Lange v. Iowa Department of Revenue

710 N.W.2d 242, 2006 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 25, 2006 WL 432185
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedFebruary 24, 2006
Docket04-1298
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 710 N.W.2d 242 (Lange v. Iowa Department of Revenue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lange v. Iowa Department of Revenue, 710 N.W.2d 242, 2006 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 25, 2006 WL 432185 (iowa 2006).

Opinion

TERNUS, Justice.

The appellant, Iowa Department of Revenue, refused to credit an overpayment of 1996 income taxes to the 1997 tax obligation of the appellee taxpayers, Randall and Sherri Lange, due to the late filing of their 1996 tax return. The Langes claimed they mailed their 1996 return by the due date in 1997, and therefore, pursuant to Iowa Code section 622.105 (2001), their return should be deemed filed as of the date of mailing, even though it was not received by the department at that time. The department director held the taxpayers had not met their burden to prove they had actually mailed their 1996 return in 1997. Therefore, the director concluded the filing date of their return was the actual filing date of June 17, 2001 when the department was provided a duplicate of the 1996 tax return. Because this date was beyond the three-year period for claiming a credit, see Iowa Code § 422.73(2), the director denied the taxpayers’ claim.

On judicial review, the district court held the agency had failed to take into account “the presumption of mailing created by evidence of office custom,” as well as whether this presumption had been adequately rebutted. The court reversed the agency’s decision and remanded the case for reconsideration by the director in light of these principles of law.

The department has appealed. We conclude (1) the agency did not err in failing to apply the common law presumption discussed by the district court, and (2) there is substantial evidence to support the agency’s factual finding that the Langes’ 1996 return was not filed until 2001. Therefore, the department correctly ruled the Langes’ claim for a credit was untimely. Accordingly, we reverse the district court judgment and affirm the agency’s ruling.

I. Background Facts and Proceedings.

The Langes’ 1996 federal and state income tax returns were prepared by CPA Robert McGowen in September 1997. The state return showed the Langes were entitled to a refund of $7685, which they indicated should be applied to their 1997 tax obligation.

Because the Langes had paid more than ninety percent of their 1996 taxes, the due date for their state return had been automatically extended to October 31, 1997. See Iowa Admin. Code r. 701-39.2(4). It is undisputed, however, that their return was not actually filed until June 17, 2001. On that date, the Langes, having learned the State did not have their 1996 return, sent a duplicate to the department. After the Langes’ 1996 return was filed in 2001, the *245 department denied the Langes’ request to apply their overpayment of 1996 taxes to their 1997 tax obligation. The department relied on Iowa Code section 422.73, which states in pertinent part: “A claim for refund or credit that has not been filed with the department within three years after the return upon which a refund or credit claimed became due ... shall not be allowed by the director.” Iowa Code § 422.73(2). Since the Langes’ return was due on October 31, 1997, the filing date of June 17, 2001 was well beyond the three-year limitations period.

The Langes protested the denial, claiming there was competent evidence they had mailed their tax return on or before the due date, and therefore, it should be deemed filed on the date of mailing pursuant to Iowa Code section 622.105. This statute provides:

Any report, claim, tax return, statement, or any payment required or authorized to be filed or made to the state ... which is transmitted through the United States mail or mailed but not received by the state ..., shall be deemed filed or made and received on the date it was mailed if the sender establishes by competent evidence that the ... tax return ... was deposited in the United States mail on or before the date for filing or paying....
For the purposes of this section “competent evidence” means evidence, in addition to the testimony of the sender, sufficient or adequate to prove that the document was mailed on a specified date which evidence is credible and of such a nature to reasonably support the determination that the letter was mailed on a specified date.

Iowa Code § 622.105 (emphasis added).

At a subsequent hearing on their protest, the Langes attempted to establish through McGowen’s testimony that their 1996 return had been deposited in the United States mail on September 18 or 19, 1997. Because McGowen had no personal recollection of the firm’s work on the Langes’ 1996 return, he testified to his firm’s general office procedure for processing tax returns. Basically, a return is prepared, reviewed, assembled, signed, and mailed. This process is tracked on an office form that shows what was done, by whom, and when. The processing checklist for the Langes’ 1996 federal and state returns showed the returns were completed on September 11, 1997 by an accountant in McGowen’s office. The returns were subsequently reviewed by McGowen on September 17, 1997. This form also showed that on the following day, McGowen personally delivered the forms to the Langes for signing. He testified his typical practice would have been to take the returns back to his office for mailing. Billing records for September 1997 showed the Langes were charged $1.70 for postage. Although the bill does not state the purpose of the postage, McGowen said the tax returns would have been the only items his firm would have mailed for the Langes that month.

McGowen testified he did not personally deposit the Langes’ 1996 returns in the mail. The normal office procedure is for one of the administrative assistants to carry a box of outgoing mail to the lobby area of their office building. There, the mail would have been placed into a designated postal slot, or depending upon the size and amount of mail, the box would have been left in the lobby where postal employees would have picked it up between 5:30 p.m. and 5:45 p.m. 1

IRS records showed the Langes’ 1996 federal tax return, prepared at the same *246 time as the state return, was not filed until April 11, 1998, almost seven months after its alleged mailing. McGowen recalled that sometime during the period from 1996 to 2002 he was notified that the federal government had not received one of the Langes’ federal returns, and he then sent a copy to the IRS. He could not remember, though, whether this incident involved the Langes’ 1996 federal return.

Finally, evidence was admitted that the Langes’ 1998 Iowa tax return, which was processed under the same procedure as the 1996 return, was also not received by the department upon its initial mailing. After the Langes learned the department did not have their 1998 return, a copy was sent on June 17, 2001.

Based on this record, the administrative law judge (ALJ) found the taxpayers’ 1996 return had been prepared, signed, and readied for mailing in September 1997.

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710 N.W.2d 242, 2006 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 25, 2006 WL 432185, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lange-v-iowa-department-of-revenue-iowa-2006.