State of Delaware Division of Revenue v. Odoemene

CourtSuperior Court of Delaware
DecidedSeptember 29, 2021
DocketK21J-00844 NEP
StatusPublished

This text of State of Delaware Division of Revenue v. Odoemene (State of Delaware Division of Revenue v. Odoemene) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State of Delaware Division of Revenue v. Odoemene, (Del. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

SUPERIOR COURT of the STATE OF DELAWARE Jeffrey J Clark Kent County Courthouse Resident Judge 38 The Green Dover, DE 19901 Telephone: (302)-735-2111

September 29, 2021

Michael B. Cooksey, DAG Mr. Kenneth Odoemene Delaware Department of Justice 160 Stoney Drive 820 N. French Street, 6th Floor Dover, DE 19904 Wilmington, DE 19801

Submitted: September 8, 2021 Decided: September 29, 2021

RE: State of Delaware Division of Revenue vs. Kenneth Odoemene K21J-00844 NEP

Mr. Cooksey and Mr. Odoemene: The Director of the Delaware Division of Revenue (hereinafter the “Director” or the “Division”) filed a certificate of assessment in Superior Court. In it, the Division entered judgment against Mr. Odoemene for unpaid taxes, a penalty, and interest. Presently, Mr. Odoemene moves the Court to strike the certificate. In essence, he seeks to collaterally vacate the judgment. This letter provides the Court’s reasoning and decision as to why it cannot. Background and Arguments of the Parties On April 19, 2021, the Division filed the certificate of assessment at issue. The assessment, which becomes a judgment, was in the amount of $1,665.97. It

1 represents the amount of his unpaid 2018 personal income tax, a penalty for the unpaid tax, and interest. Mr. Odoemene contends that he does not owe the penalty and interest. He believes that the Division should have waived them because of the Covid-19 pandemic. He also alleges that he did not receive a notice of proposed assessment. That, he contends, left him no opportunity to challenge it before it became final. The Division counters that it sent Mr. Odoemene the notice of assessment on December 8, 2020, and that he did not protest it. It relies upon 30 Del. C. § 544 which provides that a proposed assessment becomes final if not challenged within sixty days from when the Division mails the notice. Furthermore, the Division has produced documentation that it sent the notice to Mr. Odoemene by certified mail. The Division has also provided documentation showing that the Postal Service delivered the letter to Mr. Odoemene’s mailbox on a date and time certain. Relevant Statutes The Delaware Division of Revenue’s authority to certify an assessment against a taxpayer flows from several provisions in Title 30 of the Delaware Code. The statutory process starts with the requirements set forth in 30 Del. C. § 521. Namely, that section provides that the Division must send the taxpayer notice of the amount of past-due taxes, interest, and penalties that it alleges are due. More specifically, the statute provides that the notice must: “set forth the amount and the reason for the proposed assessment . . . . If the amount of the proposed assessment exceeds the applicable threshold of $1,000, such notice shall be sent by certified or registered mail.1” After sixty days without a protest, the proposed assessment becomes final with no right to appeal.2 If, on the other hand, the taxpayer files a protest, the

1 30 Del. C. § 521(c). 2 Id. at § 522. 2 Director must reconsider the matter.3 After the Director considers the taxpayer’s arguments, she must provide the taxpayer with a final decision.4 That decision then becomes final unless the taxpayer appeals the matter to the Tax Appeal Board within sixty days.5 In the event of an appeal, the Tax Appeal Board must hold a hearing and issue a decision regarding whether the proposed assessment is accurate.6 Finally, either the Director or the taxpayer may appeal the Tax Appeal Board’s final decision to the Superior Court within thirty days.7 If neither party files an appeal, the Tax Appeal Board’s decision becomes final.8 Motion to Strike Because of Allegedly Improper Penalties and Interest Mr. Odoemene contends that he does not owe the penalty and interest in the assessment. He did not, however, challenge those amounts through the administrative process. As a result, the Superior Court cannot examine the merits of his claim. It cannot do so for two reasons. First, the Court has no jurisdiction to collaterally vacate the judgment. Here, when the administrative process concludes (assuming it concludes favorably to the Division), the Prothonotary must accept the filing and it becomes a judgment of record.9 In other words, the certificate becomes a transferred judgment in the amount of the proposed assessment unless the taxpayer prevails in the administrative

3 Id. at § 523. 4 See id. at § 524 (providing that “written notice of the Director’s determination. . . shall be mailed to the taxpayer by certified or registered mail”). 5 30 Del. C. § 525. 6 Id. at § 544. The sole exception to this step in the administrative process is removal of an action to Superior Court after an appeal to the Tax Appeal Board. Id. at § 333. Bypassing the Tax Appeal Board is permitted only for (1) matters in controversy exceeding $50,000, (2) upon request of the taxpayer or the Division of Revenue, and (3) with approval of the Tax Appeal Board. Id. None of the three requirements are satisfied in this instance. 7 Id. at § 331(a). 8 Id. 9 Id. 3 process referenced above.10 Once the Division files the certificate, the Superior Court lacks jurisdiction to consider collateral challenges to the judgment unless it is void.11 Second, the exhaustion of administrative remedies doctrine makes it inappropriate for the Court to examine the accuracy of the amounts listed in the certificate of assessment. Namely, to challenge the matter in this Court, Mr. Odoemene must have first exhausted his administrative remedies.12 Where a remedy is available through an administrative hearing, a petitioner “cannot come immediately to this court, rather they must [first] establish a record below.”13 In other words, a person may not simply decide to bypass the administrative process.14 Here, the General Assembly demonstrated its intent that a taxpayer must avail himself or herself of this administrative process. That process (which could ultimately lead to Superior Court review on appeal) is the only process available to challenge the assessment. Notice of the Proposed Assessment Mr. Odeomene may collaterally attack the certificate of assessment only if the Division did not provide notice to the taxpayer of the amount claimed.15 That is,

10 See 30 Del. C. § 554(a) (providing that “the Director may file in the office of the Prothonotary of the county in which the taxpayer resides . . . a certificate specifying the [amount owed and] the amount set forth in the certificate shall thereupon be and constitute a judgment of record in such court with like force and effect as any other judgment of the court . . .”) (emphasis added). 11 See Krewson v. Household Finance Corp., 1983 WL 413306, at *2 (Del. Super. Sept. 29, 1983) (recognizing “[a] judgment, order or decree rendered by a court having jurisdiction of the parties and the subject matter, unless reversed or cancelled in some proper proceeding, is not open to collateral attack in any other proceed.”)); see also State v. Kamalski, 429 A.2d 1315 (Del. Super. Jan. 14, 1981) (stating “[c]ollateral attack is allowed only where the judgment is void, a void judgment being a judgment rendered without jurisdiction. If a judgment is merely voidable because of some other type of defect its validity may not be impeached in a collateral proceeding.”)). 12 Garvin v. Booth, 2019 WL 3017419, at *4 (Del. Super. July 10, 2019). 13 Id. (citing Buckson v. Ropp, 2000 WL 1741935, at *3 (Del. Super. Nov. 21, 2000)). 14 Id. (citing Carter v. Dept. of Labor, 1993 WL 489222, at *2 (Del. Super. Nov. 12, 1993)). 15 RESTATEMENT (FIRST) OF JUDGMENTS § 6(b) (AM. L. INST. 1942). 4 because under this case’s circumstances, the transferred judgment would be void only if there was a complete lack of notice in the underlying forum. Here, the statute required the Division to send Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
State of Delaware Division of Revenue v. Odoemene, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-delaware-division-of-revenue-v-odoemene-delsuperct-2021.