Virginia Garwood and Kristen Garwood v. State of Indiana

77 N.E.3d 204, 2017 WL 2417947, 2017 Ind. App. LEXIS 238
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 5, 2017
DocketCourt of Appeals Case 31A01-1603-CT-679
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 77 N.E.3d 204 (Virginia Garwood and Kristen Garwood v. State of Indiana) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Virginia Garwood and Kristen Garwood v. State of Indiana, 77 N.E.3d 204, 2017 WL 2417947, 2017 Ind. App. LEXIS 238 (Ind. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

Mathias, Judge.

Mother and daughter Virginia and Kristen Garwood (“Virginia,” “Kristen,” collectively, “the Garwoods”) ran a dog-breeding business from their Harrison County, Indiana, dairy farm. On June 2, 2009, the Indiana Department of Revenue (“DOR”), in concert with the Office of the Indiana Attorney General (“OAG”) and the Indiana State Police (collectively, “the State”), raided the Garwoods’ farm and seized and immediately sold more than two hundred dogs in partial satisfaction of the Garwoods’ unpaid sales and income tax liability.

The Garwoods sued a large number of public and private defendants in Harrison Circuit Court for federal constitutional and state-law torts arising from the raid. The Garwoods found success against only one: Andrew Swain (“Swain”) in his personal capacity, then chief counsel for tax litigation in OAG, against whom a Harrison County jury entered a $15,000 verdict. The Garwoods now appeal and seek a new trial. The State cross-appeals and seeks reversal of the judgment against Swain.

We reverse the judgment against Swain as unsupported by sufficient evidence. We affirm the trial court in other respects.

Facts and Procedural Posture

I. The Raid of June 2, 2009, and Events Leading to It

Stated in the terms most favorable to the Garwoods and the judgment against Swain, and incorporating a decision of the Indiana Tax Court regarding the principals of this case, the events of and leading to June 2, 2009, may be summarized as follows. In 2007, dairy prices fell, and the Garwoods’ dairy farm became less profitable. The Garwoods started breeding dogs for retail sale to make up the lost income. Without malicious intent, they did not register with the Indiana Secretary of State or DOR as retail merchants. They did not collect sales tax on the dog sales or remit sales tax to DOR, and they incompletely or incorrectly reported their income from the sales. They cared for their dogs properly and sold them responsibly.

In February 2009, the Harrison County animal control officer told- Swain he thought the Garwoods’ dog-breeding business was unregistered and did not collect or remit sales tax. The' officer had received a complaint from one of the Garwoods’' alleged customers about a sick dog. Swain relayed the message to OAG’s investigations section and asked DOR to investigate the Garwoods’ tax status.

It was determined that the Garwoods were in fact selling dogs through advertisements in local newspapers but had not registered as retail merchants or remitted sales tax. OAG investigators incognito purchased two puppies from the Garwoods using funds supplied by the Humane Society of the United States (“the Humane Society”), a private animal-rights organization. Swain had first worked with the Humane Society while pursuing another unregistered, non-remitting dog-breeder for unpaid tax liability. The Garwoods did not collect sales tax on the sale to the investigators.

*210 A meeting was held of staff from DOR, OAG, and the Indiana Office of Management and Budget (“OMB”), the final decision-maker with respect to the State’s enforcement actions in this context. Swain and then-Attorney General Greg Zoeller (“Zoeller”) advocated or counseled pursuing the same approach used against the other unregistered, non-remitting dog breeder, and against certain other such businesses: issuing jeopardy assessments and jeopardy tax warrants in conjunction with criminal prosecution for tax crimes.

A jeopardy assessment, as summarized by Swain,

is an extraordinary tax remedy. Normally when ... [DOR] ... says that you owe tax, ... what’s called a proposed assessment [is issued. The proposed assessment may go through several stages of administrative and judicial review before it becomes a final, collectible judgment.] ... What a jeopardy assessment is designed to do is that if various criteria are satisfied to the Commissioner’s satisfaction, [DOR] .,. can issue an immediate tax warrant that turns automatically into a tax judgment which is immediately collectible.

Tr. pp. 288-84. In particular, Swain’s interpretation of the jeopardy assessment statute’s criteria hinged on the argument that the Garwoods’ failure to register, collect, and remit in itself constituted an “act that would jeopardize the collection of ... taxes.” Ind. Code § 6-8.1-5-3. The Garwoods’ conduct did not satisfy the jeopardy assessment criteria, as our tax court would later hold, and Swain’s and DOR’s interpretation of the statute was in excess of their authority. Nevertheless, before the tax court so held, drawing in part on his experience in the Garwoods’ case, Swain would later author an article for a state tax law publication, “Tax Ills Behind the Mills 1 —The Advancement of Puppy Protection,” Ex. Vol. I, Pls.’s Ex, 2, about “combatting puppy mills” and other participants in the unregistered, non-remitting “underground economy” with “civil and criminal tax enforcement techniques.” Id. He would also later give a presentation to the animal law section of the Indiana State Bar Association on the same topic.

The State’s investigation prior to this extraordinary enforcement action was not as thorough as it could have been and gave the Garwoods little or no benefit of the doubt. In estimating the Garwoods’ tax liability by the “Best Information Available” (“BIA”) assessment procedure, DOR staff used the least conservative estimate of the Garwoods’ sales and income, and assessed the maximum penalty for delinquency. The State never sought the Garwoods’ co-operation with its investigation.

DOR and OAG arrived at the Garwoods’ farm early on the morning of June 2, 2009, and demanded payment of the assessed liabilities. When the Garwoods said they could or would not pay, State officers seized around 240 dogs, including several family pets, in a dramatically staged raid involving a large media presence, a state legislator, and a group of volunteers enlisted and directed by the Humane Societies of the United States and of Missouri. The dogs were sold to the Humane Society the next day for $300, less than $2 per dog, a negligible amount relative to the nearly $300,000 figure alleged by DOR as the Garwoods’ outstanding tax liability.

*211 Zoeller trumpeted the success of the raid, giving several media interviews and congratulating his staff and DOR for closing an alleged “puppy mill.” That evening, Swain and two OAG law student interns met Zoeller for a celebratory toast at a hotel in nearby Louisville, Kentucky. Zoeller and Swain would later be honored by the Humane Society in Washington, D.C., for their work.

II. Proceedings in Harrison Circuit Court

On June 2, 2009, the morning of the raid, a DOR investigator presented the jeopardy assessments to the Garwoods, Ex. Vol. II, Defs.’s Ex. B., pp. 312-27, and demanded immediate payment of the amounts assessed. When the Garwoods said they could or would not pay, jeopardy tax warrants 2 in those amounts were filed in Harrison Circuit Court, id. pp.

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77 N.E.3d 204, 2017 WL 2417947, 2017 Ind. App. LEXIS 238, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/virginia-garwood-and-kristen-garwood-v-state-of-indiana-indctapp-2017.