Stark v. Comptroller of Treasury

554 A.2d 458, 78 Md. App. 599, 1989 Md. App. LEXIS 64
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMarch 9, 1989
Docket856, September Term, 1988
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 554 A.2d 458 (Stark v. Comptroller of Treasury) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stark v. Comptroller of Treasury, 554 A.2d 458, 78 Md. App. 599, 1989 Md. App. LEXIS 64 (Md. Ct. App. 1989).

Opinion

*601 WILNER, Judge.

Appellant won $1,000,000 on the Maryland lottery. He is not complaining about that. What irks him, and has led to this appeal, is the Comptroller’s attempt to tax him on $950,000 of his winnings.

Appellant is, and at all times relevant to this case has been, a resident of the State of Washington. In December of 1976, he received a lottery subscription issued by the Maryland State Lottery Agency which gave him the right to participate in the drawings of the Maryland Lottery during January, 1977. How and where he received his subscription is not revealed to us. In any event, on January 27, 1977, fortune struck.

The million dollar prize won by appellant is to be paid in 20 equal annual installments of $50,000. The State Lottery Agency made the first payment directly to appellant, by check, on January 28, 1977. The remaining 19 payments have been, and will continue to be, paid through an annuity purchased by the Agency for the benefit of appellant from the Prudential Insurance Company of America (Prudential), a New Jersey corporation. That annuity was created pursuant to a group annuity contract entered into in November, 1976, between the Agency and Prudential. Section 1.1(a) of that contract provides, in relevant part:

“Whenever an annuity is to be provided under this contract with respect to a person who becomes eligible to receive periodic payments as a result of a Maryland State Lottery Agency drawing, a notice to effect an annuity with respect to such person will ... be given to the Prudential by the Contract-Holder. Any such notice will specify the amount of annuity to be effected, the date annuity payments are to commence, and such information about the person with respect to whom the annuity is to be effected as may be required by the Prudential. (A person for whom an annuity is effected under this contract is referred to as an ‘Annuitant’.) A contribution equal to the amount determined from the schedule of annuity purchase rates then in effect under the contract *602 needed to effect such annuity will accompany such notice and will be applied to effect an annuity on the day following its receipt by the Prudential.”

Although the group contract allowed the parties — i.e., the State Lottery Agency and Prudential — to make changes in the contract, § 2.1 made clear that “no such change will adversely affect the rights of any person with respect to any annuity effected before the effective date of such change.”

In anticipation that someone would win the January 27 drawing, the Agency, on January 25, 1977, sent Prudential a check for $487,575.60, the cost established pursuant to the group contract for the annuity to be issued in regard to that drawing. At the time, of course, the Agency did not, and could not, know who the winner would be; indeed, the remittance slip accompanying the Agency’s check states that “[t]he winner and beneficiary information will be forwarded for the winner of the Millionaire Drawing to be held January 27, 1977.” The check was received by Prudential on the 27th, the date of the drawing. This remittance, apparently, served as notice to effect an annuity for the winner.

At some point, the Lottery Agency sent the necessary information to Prudential, for, on February 1,1977, Prudential issued an annuity to appellant. The certificate issued to appellant identified the Group Annuity Contract by number and the State Lottery Agency as the Contract-Holder. It provided for 19 annual payments of $50,000 each, commencing January 15, 1978, stating, as to them, “All payments described in this certificate are payable at the Home Office of Prudential. All payments and the conditions governing them are subject in every respect to the terms of the group annuity contract.”

At the time of the drawing, Maryland did not expressly tax the lottery winnings of nonresidents. Md.Ann.Code art. 81, § 287 then taxed a nonresident only “on that portion of his federal adjusted gross income as is derived from tangi *603 ble property ... permanently located in this State ... and income from business, trade, profession or occupation carried on in this State____” By 1977 Md.Laws, ch. 414, however, the Legislature added to that list “and income from State lottery prizes,” intending by that to “requir[e] nonresidents to pay income taxes on State Lottery prizes.” Chapter 414, by its terms, took effect July 1, 1977.

In March, 1978, appellant wrote to the Comptroller inquiring about the tax status of his winnings. A “Revenue Specialist” responded on April 4, 1978, informing him of the 1977 enactment but advising that “[s]ince your winnings were prior to [July 1, 1977], you are not subject to the Maryland tax on your lottery winnings, and will not be required to file a Maryland return.” Heeding that welcome advice, appellant did not file any Maryland income tax returns.

In September, 1985, a different “Revenue Agent” for the Comptroller, as part of a “compliance survey,” discovered that appellant had won the lottery in 1977 and had not been filing tax returns. The agent, Mr. Gutin, sent appellant blank tax return forms for the years 1977-84 and requested that they be “completed, signed and returned to me with payment within thirty (30) days.” In response to an inquiry from appellant, Mr. Gutin further informed him that “[p]rizes received after June 30, 1977 are subject to taxation. The tax year 1977 would be exempt in your situation.”

Dutifully, appellant filed the Maryland tax returns for the years 1978-84 and paid the taxes due on what he received in those years — taxes in excess of $15,000. Still, Mr. Gutin was not satisfied. On November 25,1985, he sent appellant a bill for $6,540 in interest, having apparently threatened him by telephone with penalties as well. This produced a rather intemperate letter from an attorney in Seattle, Washington. Asserting that the collection was “illegal” and the result of “unnecessary overreaching of the Comptroller’s Office,” and accusing Mr. Gutin of “unnecessarily intimidating non-residents,” the lawyer demanded the “return of *604 those funds immediately.” The Comptroller’s office responded by (1) treating that letter as a request for refund, (2) denying the request, and (3) assessing not only the interest but $1,501 in penalties as well.

On appellant’s petition, the issue was presented to the Maryland Tax Court which, on July 29, 1987, abated the penalties but otherwise affirmed the denial of appellant’s claim for refund. The Circuit Court for Baltimore City affirmed the Tax Court decision and now the case comes to us laced with both statutory and Constitutional issues.

Most of the issues and sub-issues raised by appellant rest on the assumption, or assertion, that the money he has received and will continue to receive from the Prudential annuity does not constitute income “from State lottery prizes.” His view is that the State fully discharged its obligation to him in January/February, 1978, when it paid him the first installment and created the annuity. Whatever income he earned “from State lottery prizes” he claims to have earned as of then — prior to the enactment and effective date of Chapter 414.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

107OAG196
Maryland Attorney General Reports, 2022
Maryland Attorney General Opinion 107oag196
Maryland Attorney General Reports, 2022
Sharp v. Department of Revenue
945 P.2d 38 (Montana Supreme Court, 1997)
Couchot v. State Lottery Comm.
1996 Ohio 262 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1996)
Couchot v. State Lottery Commission
659 N.E.2d 1225 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1996)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
554 A.2d 458, 78 Md. App. 599, 1989 Md. App. LEXIS 64, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stark-v-comptroller-of-treasury-mdctspecapp-1989.