Opinion
Plаintiffs Peter Masi and Sheila Masi, doing business as California Home Cleaning (taxpayers), appeal from summary judgment entered in favor of defendant Alice Gonzalez, Director of Employment Development Department (EDD), in the taxpayers’ action for a refund of taxes assessed and collected by EDD as employer contributions under the Unemployment Insurance Code. 1 Summary judgment was granted on the ground that payment of the entire assessment, which covered several quarterly reporting periods, was a precondition to suit. On appeal, the taxpayers contend their payment of that portion of the assessment attributablе to one reporting period entitles them to maintaih a refund action as to that one reporting period. We disagree and will affirm the judgment.
Factual and Procedural Background
In 1985, EDD audited the taxpayers’ carpet cleaning business and, upon its determination that certain workers were employees rather than independent contractors, assessed a tax liability for unemployment insurance contributions. The notice of assessment encompassed several quarterly reporting periods from 1983 through 1985. The notice of assessment calculated the tax liability for each reporting period and added those figures for a total “Amount [] Due and Payable” of $33,912.50.
The taxpayers filed an administrative petition for reassessment, which was denied in 1988. In 1989, the taxpayers paid $548.23, which represented the tax and interest for only one reporting period—the first quarter of 1983. The taxpayers sought a refund of the $548.23. EDD applied the payment to the 1983 first quarter, per the taxpayers’ request, but advised that a refund claim could not be reviewed until the entire amount of the $33,912.50 assessment was paid. In the taxpayers’ pursuit of administrative recourse, an administrative law judge and the appeals board upheld EDO’s position.
The trial court granted EDO’s summary judgment motion on the ground that full payment of the total amount due was a preconditiоn to suit.
Discussion
The taxpayers contend payment of the entire tax for one reporting period out of a multiple-reporting-period assessment is sufficient to maintain a refund action, because the action does not require litigation of the validity of tax liability for the unpaid periods and will not interfere with tax collection for the unpaid periods. We will conclude the taxpayers’ arguments are unavailing, because the relevant statutes require full payment of the multiple-reporting-period assessment under the circumstances of this case.
“In order to challenge a [] tax, the taxpayer must first pay the tax, then follow statutory procedures for recovery. Thus, California Constitution, article XIII, section 32 . . . provides: ‘No legal or equitable process shall issue in any proceeding in any court against this State or any officer thereof to prevent or enjoin the collection of any tax. After payment of a tax claimed to be illеgal, an action may be maintained to recover the tax paid, with interest,
in such manner as may be provided by the
Legislature.’ (Italics added.)”
(Shiseido Cosmetics (America) Ltd.
v.
Franchise Tax Bd.
(1991)
The applicable statutory scheme—virtually ignored by the parties on appeal—is as follows:
The reporting period for employer contributions to unemployment insurance is on a quarterly calendar basis. (Unemp. Ins. Code, §§ 1088, 1110, 13021; undesignated statutory rеferences are to this code.)
Here, one notice of assessment was served for one “Amount [] Due and Payable” for more than one period. We conclude this constitutes one assessment, for $33,912.50.
Where, as here, a taxpayer files a prepayment administrative petition for reassessment, and that petition is denied, the taxpayer must pay “the amount of the assessment” as a рrecondition to further administrative or judicial review. Thus, section 1178, subdivision (d) provides: “Following a final decision denying a petition for reassessment pursuant to Article 11 (commencing with Section 1221), the employing unit or other person which was a party to the petition may file a claim for refund upon payment of the amount of the assessment, including interest and penalties, and thereafter may pursue all administrative and judicial review rights accorded in Article 11 (commencing with Section 1221) and Article 12 (commencing with Section 1241).” (Italics added.) 2 The filing of the refund claim is a precondition to judicial action. (§ 1241, subd. (a).)
Sections 1130 and 1178, subdivision (d), end the matter in FDD’s favоr. FDD was authorized to and did make one $33,912.50 assessment for multiple reporting periods. The taxpayers’ failure to pay the $33,912.50 assessment (plus interest and penalties) is fatal to this action.
The parties do not address these statutes. The taxpayers instead argue the code authorizes this action because seсtion 1178, subdivision (b) 3 requires that a claim for refund be made within a certain time after the date of “overpayment.” However, this statute of limitations is of no help in resolving the antecedent question of what amount must be paid.
We conclude the statutes required the taxpayers to pay the $33,912.50 assessment plus interest and penalties as a precondition to this action.
The taxpayers rely on
State Bd. of Equalization
v.
Superior Court
(1985)
The taxpayers complain their action for refund of the $548.23 will be barred by the statute of limitations if they “wait” until the entirе assessment
In
Chahine,
the taxpayer sought a refund in 1986 of amоunts paid in installments between 1972 and 1985 toward satisfaction of tax liability assessed in a 1971 audit. (
In this appeal, no statute of limitations question is presented. However, the Unemployment Insurance Code contains similar limitations provisions to those considered in Chahine. Thus, section 1178, subdivision (b) (fn. 3, ante), provides that an administrative refund claim must be filed within certain time limits after an alleged overpayment. And section 1241, subdivision (a), makes a refund claim a precondition to court action and provides that “[fjailure to bring action within the time specified [following denial of refund claim] constitutes a waiver of any demand against the state on account of alleged overpayments. . . .”
Thus, applying
Chahine
to this сase, the limitations period for seeking a refund of the $548.23 (which the taxpayers allege is an overpayment) began to run upon payment of the $548.23. Yet we hold—as compelled by the statutes—that the taxpayers cannot seek refund of the $548.23 until they
The taxpayers claim this creates a “Catch-22” for taxpayers whose financial situation requires that they pay an assessmеnt in installments rather than a lump sum: “If they file when each payment is made, their claims will be dismissed as premature. If they wait until they have paid the entire tax, their claims [for refund of the first installment payments] will be dismissed as too late.”
However, the taxpayers could have avoided any “Catch-22” by making one full payment of the $33,912.50 assessmеnt before seeking a refund. Moreover, even assuming financial inability to pay the entire multiple-reporting-period assessment in one lump sum, the asserted dilemma is no different than that of a taxpayer who is unable to make one lump sum payment of a single assessment for a single reporting period. Thus, the asserted dilemma is created not by our decision that the statutes require full payment of the assessment in this case but solely by the financial situation of the taxpayer and the absence of any statutory authorization allowing the taxpayer to hold open the statute of limitations on partial payments of an assessed tax liаbility.
We know of nothing prohibiting a financially strapped taxpayer from negotiating a partial payment plan with a stipulation by EDD to toll the statute of limitations. (See
Chahine, supra,
Nevertheless, assuming EDD would not agree to accept partial payments in exchange for a stipulation to toll the statute of limitations, the taxpayers have no recourse in this forum. “The argument that compliance with the statute may cause hardship in sоme instances is one which can be addressed only to the Legislature.”
(Modern Barber Col.
v.
Cal. Emp. Stab. Com.
(1948)
We conclude the taxpayer’s inability unilaterally to hold open the statute of limitations by making partial payments of an assessed tax liability does
In view of our disposition, we see no materiality in the taxpayers’ argument that they should be allowed to maintain this action because it would not interfere with EDO’s collection of taxes for the other reporting periods covered by the assessment. It is also unnecessary to address EDO’s argument that a full payment requirement is necessarily implied by provisions in section 1241, subdivisions (b) and (c), allowing religious organizations to challenge denial of an exemption upon payment of amounts assessed for one quarter.
We conclude the trial court properly granted EDO’s motion for summary judgment.
Disposition
The judgment is affirmed.
Puglia, P. J., and Nicholson, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied May 21, 1992, and appellants’ petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied July 16, 1992.
Notes
The director of EDD is the named defendant. Because of the unity of interest of the director and EDD, our designation “EDD” includes the director. Since entry of judgment, Thomas Nagle has replaced Alice Gonzalez as director.
This key provision was added to section 1178 in 1986 (Stats. 1986, ch. 89, § 3, p. 220, eff. May 13, 1986), hence applies here where the petition for reassessment was denied in 1988 and payment made in 1989.
Section 1178, subdivision (b), provides in part: “No refund shall be made or credit allowed unless a claim therefor is filed with the director within three years from the last day of the calendar month following the close of the calendar quarter for which the
overpayment
was made or within six months after assessments made under Article 8 (commencing with Section
