669 A.2d 647 | Conn. Super. Ct. | 1995
Although tax statutes are notoriously complex, these consolidated tax cases turn on the construction of two simple statutory words: "due date." The problem can be very briefly stated. General Statutes §
Bilco Co. (Bilco) and Minnesota Mining and Manufacturing Co. (3M) were respectively granted six month extensions of time to file their corporation business tax returns. Each corporation subsequently discovered that it had paid too much tax. (The actual overpayment of tax is not a matter in dispute.) Each corporation attempted to file an amended return more than three years after the original due date for its original return but less than three years after the extended due date for that return. In each case, the refund sought was denied on the ground of untimeliness, and an appeal was duly filed in this court.
In arguing that Bilco's and 3M's amended returns were untimely filed, the commissioner relies on a regulation, in effect since 1982, stating that "due date," for purposes of the corporation business tax, "does not mean an extended due date." Regs., Conn. State Agencies §
A "due date," in plain English, is "the particular day on or before which something must be done to comply with law or contractual obligation." Black's Law Dictionary 500 (6th Ed. 1990). The "due date" of a return means the time by which the return must legally be filed. In the case of a calendar year taxpayer, §
The commissioner argues that this common sense interpretation of §
Section
As it happens, the "supplemental return" half of §
Section 426c was changed significantly in 1943. See CharltonPress, Inc. v. Sullivan,
These provisions contrasted significantly with the corresponding provisions of the Internal Revenue Code of 1939.
The legislature responded to this request by enacting File No. 363, "An Act Concerning the Corporation Business Tax" (the 1943 act) (codified in General Statutes (Cum. Sup. 1943) §§ 291g, et seq.). The Joint Standing Committee on Finance reported that the purpose of the 1943 act was "to conform with the Federal Law." Connecticut Joint Standing Committee Hearings, Finance, supra, 169.
Three provisions of the 1943 act are relevant here. Section 3 amended § 423c of the 1935 act to allow the commissioner to challenge an allocation "within three years of the filing of the return." Section 5 amended § 426c of the 1935 act to require companies which had originally reported too little income or too many deductions to file supplemental returns "within three years *96 from the due date of the return." Finally § 6 amended § 431c of the 1935 act to allow the commissioner to examine a return and notify the taxpayer of any errors therein "within three years after the due date for the filing of such return."
This somewhat lengthy history has been necessary to show the origin of the "due date" language at issue in the present case. The 1943 act nowhere uses the term "extended due date." That phrase was not added to §
This review makes it possible to determine exactly what the legislature intended when it used the term "due date" in the 1943 act. Section 424c of the 1935 act gave the commissioner the same power to "grant a reasonable extension of time for filing [a] return" that he continues to enjoy. Given this power to grant extensions, it is implausible that the 1943 legislature could have intended "due date" to mean "original due date." In cases of extension, that meaning would have given the commissioner less than three years after the actual filing of a return to examine that return and to require a supplemental return. Such a meaning would not only have frustrated the commissioner but would have failed to conform to the very federal law that had inspired the change in the first place. This analysis shows as conclusively as is possible in such matters that when the term "due date" was used in the 1943 act, it meant "extended due date" in cases where an extension was granted. *97
It is also clear that when the provision allowing amended returns that is now at issue was added to §
The legislative history of §
A number of other considerations point to the same conclusion. First, "[s]tatutory provisions establishing remedies so that the taxpayer may recover taxes unjustly collected have generally been liberally construed." 3A J. Sutherland, Statutory Construction (Singer Ed. 1992) § 66.07. To the extent that the amended return portion of §
Second, a number of structural considerations support the conclusion that "due date" in §
In addition, as has already been seen, the term "due date" is not unique to the amended return portion of §
Moreover, in at least one important provision of the General Statutes, the term "due date" must be interpreted as meaning "extended due date" in order to avoid complete chaos and absurdity. The Uniform Administrative Procedure Act requires an agency hearing a contested case to "render a final decision within ninety days following the close of evidence or the due date for the filing of briefs, whichever is later . . . ." General Statutes §
It is also important to consider the impact of the federal tax code. Title
As is the case in Iowa and Maryland, Connecticut's tax law is in many places expressly linked to the Internal Revenue Code. There are numerous references to the Internal Revenue Code in the corporation business tax *100
code alone. See, e.g., General Statutes §§
For the reasons set forth above, §
Judgment shall enter for the plaintiffs. The parties shall submit proposed orders within ten days of the date of this opinion.