Underwood v. Fairbanks North Star Borough

674 P.2d 785, 1983 Alas. LEXIS 519
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 16, 1983
DocketNo. 7105
StatusPublished

This text of 674 P.2d 785 (Underwood v. Fairbanks North Star Borough) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Underwood v. Fairbanks North Star Borough, 674 P.2d 785, 1983 Alas. LEXIS 519 (Ala. 1983).

Opinion

OPINION

COMPTON, Justice.

This is an appeal brought by Richard Underwood, doing business as the Alaska Feed Company, from a judgment of the superior court entered against him for sales taxes and penalties he owes to the Fairbanks North Star Borough for the 1976-1981 tax years. Underwood contends that the judgment should be reversed because it is based upon an inaccurate and improperly performed audit. We agree in part.

I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Richard Underwood is the owner of the Alaska Feed Company, a retail business in the Fairbanks North Star Borough [“the Borough”]. In 1978, the Borough demanded permission to audit Underwood’s business records to determine whether he had properly collected the two percent sales tax levied by the Borough. Following Underwood’s refusal, the Borough instituted an action to compel him to permit the audit. The Borough also requested a judgment for the taxes and penalties owed “as may later be determined.” In response to various arguments made by Underwood, the superior court dismissed the Borough’s action. On appeal, however, we reversed the superior court’s judgment, holding that the Borough may maintain a civil action to compel a business to produce its records for audit. We remanded the case to the superior court for further proceedings. Fairbanks North Star Borough v. Underwood, 626 P.2d 574 (Alaska 1981).

On remand, the Borough served Underwood with a Request for Production of Documents. Underwood refused to comply with the Request. The Borough then moved for an Order Compelling Discovery, which was issued by the court. Underwood refused to comply with this order, as well. The Borough moved for summary judgment as a sanction for Underwood’s disobedience of the order. The court granted the motion and entered a judgment against Underwood in the amount of $117,265.82, plus costs and interest. Underwood filed a notice of appeal from this judgment.

The parties subsequently entered into a stipulation of settlement consisting of the following terms: Underwood agreed to dismiss his appeal and produce all of the business records requested for the audit; in return, the Borough agreed to conduct its audit and then move for a new judgment in the amount determined by the audit to be due, reserving to Underwood the right to contest this amount. Upon completion of the audit, the Borough moved for a new judgment against Underwood in the amount of $28,697.72. The taxes determined to be due by the Borough's audit amounted to $19,348.86. By Borough ordinance, the civil penalty for failing to collect the proper sales taxes is that the seller must pay twice the amount of the tax that should have been collected. Fairbanks North Star Borough Ordinance [“Ordinance”] 3.48.160(C). The Borough’s request for a judgment in the amount of $28,697.72, rather than $38,697.72, was the result of a clerical error. It has moved for leave to correct that error.

[788]*788Underwood opposed the motion for a new judgment in this amount, contending that the audit was not performed properly and was inaccurate. The superior court apparently rejected all of Underwood’s arguments. It entered a judgment for the Borough in the amount requested, plus interest and costs. From this judgment, Underwood now appeals.

II. AUDIT PROCEDURE

Underwood’s first argument is that the Borough did not conduct its audit properly. The procedure used was as follows: The Borough’s auditor examined Underwood’s business records for the three-month period of July, August and September, 1977. During that period, Underwood claimed that $159,404.38 of his sales were either excepted from taxable sales or exempt from the levy of tax under Borough ordinances. The auditor determined that $52,656.95 of these sales were sales for which Underwood should have collected a tax. Therefore, thirty-three percent of the sales for which Underwood did not collect a tax were determined by the auditor to have been taxable sales. This percentage was considered to be Underwood’s “error rate.”

During the period at issue, from May 16, 1975, to June 30, 1981, Underwood reported $2,931,645.54 in sales that he claimed were either excepted from taxation or exempt from the levy of the tax. The auditor applied Underwood’s “error rate” to these sales and concluded that thirty-three percent of these sales, or $967,443.03, were not excepted or exempt from taxation. The sales tax in effect at the time was two percent. Applying this percentage, the auditor concluded that Underwood had failed to collect $19,348.86 in sales taxes that should have been collected.

The Borough argues that the procedure it used was permissible for the following reasons:

The audit having been made in contemplation of reducing the judgment against Underwood, is not exactly the tax audit of the type which the Borough customarily performed.... The Underwood audit was not to make an assessment, it was done pursuant to stipulation to correct a judgment in Underwood’s favor. Furthermore, Underwood didn’t express any objection to the test period projection method until his opposition to the Borough’s judgment motion. By this time the Borough no longer employed auditors. Therefore, Underwood was estopped from disputing the test period projection.

Underwood argues that the sampling method was unreasonable because a better method of determining tax liability existed, namely, audit all the records. We agree that the figures a full-scale audit would have produced would have been more accurate than the estimate on which the Borough relies, but we see no reason to force the Borough to bear the expense of interpreting all the records Underwood has surrendered. The difference between the deficiency figure a statistically valid estimate produces and the deficiency a full-scale audit suggests will usually be far less than the added expense of conducting a full audit. If courts force a taxing authority to bear this additional cost even though a taxpayer’s miscalculations have caused the problem, they rob it of resources with which it could be providing services. W.T. Grant Company v. Joseph, 2 N.Y.2d 196, 159 N.Y.S.2d 150, 155-56, 140 N.E.2d 244, 249-50 (1957), is in accord with this view:

Even where an item by item audit is possible ... there is no inflexible requirement that the comptroller resort to it. It is sufficient if the method adopted is reasonably calculated to reflect the taxes due.

The parties stipulated that Underwood “shall produce for [the Borough] for purpose of audit by [the Borough], all of the documents and records requested to be produced.” (Emphasis added) After the material is produced, how any tax arrearages are to be proven in court is a matter properly committed to the appropriate rules of evidence. Samples are generally receivable in evidence “to show the quality or condition of the entire lot or mass from which” [789]*789they are taken. 2 J. Wigmore, Evidence § 439, at 522 (Chadbourn rev. ed. 1979).

The question becomes whether the sample used was large enough to be statistically reliable and, if so, whether there is something about the sample period that makes it atypical. These questions can go to both the admissibility and to the weight of the evidence.

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Related

Fairbanks North Star Borough v. Underwood
626 P.2d 574 (Alaska Supreme Court, 1981)
W. T. Grant Co. v. Joseph
140 N.E.2d 244 (New York Court of Appeals, 1957)

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Bluebook (online)
674 P.2d 785, 1983 Alas. LEXIS 519, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/underwood-v-fairbanks-north-star-borough-alaska-1983.