159 Ga. App. 476 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1981
The sole issue in this case is whether the appellees are engaged in the practice of public accounting within the meaning of Georgia law regulating the practice of that profession. The facts are undisputed. The appellees are employees of Price Waterhouse and Company, a public accounting firm maintaining an office in the City of Atlanta, and are employed as accountants on the firm’s audit staff. The appellees brought this action in response to service upon them by an agent of the City imposing a professional occupation license tax pursuant to specified city ordinances, claiming that they were not required to pay and seeking declaratory and injunctive relief. The trial court found that the appellees are not “practitioners” of public
Code Ann. § 91A-6004 allows a municipality to collect a license, occupational or professional tax upon “practitioners” of law, medicine, dentistry, architecture and upon public accountants, funeral directors and others “whose office is maintained by and who is employed in practice” therein. The City of Atlanta enacted an ordinance pursuant to Code Ann. § 91A-6004 providing that such an occupation tax be levied upon persons practicing the profession of public accounting “as defined by the laws of the State of Georgia.” The practice of public accounting is regulated by the Public Accountancy Act of 1977 (Ga. L. 1977, pp. 1063, 1064 (Code Ann. § 84-201 et seq.)) While “public accountant” is not expressly defined by the statute, Code Ann. § 84-215 sets forth certain functions which may only be performed by a certified public accountant who has registered as required under § 84-204 and holds a valid permit to use the title. Such permits are issued to persons who have met the educational requirements of Code Ann. § 84-210. No person who does not hold such a permit “shall sign or affix, or cause to be signed or affixed, a partnership, association or corporate name to any opinion or certificate attesting in any way to the reliability of any representation or estimate in regard to any person or organization embracing (1) financial information, or (2) facts respecting compliance with conditions established by law or contract...” Code Ann. § 84-215 (g). Code Ann. § 84-216 (a) provides in pertinent part: “Nothing contained in this Chapter shall prohibit any person not a certified public accountant or a public accountant from serving as an employee of, or an assistant to, a certified public accountant . . . registered under section 84-206 of this Chapter and holding a live permit: Provided, however, that such employee or assistant shall not issue, or attest to, any accounting or financial statement over his name.”
We conclude that under the facts shown by the record the appellees are not engaged in the practice of public accounting as contemplated by the law of this state. The appellees, although they hold valid permits as certified public accountants, are employed on the audit staff of Price Waterhouse. However, they are not required to be certified as a condition of their employment and other individuals who are not certified have been and are employed in the same job classification. Appellees are employed to work on various audit “engagements” being conducted by the firm. At least one partner of the firm is assigned the responsibility for planning and satisfactorily completing each such engagement. Prior to each
In City of Atlanta v. Ga. Society of Professional Engineers, 220 Ga. 62, 65 (137 SE2d 41) (1964), the Supreme Court considered the same issue as it applied to the licensing requirements for engineers and architects under the provisions of Code Ann. Ch. 84-21, and determined that those appellees “[t] hough holding certificates as engineers and architects ... work as employees in the firm in which the principals who are responsible for the final design decisions hold certificates” (emphasis supplied) and were thus not subject to the taxes levied upon them. While the facts of employment there were remarkably similar to those of the present case, Code Ann. § 84-2138 contained a provision expressly exempting persons working as employees from the licensing requirements. The City argues that because no such express exemption exists in the Public Accountancy Act, the appellees here are subject to the licensing tax.
On the contrary, we read as collinear the disclaimer in Code Ann. § 84-216 (a) that no uncertified person shall be prohibited under the Act from serving as an employee of a certified public accountant provided that “such employee or assistant shall not issue, or attest to, any accounting or financial statement over his name.” The Public Accountancy Act thus specifically allows persons who are not
Judgment affirmed.