EASTERN AIR LINES, INC. v. FULTON COUNTY.
73650
Court of Appeals of Georgia
July 13, 1987
Rehearing Denied July 31, 1987
183 Ga. App. 891 | 360 SE2d 425
BENHAM, Judge.
Theodore M. Forbes, Jr., Frederick G. Boynton, Edward H. Wasmuth, Jr., for appellant. Harold T. Daniel, Jr., William C. Gentry, for appellee.
Eastern Air Lines, Inc., filed this action to obtain a refund of ad valorem taxes collected by Fulton County on certain leasehold interests held by Eastern on property owned by the City of Atlanta and located at Hartsfield Atlanta International Airport. In addition, Eastern sought to collect prejudgment interest on the taxes, plus attorney fees based on the county‘s alleged bad faith and stubborn litigiousness.
Admitting that the leasehold interests were not taxable, the county tendered the principal amount of the tax payments into the registry of the court; however, in a brief in support of its motion for summary judgment, it asserted sovereign immunity from liability for prejudgment interest or attorney fees. This appeal is from the grant of the county‘s motion for summary judgment and the denial of Eastern‘s motion for summary judgment with respect to these latter claims.
In September of 1981, Eastern was notified by the Joint City-County Board of Tax Assessors for the City of Atlanta and Fulton County that the leasehold interests in question were considered to be subject to ad valorem taxation at a value in excess of ten million dollars. Eastern appealed, taking the position that the interests were non-taxable usufructuary interests rather than taxable interests in real property. The assessments were sustained by an arbitration panel and by the Superior Court of Fulton County, but Eastern ultimately prevailed in the Georgia Supreme Court. See Eastern Air Lines v. Joint City-County &c. Tax Assessors, 253 Ga. 18 (315 SE2d 890) (1984).
During the pendency of the appeals arising from the 1981 assessment, Eastern paid to Fulton County, under protest, a total of $271,086.32 in ad valorem taxes assessed on the interests for the 1981, 1982, and 1983 tax years. On February 22, 1984, in a letter addressed to “The Governing Authority of Fulton County c/o Fulton County Board of County Commissioners,” Eastern demanded a full refund of those taxes, based on its continuing position that the leasehold interests were not taxable. On May 22, 1984, the Supreme Court handed down its decision sustaining Eastern‘s position, and approximately a year later, on April 1, 1985, Eastern filed the present action. The county paid the taxes into the registry of the court on September 24, 1985. Eastern contends that, at the very least, it is entitled to recover prejudgment interest for the period between the date of its demand letter and the date of the refund.
1. Generally speaking, a claimant is entitled under Georgia law to recover prejudgment interest on a liquidated claim at the rate of 7
While it is true that
While this court has impliedly held that a taxpayer may recover prejudgment interest in an action to recover a refund of wrongfully collected property taxes (see Webb v. Coweta County, 178 Ga. App. 170 (342 SE2d 345) (1986)), the courts of this state do not appear to have had occasion to address the issue squarely. Recovery of prejudgment interest has, however, been authorized in suits against the state and its subdivisions to collect on other types of liquidated claims, notwithstanding the absence of any specific statutory authorization for such recovery. In Marion County v. First Nat. Bank of Gainesville, 193 Ga. 263 (7) (18 SE2d 475) (1942), the Supreme Court, relying on the predecessors to
To allow a taxpayer to recover prejudgment interest in an action for a refund of wrongfully collected taxes is not to sanction an additional claim against the taxing authority but is merely to afford the taxpayer full restitution of the benefit the taxing authority has received as a result of the overpayment. This is nothing more than the measure of recovery authorized in any action for money had and received, and to disallow it in tax refund cases on the basis of sovereign immunity would be to permit the taxing authority to commandeer with impunity the free use of the taxpayer‘s money. This we decline
2. We reject the county‘s contention that Eastern‘s demand letter was invalid because it was premature or otherwise technically defective. The county‘s position in this regard is based on the following emphasized portions of
We find this position to be totally untenable. Obviously, the Legislature did not intend to make the taxpayer‘s right to assert a claim for a tax refund contingent on a prior decision by the taxing authority or some unspecified appeals tribunal approving the as yet non-existent claim. Such an interpretation would render the statute totally meaningless and absurd. Rather,
The county further contends that Eastern‘s demand letter was ineffective because it was not in the proper form and did not contain certain information required by the county taxing authority to be contained therein. The contention that the form of the demand was
3. Based on its contention that Eastern‘s demand letter was defective, the county further contends the present action was filed prior to the expiration of one year after the date of a valid refund demand, in contravention of
4. In appellee‘s motion for summary judgment, the only defensive grounds raised with regard to appellant‘s claim for attorney fees were that appellant‘s demand for a refund was not timely or proper and that the suit for a refund was premature. Its arguments in support of those grounds are adequately refuted in the preceding divisions of this opinion.
Where there is no bona fide dispute with regard to liability, a defendant‘s action in forcing a plaintiff to bring suit in order to recover causes the plaintiff unnecessary trouble and expense within the meaning of that phrase in
The dissent asserts that counties are protected from claims for attorney fees as expenses of litigation by the doctrine of sovereign immunity, suggesting, in effect, that a claim for expenses of litigation
The dissent also seeks to draw a distinction between prejudgment interest and a claim for attorney fees, but the distinction is illusory: both of those elements of damage are based on conduct of the defendant with regard to the transaction which is the subject of the litigation, including the conduct of the litigation itself. Furthermore, the dissent‘s position that counties enjoy sovereign immunity from claims for attorney fees as expenses of litigation because there is currently no statute specifically authorizing such a recovery is inconsistent with concurrence in the holding that prejudgment interest can be recovered against a county: as we noted in Division 1 of this opinion, there is no specific statutory provision for the recovery of prejudgment interest, either.
This court has previously affirmed an award of attorney fees as expenses of litigation against a county in DeKalb County v. Daniels, 174 Ga. App. 319 (6) (329 SE2d 620) (1985), the case the dissent would overrule. To do so would create judicially an expanded immunity which the legislature and the voting populace have not chosen to confer on governmental entities. In an era in which legislatures and courts are exerting efforts to curb abuses of the litigation process, that is a step which we should not take.
As may be seen from the statement of the case in this opinion, appellee‘s conduct in the transaction here involved has been such that there is at least a question of fact with regard to appellant‘s entitlement to an award of attorney fees. The grant of summary judgment to appellee on that issue was error.
Judgment reversed. Birdsong, C. J., Deen, P. J., Carley, Sognier, and Pope, JJ., concur. Beasley, J., concurs in Divisions 1, 2, and 3, and in the judgment. McMurray, P. J., and Banke, P. J., concur in part and dissent in part.
BANKE, Presiding Judge, concurring in part and dissenting in part.
I wholeheartedly agree with the majority‘s holding that Eastern is entitled to prejudgment interest on the wrongfully assessed taxes. However, as much as I sympathize with the majority‘s desire to allow Eastern also to collect attorney fees pursuant to
With certain specific exceptions set forth in the Georgia Constitution, “[a] county is not liable to suit for any cause of action unless made so by statute.”
Suits against counties and municipalities to recover refunds of erroneously or illegally collected taxes are, of course, specifically authorized by
Because there is currently no statute specifically authorizing the recovery of attorney fees as expenses of litigation in a suit against a county, I am compelled to reach the conclusion that the county enjoys sovereign immunity from such claims. The Supreme Court‘s holding in DeKalb County v. Trustees &c. Elks, 242 Ga. 707 (251 SE2d 243) (1978), upon which the majority relied in all but the final draft of its opinion in this case, provides not even remote support for a contrary view. In the first place, the issue there was whether attorney fees were recoverable not as a penalty for bad faith or stubborn litigiousness but as an element of just and adequate compensation in eminent domain proceedings. In the second place, the Court‘s holding in that case was that attorney fees were not recoverable in such proceedings in the absence of specific legislative authorization. To the extent that this court‘s decision in DeKalb County v. Daniels, 174 Ga. App. 319 (6) (329 SE2d 620) (1985), may be considered authority for the majority‘s holding in Division 4 of the present case, it contravenes statutory and constitutional law and should be overruled rather than followed.
I am authorized to state Presiding Judge McMurray joins in this opinion.
