Wright v. Commonwealth

50 Va. Cir. 121, 1999 Va. Cir. LEXIS 396
CourtLoudoun County Circuit Court
DecidedJune 22, 1999
DocketCase No. (Law) 21530
StatusPublished

This text of 50 Va. Cir. 121 (Wright v. Commonwealth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Loudoun County Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wright v. Commonwealth, 50 Va. Cir. 121, 1999 Va. Cir. LEXIS 396 (Va. Super. Ct. 1999).

Opinion

By Judge Thomas D. Horne

This case came before the Court on May 6, 1999, for argument on the County’s Demurrer and the Commonwealth’s Demurrer, Plea of Sovereign Immunity, and Plea to the Jurisdiction of the Court. All are in response to Plaintiffs Amended Motion for Judgment, which asks the Court to declare Virginia Code § 58.1-3813 unconstitutional. For the reasons that follow, the Court finds it unnecessary to rule on the Commonwealth’s Plea of Sovereign Immunity and Plea to the Jurisdiction of the Court. The Court sustains the Commonwealth’s and the County’s Demurrer.

Virginia Code § 58.1-3183 authorizes Virginia localities to levy an additional tax on telephone customers in order to enhance the local 911-Emergency Telephone System. Loudoun County consequently passed an ordinance, Loudoun County Ordinance § 844.025, imposing an additional tax of two dollars per month on each telephone line until June 30,1998, and one dollar on each telephone line after June 30, 1998, in order to upgrade the Loudoun County 911-Emergency System.

Plaintiff’s Prayer for Declaratory Relief; Plaintiffs Case at Equity

Plaintiff, by the style and content of his Amended Motion for Judgment, asks the Court for declaratory relief, an action of equity and not one of law. [122]*122Plaintiff asks the Court to prevent Loudoun County’s collection of the monthly tax in the future. Plaintiff also asks the Court to make a declaratory judgment regarding the constitutionality of both the state enabling statute and the County’s Ordinance.

The Declaratory Judgment Act, Virginia Code § 8.01-184 etseq. outlines declaratory judgment requirements and limitations in Virginia. The Act provides in part:

This article is declared to be remedial. Its purpose is to afford relief from the uncertainty and insecurity attendant upon controversies over legal rights, without requiring one of the parties interested so to invade the rights asserted by the other as to entitle him to maintain an ordinary action therefor. It is to be liberally interpreted and administered with a view to making the courts more serviceable to the people.

Virginia Code § 8.01-191. The Code also provides that declaratory judgment review is limited to “cases of actual controversy”; the Court may not issue declaratory judgments on future controversies. Virginia Code § 8.01-184. Virginia case law has further defined the role and limitations of declaratory judgment. Because the intent of declaratory judgment review is not to “give parties greater rights than those they previously possessed,” but instead to “guide parties in their future conduct in relation to each other,” courts have held that the “power to make a declaratory judgment is a discretionary one.” Liberty Mutual Ins. Co v. Bishop, 211 Va. 414, 421 (1970). The Court may decline to consider an issue in declaratory judgment if it feels that the controversy should be settled by another type of proceeding. Id.

Because Plaintiff constructively asks for a declaratory injunction, it is necessary for the Court to determine whether another proceeding is more appropriate than one for declaratory relief. The relevant statute provides, “No suit for the purpose of restraining the assessment or collection of any tax, state or local, shall be maintained in any court of this Commonwealth, except when the party has no adequate remedy at law.” Virginia Code § 58.1-1831. This Code Section’s predecessor has been interpreted by case law, which states that where “the statutory remedy is adequate it must be followed and the previously existing remedy by injunction is cut off and cannot be pursued.” C. & P. Tel. Co. v. City of Newport News, 194 Va. 409, 413 (1952). If another remedy, especially a statutory one, is available and is adequate, it is improper for the Court to decide the controversy in equity.

[123]*123 Adequacy of Code Remedies

The Court must now determine whether Plaintiff has an adequate remedy at law. The Commonwealth asserts that Plaintiff has a statutory remedy provided in Virginia Code § 58.1-1825, which is titled, “Applications to court for correction of erroneous or improper assessments of state taxes generally,” and Virginia Code § 58.1-3984, titled “Application to the court to correct erroneous assessments of local levies generally.” The Code sections outline the procedural aspects of appealing a tax assessment, whether it is deemed a state or local one. The Court, in determining if the above-mentioned Code remedies are adequate, must analyze (1) whether this tax is an “assessment” that can be dealt with under the remedies and (2) whether it is appropriate to challenge the constitutionality of a tax under these remedies. An examination of the pertinent case law reveals that these considerations do not prevent Plaintiff from using the prescribed remedies to challenge this tax. Plaintiff does indeed have an adequate remedy available at law.

The meaning of the word “assessment” was dealt with in C. & P. Tel. Co. v. City of Newport News, a case in which a telephone company sought to have a local license tax, which was actually a percentage of its gross receipts, declared unconstitutional. 194 Va. 409 (1952). Plaintiff telephone company argued that because the tax was a percentage, which it had to determine itself and pay to the city, there was no real “assessment” taking place. Id. at 414, 415. The Court disagreed, stating that one of the meanings of assessment “applied to the amount of money that was to be paid.” Id. at 414. The Court further held:

So far as the plaintiff is concerned, the assessment it complains of was made by the ordinance, and the plaintiff is to all intents and purposes a person assessed with a local license tax and aggrieved thereby within the meaning of section 58-1145.1 If the plaintiff has not been assessed by the ordinance, then its resort to equity is premature because “equity will not enjoin an apprehended illegal assessment.”

Id. at 415 (citations omitted). A focus on the term “assessment” to discredit the adequacy of the remedies at law, therefore, is improper because the term is held to be broader in meaning. As the Court held above, assessment is considered to have occurred when Loudoun County adopted the Ordinance [124]*124mandating a two-dollar monthly tax on each telephone line. If this “assessment” had not occurred, there would be no controversy because there would be no tax.

The Court next turns to the issue of whether the Code remedies can be used to appeal a tax which a plaintiff argues is unconstitutional. The Commonwealth asserts that the Code remedies are an appropriate way to challenge the constitutionality of a tax. The Court agrees. It has been well settled in case law that tax-appeal statutes not only provide a vehicle to appeal what a plaintiff feels is an erroneous assessment of tax, but also to provide a way to grant relief from assessments found to be unconstitutional. See Todd v. County of Elizabeth City, 191 Va. 52 (1950). See also, C. & P. Tel. Co. v. City of Newport News, 194 Va. 409 (1952).

This Court finds that both §§ 58.1-1825 and 58.1-3984 are adequate remedies at law for Plaintiff to appeal the fax in question. It is improper for the Court, therefore, to decide a matter of equity when alternate remedies at law exist.

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Related

Abbott v. Board of Supervisors
108 S.E.2d 243 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1959)
Liberty Mutual Insurance v. Bishop
177 S.E.2d 519 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1970)
Todd v. County of Elizabeth City
60 S.E.2d 23 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1950)
Chesapeake & Potomac Telephone Co. v. City of Newport News
73 S.E.2d 394 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1952)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
50 Va. Cir. 121, 1999 Va. Cir. LEXIS 396, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wright-v-commonwealth-vaccloudoun-1999.