Leonard v. Commissioner of Revenue Serv., No. Cv 98 0492503s (Apr. 19, 2000)

2000 Conn. Super. Ct. 4289
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedApril 19, 2000
DocketNo. CV 98 0492503S
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2000 Conn. Super. Ct. 4289 (Leonard v. Commissioner of Revenue Serv., No. Cv 98 0492503s (Apr. 19, 2000)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Leonard v. Commissioner of Revenue Serv., No. Cv 98 0492503s (Apr. 19, 2000), 2000 Conn. Super. Ct. 4289 (Colo. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.]

MEMORANDUM OF DECISION
This action is an appeal by the plaintiff, Stewart J. Leonard, Sr., d/b/a Stew Leonard's Dairy, from the decision of the Commissioner of Revenue Services (Commissioner) imposing upon the plaintiff an assessment of sales and use tax plus interest and a 25% fraud penalty for the period of July, 1983 through March, 1992. Stew Leonard's Dairy is a Connecticut partnership engaged in the retail dairy and grocery sales business with a principal place of business in Norwalk, Connecticut. The plaintiff appeals pursuant to General Statutes § 12-422, claiming that the Commissioner's assessment is invalid because it is based upon assumptions of fact that are erroneous. A threshold issue in this case is whether the three year statute of limitations in General Statutes § 12-415(7) bars the deficiency assessment for the CT Page 4290 period prior to February, 1989. The Commissioner claims that the three year limit does not apply because of the plaintiffs fraud. The parties have submitted a stipulation of facts accompanied by twenty-eight stipulated exhibits. (See Court's Exhibit 1.) The parties have agreed, with this court's consent, to bifurcate this trial so that the only issue currently before the court is whether the deficiency assessment for the period prior to February 1989 is barred by the limitation period in General Statutes § 12-415(7).

The Commissioner's assessment arises out of a plea agreement entered into between the plaintiff and the Internal Revenue Service (IRS). This plea agreement was entered into on July 22, 1993 by four members of Stew-Leonard's Dairy (Dairy) management, including Stewart J. Leonard, Sr., who pled guilty to the charge of conspiracy to defraud the United States government. The IRS and Leonard agreed that Leonard would pay to the IRS $15,000,000 in tax, penalties, and interest for the years 1981 through 1991 in settlement of all federal tax liabilities for the years 1980 through 1991. The $15,000,000 was arrived at by the U.S. Attorney's office, the IRS and Leonard's attorney. One of the factors in arriving at the settlement was the consideration of the sentencing guidelines. The IRS used a computer program to input various factors to arrive at a final number. The factors were not based upon any records of the Dairy. The $15,000,000 amount was basically an arbitrary figure. For the sake of numbers, the IRS used $1,250,000 as an allocation of additional individual yearly income to Leonard. This amount was not based upon the actual receipt of excess money by Dairy for the years in issue, but was an agreed-upon figure for settlement purposes.

The conspiracy charge resulted from the following facts. In 1991, the IRS began an investigation of Stewart J. Leonard, Sr.'s personal tax returns. The investigation discovered that certain members of the Dairy management had been diverting currency receipts for their personal benefit. A computer software program was developed by the Dairy's computer systems manager to create and implement a program called the "Equity Program." The Equity Program was funded when the daily receipts of sales were brought CT Page 4291 to the bank for deposit. Before the funds were deposited in the bank, the money vault manager removed a certain amount of currency from the bank deposits and diverted these deposits to the Equity Program. The money vault manager altered Dairy's bank deposit records and altered the data on the handwritten daily store report to conform to the reduced deposit. The total store sales and the bank deposits were the only documents altered. The object of the Equity Program was to reduce the amount of sales reported by Dairy to the IRS. The Equity Program scanned all sales to determine if the sales had met their daily criteria. As an example, the program was designed to say that today's criteria for the sale of cucumbers would be 50 units. If more than 50 units of cucumbers were sold, the excess was diverted into the Equity Program. The Equity Program scanner went through every single item that was sold that day. The amount diverted was spread over a wide spectrum of products. Some calculations amounted to pennies per item. The Equity Program actually overwrote the information forwarded to it. The actual data in the financial records, including sales takes collected, bottle deposits, bottle refunds, and vendor coupons, was never altered by the Equity Program. The Equity Program did not change the books and records of the business. It only altered the data of the bank deposits. This made it untraceable.

Sales made at the Dairy were recorded by approximately 25 automatic scanning cash registers. The products sold were coded with Universal Price Code (UIPC) bar codes and read into the scanners at the time of sale. All of the data was collected on the downstairs computer system and transferred to the upstairs financial computer system. When the data went upstairs, it was divided into two primary data files. The two files were the UPC file and the financial file. The UPC file was the record which contained the number and type of items sold, the margin and the profit which the Equity Program altered after scanning the spectrum of products sold. There was no sales tax data involved in the UPC file. The financial file was sent to the accounting department which would prepare the tax returns. The IRS special agent who discovered the Equity Program ran it to develop a feel for how the program operated. When asked if she would have notice CT Page 4292 if the sales taxes had been altered by the program, Special Agent Doreen Schulze testified at the trial in this case: "Yes, . . . I would have noticed it, documented it, and reported it to the agent." (Transcript, July 21, 1999, morning session, p. 49; see also p. 52.) Special Agent Lawrence Marini also testified that to his understanding, the Equity Program did not affect the sales tax records. (Transcript, July 21, 1999, morning session, p. 34.)

After the IRS started its investigation of the plaintiff in 1991, a revenue examiner for the Connecticut Department of Revenue Services (DRS) commenced an audit of the sales and use tax returns of the Dairy in February, 1992. During the audit, the Dairy executed consents to extend the limitations period for assessment of additional sales and use taxes under General Statutes § 12-415(8). The several extensions executed by the Dairy resulted in an extension until April 30, 1996 for the mailing of a notice of deficiency for the periods ending February, 1989 through February, 1993. In 1994 and 1995, the Dairy made payments of $91,233 and $81,751 for additional sales and use tax based on agreed-upon adjustments for the period of February, 1989 through March, 1992. The revenue examiner rendered a final sales and use tax report on February 27, 1996 proposing the assessment of sales and use tax liabilities against the Dairy in the amount of $511,821.15 for the periods ending July, 1983 through March, 1992. In March 1996, the Commissioner issued a notice of assessment of sale and use tax showing a total assessment of $1,402,514.42, composed of $511,821.15 tax, plus a penalty of $148,414.99, and interest of $742,278.10, computed through March 31, 1996. The Dairy protested the Commissioner's assessment of additional sales and use tax and imposition of the fraud penalty based upon the revenue examiner s adoption of the settlement figures arrived at by the IRS and Leonard as part of the plea agreement with the federal government. The protest was denied by the Commissioner.

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Bluebook (online)
2000 Conn. Super. Ct. 4289, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leonard-v-commissioner-of-revenue-serv-no-cv-98-0492503s-apr-19-connsuperct-2000.