Lead Opinion
Bеfore this court are the collective appeals of 22 utility companies (“Appellants”) from the decision of the Commonwealth Court in Safe Harbor Water Power Corp., et al. v. Larry P. Williams, Secretary of Revenue,
These cases regard Appellants’ 1997 alleged liability for taxes imposed pursuant to the Public Utility Realty Tax Act (“PURTA”).
The procedure is as follows. Each year, the Department provides the utility with a form upon which the utility inserts the
The process by which the Department reconciles these shortfalls forms the basis for the instant dispute. The PUR-TA statute, specifically, 72 P.S. § 8104-A(b), sets forth a mechanism for the Department to assess the utilities with an additional supplemental tax, known as the PURTA Supplementary Tax (“Suptax”). The statute reads:
If in any calendar year the amount determined by the department pursuant to section 1107-A(a)(2) shall exceed the total amount of tax collected pursuant to section 1102-A(a), the department shall determine the ratio which the amount of such excess bears to the total State taxable value of all utility realty reported to it pursuant to section 1102-A(b). The department shall notify each reporting public utility of such ratio, and it shall be the duty of such public utility, within forty-five days thereafter, to pay to the State Treasurer, through the Department of Revenue, an additional amount of tax equal to the product of (1) such ratio and (2) the State taxable value shown in its report required by section 1102-A(b). The provisions of section 1102-A(c) shall be applicable to such additional amount of tax.
72 P.S. § 8104-A(b).
Thus, when the amount of tax due to be distributed to the reporting LTAs exceeds the amount collected by the Department, the Department must calculate a ratio that the utilities are to apply to their reported net book value, the product of which was to be paid to the Department within 45 days.
It is against this historical and statutory backdrop that we now set forth the facts and procedural history of the matters sub judice. For the 1997 tax year, the gap between PURTA revenues and the required distributions to LTAs exceeded $71 million. Pursuant to 72 P.S. § 8104-A, on December 22, 1998, the Department sent notices (the “Notices”) to Appellants indicating their individual Suptax liability and that the Suptax payment was due to the Department within 45 days or else the utility would be subject to interest and penalty.
On February 22, 1999, the Secretary of the Department of Revenue filed preliminary objections in the nature of a demurrer to each of the Appellants’ petitions. The essence of the preliminary objections was that the Department met all requirements of the PURTA statute and assessed utilities with the 1997 Suptax in a strictly mechanical, non-discretionary fashion. The Commonwealth Court, by order dated February 23, 1999, consolidated the petitions for purposes of briefing and argument on the Department’s preliminary objections. The Commonwealth Court, en banc, heard argument on the Department’s preliminary objections on May 19,1999.
While the Commonwealth Court’s decision on Appellants’ Petitions and the Department’s demurrers was pending, the Department initiated collection activities for the delinquent Suptax revenues by filing liens and writs of scire facias
By opinion and order dated August 16, 2000, the Commonwealth Court overruled the Department’s preliminary objections. See Safe Harbor I,
Appellants appealed the Safe Harbor II decision to this court on July 16, 2003, raising lour issues.
On May 11, 2004, we heard oral argument in this matter limited to: 1.) whether the Department was required to settle the 1997 Supplemental Realty Tax prior to initiating actions to collect the tax; and, 2.) whether the Department violated the due proсess rights of Appellants, and, if so, was a refund the appropriate remedy.
Having discussed the procedural history of this matter, we now address Appellants’ issues. The nature of the first two issues which the Appellants raise permits us to discuss them in tandem.
Appellants argue that Safe Harbor I was a final declaration of rights of the
Appellants correctly cite Pennsylvania Rule of Appellate Procedure 341(b)(2) for the proposition that an order is final if it is expressly defined as such by statute. The pertinent statute provides:
Courts of record, within their respective jurisdictions, shall have power to declare rights, status, and other legal relations whether or not further relief is or could be claimed. No action or proceeding shall be open to objection on the ground that a declaratory judgment or decree is prayed for. The declarаtion may be either affirmative or negative in form and effect, and such declarations shall have the force and effect of a final judgment or decree.
42 Pa.C.S. § 7532.
Appellants cite our decision in Nationwide Mut. Ins. Co. v. Wickett,
The question we resolved in Wickett was whether the demurrer order affirmatively or negatively declared the rights, status, and other legal relations of the parties. We said that if the orders did so, then they were immediately appealable orders pursuant to Pa.R.A.P. 341(b)(2). Id. at 817. Conversely, if no such declarations were made, the orders were interlocutory, and the trial court retained jurisdiction to reconsider them. Wickett,
For present purposes then, it follows that we must determine if the Commonwealth Court’s order in Safe Harbor I
Appellants contend that the Safe Harbor I decision was a final, appealable order that determined settlement was a prerequisite to collection of the Suptax. This is because the decision in Safe Harbor I did not depend on contested facts, but rather was decided purely on the PURTA statute provisions, the Fiscal Code, the West Penn decisions and the Notices. Appellants specifically rely on that part of the Safe Harbor I decision where the court concluded:
Once the notice was given that the Suptax was due within 45 days or interest and penalties may be forthcoming, [the Department] obviously intended to use the collection procedures [of the Fiscal Code]. In accordance with West Penn Power I and II, therefore, [the Department] is now compelled to settle the taxes with the Petitioners.
Safe Harbor I,
Appellants contend that the Safe Harbor I decision, in determining that settlement was a prerequisite to collection of the Suptax, was a final, appealable order because it did not depend upon contested facts. Because the Department failed to appeal Safe Harbor I, Appellants contend that the Safe Harbor II court was without jurisdiction to overrule Safe Harbor I.
We disagree and hold that the Safe Harbor I decision was not a final, immediately appealable order. As a matter of substance, Appellants’ position cannot stand, as the Safe Harbor I court merely overruled the Department’s preliminary objections. See Safe Harbor I,
In this regard, Safe Harbor I is in direct contrast to the decision in Wickett, where the court granted preliminary objections in the nature of a demurrer, concluding that, upon all the facts averred by the plaintiff, there was no legal basis upon which the plaintiff could recover. Wickett,
Our foregoing discussion regarding the finality of the Safe Harbor I decision thus forecloses Appellants’ contentions
The parties’ respective positions, generally speaking, are straightforward: Appellants urge us to read Safe Harbor I as conclusive of the propositions that the Notices constituted the Department’s initiation of collection procedures for the Suptax under the Fiscal Code, and that prior to such collection efforts, the Department was required to settle the Suptax returns with the taxpayers. Appellants’ assertions derive in part from West Penn I, which, according to Appellants, mandates that when the Department uses the collection provisions of the Fiscal Code, the Department must settle the return. Appellants likewise assert that our decision in West Penn II, affirming West Penn I, demands this conclusion. Furthermore, Appellants contend that because there is no tax collection mechanism in PURTA statute, the Fiscal Code collection provision “must be employed.” (Safe Harbor Brief at p. 11). Appellants contend that the Department started collection activity against Appellants by issuing the Notices in derogation of rights they assert under West Penn I and II. Finally, Appellants contend their right to settlement based on their assertion that the Suptax is neither self-assessing nor self-paying.
The Department, to the contrary, argues that the Safe Harbor II court arrived at the correct decision by recognizing that Appellants and the Safe Harbor I court misinterpreted West Penn I and II. Moreover, the Department stresses that while we affirmed West Penn I in West Penn II, Appellants ignore the rationale of the West Penn II decision in which we held that the PURTA statutes vest the Department with the discretion to issue settlement as а prerequisite to collection of the initial PURTA tax.
Again, we agree with the Department. Addressing the Appellant’s arguments however, confronts us with our decision in West Penn II, and, as such, the doctrine of stare decisis,
West Penn I
In West Penn I, West Penn Power Company, a utility company subject to PURTA taxation, presented a mandamus and declaratory action to the Commonwealth Court, seeking respectively, an order requiring the Department to settle all initial PURTA tax returns, and second, to declare the Department’s duties regarding the administration of PURTA in conjunction
The West Penn I court, in resolving the declaratory action, examined the statutory language imposing the PURTA tax, 72 P.S. § 8102-A, and noted that, because the PURTA tax was self-assessing, as each reporting utility multiplied the tax rate by its own valuation of the state taxable value of its property, settlement was not necessary for every PURTA tax return. Id. The court further stated that the statute permitted the enforcement of payment obligations “by any means provided by law for the enforcement of payment of taxes to the State.” Id. at 1368-69 (quoting 72 P.S. § 8102-A(c)). Should a utility fail to make a return or the Department determined an underpayment by the utility, the West Penn I court decided that the Department had the discretion to utilize the enforcement provisions of the Fiscal Code to collect past due revenues. West Penn I,
The Commonwealth Court specifically ordered in West Penn I that if the Department intends to use the collectiоn provisions of the Fiscal Code, then the utilities were entitled to a settlement of their tax returns. See West Penn I,
West Penn II
West Penn Power Company appealed the Commonwealth Court’s denial of its request for mandamus relief in West Penn I and requested that we order the Department to issue settlements for initial PURTA tax returns. West Penn II,
We also reviewed the language of 72 P.S. § 8102-A(c), and found that, rather than mandating settlement procedures, this statute supplies the Department with the discretion to enforce а taxpayer’s liability -with any means provided for in the collection of other revenues. Id. The statute reads as follows:
Payment of the tax hereby imposed may be enforced by any means provided by law for th,e enforcement of payment of taxes to the State. If the tax hereby imposed is not paid by the date herein prescribed, or within any extension granted by the department, the unpaid tax shall bear interest at the rate of one per cent per month, and shall in addition be subject to a penalty of five per cent of the amount of the tax, which penaltymay be waived or abated, in whole or in part, by the department unless the public utility has acted in bad faith, negligently, or with intent to defraud.
72 P.S. § 8102-A(e).
From this statutory language, we found no specific directive requiring settlement prior to collection, and concluded that, in the absence of an explicit mandate requiring settlement, the General Assembly merely vested the Department with the discretion to issue settlement pursuant to 72 P.S. § 801(d) of the Fiscal Code.
Appellants would have us believe that our holding in West Penn II bound the Department to use the full panoply of tools and procedures under the Fiscal Code to collect the Suptax. However, this argument is premised upon the point that, when the Department issued the Notices, it was evincing its intent to use the collection provisions of the Fiscal Code.
As we stated in West Penn II, neither the plain language of the Fiscal Code nor the statute providing for the enforcement of PURTA tax, 72 P.S. § 8102-A(c), lend themselves to the interpretation Appellants put forward. There is nothing within Section 8102-A(c) that is even suggestive of the espoused position that, as precursor to collecting the Suptax, the Department is required to settle Suptax returns. The Suptax provision, 72 P.S. § 8104-A, by integrating Section 8102-A(c), merely states that the Department can employ, as a means of collecting the Suptax, any means provided by the Fiscal Code to enforce othеr taxes due to the state. Section 8102-A(c) does not incorporate by reference the enforcement procedures of the Fiscal Code. It does not mandate the Department to follow lock-step those procedures, nor does it set forth a procedure parallel to that of the Fiscal Code for the enforcement of tax liability. Section 8102-A(c) does not suggest that, should the Department choose to employ the coercive tools set forth in the Fiscal Code, e.g., a lien or writ of scire facias, that the Department can only do so in the manner prescribed by the Fiscal Code. The statutory language provides options, it does not prescribe procedures. We stand by our rationale in West Penn II where we stated that if the General Assembly wanted to provide such direction, it would have done so.
Finally, Appellants contend, based on Safe Harbor I, that the Department, by issuing the Notices, initiated collection procedures under the Fiscal Code. Since the Notices evidenced intent by the Department to utilize the Fiscal Code collection provisions, Appellants assert they were entitled tо settlements and the attending predeprivation appeal process prior to the issuance of the Notices. Appellants’ argument on this facet of their claim is erroneous, as the Safe Harbor I court’s conclusion supporting it is based on that court’s
The Safe Harbor I court, in reciting the PURTA return process, stated the following: “If [the Department] feels that the taxpayer owes additional [PURTA] tax, [the Department] must challenge the taxpayers calculation but, in that event, [the Department], not the utility taxpayer, makes the calculation and assesses the taxpayer an additional supplemental tax, (the Suptax).” Safe Harbor I, 758 A.2d at 263. The Safe Harbor I court subsequently asserted that the Department was dissatisfied with the valuations set forth in Appellants’ 1997 PURTA returns and the Notices set forth different valuations and demanded the Suptax as recompense for the difference in valuations. Safe Harbor I, 758 A.2d at 264. These statements are incorrect and confuse two related, but distinct statutory provisions, eаch of which serves a related, but distinct purpose. The Suptax, contrary to the Safe Harbor I decision, does not serve as a means by which the Department duns a particular utility for filing a PURTA tax return with a suspect valuation or deficient payment. The Suptax, as we explained previously iii this opinion, is a statutory mechanism by which the Department addresses revenue shortfalls, not based on discrepancies in individual returns, but rather for those situations where disbursements to LTAs exceed revenues collected from all utilities subject to PURTA taxation. The Safe Harbor I court’s narrow view of the Suptax is not supported by the statutory language providing for the PURTA tax and Suptax, which are unequivocal in this regard. See 72 P.S. §§ 8102-A and § 8104-A.
The Notices were the Department’s response to a specific condition, both of which are prescribed by statute. See 72 P.S. § 8104-A(b). Triggered by the presence of a projected shortfall between the amount of the PURTA valuations submitted by the utilities and the cumulative realty tax equivalents submitted by the LTAs, Section 8104-A(b) requires the Department to provide the reporting utilities with a ratio by which the burden of the deficit-reduction is to be shоuldered by the reporting utilities and a payment deadline. There was no discretion, contrary to the Safe Harbor I decision, exercised in determining the necessity for the Suptax, nor in the transmittal of the Notices to Appellants. The Notices cannot be equated with enforcing the liability of unpaid taxes.
When it comes to enforcing liability for taxes prescribed by the PURTA statute, our decision in West Penn II and in the instant matters, stand for the propositions that 72 P.S. § 8102-A permits the Department to use any lawful means to collect unpaid PURTA and Suptax revenue and that the Department has the discretion to issue settlements. See West Penn II,
Appellants contend that the Department’s initiation of collection actions in the absence of what they assert are their rights to predeprivation settlement amounts to a prima facie violation of due process rights guaranteed to them by the 14th Amendment to the United States Constitution and Article I, § 9 of the
Appellants argue that the PURTA stаtute, Fiscal Code and our decisions in West Penn I and II combine to compel the Department to issue settlement of Suptax returns as a prerequisite to the Department’s collection activities. The settlement process, Appellants contend, provides taxpayers with the opportunity to challenge both the necessity and calculations of individual liability for the Suptax assessment. Because the Department failed to afford them any predeprivation process, and because the liens had a deleterious effect on their operations, Appellants assert they paid the Suptax under duress. The Department’s disregard for Appellants’ rights constituted a due process violation for which a refund is the only viable remedy.
Appellants cite McKesson v. Division of Alcoholic Beverages,
The Department counters that Appellants’ due process argument fails as its central premise—the requirement of settlement before collection of the Suptax—is unsustainable. There is no settlement requirement before the Department sent the Notices. Due process is served, according to the Department, by the refund mechanism which is replete with due process safeguards. Through this postdeprivation procedure, the Department argues, taxpayers, like Appellants, are afforded the opportunity to challenge their liability. 72 P.S. § 503; see also, West Penn II,
We agree with the Department that it did not violate Appellants’ due process rights in the collection of the 1997 Suptax. McKesson is inapt for the simple reason that the underlying tax for which taxpayers sought relief had been declared unconstitutional and the state, Florida, refused to refund the revenue genеrated by the unlawful tax. McKesson,
McKesson, in its recitation of cases involving due process and the exaction of tax revenue, stands for the broad proposition that а party who chooses to challenge the legality of a tax should have a “clear and certain remedy.” McKesson,
[Wjhereas “we have described the ‘root requirement’ of the Due Process Clause as being ‘that an individual be given opportunity for a hearing before he is deprived of any significant property interest’ ”, it is well established that a State need not provide predeprivation process for the exaction of taxes, (citations omitted)(emphasis supplied).
Appellants’ due process rights are not denied by the existing regime of a postdeprivation refund process under 72 P.S. § 503. Thus, we remain confident in our decision in Cedarbrook, that predeprivation process is not required in the exaction of taxes, especially where, as is the case at bar, a mechanism exists for postdeprivation proceeding with a “clear and certain” refund remedy. Because we conclude that the Department did not violate Appellants’ due process rights, any discussion of the suitability of a refund as a remedy for such is unnecessary.
CONCLUSION
We affirm the decision of the Safe Harbor II court, inasmuch as we agree first: that the order in Safe Harbor I was not a final, appealable order, since it merely overruled the Department’s demurrer; second, that the Department is not obligated to issue settlement prior to delivering the notices prescribed by 72 P.S. § 8104-A; and third, that the Department did not violate Appellants’ due process rights. In conclusion, we remand to the Commonwealth Court to resolve any outstanding issues.
Notes
. 72 P.S. §§ 8101-A-8108-A. PURTA was amended by the Act of May 12, 1999, P.L. 26. Unless specified otherwise, all cites to PURTA in this opinion refer to the Act as it read in 1997.
. The particular provision reads as follows:
The real property of public utilities is subject to real estate taxes imposed by local taxing authorities. Payment to the Commonwealth of gross receipts taxes or other special taxes in replacement of gross receipts taxes by a public utility and the distribution by the Commonwealth to the local taxing authorities of the amount as herein provided shall, however, be in lieu of local taxes upon its real property which is used or useful in furnishing its public utility service. The amount raised annually by such gross receipts or other special taxes shall not be less than the gross amount of real estate taxes which the local taxing authorities could have imposed upon such real property but for the exemption herein provided. This gross amount shall be determined in the manner provided by law. An amount equivalent to such real estate taxes shall be distributed annually among all local taxing authorities in the proportion which the total tax receipts of each local taxing authority bear to the total tax receipts of all local taxing authorities, or in such other equitable proportions as may be provided by law. Notwithstanding the provisions of this section, any law which presently subjects real property of public utilities to local real estate taxation by local tаxing authorities shall remain in full force and effect.
Pa. Const, art. VIII, § 4.
. State taxable value is defined by statute as:
The cost of utility realty, less reserves for depreciation and depletion, as shown by the books of account of a public utility: Provided, that for any public utility which was not required to record annual depreciation on its utility realty prior to enactment of section 503 of the Public Utility Law or Title 66 Pa.C.S. 1703 (relating to depreciation accounts; reports), the depreciation deduction prescribed in this definition shall be the book reserve or fifty per cent of the book cost, whichever is greater.
72 P.S. 8101-A(4).
. All revenue collected under the PURTA statutes is not for distribution to LTAs. We have recognized that PURTA also raises general fund revenues for the Commonwealth. In Southeast Delco School District v. Shapp,
. See Wendy Tanaka, Pennsylvania Electric Utilities Are at Center of Taxing Problems, Philadelphia Inquirer, October 31, 1999 (stating the shift in the balance between distribution and revenue in the 1990s was the product of ''[rjising property taxes and declining utility property values.”) In most years previous to 1997, the Department collected more money from the utilities than it paid out to LTAs. In 1991, for example, the Department collected $60 million more than it paid out; in 1979, more than $80 million than paid out. See Reproduced Record (“R.R.”) at 129a. From 1970 until 1993, the Department collected an average of $32 million a year in excess of what was paid out to LTAs. However, in 1994, there was a shortfall between revenue collected and disbursements of nearly $2.5 million; in 1995, nearly $3.5 million; in 1996, more than $15 million; and, in 1997, the year at issue herein, there was a $71 million shortfall in revenue. (R.R. 130) and Department’s Brief atp. 18.
. The Notices stated in pertinent part:
[o]n or before October 1 of each year, the Department of Revenue shall distribute to each local taxing authority its share of the total realty tax equivalent. Funding fоr this distribution is indirectly linked to the Public Utility Realty Tax (PURTA) collected from utility companies under Title 72 P.S. 8102(A)(a). If in any calendar year the amount determined by the Department pursuant to the amount determined by the Department pursuant to § 8107-A shall exceed the total amount of tax collected pursuant to § 8102-A(a), the Department shall determine the ratio which the amount of such excess bears to the total state taxable value of all utility realty reported to it pursuant to § 8102-A(b). In the event that the amount of the distribution exceeds the amount of tax collected, the Department of Revenue is required to assess an additional tax. The 1997 Realty Tax Equivalent shown in the reports required by Title 72 P.S. § 8106-A was $167,503,199. The 1997 State taxable value shown in the reports required by Title 72 P.S. § 8102-A(b) was $3,204,671,382.86. The computed ratio and the amount of additional tax due is calculated below. Please detach the coupon and return it along with full payment in the enclosed pre-addressed envelope. You have 45 days from the date of this notice to remit or satisfy your pro-rata share of additional tax. Failure to timely remit may result in the аssessment of interest and underpayment penalties.
R.R. 41a.
. One of the taxpayer utilities, Allegheny Electric Cooperative, Inc., (“AEC”) is an electric cooperative corporation organized pursuant to the Electric Cooperative Corporation Act, Act of June 21, 1937, P.L. 1969, No. 389 as amended, 15 P.S. §§ 12401, et seq. (repealed). As an electric cooperative corporation, AEC asserts that it is not subject to PURTA. That claim remains pending before the Commonwealth Court and is not before this court on appeal.
. 72 P.S. §§ 1-1804.
. The term "settlement” is used in this context to mean an administrative determination of any amount owed by the taxpayer. West Penn Power Co. v. Cohen,
. Scire facias means literally "you are to make known, show cause.” Black’s Law Dictionary 1347 (7th ed.1999). A writ of scire facias is a mandate to the sheriff, which recites the occasion upon which it issues, which directs the sheriff to make known to the parties named in the writ that they must appear before the court on а given day, and which requires the defendant to appear and show cause why the plaintiff should not be permitted to take some step, usually to have advantage of a public record. The object of the writ of scire facias is ordinarily to ascertain the sum due on a lien of record and to give the defendant an opportunity to show cause why the plaintiff should not have execution. The writ of scire facias serves the dual purposes of a summons and a complaint, and a writ of scire facias is personal process, but the detailed requirements of a pleading are not applied to the writ of scire facias. See In re Free and Clear Sale,
. This court has jurisdiction over the instant matters pursuant to 42 Pa.C.S. § 723, which confers jurisdiction on this court for appeals from final orders of the Commonwealth Court when the matter originally commenced in the Commonwealth Court and from final Orders of the Commonwealth Court entered in any appeal from a decision of the Board of Finance and Revenue.
. This court's review in a tax appeal is to determine whether the trial court abused its discretion, committed an error of law, or rendered a decision unsupported by the evidence. Glenn Johnston, Inc. v. Commonwealth,
. To the extent that the dissenting opinion supports its conclusion by suggesting that the information provided by LTAs is susceptible to variation and thus implicates the uniformity of taxation provision of the Pennsylvania Constitution, art. VIII, 1, it must be said that Appellants did not raise a uniformity of taxation argument in their respective briefs to this Court. The issue, therefore, is waived. Danville Area Sch. Dist. v. Danville Area Educ. Ass'n,
. "The rule of stare decisis declares that for the sake of certainty, a conclusion reached in one case should be applied to those which follow, if the facts are substantially similar, even though the parties may be different.” Northwood Constr. Co. v. Township of Upper Moreland,
. This statute reads in pertinent part:
If the Department of Revenue shall not be satisfied with the payment of tax, as made and returned by the officers of any corporation, joint-stock association, limited partnership, or other company, it is hereby authorized and empowered to settle an account on the valuation thus made for taxes, bonus, penalties, and interest, due the Commonwealth.
72 P.S. § 801(d).
. Appellants incorrectly assert that, in matters regarding taxation, we have held that the guaranties of due process found in the United States and Pennsylvania Constitutions are coterminous. Appellants cite Commonwealth v. Girard Life Ins. Co.,
. See e.g., Commonwealth v. Allied Building Credits, Inc.,
. Justice William Brennan, writing for the unanimous court in McKesson, stated:
Our precedents establish that if a state penalizes taxpayers for failure to remit their taxes in a timely fashion, thus requiring them to pay first and obtain review of the tax's validity later in a refund action, the Due Process Clause requires the State to afford taxpayers a meaningful opportunity to secure postpayment relief for taxes already paid pursuant to a tax scheme ultimately found unconstitutional.
McKesson,
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
I agree with the majority that the existence of an adequate post-deprivation procedure for challenging an asserted tax obligation and obtaining a concomitant remedy will ordinarily satisfy the dictates of the Due Process Clause. Here, however, Appellants raise a substantial question concerning the adequacy of the post-deprivation procedure actually afforded them.
It is undisputed that Appellants’ initial PURTA tax (the “surtax”) is self-assessing: each year, the taxpayer calculates
As suggested above, a utility’s suptax liability is directly controlled by the reports filed by the LTAs pursuant to Section 1106-A, 72 P.S. § 8106-A, listing their individual realty tax equivalents, as well as the returns filed by all other Pennsylvania utilities pursuant to Section 1102-A, 72 P.S. § 8102-A, specifying their state taxable value and their resultant surtax liabilities. These reports may be highly subjective, as they depend upon the LTAs’ own methods of determining the assessed value of the real estate involved, the LTAs’ own determinations as to how to calculate their total tax receipts, and the other utilities’ specific accounting methods utilized in determining their state taxable values. While Appellants would appear to retain the right to participate in any Departmental audit of the annual reports of the LTAs, see 61 Pa.Code § 159.1(d), they lack access to other utilities’ PURTA tax returns. Without this information, it is impossible to determine whether the other utility companies have paid their commensurate share of the initial PURTA tax, including whether the assessments against similarly situated utilities were uniformly ascertained in compliance with the Pennsylvania Constitution, see Pa. Const, art. XIII, § 1 (pertaining to uniformity of taxation), or whether the Department acted correctly in accepting and/or settling these returns.
As discussed, Appellants contend that they lack the necessary information to determine the correctness of the Department’s suptax assessment, as some of the necessary records are confidential under the Fiscal Code,
The Commonwealth avers that the utilities’ problems with any lack of information will be solved merely by first paying the tax as demanded and then filing for a refund.... Here, Petitioners cannot meet their burden of proof in the refund process because the documents, assumptions, determinations and calculations are in the exclusive control of [the Department].Without such information a refund petition cannot be properly drafted and there would be no substantial evidence in the record to sustain an administrative appeal to the Board of Finance and Revenue or to this Court.
Safe Harbor Water Power Corp. v. Judge,
Under these circumstances, I would conclude that the post-deprivation process fails scrutiny under the Due Process Clause pursuant to the principles announced in McKesson, and would, accordingly, require a full refund of the suptaxes paid pending settlement (or other reasonably structured) proceedings at which Appellants can assess the accuracy of their tax obligations as reflected in the Department’s notices.
. In this regard, I do not concur with the Commonwealth Court's characterization of the suptax obligations as "self-assessing.” Safe Harbor Water Power Corp. v. Williams,
. Although each utility company must calculate its tax liability premised upon its state taxable value, see 72 P.S. § 8102-A, and this value is statutorily defined as the cost minus depreciation as per books of any qualifying piece of realty, see 72 P.S. § 8101-A(4), the methodology is not insulated from controversy, as reflected in litigation surrounding the allowable manner of determining asset depreciation, see, e.g., PP&L v. Commonwealth,
. Indeed, the Departmental notices do not even state the total size of the shortfall. Hence, the taxpayers are left without the ability, predeprivаtion, to assess whether the Department correctly calculated the PURTA assessment ratio based upon the shortfall and the cumulative state taxable value shown in the Section 1102-A(b) reports.
. PURTA was amended after the tax period in question to specify that the LTAs' Section 1106-A reports are public documents, notwithstanding Section 731 of the Fiscal Code. See 72 P.S. § 8106-A(c) (as amended by the Act of May 12, 1999, P.L. 26, No. 4, § 20). It appears that the utilities' PURTA returns, however, remain confidential. In the present case, they were not disclosed to Appellants during discovery, as discussed infra.
. Act of April 9, 1929, P.L. 343 (as amended, 72 P.S. §§ 1-1804).
. The Department maintains that the post-deprivation procedures provided by the Commonwealth comport with due process because Appellants have available administrative and judicial review, and during such review they are guaranteed the right to representation by counsel, oral and deposition testimony, affidavits and subpoenas, a written decision, and the like. See Brief for Appellees at 22-23. Absent access to the information necessary to test the accuracy of the amount of tax owed as stated by the Department, however, these facets of the post-deprivation process do not, by themselves, satisfy the McKesson standard as recited above.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring and dissenting.
I join the Majority in its determination that the Commonwealth Court was not bound by its August 16, 2000 decision that: (a) the Suptax was not self-assessing and self-paying; (b) the Suptax notices issued by the Department of Revenue (Department) constituted initiation of collection activities requiring the Department to engage in settlements prior to attempting collection; and (c) the utilities were entitled to use their mandatory appeal rights before they had to pay the Suptax. See Safe Harbor Water Power Corp. v. Judge,
