U.S. Xpress, Inc. v. Arizona Tax Court

879 P.2d 371, 179 Ariz. 363, 171 Ariz. Adv. Rep. 33, 1994 Ariz. App. LEXIS 169
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arizona
DecidedAugust 16, 1994
Docket1 CA-SA 94-0152 TX
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 879 P.2d 371 (U.S. Xpress, Inc. v. Arizona Tax Court) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arizona primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
U.S. Xpress, Inc. v. Arizona Tax Court, 879 P.2d 371, 179 Ariz. 363, 171 Ariz. Adv. Rep. 33, 1994 Ariz. App. LEXIS 169 (Ark. Ct. App. 1994).

Opinion

OPINION

FIDEL, Judge.

In this novel proceeding, plaintiffs and defendants jointly petition this court to set aside the tax court’s dismissal of the underlying tax appeal. Although plaintiffs and defendants dispute the merits of the underlying action, they jointly challenge the tax court’s ruling that plaintiffs’ action was not timely filed. The parties argue that the tax court misinterpreted the applicable statutes and ask us to reinstate the action for resolution on the merits.

BACKGROUND

Plaintiffs U.S. Xpress and Southwest Motor Freight are motor carriers subject to licensing, reporting requirements, and taxes under Ariz.Rev.Stat.Ann. (“AR.S.”) §§ 28-1599—1599.13 (1989). Defendant Arizona Department of Transportation (“ADOT”) is the state agency that licenses and taxes motor carriers.

When an intermediary hired to file plaintiffs’ tax reports and pay their taxes miscalculated the due date by six days, plaintiffs were assessed tax penalties and late fees. Plaintiffs appealed these assessments, first by exhausting administrative avenues, then by filing the underlying action in the tax court. ADOT moved to dismiss plaintiffs’ complaint for failure to state a .claim. In response, plaintiffs moved for summary judgment.' In their motions, the parties debated whether plaintiffs’ late reporting and tax payment were excusable as inadvertent error.

Defendants did not contest the timeliness of plaintiffs’ complaint. The administrative process had ended and the penalty assessment had become due on November 9,1992. 1 Plaintiffs had made payment under protest on February 5, 1993, less than three months thereafter, and had initiated tax court proceedings on June 2, 1993, well within a year of payment under protest. Both payment and filing met the timelines of AR.S. § 28-1599.11(B). That subsection provides in pertinent part:

B. A motor carrier making a payment may bring an action against the director in the superior court in Maricopa County for recovery of the amount paid if the motor carrier:

1. Pays the amount stating it is paid under protest.
2. Verifies and states the grounds for objection to the legality of the payment.
*365 3. Pays the amount within three months after becoming due.
The motor carrier shall institute the action within one year after payment under pro-test____

(Emphasis added).

The tax court, however, determined on its own initiative that subsection B was inapplicable and that plaintiffs were subject to the more restrictive timelines of A.R.S. § 28-1599.11(E). That subsection provides in pertinent part:

E. From a decision or order of the director pursuant to this article, the motor carrier may, within thirty days from the date of decision or order, appeal to the superior court in Maricopa county from the decision or order.

(Emphasis added). Because plaintiffs had not filed within thirty days of the final agency decision, the tax court dismissed their appeal without reaching the merits of the issue the parties had briefed.

In a published opinion, the tax court addressed the apparent conflict between subsections B and E: Subsection B, the tax court reasoned, applies only to motor carriers who have waived administrative remedies and sought relief directly in the superior court; where, by contrast, motor carriers have exhausted administrative remedies, the more restrictive deadline of subsection E applies. U.S. Xpress, Inc. v. Arizona Dep’t of Transp., 177 Ariz. 299, 300-01, 867 P.2d 869, 870-71 (Tax 1994).

In a series of subsequent motions and memoranda, the parties unsuccessfully urged the tax court to reverse its opinion. They then petitioned this court for relief.

SPECIAL ACTION JURISDICTION

Because the tax court has published an opinion that we believe misinterprets the applicable statute, and because that opinion, until corrected, will misgovern tax appeals of motor carriers throughout the state, this matter has sufficient statewide interest to warrant special action jurisdiction and relief. Maricopa County v. Arizona Tax Court, 162 Ariz. 64, 65-66, 781 P.2d 41, 42-43 (App.1989). We take jurisdiction, however, only to determine the timeliness of the underlying tax appeal. We deny the parties’ further request to bypass the tax court and resolve the merits of the underlying dispute.

INTERPRETING SUBSECTIONS B AND E

If one considers only the text of AR.S. § 28-1599.11, a conflict appears between subsections B and E. Subsection E sets a 30-day deadline for a motor carrier’s superior court appeal from “a decision or order of the director.” Because the underlying action is a superior court appeal from a final order of the director, subsection E appears facially to apply. Yet subsection B gives a motor carrier three months from the due date of a contested assessment to pay under protest and one year thereafter to file a superior court action to recover payment. The underlying action seeks to recover an assessment paid under protest. Thus, subsection B likewise appears facially to apply.

The tax court, to reconcile the conflict, concluded that subsection B applies only when the protesting carrier foregoes administrative remedies and proceeds directly to superior court. No such restriction appears, however, within subsection B or elsewhere within the text of § 28-1599.11. Nor did the tax court refer to any source external to § 28-1599.11 to support the restriction that it read into the text.

We find more persuasive petitioners’ alternative reconciliation. Petitioners argue:

1. Subsection E applies to and permits only appeals of administrative decisions refusing to issue, revoking, or suspending a motor carrier tax license by the Director ... pursuant to AR.S. §§ 28-1599.02 and 1599.03; and
2. Subsection B authorizes and exclusively regulates appeals of assessments of motor carrier taxes or penalties pursuant to AR.S. §§ 28-1599.06 and 1599.08.

Although this distinction, like the tax court’s, is not apparent on the face of § 28-1599.11, it emerges, unlike the tax court’s, from close reading of surrounding statutory text—particularly the text of § 28-1599.10.

*366 “If a statute’s words do not disclose legislative intent, the court must read the statute as a whole and give meaningful interpretation to all its provisions.” Devenir Assocs. v. City of Phoenix, 169 Ariz. 500, 503, 821 P.2d 161, 164 (1991). Statutes that “relate to the same subject or have the same general purpose ...

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Bluebook (online)
879 P.2d 371, 179 Ariz. 363, 171 Ariz. Adv. Rep. 33, 1994 Ariz. App. LEXIS 169, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/us-xpress-inc-v-arizona-tax-court-arizctapp-1994.