PASCP Inc., Relator, vs. Commissioner of Revenue, Respondent.
A25-1191
STATE OF MINNESOTA IN SUPREME COURT
June 3, 2026
Moore, III, J. Took no part, Hudson, C.J.
Tax Court. Filed: June 3, 2026, Office of Appellate Courts
Keith Ellison, Attorney General, Joseph Weiner, Assistant Attorney General, Saint Paul, Minnesota, for respondent.
SYLLABUS
- The tax court did not err when it concluded that the Commissioner of Revenue properly extended the statute of limitations period to 6½ years under
Minn. Stat. § 289A.38, subd. 6 . - The tax court did not err when it concluded that the Commissioner of Revenue’s imposition of the negligence penalty under
Minn. Stat. § 289A.60, subd. 5 was proper.
Affirmed.
OPINION
MOORE, III, Justice.
The tax dispute here concerns the Commissioner of Revenue’s application of the 6½-year statute of limitations under
FACTS
The facts here are undisputed. PASCP is a retail liquor store in Circle Pines doing business as Down Under Liquor. On June 25, 2020, the Commissioner of Revenue notified PASCP that it had been selected for a sales and use tax audit. The Commissioner requested records, including sales records, for the tax periods April 2017 through May 2020. During the audit, PASCP provided purchase records, bank statements, and sales
Because of the lack of accurate sales records, the Commissioner conducted an indirect audit1 of PASCP using the year 2019 as the sample period.2 Relying on documentation from vendors reflecting PASCP’s 2019 purchases, аs well as PASCP’s own retail price list, the Commissioner estimated PASCP’s retail sales for 2019. First, the Commissioner subtracted sales reported on PASCP’s sales and use tax return from PASCP’s estimated sales to determine PASCP’s unreported taxable sales for 2019. Next, the Commissioner divided the unreported taxable sales by the reported taxable sales for 2019 to determine the apportionment factor (error rate). Based on these calculations, the Commissioner concluded that liquor sales and other taxable sales for PASCP should have been, respectively, 140.84 percent and 124.56 percent higher than the sales PASCP reported on its sales and use tax returns. Finally, the Commissioner applied the
Based on the results of the audit, on August 9, 2021, the Commissioner issued a Tax Order, assessing PASCP additional tax of $500,615.08, penalties of $51,207.18, and interest of $87,639.30, for a total liability of $639,461.56 for the tаx periods from January 2015 through June 2020. PASCP filed an administrative appeal on October 7, 2021, disputing the determinations in the Tax Order, disagreeing with the computation of the Commissioner’s sales reconstruction, and contesting the extension of the statute of limitations. In response to the administrative appeal, on August 4, 2022, the Commissioner рrovided PASCP a secondary analysis of PASCP’s S-Corp returns which showed “the sales reported for sales tax purposes were consistently and substantially lower than the actual purchases made and the gross receipt[s] for this business” and reiterated his audit conclusion. Then, on November 2, 2022, the Commissioner issued a Notice of Dеtermination on Appeal, affirming the Tax Order’s change in tax, penalty, and interest.
On December 29, 2022, PASCP timely filed an appeal of the Commissioner’s Notice of Determination with the tax court. After discovery, the Commissioner moved for summary judgment, arguing that there were no material facts in dispute, his indirect audit
The tax court granted summary judgment for the Commissioner. The tax court found that PASCP did not identify any evidence creating a fact dispute. Quoting statements by PASCP’s counsel at the motion hearing, the tax court determined that PASCP had implicitly conceded that it did not have evidence to dispute the indirect audit method and that PASCP only speculated that additional facts might be developed through cross-examination.3 The tax court found that the Commissioner appropriately extended the period of assessment to 6½ years under
ANALYSIS
PASCP raisеs two issues on appeal. PASCP argues that the tax court erred in granting summary judgment for the Commissioner with respect to: (1) the application of the extended 6½-year statute of limitations period under
We review decisions of the tax court to ensure that the tax court had jurisdiction, that the tax court applied the law сorrectly, and that the evidence supported the tax court’s decision.
Here, as before the tax court, PASCP makes no argument that there is a genuine issue of material fact. Therefore, resolutiоn of the issues raised depends on whether the tax court erred as a matter of law. See Dakota Drug, Inc. v. Comm’r of Revenue, 13 N.W.3d 387, 390 (Minn. 2024) (stating where the material facts are undisputed, “the only question before us is whether the tax court correctly applied Minnesota law.”). “The tax
I.
We begin with PASCP’s argument that application of the 6½-year statute of limitations period—which applies if the taxpayer underreports its taxes by more than 25 percent—was erroneous. PASCP argues that the Commissioner bears the burden of persuasion to demonstrate that PASCP underreported its taxes by more than 25 рercent and that he failed to meet that burden here. The Commissioner disagrees, arguing that PASCP, as the taxpayer, retains the burden of persuasion throughout the proceedings. The Commissioner also argues that, no matter who bears the burden of persuasion, he met his burden here.
Minnesota statutes section 289A.38 governs the limitations on time for assessment of tax. The dispute here hinges on whether the 3½-year limitations period in subdivision 1 or the 6½-year limitations period in subdivision 6 applies. Subdivision 1 states: “Except as otherwise provided in this section, the amount of taxes assessable must be assessed within 3-1/2 years after the date the return is filed.”
The tax court declined to decide which party bears the burden of persuasion because it concluded that “the burden of production and persuasion ha[d] been met by the Commissioner[.]” PASCP Inc. v. Comm’r of Revenue, No. 9566 R, 2025 WL 4742103, at *6 (Minn. T.C. June 26, 2025). The tax court concluded that “[PASCP’s] underpayment of tax during the 2019 sample audit period furnishe[d] the Commissioner with a reasonable basis to infer underpayment for other tax periods.” Id.
PASCP disputes the tax court’s decision, arguing that “a reаsonable basis to infer” is not enough for the Commissioner to meet his burden of persuasion. PASCP argues that applying a tax underreporting rate from an indirect audit constructed from data for 2019 to periods going back as far as 2015 gets into the realm of speculation. PASCP contends that while such speculation may be sufficient fоr periods within the 3½-year statute of limitations period, where the taxpayer has the burden to demonstrate the incorrectness of the Commissioner’s adjustments, speculation is not sufficient to trigger the 6½-year statute of limitations, where the Commissioner bears the burden of persuasion.
We are unpersuaded by PASCP’s argument. The Commissioner has the power and duty to “use statistical or other sampling techniques consistent with generally accepted auditing standards in examining returns or records and making assessments[.]”4
It is undisputed that (1) PASCP did not keep adequate records for the taxable years at issue, (2) PASCP accepts the results of the indirect audit, and (3) those results show that PASCP underreported its sales taxes by more than 25 percent. No matter who bears the burden of persuasion, these undisputed facts establish that the Commissioner met his burden. Accordingly, the tax court did not err when it concluded that the Commissioner properly extended the statute of limitations period to 6½ years under
II.
Next, we consider PASCP’s argument that the imposition of the negligence penalty under
Section 289A.60, subdivision 5 provides the circumstances under which the penalty at issue may be imposed:
If part of an additiоnal assessment is due to negligence or intentional disregard of the provisions of the applicable tax laws or rules of the commissioner, but without intent to defraud, there must be added to the tax an amount equal to ten percent of the additional assessment.
While PASCP is correct that intent requires a state-of-mind analysis, negligence does not. See Florenzano v. Olson, 387 N.W.2d 168, 174 (Minn. 1986) (“Proof of the subjective state of the misrepresenter’s mind, whether by direct evidence or by inference, is not needed to prove negligence. Negligence is proved by measuring one’s conduct against an objective standard of reasonable care or competence.”). Negligence is an objective standard and “is generally defined as the failure to exercise such care as persons
Given the legal obligations to maintain books and records, see
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the decision of the tax court.
Affirmed.
HUDSON, C.J., took no part in the consideration or decision of this case.
