OPINION
Bоbby Blu Greene appeals from the trial court’s final judgment finding him personally liable for past due sales tax, penalties, and interest owed by Greene’s Gold and Diamonds, Inc. (“Greene’s Gold”), based on past forfeitures of Greene’s Gold’s corporate privileges.
See
Tex. Tax Code Ann. § 171.255 (West 2008). On appeal, Greene argues that he cannot be held personally liable for sales tax as an officer and director of Green’s Gold because there was
BACKGROUND
In September 1998, the Comptroller randomly selected Greene’s Gold, a Dallas-area wholesale and retail jewelry business, for a sales tax audit. This audit originally encompassed the periods of February 1, 1995 through October 31, 1998, but was later extended to cover the periods of July 1, 1992 through July 31, 1999. Upon completing the audit, the Comptroller notified Greene’s Gold that its audit results indicated a total sales tax liability of $1,121,471.81. Greene’s Gold then requested a redetermination of its tax liability. The Comptroller granted this request and, as a result of the redetermination proceeding, amended Greene’s Gold’s audit results to delete one of the two fraud penalties that had been assessed, remove two audit periods from the assessment, and reduce the amount of unreported gross sales. In September 2005, the Comptroller notified Greene’s Gold that its redetermination was complete and that its amended tax liability totaled $1,479,837.29. 1
In December 2005, Greene’s Gold entered federal bankruptcy proceedings, thus precluding the relevant taxing authorities from suing Greene’s Gold directly to recover the tax amounts due. As a result, in February 2006, the State of Texas, the City of Dallas, and the Transit Authority of Dallas (collectively, “the State”), filed suit against Greene and Legacy Exquisite Jewelers, Inc. (“Legacy”) in an attempt to collect the amount of Greene’s Gold’s sales tax liability. The State sued Greene individually as an officer and director of Greene’s Gold under tax code section 171.255, which рrovides that officers and directors may be held personally liable for debts incurred by a corporation during a period in which corporate privileges have been forfeited. 2 See id. The State sought to impose tax liability against Legacy, a jewelry business owned by Greene’s mother and incorporated in 2004, as a successor to Greene’s Gold’s tax liability and as a fraudulent transferee, under the theory that Greene’s Gold had sold its assets to Legacy in a sham transaction for the purpose of avoiding tax liability. See id. § 111.020 (West 2008) (purchaser of business may be held liable for seller’s tax liability in absence of certain precautionary measures), § 111.024 (West 2008) (person acquiring business through fraudulent transfer or sham transaction is liable for taxes owed by seller).
A bench trial was hеld in October 2008, during which the State presented evidence that Greene’s Gold’s corporate privileges were forfeited on four separate occasions during the audit period and that during these periods of forfeiture, the total amount of tax, interest, and penalties assessed against Greene’s Gold totaled $1,095,842.95. The State also presented evidence related to its theories of successor liability in connection with Legacy. After hearing the evidence, the trial court rendered judgment against Legacy for
In his first two issues on appeal, Greene argues that the trial court erred in imposing officer and director liability against him under section 171.255 because the State failed to establish that the Comptroller had fully complied with the notice requirements of section 171.256. See id. § 171.256 (West 2008) (requiring Comptroller to notify corporation at least 45 days before forfeiture of corporate privileges). In his third issue on appeal, Greene contends that the trial judge who presided over the bench trial in this case did not have authority to sign the final judgment because she retired from office on December 31, 2008, -but did not sign the final judgment until January 7, 2009.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
Greene’s arguments regarding the notice requirement of tax code section 171.256 turn on a question of statutory construction, which we review de novo.
See City of Rockwall v. Hughes,
The qualification of a retired judge to preside over a case is a jurisdictional issue that cannot be waived and may be raised at any time.
See Houston Gen. Ins. Co. v. Ater,
DISCUSSION
Authority of District Judge to Sign Final Judgment
Because Greene’s argument that the district judge lacked authority to sign the final judgment implicates the trial court’s jurisdiction, we will resolve this issue before turning to Greene’s arguments under the tax code. Judge Cooper, the district judge who presided over the bench trial in this case in October 2008, retired at thе end of her term of office on December 31, 2008. At the close of evidence on October 15, 2008, Judge Cooper requested additional briefing from the parties on certain issues, stating, “[T]hen I’ll issue a letter ruling and request that one of you prepare an order and circulate it pursuant to our local rules for approval as to form.” The parties submitted additional briefing as requested, and on December 2, 2008, Judge Cooper issued a letter to the parties stating that “judgment is rendered for the plaintiffs on all claims and plaintiffs are awarded their attorneys’ fees. [Counsel for the State] is requested to prepare a form of judgment, circulate to all counsel for approval as to form, and submit to the court for signature.” This letter was filed
Greene contends that because Judge Cooper was retired and was not sitting by assignment at the time the final judgment was signed, she lacked authority to sign the judgment and the judgment is therefore void as a matter of law.
See Ex parte Eastland,
The State takes the position that Judge Cooper’s letter to the parties, written and filed with the clerk during her term of office, represented the rendition of final judgment and therefore preserved her authority to later sign the form of the final judgment and the findings of fact and conclusions of law. Greene argues in responsе that a letter to the parties cannot represent the rendition of judgment, citing to cases in which Texas courts have held that a letter to the parties does not represent a final, appealable order.
See Goff v. Tuchscherer,
In short, the rendition of judgment and the signing of a written judgment are not synonymous.
Burns v. Bishop,
A letter to the parties that describes the court’s findings and asks the parties to prepare a judgment, while insufficient to serve as an appealable order, can serve as the rendition of judgment if it is filed with the clerk.
See Abarca v. Roadstar Corp. of Am.,
The question, then, is whether Judge Cooper’s December 2 letter to the parties represented the rendition of judgment in this case, so that her subsequent act of signing the judgment was a ministerial act that “merely recorded this rendition.”
Id.
If so, she retained judicial capacity to sign the judgment and findings of fact, even after the expiration of her term of office.
See Texas Life Ins. Co.,
The above-captioned matter came on for trial on the merits on October 13-15, 2008. Having heard the evidence and considered the arguments of counsel, as well as the post-trial briеfing, judgmentis rendered for the plaintiffs on all claims and plaintiffs are awarded their attorneys’ fees. [Counsel for the State] is requested to prepare a form of judgment, circulate to all counsel for approval as to form, and submit to the court for signature.
(Emphasis added.) The present-tense language of Judge Cooper’s letter, stating that “judgment is rendered,” indicates her intent to render judgment at that time, rather than at some point in the future once the form of judgment had been prepared. We “give deference to the trial court’s factual determination regarding whether it previously rendered judgment.”
In re Dickerson,
Greene argues that Judge Cooper’s letter cannot represent the rendition of judgment because it does not specifically state the monetary amounts awarded. While the terms of a final judgment must be certain and definite, the “total amount of money need not be stated in dollars and cents if the correct amount can be ascertained by the pleadings.”
Jones v. Liberty Mut. Ins. Co.,
Because of the unique nature of a sales tax collection proceeding, the specific amount of the judgment could easily be ascertained by reference to the pleadings. Section 111.013 of the tax code provides that in a suit involving the establishment or collection of certain taxes, including sales tax, a delinquency certificate from the Comptroller is prima facie evidence of:
(1) the stated tax or amount of the tax, after all just and lawful offsets, payments, and credits have been allowed;
(2) the stated amount of penalties and interest;
(3) the delinquency of the amounts; and
(4) the compliance of the comptroller with the applicable provisions of this code in computing and determining the amount due.
Tex. Tax Code Ann. § 111.013(a) (West 2008). The record in this case contains two relevant delinquency certificates from the Comptroller — one setting forth the sales tax liability of Legacy as a transferee of Greene’s Gold and one setting forth Greene’s individual liability under section 151.255. The form of judgment ultimately signed by Judge Cooper incorporates the amounts listed on these delinquency certificates, stating that the amounts awarded “reflect the state, city, and transit authority sales tax, penalties, and interest shown on the Trial Certificate calculated through October 13, 2008.” The prejudgment interest listed on the form of judgment is also consistent with the delinquency certificates, which provide that after October 13, 2008, additional interest will accrue at $181.34 per day for Legacy and $116.05 per day for Greene. In rendering judgment in favor of the State on all claims, Judge Cooper’s letter necеssarily awarded the amounts of taxes, penalties, and interest stated on the Comptroller’s delinquency certificates.
Based on the unique facts of this case, in which the amount of tax liability was clearly delineated by the Comptrоller’s delinquency certificate and the appropriate amount of an attorneys’ fee award had been resolved by stipulation of the parties, we conclude that Judge Cooper’s letter, stating that “judgment is rendered” for the State on all claims, was sufficiently definite to constitute the rendition of judgment.
See Jones,
Greene also argues that Judge Cooper’s failure to enter judgment on the court’s docket sheet prior to the expiration of her term is dispositive as to her capacity to sign the final judgment, citing
Martinez v. Martinez,
As the Texas Supreme Court held in
Storrie v. Shaw,
“We fail to see any sound objection to the conclusion that upon the retirement of a judge the judicial function survives and continues so far as necessary for him to complete that which reflects the opеrations of his own mind or relates to his own conduct in the particular case.”
Officer & Director Liability under the Tax Code
In his remaining issues on appeal, Greene argues that the trial court erred in imposing officer and director liability against him under section 171.255 of the tax code. Specifically, Greene argues in his first issue thаt the notice provision in section 171.256 of the tax code creates a statutory prerequisite to the forfeiture of corporate privileges and that because the State failed to prove the Comptroller’s compliance with section 171.256, it cannot seek to impose officer and director liability against him under section 171.255. In his second issue, Greene argues that the trial court erred in relying on a “presumption of regularity” to determine that the Comptroller did in fact satisfy the notice requirements of section 171.256.
Section 171.251 of the tax code authorizes the Comptroller to forfeit the corporate privileges of a corporation that fails to file its franchise tax report or pay its franchise taxes. Tex. Tax Code Ann. § 171.251 (Wеst 2008). Section 171.256 describes the procedure for providing notice of an impending forfeiture:
(a) If the comptroller proposes to forfeit the corporate privileges of a corporation, the comptroller shall notify the corporation that the forfeiture will occur without a judicial proceeding unless the corporation:
(1) files' [its franchise tax report within 45 days]; or
(2) pays [its delinquent franchise tax and any penalties within 45 days].
(b) The notice shall be written or printed and shall be verified by the seal of the comptroller’s office.
(c) The comptroller shall mail the notice to the corporation at least 45 days before the forfeiture of corporate privileges. The notice shall be addressed to the corporation and mailed to the аddress named in the corporation’s charter as its principal place of business or to another known place of business of the corporation.
(d) The comptroller shall keep at the comptroller’s office a record of the date on which the notice is mailed. For the purposes of this chapter, the notice and the record of the mailing date constitute legal and sufficient notice of the forfeiture.
Id.
§ 171.256. Greene takes the position that the State failed to demonstrate the Comptroller’s compliance with section 171.256 because it did not present sufficient evidence that a notice of forfeiture
If the corporate privileges of a corporation are forfeited for the failure to file a report or pay a tax or penalty, each director or officer of the corporation is liable for each debt on which the report, tax, or penalty is due and before the corporate privileges are revived. The liability includes liability for any tax or penalty imposed by this chapter on the corporation that becomes due and payable after the date of the forfeiture.
Id. § 171.255(a).
At trial, the State introduced Comptroller records showing that Greene’s Gold’s corporate privileges were forfeited for failure to satisfy franchise tax requirements on four separate occasions during the audit period. Greene does not dispute that Greene’s Gold qualified for forfeiture under section 171.251 for each of the four time periods in question, but argues that because the State failed to prove the Comptroller’s compliance with the notice requirements of section 171.256, it failed to prove that forfeiture properly occurred. Because Greene’s arguments are based on the premise that the notice requirements of section 171.256 are conditions precedent to the imposition of officer and director liability under section 171.255, we will first address this issue before considering whether such compliance was established at trial.
I. Conditions Precedent to Officer and Director Liability
There is no indicаtion in the plain language of sections 171.255 or 171.256 that officer and director liability is contingent upon pre-forfeiture notice to the corporation. This Court recently addressed a similar issue in
State v. Montano,
holding that while the Texas Ethics Commission is statutorily required to provide notice of late-filed financial disclosure and campaign finance reports, notice is not a prerequisite for the imposition of penalties for late-filed reports.
The statute is the notice of both the requirement and the deadline. Missing the statutory deadline implicates a statutory penalty. The fact that the TEC is required to send notice of a determination that a penalty will be imposed does not affect the fact that filers are statutorily on notice of the requirement to file, the deadline for filing, and the penalties for late filing.
Id. at 857. Similarly, officers and directors are statutorily on notice that a corporation’s failure to fulfill franchise tax requirements will result in the forfeiture of corporate privileges, which in turn will subject them to personal liability for debts incurred during the time of forfeiture. See Tex. Tax Code Ann. §§ 171.251, .255. The connection between the notice requirement of section 171.256 and the personal liability imposed under section 171.255 is in fact weaker than the connection between the provisions at issue in Montano, as the election code at least requires that notice be given to the same party against whom penalties would be assessed. In contrast, the tax code contains no requirement that the Comptroller notify the officers and directors themselves of the impending forfeiture of corporate privileges, requiring only that notice be mailed to the corporation. See id. § 171.256. 6
We may not judicially amend a statute to add new requirements.
See Lee v. City of Houston,
Greene also argues that because sections 171.255 and 171.256 contain no provision for notice to the officers and directors themselves before personal tax liability attaches, they violate due process and are facially unconstitutional. He further contends that these statutory provisions are unconstitutional as applied to him in this case because the trial court did not require the State to prove that notice had been
The imposition of tax liability without prior notice and a hearing does not represent an unconstitutional deprivation of due process when the tax code allows for a de novо review of the party’s tax liability in state court.
See Texas Alcoholic Beverage Comm’n v. Macha,
II. Compliance with Section 171.256
Even if we did consider compliance with section 171.256 to be a prerequisite for officer and director liability under 171.255, the State sufficiently established that the Comptroller fulfilled the statutory requirements in this case. At trial, the State presented the Comptroller’s record of Greene’s Gold’s franchise tax history, which contained four separate, dated entries marked, “DELINQUENT NOTICE.” Each notice entry was followed by an entry marked, “FORFEIT CORP PRIV,” each of which was dated at least 45 days after the notice entry, consistent with the requirement that notices be mailed at
While Greene contends that the State was also obligated to produce copies of each notice of impending forfeiture or records indicating the contents of each notice and the address to which it was sent, there is no basis in the plain language of section 171.256 for such an obligation. The only record-keeping requirement imposed on the Comptroller is to maintain “a record of the date on which the notice is mailed.”
Id.
§ 171.256(d). Greene points to the second sentence of subsection (d), which provides that “the notice and the record of the mailing date constitute legal and suffiсient notice of the forfeiture,” in support of his argument that the Comptroller must maintain a copy of the written notice itself in addition to a record of the mailing date.
Id.
However, words and phrases in a statute must be read in context.
See
Tex. Gov’t Code Ann. § 311.011(a) (West 2005). Section 171.256(d), in its entirety, states, “The comptroller shall keep at the comptroller’s office a record of the date on which the notice is mailed. For the purposes of this chapter, the notice and the record of the mailing date constitute legal and sufficient notice of the forfeiture.” Tex. Tax Code Ann. § 171.256(d). Under the plain language of the statute, the only record required to be kept “at the comptroller’s office” is the record of the mailing date.
Id.
To require the Comptroller to maintain both a record of the mailing date and a copy of the notice itself would require us to read extra words into the statute, which we cannot do.
See Lee,
In light of the foregoing, we hold that the State established the Comptroller’s compliance with tax code section 171.256 by producing records of the mailing date of a pre-forfeiture notice for each of the four periods of forfeiture for which it sought to hold Greene personally liable. 8
We overrule Greene’s first and second issues on appeal.
CONCLUSION
We affirm the trial court’s judgment.
Notes
. Despite the downward adjustments made by the Comptroller after its redetermination of the audit results, the accumulation of interest caused Greene’s Gold’s amended tax liability to exceed the original liability amount.
. Greene was the sole officer and director of Greene’s Gold.
. The judgment also assessed prejudgment interest against Legacy at $181.34 per day after October 13, 2008, the date through which liability was calculated for purposes of the Comptroller’s trial certificate. See Tex. Tax Code Ann. § 111.013 (West 2008) (providing that in tax collection suit, "a certificate of the comptroller that shows a delinquency is pri-ma facie evidence” of stated amount of tax, penalties, and interest). Greene was found jointly and severally liable for prejudgment interest in the amount of $116.05 per day.
. Legacy did not appeal the trial court’s judgment.
. The State was entitled to recover attorneys' fees under government code section 2107.006, which provides that “the attorney general may recover reasonable attorney fees” in any proceeding in which the State seeks to collect or recover a delinquent obligation. Tex. Gov't Code Ann. § 2107.006 (West 2008).
.
Officers and directors may avoid liability for debts of the corporation incurred over their objection or without their knowledge. See Tex. Tax Code Ann. § 171.255 (West 2008). The
. This argument appears to be based on the notion that notice mailed to the corporation's principal place of business as required by section 171.256 could also be considered notice to the corporation’s officers and directors. Specifically, Greene argues, "Unless Sections 171.255 and 171.256(c) are construed in a manner to provide notice to both the corporation at the address stated in the statute and to its officers and directors at that same address, both Sections 171.255 and 171.256 are unconstitutional as applied by the trial court in this case.”
. Given our determination that the State conclusively established compliance with the notice requirement under section 171.256, we need not address the question of whether the State had the burden of proving such compliance or whether, as the State contends, Greene bore the burden of proving lack of notice as an affirmative defense. Similarly, because section 171.256 contains no requirement that the Comptroller maintain a record of the address to which the notice was sent, we need not reach Greene’s argument that the trial court improperly relied on a common-law rule presuming the regularity of official acts in determining that the notice was mailed to the address listed by Greene’s Gold on all documents filed with the Comptroller.
