O'BRYAN v. Ashland

2006 SD 56, 717 N.W.2d 632, 2006 S.D. LEXIS 114, 2006 WL 1707957
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedJune 21, 2006
Docket23596, 23609
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 2006 SD 56 (O'BRYAN v. Ashland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
O'BRYAN v. Ashland, 2006 SD 56, 717 N.W.2d 632, 2006 S.D. LEXIS 114, 2006 WL 1707957 (S.D. 2006).

Opinion

KONENKAMP, Justice.

[¶ 1.] In ordinary circumstances, when a tax advisor’s negligence leads to an underpayment of tax, the taxpayer cannot recover as damages the tax deficiency itself because the tax liability arose not from the negligent advice, but from the ongoing obligation to pay the tax. An issue never before decided in South Dakota, however, is whether the taxpayer can recover from the negligent advisor the accrued interest the IRS charged on the delinquent tax. Here, Bruce Ashland, an accountant, improperly completed federal income tax returns for Doug O’Bryan’s contracting business. When the mistakes *634 were later uncovered, O’Bryan incurred a large delinquent tax liability, together with accrued interest on the unpaid tax. He sued Ashland for accountant malpractice. At trial, Ashland conceded negligence and left for the jury the question of damages. Through special interrogatories, the jury held Ashland liable for, among other things, the interest the IRS assessed against O’Bryan. On appeal, Ashland challenges only the interest award. He urges us to follow a line of authority generally holding that recovery of interest payable to the IRS is not allowed because taxpayers have the interim use of the taxes, and therefore they are not damaged by later having to pay interest for the period of that use. We conclude that the better reasoned authority allows for recovery of interest depending on the particular circumstances of each case. Under the facts here, interest was recoverable, and thus we affirm the jury’s verdict.

Background

[¶ 2.] Ashland is a certified public accountant. He began providing services for Doug O’Bryan Contracting in 1987-1988. From 1979 through the first quarter of 1995, O’Bryan operated as a sole proprietorship. O’Bryan’s well-drilling business prospered and grew in the early 1990s. On several occasions over the years, Ash-land recommended to O’Bryan that he incorporate. O’Bryan ultimately followed Ashland’s advice and incorporated effective April 1,1995.

[¶ 3.] For taxation purposes, incorporating in April meant that O’Bryan remained a cash basis taxpayer for the first quarter of the year, January 1, 1995 through March 31, 1995. Then, on incorporation, the business changed to accrual basis accounting for the last three quarters, April 1, 1995 through December 31, 1995. 1 But, when Ashland prepared O’Bryan’s 1995 tax return in October 1996, he mistakenly calculated O’Bryan’s income for the first quarter using accrual based figures. As a result, Ashland understated, and consequently underreported, the income O’Bryan realized for the first quarter. 2

[¶ 4.] Ashland’s mistake was discovered by another accountant during O’Bryan’s divorce proceedings in 1997. After the accountant informed Ashland, he wrote a letter to O’Bryan disclosing the mistake and the need to correct the tax return. O’Bryan’s divorce attorney hired a different accountant to review and amend the mistaken return, and, as of June 28, 1998, O’Bryan had $239,933 in additional tax liability for 1995, together with approximately $50,000 in interest. 3 O’Bryan brought suit against Ashland seeking recovery for the additional expenses he incurred in correcting the erroneous tax returns. He also sought the interest the IRS charged on his unpaid tax liability.

[¶ 5.] As a matter of settled law, the circuit court ruled that O’Bryan’s delinquent tax debt ($239,933) could not be included in his measure of damages be *635 cause it was solely O’Bryan’s obligation, which he would have owed regardless of his accountant’s negligence. However, the court allowed the jury to consider whether O’Bryan could recover as damages the interest assessed by the IRS on his unpaid tax liability. Accordingly, the issue whether the interest charge actually damaged O’Bryan was extensively argued, and each side offered theories on whether and why the interest assessed by the IRS should or should not be recoverable.

[¶ 6.] While Ashland conceded that under certain situations a negligent accountant should pay interest assessed against the taxpayer, such requirement would apply only to situations where the client had “the money just sitting in their one percent savings account....” Here, Ashland argued, the situation was distinguishable because O’Bryan did not have the cash readily available when his 1995 tax return was originally filed in October 1996, and if it would have been correctly filed, O’Bryan would have had to borrow the money to pay the tax at a higher interest rate than the IRS charged. As a result, Ashland contended that the loss O’Bryan sustained should not include the interest assessed by the IRS.

[¶ 7.] O’Bryan, on the other hand, maintained that he would have been able to fully pay his 1995 tax obligation had it been properly calculated, and thus he would have incurred no interest. O’Bryan also asserted that Ashland committed additional negligence when he incorporated O’Bryan’s business in April rather than at the beginning of the year. To support his theory, O’Bryan offered expert testimony that had Ashland incorporated O’Bryan’s business at the beginning of the year, rather than in April, O’Bryan would have been able to use a transitional reporting method, termed the “Three Year Rule.” Use of the “Three Year Rule,” according to O’Bryan’s expert, would have softened the effect of changing from a cash based taxpayer to an accrual based taxpayer. 4 Consequently, the damage O’Bryan claimed he suffered was that Ashland’s negligence prevented him from spreading out the effect of changing from a cash based taxpayer as a sole proprietor to an accrual based taxpayer through incorporation. 5

[¶ 8.] According to Ashland, however, O’Bryan’s “Three Year Rule” argument only confused the issues: use or non use of the “Three Year Rule” was in no way connected to the case and was “nothing *636 more than a smoke screen.... ” In Ash-land’s view, the IRS interest charge related exclusively to O’Bryan’s unpaid tax liability for 1995. Thus, the “Three Year Rule” was immaterial, and Ashland claimed that the focus should be on the real issue: what damage did O’Bryan suffer from Ashland’s miscalculation of O’Bryan’s income realized for the first quarter of 1995? 6

[¶ 9.] O’Bryan and Ashland presented their conflicting theories on how damages should be calculated and what factors should be considered within that calculation. Ultimately, the jury concluded that O’Bryan had been damaged by Ashland’s negligence and found, among other things, that the interest O’Bryan incurred should be included in the measure of damages. The jury awarded O’Bryan interest charged from October 10, 1996, through June 23, 1998, which was later calculated to be $39,038.03.

[¶ 10.] Ashland appeals only the award of interest charged by the IRS, claiming that, as a matter of law, it is not includable as an element of recoverable damages in professional negligence actions. 7

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Bluebook (online)
2006 SD 56, 717 N.W.2d 632, 2006 S.D. LEXIS 114, 2006 WL 1707957, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/obryan-v-ashland-sd-2006.