CFRE, LLC appeals the decision of the Administrative Law Court (ALC) that real estate owned by the company is not entitled to the residential tax ratio under Section 12-43-220(c) of the South Carolina Code (Supp.2010). Furthermore, CFRE argues the ALC erred in not sanctioning the Greenville County Assessor (Assessor) for failing to respond to discovery requests from CFRE. While we hold the ALC did not abuse its discretion in not sanctioning the Assessor, we reverse the ALC’s conclusion regarding CFRE’s entitlement to the legal residence tax ratio and remand.
FACTUAL/PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
Sherry Ray purchased residential property in Greenville County, South Carolina, in 1991 and has lived there continuously ever since. Because she owned no other residential property, the property was taxed at the four percent legal residence tax ratio.
In 2004, Ray formed CFRE, a single-member limited liability company with herself as the sole member. CFRE conducts no business and was formed solely for estate planning and asset protection purposes. To that end, Ray declined to have CFRE taxed as a corporation and, in 2006, deeded the title in her home to it. Because there was a conveyance by deed of the property, the Assessor automatically commenced a reassessment of the property for the 2007 tax year. Accordingly, the property was subjected to the default property tax ratio of six percent until CFRE could prove entitlement to the lower ratio under section 12-43-220. 1
When CFRE sought the four percent ratio, the Assessor denied it eligibility. CFRE then requested a personal interview with the Assessor’s office, which is the next step in the appeals process. During that interview, Ray met with Debbie Adkins, who is the manager for the group within the Assessor’s office responsible for property classifications. Adkins refused to change the ratio back to four percent because she
Following assignment to the ALC, CFRE filed interrogatories and a request for production on the Assessor. After not receiving a response to either of these, CFRE filed a motion to compel. Apparently in response to CFRE’s motion, the ALC ordered the Assessor to produce certain documents pertaining to the case; however, the court did not specifically order the Assessor to respond to the interrogatories or requests for production. Although the Assessor never did respond to CFRE’s discovery requests, it fully complied with the court’s order, submitting its preliminary tax appeal statement, which set forth a statement of the facts and legal authority it planned to use, and a filing titled “Exchange of Evidence and Foundation for Documents.” Furthermore, the Assessor twice supplemented these filings.
Just days before the hearing, CFRE moved to prevent the Assessor from presenting any evidence or argument due to its failure to respond to the discovery requests. The Assessor steadfastly maintained that it had provided CFRE all the information in the Assessor’s possession regarding this dispute and asked the court to permit the case to proceed. Although the ALC sua sponte offered to grant CFRE a continuance and order the Assessor to specifically respond to CFRE’s discovery requests, CFRE declined the court’s invitation because it believed the Assessor would simply respond that there is no additional information it could provide.
Ultimately, the ALC found CFRE was not entitled to the four percent ratio. In particular, the ALC held that only a “natural person” could qualify for the legal residence ratio.
ISSUES PRESENTED
Three issues are raised on appeal: 3
I. Did the ALC err in concluding that a single-member limited liability company that is not taxed as a corporation cannot qualify for the four percent legal residence property tax ratio?
II. Did the ALC err in not sanctioning the Assessor for its failure to respond to CFRE’s discovery requests?
III. Is CFRE entitled to costs and attorney’s fees?
LAW/ANALYSIS
I. ELIGIBILITY FOR FOUR PERCENT RATIO
CFRE argues the ALC erred in concluding that section 12-2-25(B)(l) only applies to income taxes 4 and only natural persons can qualify for the legal residence ratio. We agree.
Tax appeals to the ALC are subject to the Administrative Procedures Act (APA).
Long Cove Home Owners’
“The cardinal rule of statutory interpretation is to ascertain and effectuate the intent of the legislature.”
Sloan v. Hardee,
However, “the statute must be read as a whole and sections which are part of the same general statutory law must be construed together and each one given effect.”
S.C. State Ports Auth. v. Jasper County,
In this case, interlaced with these standard canons of statutory construction is our policy of strictly construing tax exemption statutes against the taxpayer.
See Se.-Kusan, Inc. v. S.C. Tax Comm’n,
Section 12-43-220 provides, in relevant part:
(c)(1) The legal residence and not more than five acres contiguous thereto, when owned totally or in part in fee or by life estate and occupied by the owner of the interest, ... are taxed on an assessment equal to four percent of the fair market value of the property. If residential real estate is held in trust and the income beneficiary of the trust occupies the property as a residence, then the assessment ratio allowed by this item applies.... If this property has located on it any ... business for profit, this four percent value does not apply to those businesses.... For purposes of the assessment ratio ..., a residence does not qualify as a legal residence unless the residence is determined to be the domicile of the owner-applicant.
Section 12-2-25(B) further provides that “[f]or South Carolina tax purposes: (1) a single-member limited liability company, which is not taxed for South Carolina income tax purposes as a corporation, is not regarded as an entity separate from its owner.”
In the case before us, it is undisputed that the residence is on less than five acres, owned in fee by CFRE, has no business for profit conducted on it, and is Ray’s sole domicile. It is further undisputed that CFRE is a single-member limited liability company that conducts no business for profit, is not taxed as a corporation, and has no other location besides the property in question. Thus, the only question presented is whether section 12-2-25(B)(l) permits single-member limited liability companies in the same position as CFRE to receive the lower ratio provided for in section 12-43-220.
Initially, we note that section 12-2-25(B)(l) appears in the “General Provisions” chapter of Title 12, which ostensibly applies to all the different forms of taxation provided for therein, be it income tax, corporate license fees, deed recording fees, gasoline tax, sales and use tax, county property tax, or any of the other myriad taxes imposed through that title. Furthermore, this section contains no language limiting its application within Title 12 in any way; rather, it simply
Even under the principles of strict construction, we cannot ignore the plain language of section 12-2-25(B)(l) that contains no restrictions on its applicability within Title 12.
See Se.-Kusan,
We further note that DOR, the agency charged with administering this State’s revenue laws, has consistently interpreted section 12-2-25(B)(l) as applying broadly. “The construction of a statute by the agency charged with its administration will be accorded the most respectful consideration and will not be overruled absent compelling reasons.”
Dunton v. S.C. Bd. of Exam’rs in Optometry,
At the hearing, CFRE introduced five publications from DOR which contain DOR’s opinion, that section 12-2-25(B)(l) applies to all taxes, not just income taxes: (1) a report from 2004 on legislative changes stating that the definitions in section 12-2-25 apply to all titles administered by DOR; (2) an undated tax worksheet that states “if a single member LLC is disregarded as an entity separate from its owner for federal income tax purposes, it is similarly disregarded for South Carolina income tax purposes” but then, in a later section, states generally that section 12-2-25(B)(l) “provides that a single member LLC which is not taxed as a corporation will be ignored for all South Carolina tax purposes”; (3) a business tax guide from 2007 that provides, “A single member limited liability corporation [sic] that elects to be disregarded for federal income tax purposes will be disregarded for state tax purposes”; and (4) two publications concerning tax incentives for economic development, one from 2008 and one from 2009, stating that this section “provides that a single member limited liability company that is not taxed as a corporation for South Carolina income tax purposes will be ignored for all South Carolina tax purposes.”
DOR has also applied section 12-2-25(B)(l) to provide this tax treatment in specific situations beyond income taxes. We have already noted that DOR believes the company is exempt from deed recording fees if it meets the criteria of section 12-
Because there is no limitation within section 12 — 2—25(B)(1) as to which areas of taxation it applies, DOR’s construction of this section — both before and after the amendment removing the word “all” — comports with its plain language. Furthermore, we cannot find any compelling reasons to disregard DOR’s interpretation, and the Assessor has pointed to none. DOR’s own broader interpretation also militates against any effects of strictly construing this statute against CFRE. Therefore, we accord due deference to this agency’s view and hold that section 12-2-25(B)(l) generally applies to all forms of taxation under Title 12 absent some other provision limiting it. 6
We also hold the ALC erred in finding that only a natural person can qualify for the legal residence ratio.
7
As a final matter, we wish to address the ALC’s reliance on two unenacted pieces of legislation specifically incorporating single-member limited liability companies within section 12-43-220 as demonstrative of the General Assembly’s intent with respect to the current version of section 12-2-25(B)(1).
8
The ALC’s logic in relying on these bills went as
However, the Supreme Court of the United States has stated the problem of relying on unenacted legislation quite succinctly:
We have stated, however, that failed legislative proposals are “a particularly dangerous ground on which to rest an interpretation of a prior statute. Congressional inaction lacks persuasive significance because several equally tenable inferences may be drawn from such inaction, including the inference that the existing legislation already incorporated the offered change.”
Cent. Bank of Denver, N.A. v. First Interstate Bank of Denver, N.A.,
The present case perfectly illustrates the very folly of relying on unenacted legislation. Both CFRE and the Assessor could use the General Assembly’s failure to enact Senate Bills 1313 and 230 equally to their advantage: the Assessor could argue the bills’ failure demonstrates the General Assembly’s intent to exclude single-member limited liability companies from section 12-43-220, while CFRE could argue that because an amendment presumes a change to the existing statute, these bills were unnecessary as sections 12-2-25(B)(l) and 12-43-220 already conferred this benefit. Bills are introduced and fail in the General Assembly for any number of reasons, and it would be beyond speculation for us or any court to divine some import and meaning from the mere fact that the bills did not become law. Absent something more, it was error for the ALC to rely on them.
Cf. Stardancer Casino, Inc. v. Stewart,
II. DISCOVERY REQUESTS
CFRE next argues that the ALC erred by not sanctioning the Assessor for its failure to formally respond to CFRE’s interrogatories and production requests. We disagree.
As a threshold matter, CFRE has waived this issue. A litigant cannot concede an issue at trial and then raise it on appeal.
Southern Ry. v. Routh,
However, CFRE contends it has not waived this issue because it learned of the existence of another witness after CFRE’s initial concessions to the ALC. Adkins, in cross examination, revealed that her staff makes the initial classification of which tax ratio should be applied to the taxpayer, but she alone has the final decision of which ratio to apply. CFRE therefore contends that there is another person who has come in contact with this case previously unknown to it. However, Adkins’ testimony makes clear that the unknown witness would not add any material facts or clarify any facts in dispute. Therefore, the existence of this witness is immaterial and CFRE’s concession that it would receive nothing more of substance from the Assessor still stands.
Even if CFRE has not waived this issue, the ALC did not abuse its discretion in not ordering sanctions against the Assessor. “In determining the appropriateness of a sanction, the court should consider such factors as the precise nature of the discovery and the discovery posture of the case, willfulness, and degree of prejudice.”
McNair v. Fairfield County,
Here, the Assessor failed to formally answer any of the standard interrogatories or production requests. However, the ALC required the Assessor to produce various documents and enter them into the record, an order with which the Assessor fully complied. Furthermore, the documents submitted to the court created a complete record of the facts. Thus, despite arguing that it has been “prevented from being fully prepared for trial,” there is no evidence of what material facts were not produced to CFRE, and anything CFRE contends is missing immaterial and irrelevant. Therefore, CFRE ultimately received all pertinent and material information it would have been entitled to had the Assessor specifically answered CFRE’s requests.
Thus, notwithstanding the duty to formally answer the interrogatories and production requests, CFRE was not prejudiced by the Assessor’s failure to do so. Although CFRE argues that
Downey v. Dixon,
III. COSTS
In its brief, CFRE requested that this Court award costs in the amount of $646.50, the same amount it requested from the ALC. Furthermore, in its reply brief, CFRE requested an award of attorney’s fees. However, “[i]n an action covered by [the South Carolina Revenue Procedures Act (SCRPA) ], no costs or disbursements may be charged or allowed to either party, except for the service of process and attendance of witnesses.” S.C.Code Ann. § 12-60-3350 (Supp.2010). As this action is governed by the SCRPA in the tribunals below, see id. § 12-60-2510, et seq., CFRE is not entitled to attorney’s fees but may be entitled to some costs. Because CFRE did not identify which costs, if any, are attributable to service of process or attendance of witnesses, the court on remand is to determine which costs are appropriate for CFRE to receive. To the extent CFRE desires an award of costs and attorney’s fees incurred before this Court, it must make the appropriate motion at the appropriate time.
CONCLUSION
Therefore, we hold that CFRE was entitled to the four percent legal residence ratio for the 2007 tax year. Accordingly, we remand this case to the ALC for a determination of the refund due to CFRE. A remand is also in order for a determination of which costs, if any, CFRE may receive. However, we affirm the ALC’s denial of sanctions against the Assessor for its failure to respond to CFRE’s discovery requests.
Notes
. This reassessment also resulted in an increase in the property's fair market and taxable market values. CFRE and the Assessor reached a separate agreement with respect to this increase that is not the subject of this appeal.
. At some point during this process, Adkins told Ray that if she were to retain a life estate in the property, with CFRE having the remainder, she could receive the four percent ratio. Ray amended the 2006 deed to reflect this and accordingly has received this lower ratio for all subsequent years. Thus, CFRE is only appealing the imposition of the six percent ratio for the 2007 tax year. We express no opinion regarding whether this transfer was valid.
. We have consolidated CFRE’s Issues on Appeal I, II, and IV because they all concern the ALC's interpretation of Section 12-2-25(B)(l) of the South Carolina Code (Supp.2010). Furthermore, we have restated CFRE’s Issue on Appeal III to reflect the thrust of CFRE’s argument as it solely concerns the harm CFRE suffered as a result of the Assessor’s conduct during discovery.
. It is not clear whether the ALC actually held section 12-2-25(B)(l) applies only to income taxes. In fact, the only reference to income taxes comes from the court’s quotation of an Attorney General's Opinion and not from any holding of the court. However, because both parties argue this point in their briefs and it would be an additional sustaining ground under Rule 220(c), SCACR, we address this issue in full.
. Prior to the 2001 amendments to section 12-2-25(B), that section explicitly stated that single-member limited liability companies received this treatment for "all South Carolina tax purposes.” S.C.Code Ann. § 12-2-25(B) (2000) (emphasis added). The 2001 amendments removed the word "all” from the language, but they also added a host of other provisions to subsection (B) that are not relevant to this case. See 2001 Act No. 89 § 5. We do not believe this deletion was substantive, and as discussed infra, the Department of Revenue (DOR) has not treated it as such.
. In reaching this conclusion, we assign no weight to the two Attorney General’s Opinions relied upon the ALC.
See Eargle v. Horry County,
. The ALC based its ruling mainly on the use of the first person in the following certification signed by the applicant:
Under penalty of perjury, I certify that:
(A) the residence which is the subject of this application is my legal residence and where I am domiciled at the time of this application and that I do not claim to be a legal resident of a jurisdiction other than South Carolina for any purpose; and
(B) that neither I nor any other member of my household is residing in or occupying any other residence which I or any member of my immediate family has qualified for the special assessment ratio allowed by this section.
S.C.Code Ann. § 12 — 43—220(c)(2)(ii); see also 27 S.C.Code Ann. Reg. 117-1800.1(2) (Supp.2010) ("For property tax purposes the term ‘Legal Residence' shall mean the permanent home or dwelling place owned by a person and occupied by the person thereof or where he or she is domiciled." (emphasis added)).
. In 2008, the following language was proposed to be added to section 12-43-220(c)(2)(i):
A single-member limited liability company where the single-member is an individual and that is not taxed for South Carolina income tax purposes as a corporation shall be considered an owner-occupant for purposes of the special property tax assessment ratio allowed by this item, if the single-member limited liability company is able to meet all the requirements of subsection (c).
S. 1313, 117th Gen. Assem. (S.C.2008). The proposed amendment did not pass. The following year, an identical amendment was introduced and never left the committee. See S. 230, 118th Gen. Assem. (S.C.2009).
. Rule 21 of the Rules of Procedure for the Administrative Law Court states that "[discovery shall be conducted according to the procedures in Rules 26-37, SCRCP, except that only the standard interrogatories provided by SCRCP 33(b), as applicable to the pending contested case, are permitted.”
