23 Mass. App. Ct. 965 | Mass. App. Ct. | 1987
This is an action under G. L. c. 231 A, brought originally in a Probate Court and later transferred to the Superior Court, by which the plaintiffs seek relief from a 1975 assessment to them of additional income tax, interest and penalties arising out of their 1972 sale of a parcel of real estate. The action was not brought until some four years after the plaintiffs should have appealed to the Appellate Tax Board from the denial of their application for abatement of the additional tax. Compare Iodice v. Newton, 397 Mass. 329, 333-334 (1986). The case was submitted upon a statement of agreed facts following the denial of the defendant’s motion to dismiss. A probate judge sitting under statutory authority entered a final judgment which declared, in effect, that the plaintiffs have no further tax liability arising out of the sale and which enjoined the defendant from collecting any further amount of the tax assessed. The defendant has appealed, urging that the judge (1) abused his discretion in entertaining the action and granting relief and (2) committed sundry errors of law in the course of arriving at his conclusion that no further amount of tax is due. We do not reach the second ground of appeal because we reverse on the first. It is clear from the face of the record that all the plaintiffs’ problems in this case are traceable directly to their accountant’s ignorance of the regulations specifically authorized by G. L. c. 62, § 63(c), inserted by St. 1958, c. 308, § 1, and in effect prior to St. 1973, c. 723, § 11, which are now found in 830 Code Mass. Regs. § 12:01(4) (1979) and to the accountant’s failure to take an appeal to the Appellate Tax Board under G. L. c. 62C, § 39(c), inserted by St. 1976, c. 415, § 22, or to advise the plaintiffs to do so.
So ordered.
We have not been told why the plaintiffs did not appeal from so much of the final judgment as dismissed the action as to the accountant.