14 Or. Tax 112 | Or. T.C. | 1997
Decision for defendant rendered January 27, 1997.
Aff'd
DeArmond testified that on April 18, 1994, (three days after the period for filing a claim for refund expired) he received a copy of the audit report from the state of Idaho which indicated that taxpayers owed Idaho additional income taxes of $10,452. Taxpayers took this assessment to their accountant, discussed it with him, and eventually paid the Idaho tax. Taxpayers assumed they would receive a tax credit from Oregon. On June 27, 1994, after having paid the Idaho tax, they filed an amended Oregon income tax return claiming the tax credit and resulting refund. The department refused the refund on the ground that the three-year refund period in ORS
ORS
"(3) The department shall provide by rule the procedure for obtaining credit provided by this section and the proof required." ORS
316.082 (3).
In accordance with the authority delegated to it, the department has adopted a rule. The relevant part of that rule provides:
"(3) The credit may be taken either at the time of filing returns or subsequently.
"* * * * *
"(5) A taxpayer shall be allowed a credit for taxes paid to another state when the other state's taxes have been paid. If the other state's taxes have not been paid before the credit is claimed on the Oregon tax return, no credit shall be allowed. When the other state's taxes are paid, the taxpayer must file a refund claim in order to receive such credit. If any subsequent change or correction is made to the taxpayer's liability which also changes the credit allowed under ORS
316.082 , the taxpayer shall amend the Oregon return for which such credit was originally allowed." OAR150-316.082(3) .
Taxpayers recognize that ORS
*115"No refund shall be allowed or made after three years from the time the return was filed, or two years from the time the tax or a portion thereof was paid, whichever period expires the later * * *."
However, taxpayers contend that the department's rule for obtaining a tax credit overrides the refund statute. They assert that a refund arising from a tax credit is somehow different than a refund arising from other causes or credits and therefore falls outside the general refund statute. Taxpayers do not point to any statute which provides a separate refund procedure.
The authority delegated to the department by the legislature in ORS
1. Furthermore, as a general principle, an administrative agency cannot authorize by rule that which a statute prohibits. McLainv. Lafferty,
2. The court can find no indication that the legislature intended ORS
Under the facts in this case, the period for obtaining a refund not only expired before taxpayers knew they had a claim, it expired before the claim even arose. The Idaho tax assessment was not received and the tax was not paid until after the three-year period had expired. Consequently, it is not a question of notice. The question is whether Oregon may let its refund period expire before Idaho imposes the tax.
The cases cited by taxpayers in support of their due process argument are not applicable. In Kent, the court found that the Due Process Clause requires the department to give notice to a taxpayer of its intent to adjust the amount of a taxpayer's claimed refund. Here, taxpayers are not claiming that the department failed to give them notice. Doe involved a statute of limitations for the recovery of damages from injury due to tortious conduct. The court resolved that issue as a matter of statutory construction, not due process analysis.
Brockamp was also not decided on due process grounds. There, the court applied the doctrine of equitable tolling to toll the statute of limitations. The taxpayer's over-payment of taxes and failure to file a claim for refund were due to his mental incompetence. The court found that the statute of limitations should be equitably tolled in such circumstances. Brockamp relied on the Supreme Court case of Irwin v. Dept. of Veterans Affairs,
"`where the claimant has actively pursued his judicial remedies by filing a defective pleading during the statutory period, or where the complainant has been induced or tricked by his adversary's misconduct into allowing the filing deadline to pass.'" Brockamp, 95-2 USTC (CCH) at 89,790 n 2 (quoting Irwin,
489 US at 96 ).
This is not the type of situation presented here.
3. Furthermore, other circuit courts have held that the doctrine of equitable tolling does not apply to the statute of limitations in tax refund cases. These courts have reached this conclusion by relying on more specific Supreme Court cases. See, e.g., Webb v.United States,
4. Due process and equitable tolling do not require Oregon to extend the period for which it allows a tax credit to produce a refund. Perhaps the legislature should make a provision for refunds due to tax credits that arise after the normal three-year refund period expires. However, that is a question for the legislature, not the courts. Until changed by the legislature, the law limits refunds without regard to why refund claims are filed more than three years after the return was due.
There are many circumstances where a taxpayer may fail to file a refund claim within the three-year period. This court has heard cases involving house fires, divorced spouses holding the tax records hostage, and taxpayers engaged in extensive travel that results in involuntary *118 delays. The legislature has not seen fit to make provision for any of these particular circumstances and due process does not require it to do so.
In summary, income tax credits and deductions are matters of legislative grace. The conditions, extent, and effects of credits and deductions are matters governed by statute. Under Oregon's income tax scheme, deductions and credits are effective only if used and claimed within the periods allowed by the legislature. Taxpayers acknowledge that protective claims could have been filed2 to protect themselves even where audits by other states conclude after the three-year refund period. Yet, they argue that it would be unreasonable to require all Oregon taxpayers to file protective claims. However, reasonableness in procedures is in the same category of fairness in substance: both are matters for the legislature. So long as either is within the constitutional framework, it is for the legislature to determine what is reasonable.
The court finds that taxpayers' amended return was filed after the three year period allowed for claiming a refund; and, therefore, the department properly denied the refund. Department's Opinion and Order No. 95-4258 must be sustained. Costs to neither party.