e., 2009-2013. It is also undisputed that he had not been physically present in Alaska for at least 30 cumulative days during the same five-year period. The Division also denied Gwalthney-Jones's 2014 application, finding that her eligibility depended on her husband remaining eligible.8

The Joneses requested informal appeals of their 2014 PFD denials. They argued that their ties to Alaska proved their intent to remain Alaska residents, but they did not address the 30 days/5 years statutory language. The Division denied Jones's appeal, stating that "the current law clearly states [that] an individual who is not back for 30 days is no longer a state resident for PFD purposes." The Division also denied Gwalthney-Jones's informal appeal, finding "no provision in law" that would entitle her to a 2014 PFD when she had been "absent from Alaska for more than 180 days during 2013 accompanying an individual ineligible to receive the 2014 PFD."

The Joneses then requested formal hearings, at which they had the burden to prove that the Division had erred in denying their applications.9 They again emphasized their ties to Alaska; they also argued for the first time that the 30 days/5 years rule was an ex post facto law and that it conflicted with another provision in the PFD statutes.10 The Division argued that the 2013 statute's wording precluded it from considering "why an individual failed to meet the 30 day return requirement, as it could do [previously] under [the] regulation."

Following a hearing the ALJ issued a decision and order (2014 PFD Decision), which was adopted by the Commissioner of Revenue in March 2016. The ALJ concluded that in enacting AS 43.23.008, the legislature had "clarified its intent to make the 30-day requirement inflexible" by "striking" the unavoidable-circumstances exception.

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Bluebook (online)
441 P.3d 966, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-state-department-of-revenue-alaska-2019.