Multistate Tax Commission v. Dow Chemical Co.

9 Or. Tax 272, 1982 Ore. Tax LEXIS 7
CourtOregon Tax Court
DecidedNovember 24, 1982
DocketTC 1835
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 9 Or. Tax 272 (Multistate Tax Commission v. Dow Chemical Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Tax Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Multistate Tax Commission v. Dow Chemical Co., 9 Or. Tax 272, 1982 Ore. Tax LEXIS 7 (Or. Super. Ct. 1982).

Opinion

CARLISLE B. ROBERTS, Judge.

Petitioner, Multistate Tax Commission (MTC), is an agency created by the enactment of 19 states, including the State of Oregon. Pursuant to Article VIII of the Compact which has been adopted by legislatures in all the member states, MTC is granted the authority to make examinations of the records of certain multistate-multinational corporations for tax audit purposes. (Article VIII is a part of Oregon Revised Statutes 305.655.)

The respondent, Dow Chemical Company (Dow), is a foreign corporation conducting business activities within the State of Oregon and within other member states of the Compact. The States of Alaska, Idaho, Kansas, Nebraska, New Mexico, Oregon and Utah authorized MTC to audit the records of Dow and its subsidiary and affiliated corporations for state income tax purposes. (Petition for Order, ¶ 7.)

In a letter to Dow on May 18, 1982, MTC requested that certain records and data be made available at the commencement of an audit scheduled for June 21, 1982. (Def Ex A.) Dow stated in court that it attempted to produce all items requested on June 21,1982. (Affidavit of Bruce V. Ecklund, ¶ 9.) Mr. Eugene B. Fischer, National Audit Manager for MTC, confirmed this statement by testifying:

“* * * Mr. Ecklund had the information that we had requested in our letter of May 18th available and ready for us to look and that we would — would have access to that * * *.” Tr 23.)

Mr. Fischer testified that he then orally requested that the corporate minutes of Dow and its subsidiary and affiliated corporations be made available for the audit. The witness testified that Mr. Glenn White, Director of Dow’s Tax Department, declined to provide general access to the corporate minutes, expressing concern about confidentiality of the records, suggesting “that we might want to continue on with *274 the audit * * * and, if * * * we come across specific instances whereby we were to request specific minutes, maybe he would show them to us.” (Tr 25.) Mr. White submitted an affidavit stating that he had assured the auditors “* * * that if their development of facts showed a need for Board of Directors minutes respondent was prepared to discuss permitting the auditors to review any minutes they reasonably desired.” (Affidavit of Glenn W. White, at 3.)

Failing to reach a solution concerning the board minutes which the audit team deemed satisfactory, the team left Dow’s premises and reported the foregoing episode to its superiors.

Upon motion by the petitioner, an Order to Show Cause was issued, requiring the respondent to make available certain records for the purpose of a joint income tax audit or to show cause why it had not done so. It was also requested that respondent be required to waive the relevant statutes of limitation until proceedings in this case were resolved or for the respondent to show cause why such an order should not be issued. A hearing on these matters was held on October 6, 1982.

Oregon’s adoption of the Multistate Tax Compact is embodied in ORS 305.655. Article VIII of the Compact empowers MTC to conduct tax audits at the request of member states and to examine documents in connection with audits. Article VIII also provides that the court of any state on behalf of which the audit is made may enforce MTC’s requests for documents; therefore, jurisdiction is conferred upon this court to determine the issues raised.

It appears that access to the corporate minutes is the primary issue since Dow has stated “* * * respondent has no intention of withholding those items the MTC requested in its 18 May 1982 correspondence. * * *” (Opposition of Respondent to Order to Show Cause, at 5.)

The respondent bases its position in regard to producing the corporate minutes on its belief “* * * that minutes contain a great deal of proprietary or other materials which are simply irrelevant to any tax determination, but that if the auditors would identify subject areas pertinent to their audit, *275 corresponding minutes would be produced. * * *” (Supplemental Memorandum of Respondent Re Order To Show Cause, at 4.)

Petitioner contends that corporate minutes are relevant, may lead to relevant information and were requested pursuant to a legitimate auditing purpose.

In U.S. v. Powell, 379 US 48, 85 S Ct 248, 13 L Ed2d 112, 14 AFTR2d 5942 (1964), the court refused to require that the Internal Revenue Service show probable cause before enforcing the Service’s request for taxpayer’s records and held that there was no need for showing cause for suspecting fraud before such examination would be allowed. The court set out a four-point formula for allowing the Service access to taxpayer’s records:

(1) The investigation is conducted for a legitimate purpose;
(2) The inquiry may be relevant to the purpose;
(3) Information sought is not already in the Service’s possession; and
(4) Administrative steps required by the Internal Revenue Code have been followed.

Using this formula for determination:

The court allowed access to a church’s corporate minutes in order to reach a fair determination as to continuing the tax exempt status of the church. U.S. v. Coates, 526 F Supp 248, (DC Calif 1981), 49 AFTR2d 82-776.

A third-party summons was upheld to require an accountant to produce books, records and other documents for tax years 1970 to 1977. The court denied production of 1970-1972 records because no show of relevance was made but, based upon a standard that inspection might throw light on the correctness of the taxpayer’s return, the court allowed inspection of 1973-1976 records. U.S. v. Goldman, 637 F2d 664 (9th Cir 1980), 46 AFTR2d 80-6102.

U.S. v. Sun First National Bank of Orlando, 510 F2d 1107 (5th Cir 1975), 35 AFTR2d 75-1168. The enforcement of an IRS summons on a bank for documents of separate trust accounts was upheld. Trust committee minutes were included *276 in the requested documents. The enforcement was upheld because there was a good faith audit under way and the documents sought were likely to be relevant and material.

In U.S. v. Arthur Young and Company, 496 F Supp 1152 (DC NY 1980), 46 AFTR2d 80-5857 (aff’d in part, reversed in part, 677 F2d 211 (2d Cir 1982), 49 AFTR2d 82-1107), the court held that the four requirements of Powell had been met and the defendant had the . burden of showing that enforcement would be an abuse of the court’s process.

In determining the relevancy of requested records, the court stated that a “sufficiently relevant standard” pursuant to investigations applied to categories of documents, not every single document within a category need be described in the request for records. U.S. v. Harrington, 388 F2d 520, 524 (2d Cir 1968), 21 AFTR2d 456.

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