Livingston Parish School Board ex rel. Sales & Use Tax Division v. Louisiana Machinery Co.

98 So. 3d 407, 2011 La.App. 1 Cir. 1235, 2012 La. App. LEXIS 827, 2012 WL 2060865
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 8, 2012
DocketNos. 2011 CA 1235, 2011 CA 1236
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 98 So. 3d 407 (Livingston Parish School Board ex rel. Sales & Use Tax Division v. Louisiana Machinery Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Livingston Parish School Board ex rel. Sales & Use Tax Division v. Louisiana Machinery Co., 98 So. 3d 407, 2011 La.App. 1 Cir. 1235, 2012 La. App. LEXIS 827, 2012 WL 2060865 (La. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

KUHN, J.

| oTaxpayer, Louisiana Machinery Company, LLC (LMC) appeals the trial court’s judgment granting a partial motion for summary judgment in favor of tax collector, Livingston Parish School Board through its Sales and Use Tax Division (LPSB), and making executory unpaid sales and use taxes, penalties, and interest assessed against LMC for tax years 2004, 2005, and 2007.1 LPSB answered the appeal, challenging the trial court’s action of sustaining LMC’s peremptory exception raising the objection of prescription for unpaid sales and use taxes, penalties, and interest against LMC for the tax year 2006.2 We affirm the granting of the partial summary judgment, reverse the sustaining of the exception of prescription for the tax year 2006, and remand.

BACKGROUND

On October 25, 2010, LPSB filed a summary proceeding against LMC under provisions of the Uniform Local Sales and Tax Code (ULSTC).3 LPSB averred that LMC was a registered dealer for Livingston Parish sales and use tax purposes and operated as Louisiana’s sole statewide Caterpillar franchise dealer, selling at retail, leasing, and repairing various new and used Caterpillar equipment and parts in ^Livingston Parish. LPSB, the single sales and use tax collector for all taxing authorities within Livingston Parish, contracted with a private auditing firm, Broussard Partners and Associates (BPA), to conduct an audit of LMC’s sales and use tax compliance for the period between December 1, 2008 and June 30, 2007. The audit was held open several times by three contracts entered into between LMC and LPSB that suspended the tolling of prescription of any taxes that were due by LMC during specified time periods. In its petition, LPSB averred the audit revealed that LMC had incorrectly failed to charge and collect sales and use taxes from its customers in Livingston Parish. LPSB alleged that under provisions of the ULSTC,4 LMC was liable to it for the taxes it had neglected, failed, or refused to collect and remit, as well as penalties and attorney’s fees.

The original audit conducted by BPA showed a sales and use tax deficiency of $198,769.79. On November 23, 2009, LPSB director, Michael Curtis, sent to LMC a notice entitled “30-DAY NOTICE [410]*410OF INTENT TO ASSESS/Additional Tax Due — LA R.S. 47:337.48 B” for the deficiency, along with a penalty of $49,692.64 and interest of $108,686.44, for a total due of $357,148.87. In response to the intent to assess notice, LMC submitted additional documents, records, and papers to BPA pertaining to its sales and use compliance during the audited period. After considering the submitted documents, on February 18, 2010, LPSB issued another 30-day intent-to-assess notice to LMC showing a tax due of $196,641.45, along with a penalty of $49,160.56 and interest of $117,643.32, for a total due of $363,445.33. LMC responded to this second notice of the intent to assess by again submitting additional documents, records, and paperwork to BPA, which had not 1 ¿previously been provided and that pertained to LMC’s sales and use compliance during the audited period.

After consideration of the additional documentation, on May 17, 2010, LPSB sent LMC a notice entitled, “REVISED 60-DAY NOTICE OF ASSESSMENT/Additional Tax Due — LA R.S. 47:337.51/ Via Certified Mail,” showing a tax due of $67,326.63, along with a penalty of $19,130.67 and interest of $51,470.29, for a total due of $137,927.59. When LMC failed to respond in any of the manners stated in the May 17, 2010 notice, LPSB filed its petition, alleging that the assessment had become final and was the legal equivalent of a judgment against LMC under the ULSTC.5 With additional accrued interest, the total tax, penalty, and interest assessment through October 31, 2010 was $140,452.37, which, with interest continuing to accrue until paid, LPSB sought to make executory.

In its petition, LPSB also sought an injunction,6 enjoining LMC from further pursuit of business in Livingston Parish until full payment of the sales and use taxes; as well as recognition of its lien and privilege on all property owned by LMC7 to secure payments of the amount due; and attorney’s fees8 for its employment of counsel to assist it in the collection of the taxes, penalties, and interest due. Attached to LPSB’s petition was the affidavit of LPSB director Curtis, who attested that to the best of his knowledge and belief all the allegations of fact contained in the petition were true and correct. Thus, LPSB averred that it had established a |Bprima facie case under the ULSTC, and that the burden of proof shifted to LMC to establish anything to the contrary.

On December 2, 2010, LMC filed an answer, exceptions, and affirmative defenses to LPSB’s petition. In its answer, LMC contested the audit and assessment, denying that any sales or use taxes, penalties, or interest were due. LMC raised the declinatory exception of insufficiency of citation and service of process, dilatory exceptions of unauthorized use of summary proceeding and vagueness or ambiguity of the petition, and the peremptory exception of prescription. Its affirmative defenses included various ways in which the assessments were erroneous, extin-guishment of the obligation through payment or, in the alternative, offset, denial of due process and equal protection of the laws in violation of the Louisiana and United States Constitutions, non-taxability of the transactions included in the assessment, lack of finality of the assessment, and, to the extent any additional tax might be owed, a request for waiver of all [411]*411penalties and interest. On December 13, 2010, LMC filed a supplemental and amending answer and affirmative defense, asserting that, to the extent the LPSB might contend that provisions of the ULSTC divested the trial court of subject matter jurisdiction; precluded LMC from raising any defenses or presenting evidence relevant to the correctness of the audit and assessment; or gave the LPSB unfettered discretion to determine the validity and correctness of the audit with no right of judicial review, as interpreted by the LPSB, those provisions were unconstitutional.

LPSB opposed LMC’s exceptions and affirmative defenses and filed an | (¡exception raising the objections of lack of jurisdiction over the subject matter9 and peremption. LPSB also filed a motion for partial summary judgment, alleging there were no genuine issues of material fact and that it was entitled to judgment in its favor and against LMC as a matter of law for the amounts due for the sales and use tax deficiency, interest, and penalties, as set out in the May 17, 2010, “REVISED 60-DAY NOTICE OF ASSESSMENT” and its petition. It also moved to strike LMC’s supplemental and amending answer and affirmative defenses on the grounds that they were urged separately and weeks after LMC’s first responsive pleading, and that these defenses to the taxing authority had been rejected by both the Louisiana and United States Supreme Courts.

After a hearing, the trial court granted LPSB’s motion to strike and its partial motion for summary judgment for the tax years 2004, 2005, and 2007, but sustained LMC’s peremptory exception of prescription for the 2006 tax year. A judgment in conformity with the trial court’s ruling was signed, and this appeal by LMC, and LPSB’s answer to the appeal, followed.

DISCUSSION

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Related

Washington Parish Sheriff's Office v. Louisiana Machinery Co.
126 So. 3d 1273 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 2013)

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Bluebook (online)
98 So. 3d 407, 2011 La.App. 1 Cir. 1235, 2012 La. App. LEXIS 827, 2012 WL 2060865, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/livingston-parish-school-board-ex-rel-sales-use-tax-division-v-lactapp-2012.