Franchise Tax Board v. Superior Court , 51 Cal. 4th 1006 ( 2011 )


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  • Filed 6/6/11
    IN THE SUPREME COURT OF CALIFORNIA
    FRANCHISE TAX BOARD,                )
    )
    Petitioner,              )
    )                               S176943
    v.                       )
    )                         Ct.App. 1/5 A122723
    THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE CITY )
    AND COUNTY OF SAN FRANCISCO,        )
    )                 San Francisco City and County
    Respondent;              )                 Super. Ct. No. CGC-06-454297
    )
    TOM GONZALES, as Personal           )
    Representative, etc.,    )
    Real Party in Interest   )
    and Respondent.          )
    ____________________________________)
    Does a taxpayer have the right to a jury trial in an action for a refund of
    state income taxes? The Court of Appeal said yes, reasoning that the gist of such
    an action is legal and therefore a jury trial is guaranteed by the state Constitution.
    We reverse.
    The facts are undisputed, and may briefly be stated. Real party in interest
    Tom Gonzales, as personal representative of his son‟s estate, filed a complaint in
    2006 seeking a refund of state personal income taxes for the years 2000 and 2001.
    Gonzales alleged that the estate had paid over $15 million as part of a tax amnesty
    program, reserving the right to seek a refund. He demanded a jury trial. The trial
    court denied a motion by defendant Franchise Tax Board to strike the jury
    demand. On the Board‟s application for writ relief, the Court of Appeal issued an
    1
    order to show cause. After thorough consideration of the parties‟ arguments, the
    court declined to disturb the trial court‟s ruling as to the refund action, deciding as
    a matter of first impression that there is a state constitutional right to a jury trial in
    an action for a refund of state income taxes.1 We granted the Board‟s petition for
    review.
    DISCUSSION
    The statutes governing suits for income tax refunds from the state are silent
    on the right to a jury trial. (Rev. & Tax. Code, § 19381 et seq.)2 Gonzales relies
    on article I, section 16 of the California Constitution, which declares that “[t]rial
    by jury is an inviolate right and shall be secured to all . . . .” It is settled that the
    state constitutional right to a jury trial “is the right as it existed at common law in
    1850, when the Constitution was first adopted, „and what that right is, is a purely
    historical question, a fact which is to be ascertained like any other social, political
    or legal fact.‟ [Citations.]” (C & K Engineering Contractors v. Amber Steel Co.
    (1978) 
    23 Cal.3d 1
    , 8; see also Corder v. Corder (2007) 
    41 Cal.4th 644
    , 656, fn. 7;
    1
    The court granted the petition insofar as the trial court permitted a jury trial
    on the Board‟s cross-complaint seeking to recover a penalty from the estate.
    Gonzales does not challenge that ruling.
    2
    Revenue and Taxation Code section 19382 provides: “Except as provided
    in Section 19385, after payment of the tax and denial by the Franchise Tax Board
    of a claim for refund, any taxpayer claiming that the tax computed and assessed is
    void in whole or in part may bring an action, upon the grounds set forth in that
    claim for refund, against the Franchise Tax Board for the recovery of the whole or
    any part of the amount paid.”
    Gonzales filed his complaint under Revenue and Taxation Code section
    19385, which provides that if the Board fails to mail a notice of action on a refund
    claim within six months, a taxpayer may consider the claim disallowed and sue for
    a refund.
    2
    Crouchman v. Superior Court (1988) 
    45 Cal.3d 1167
    , 1173-1174; People v. One
    1941 Chevrolet Coupe (1951) 
    37 Cal.2d 283
    , 286-287.)
    “As a general proposition, „[T]he jury trial is a matter of right in a civil
    action at law, but not in equity.‟ [Citations.]” (C & K Engineering Contractors v.
    Amber Steel Co., 
    supra,
     23 Cal.3d at p. 8.) “[I]f the action is essentially one in
    equity and the relief sought „depends upon the application of equitable doctrines,‟
    the parties are not entitled to a jury trial.” (Id. at p. 9.) And “if a proceeding
    otherwise identifiable in some sense as a „civil action at law‟ did not entail a right
    to jury trial under the common law of 1850, then the modern California
    counterpart of that proceeding will not entail a constitutional right to trial by jury.
    [Citations.]” (Crouchman v. Superior Court, supra, 45 Cal.3d at p. 1174.)3
    We have explained that if the action deals with “ „ordinary common-law
    rights cognizable in courts of law, it is to that extent an action at law. In
    determining whether the action was one triable by a jury at common law, the court
    is not bound by the form of the action but rather by the nature of the rights
    involved and the facts of the particular case — the gist of the action. A jury trial
    must be granted where the gist of the action is legal, where the action is in reality
    cognizable at law. [¶] . . . The constitutional right of trial by jury is not to be
    narrowly construed. It is not limited strictly to those cases in which it existed
    3
    Code of Civil Procedure section 592 states: “In actions for the recovery of
    specific, real, or personal property, with or without damages, or for money
    claimed as due upon contract, or as damages for breach of contract, or for injuries,
    an issue of fact must be tried by a jury . . . .” This statutory jury trial provision,
    like our state constitutional guarantee, “is historically based and does not expand
    the jury trial right beyond its common law scope. [Citations.] Accordingly,
    section 592 provides no independent basis for a right to a jury . . . .” (Corder v.
    Corder, 
    supra,
     41 Cal.4th at p. 656.)
    3
    before the adoption of the Constitution but is extended to cases of like nature as
    may afterwards arise. It embraces cases of the same class thereafter arising.‟ ”
    (People v. One 1941 Chevrolet Coupe, supra, 37 Cal.2d at pp. 299-300, fn.
    omitted.)
    Here, the Court of Appeal reasoned that the “gist” of a claim for a tax
    refund is legal. The plaintiff seeks monetary relief, and the proceeding is “in the
    nature of an action in assumpsit” (Northrop Aircraft v. Cal. Emp. etc. Com. (1948)
    
    32 Cal.2d 872
    , 879), a common law form of action at law (Jogani v. Superior
    Court (2008) 
    165 Cal.App.4th 901
    , 906-907). The court was persuaded by the
    rationale of United States v. State of N. M. (10th Cir. 1981) 
    642 F.2d 397
     (New
    Mexico), where the Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals observed that jury trials were
    available at common law in actions against tax collectors to recover illegally
    exacted taxes. Accordingly, the New Mexico court concluded that “the right of a
    taxpayer to a jury trial in refund cases is rooted in the common law and was
    preserved by the Seventh Amendment.” (Id. at p. 401; see also Department of
    Revenue v. Printing House (Fla. 1994) 
    644 So.2d 498
    , 500 [following New Mexico
    and recognizing state constitutional right to jury trial in statutory tax refund
    actions].)
    The Court of Appeal‟s reasoning is not without support. A tax refund
    action is legal rather than equitable in character. And in England and early
    America, common law actions for refunds were brought against officers who
    4
    collected taxes and duties, though in some cases recovery was limited to amounts
    assessed without jurisdiction and did not extend to overcharges.4
    However, it is a general proposition, not an absolute rule, that the right to a
    jury trial attaches when the “gist” of the action is legal. (C & K Engineering
    Contractors v. Amber Steel Co., 
    supra,
     23 Cal.3d at p. 8.) The “gist” test does not
    apply in administrative proceedings. (McHugh v. Santa Monica Rent Control Bd.
    (1989) 
    49 Cal.3d 348
    , 379-380.) We have also held that the legal nature of small
    claims actions does not bring with it the right to a jury trial. (Crouchman v.
    Superior Court, supra, 45 Cal.3d at p. 1175.) And in Sonleitner v. Superior Court
    (1958) 
    158 Cal.App.2d 258
    , the court ruled that a jury trial was not available in a
    tax collection proceeding, even though the proceeding was statutorily designated
    “an action at law.” Observing that the statutory proceeding was not equivalent to
    a common law debt collection action (id. at p. 261), the Sonleitner court noted that
    “the test is whether the gist of the action is legal in a common law context” (id. at
    p. 262, italics added). We look to whether a claim arising under a modern statute
    is “of like nature” or “of the same class” as a common law right of action. (People
    v. One 1941 Chevrolet Coupe, supra, 37 Cal.2d at p. 300.)
    4
    See, e.g., Whitbread v. Brooksbank (K.B. 1774) 98 Eng. Rep. 970, 972 (no
    action for overpayment); Camplin v. Bullman (Exch. 1761) 145 Eng. Rep. 755,
    756; Stevenson v. Mortimer (K.B. 1778) 98 Eng. Rep. 1372, 1373 (refund of
    overpayment permitted); Elliott v. Swartwout (1836) 
    35 U.S. 137
    , 156-158;
    Hearsey v. Pruyn (N.Y. Sup.Ct. 1810) 
    7 Johns. 179
    , 182; Torrey v. Millbury
    (1838) 
    38 Mass. 64
    , 70; Kirst, Administrative Penalties and the Civil Jury: The
    Supreme Court’s Assault on the Seventh Amendment (1978) 126 U.Pa. L.Rev.
    1281, 1313 et seq.; Plumb, Tax Refund Suits Against Collectors of Internal
    Revenue (1947) 60 Harv. L.Rev. 685, footnote 2 (Plumb).
    5
    Notwithstanding the Tenth Circuit‟s opinion in New Mexico, supra, 642
    F.2d at pages 400-401, statutory actions for tax refunds from the government have
    generally not been placed in the same class as the common law right of action
    against individual tax collectors. Most courts have viewed actions for a refund
    from the government as new and distinct proceedings, subject to such conditions
    as the legislative branch sees fit to impose. At common law, sovereign immunity
    barred actions against the government, by way of jury trial or otherwise. (People
    v. Superior Court (Pierpont) (1947) 
    29 Cal.2d 754
    , 756; Galloway v. United States
    (1943) 
    319 U.S. 372
    , 388; 5 Witkin, Summary of Cal. Law (10th ed. 2005) Torts,
    §§ 203, 210, pp. 343-344, 354-355.) The right to a jury trial provided by the
    Seventh Amendment to the United States Constitution does not apply in statutory
    actions against the federal government. (Lehman v. Nakshian (1981) 
    453 U.S. 156
    , 160-161.) 5 That rule applies in tax refund actions. (Wickwire v. Reinecke
    (1927) 
    275 U.S. 101
    , 105 (Wickwire). 6 Several states have followed the federal
    5
    “In suits at common law, where the value in controversy shall exceed
    twenty dollars, the right of trial by jury shall be preserved, and no fact tried by a
    jury shall be otherwise reexamined in any court of the United States, than
    according to the rules of the common law.” (U.S. Const., 7th Amend.) “Like the
    state constitutional provision, the Seventh Amendment merely „preserves‟ the
    common law right to jury trial and does not create a new or broader right.”
    (McHugh v. Santa Monica Rent Control Bd. (1989) 
    49 Cal.3d 348
    , 381, fn. 54; see
    Monterey v. Del Monte Dunes at Monterey, Ltd. (1999) 
    526 U.S. 687
    , 708-709;
    Granfinanciera, S. A. v. Nordberg (1989) 
    492 U.S. 33
    , 42; DiPirro v. Bondo Corp.
    (2007) 
    153 Cal.App.4th 150
    , 180 [citing federal cases]; but see Jehl v. Southern
    Pac. Co. (1967) 
    66 Cal.2d 821
    , 827.)
    6
    The New Mexico opinion did not acknowledge the contrary rule stated in
    Wickwire, 
    supra,
     275 U.S. at page 105, to the effect that the right to a jury trial in
    a tax refund case “is not to be found in the Seventh Amendment.” The Court of
    Appeal below suggested this statement in Wickwire was dictum. However, the
    Wickwire rule is settled law, and consistent with the general rule that the Seventh
    (footnote continued on next page)
    6
    example and refused to recognize a state constitutional right to a jury trial in tax
    refund cases. (Coeur D’Alene Lakeshore v. Kootenai County (Idaho 1983) 
    661 P.2d 756
    , 762; C. W. Matthews Contracting Co. v. S. C. Tax Comn. (S.C. 1976)
    
    230 S.E.2d 223
    , 226; Dexter Horton Bldg. Co. v. King County (Wn. 1941) 
    116 P.2d 507
    , 511; see also Jernigan v. Jackson (Tenn. 1986) 
    704 S.W.2d 308
    , 309
    [rejecting claim of right to jury trial without reference to federal law].)
    Before we examine California‟s experience with common law and statutory
    refund actions, we briefly review the development of federal procedure in this
    area, which shows that the common law right of action was effectively superseded
    by statute well before California‟s statehood. The United States Supreme Court
    first recognized the right to seek refunds from tax collectors in 1836, when it ruled
    that collectors of customs duties were personally liable for illegal assessments
    even if they had transferred the money to the treasury. (Elliott v. Swartwout,
    (footnote continued from previous page)
    Amendment has no application in suits against the federal government. (See
    Phillips v. Commissioner (1931) 
    283 U.S. 589
    , 599, fn. 9; Lehman v. Nakshian,
    
    supra,
     453 U.S. at pp. 160-161; 20A Federal Procedure L.Ed. (2009) § 48:1395, p.
    426; 8 Moore‟s Federal Practice (3d ed. 2007) § 38.40[2][a] & [f].) While a jury
    trial is currently available as a matter of statute in a federal district court action for
    a tax refund (
    28 U.S.C. §§ 1346
    (a)(1) & 2402), there is no right to a jury trial in
    tax refund actions in the Court of Claims (Malajalian v. United States (1st Cir.
    1974) 
    504 F.2d 842
    , 844, fn. 1), or in tax contests in district court, even when the
    taxpayer is required to deposit the contested amount with the Internal Revenue
    Service (Thomas v. U. S. (E.D.Mo. 1988) 
    695 F.Supp. 1021
    , 1022-1023).
    The Tenth Circuit‟s view that the Seventh Amendment applies in tax refund
    cases must be deemed overly broad; it arose in an unusual case where the federal
    government brought a nonstatutory action against a state to recover a tax payment
    that had been passed along by a federal contractor. (New Mexico, supra, 642 F.2d
    at pp. 398-399.)
    7
    supra, 
    35 U.S. 137
    , 159.) However, the claim permitted in Elliott “had, as a
    strictly common law action, a short and unhappy life.” (Plumb, supra, 60 Harv.
    L.Rev. at p. 688.) Collectors asserted the right to withhold disputed payments,
    which “led to great abuses, and to much loss to the public.” (Cary v. Curtis (1845)
    
    44 U.S. 236
    , 243.) Three years after the Elliott decision, Congress enacted
    legislation requiring customs duties paid under protest to be transferred to the
    treasury, and authorizing the Secretary of the Treasury to make refunds. (Act of
    Mar. 3, 1839, § 2, 
    5 Stat. 339
    , 348); see Plumb, supra, 60 Harv. L.Rev. at p. 689.)
    The Supreme Court decided that this statutory remedy had replaced the common
    law right of action against collectors, and also that the new administrative remedy
    was not subject to judicial review. (Cary v. Curtis, supra, 44 U.S. at pp. 243-244.)
    Congress again responded with legislation, explaining that the 1839 statute
    had not been intended to impair the right of action against a collector of customs,
    including the right to a trial by jury. (Act of Feb. 26, 1845, 
    5 Stat. 727
    .) No
    similar legislation covered internal revenue collectors, who were also required to
    turn tax payments over to the treasury regardless of protest by the taxpayer. In
    1866, however, the Supreme Court held that a right of action against internal
    revenue collectors had been recognized by implication in a number of statutes.
    (City of Philadelphia v. The Collector (1866) 
    72 U.S. 720
    , 731-732; see Plumb,
    supra, 60 Harv. L.Rev. at p. 689.) “The action against the collector, therefore, was
    no longer a common law but a new statutory action, subject to such restrictions as
    Congress might provide.” (Plumb, at pp. 690-691.)
    Accordingly, in 1927 the Wickwire court had ample support for its
    conclusion that “[i]t is within the undoubted power of Congress to provide any
    reasonable system for the collection of taxes and the recovery of them when
    illegal, without a jury trial.” (Wickwire, 
    supra,
     275 U.S. at pp. 105-106, citing
    8
    Murray’s Lessee v. Hoboken Land and Improvement Co. (1856) 
    59 U.S. 272
    , 283-
    284 [while customs collectors and the government “are exempt from suit, for
    anything done by the former in obedience to legal process, still, congress may
    provide by law, that both, or either, shall, in a particular class of cases, and under
    such restrictions as they may think proper to impose, come into a court of law or
    equity and abide by its determination”]; Nichols v. United States (1869) 
    74 U.S. 122
    , 127 [allowing actions for refunds of customs duties “was an act of
    beneficence on the part of the government . . . so it could have made [the Secretary
    of the Treasury] the final arbiter in all disputes concerning the same”]; and
    Cheatham v. United States (1876) 
    92 U.S. 85
    , 89 [in tax refund actions “the
    government has the right to prescribe the conditions on which it will subject itself
    to the judgment of the courts”].)
    This court has also taken the view that a statutory action against the state
    for a tax refund is a departure from the common law right of action against tax
    collectors, and a remedy subject to restriction by the Legislature. The first
    California statute authorizing refund actions was enacted in 1893. Former
    Political Code section 3819 required a written protest, and provided that “when so
    paid under protest, the payment shall in no case be regarded as a voluntary
    payment, and [the taxpayer] may at any time within six months after such payment
    bring an action against the county, in the Superior Court, to recover back the tax
    . . . .” (Stats. 1893, ch. 20, § 1, p. 32.)7 The reason for the Legislature‟s
    7
    The statute required the state to indemnify counties for refunds of taxes that
    had been paid into the state treasury. (Former Political Code § 3819, Stats. 1893,
    ch. 20, § 1, p. 32.) In the same year, the Legislature enacted the first statute
    allowing suits against the state, which was limited to contract and negligence
    claims. (Stats. 1893, ch. 45, p. 57.) Tax refund actions against the state were not
    (footnote continued on next page)
    9
    specification that a payment under protest would not be regarded as voluntary was
    that California courts followed a stringent common law rule forbidding actions for
    tax refunds unless the payment was compelled. This rule, which has no
    counterpart in the refund statutes, is the primary reason why California courts have
    not regarded statutory refund actions as extensions of the common law.
    The relationship between the common law rule and the statutory right to
    seek a refund was examined in Southern Service Co., Ltd. v. Los Angeles (1940)
    
    15 Cal.2d 1
     (Southern Service). There, a county sought dismissal of a refund
    action that was pending on appeal. The county relied on a newly enacted statute
    that barred statutory refund claims under certain circumstances and specified:
    “ „For the purposes of this section, the mere payment of a tax under protest shall
    not be deemed to constitute . . . an involuntary payment.‟ ” (Id. at p. 6.) The
    Southern Service court observed that the effect of the statute “was to cut off the
    remedy to the plaintiff and to terminate the action herein unless the plaintiff had a
    vested property interest in or a contractual right to recover the claimed excessive
    portion of the taxes so paid.” (Id. at p. 7.)
    The court continued: “It is the settled law of this state that illegal taxes
    voluntarily paid may not be recovered by the taxpayer in the absence of a statute
    permitting a refund thereof; and in the absence of such statute only illegal taxes
    paid under duress, coercion or compulsion are considered to have been
    (footnote continued from previous page)
    authorized until a later date. (See Stats. 1929, ch. 13, § 30, p. 31.) For our
    purposes of comparing the nature of the common law and statutory actions for tax
    refunds, the distinction between actions against counties and those against the state
    is inconsequential.
    10
    involuntarily paid and therefore recoverable. (Brumagim v. Tillinghast [(1861)]
    
    18 Cal. 265
    , 269, 271; Grimes v. County of Merced [(1928)] 
    96 Cal.App. 76
    , 81-
    83; Maxwell v. San Luis Obispo County [(1886)] 
    71 Cal. 466
    .[8] See, also, Brandt
    v. Riley [(1934)] 
    139 Cal.App. 250
    , and cases hereinafter cited.)” (Southern
    Service, supra, 15 Cal.2d at p. 7, italics added.)
    “The plaintiff concedes that the common law as to what constitutes an
    involuntary payment is the rule for the guidance of this court in determining
    whether the payment of the tax herein was voluntary or involuntary. The
    presence or absence of a written protest does not appear to be the distinguishing
    feature. That is, if the taxes were paid involuntarily, namely, „by means which
    amount to duress or coercion, they may be reclaimed . . . without proof that they
    were paid under protest.‟ (Brandt v. Riley, supra, [139 Cal.App.] at page 253
    . . . .) On the other hand it has also been held that the filing of a protest with a
    payment of illegal taxes otherwise voluntarily made does not deprive the payment
    of its voluntary character. (Brumagim v. Tillinghast, supra, [18 Cal.] at page 275;
    8
    It is not clear why the county, as opposed to the tax collector, was named as
    defendant in the Maxwell case, which predated the statutes permitting direct
    refund actions against counties. In another early case against a county, relief was
    sought under former Political Code section 3804, which provided that county
    boards of supervisors “may” refund taxes that were erroneously assessed.
    (Younger v. Board of Supervisors (1885) 
    68 Cal. 241
    , 242-243.) The court held
    that the board‟s denial of the plaintiff‟s claim was not subject to judicial review.
    (Id. at p. 243.) Beginning in 1893, however, the statutory term “may” was
    construed to mean “must,” allowing taxpayers to pursue a judicial remedy. (Hayes
    v. County of Los Angeles (1893) 
    99 Cal. 74
    , 78-80; Stewart Etc. Co. v. County of
    Alameda (1904) 
    142 Cal. 660
    , 661-664.) The courts distinguished this statutory
    avenue of relief from the common law right of action for a tax refund, with its bar
    against recovery of “voluntary” payments. (Stewart, at pp. 662-663; see Southern
    Service, supra, 15 Cal.2d at pp. 9-10.)
    11
    Bucknall v. Story [(1873)] 
    46 Cal. 589
    ; Bank of Woodland v. Webber ([1877)] 
    52 Cal. 73
    ; Merrill v. Austin [(1879)] 
    53 Cal. 379
    ; Dear v. Varnum [(1889)] 
    80 Cal. 86
    , 89; Justice v. Robinson [(1904)] 
    142 Cal. 199
    ; Warren v. City and County of
    San Francisco [(1907)] 
    150 Cal. 167
    ; see, also, Meek v. McClure [(1875)] 
    49 Cal. 623
    .)” (Southern Service, supra, 15 Cal.2d at pp. 7-8.)
    The court reviewed a number of cases demonstrating that California
    common law precluded refunds of tax payments unless they were made under
    compulsion, strictly defined in Brumagim v. Tillinghast as “some actual or
    threatened exercise of power possessed, or supposed to be possessed, by the party
    exacting or receiving the payment over the person or property of the party making
    the payment, from which the latter has no other means of immediate relief than by
    advancing the money.” (Brumagim v. Tillinghast, supra, 18 Cal. at p. 272; see
    Southern Service, supra, 15 Cal.2d at pp. 8-10.) It then emphasized that the
    statutes permitting refund actions were a sharp break from the common law rule:
    “The case of Hellman v. City of Los Angeles [(1905)] 
    147 Cal. 653
    , recognized
    that the foregoing was the general common-law rule which, however, has been
    abrogated by the adoption of sections 3804 and 3819 of the Political Code so as to
    permit recovery although the payments were voluntary in all those cases coming
    within the provisions of the code sections. Section 3819 of the Political Code,
    allowing an action to recover a refund of certain taxes paid under protest, was
    involved in the Hellman case. In that case the court stated that the statute in
    derogation of the common-law rule was „befitting to this more enlightened age.‟ ”
    (Southern Service, supra, 15 Cal.2d at p. 10, quoting Hellman v. City of Los
    Angeles, supra, 147 Cal. at p. 655.)
    12
    The Southern Service court concluded: “The foregoing discussion and
    review leads to the conclusion that the plaintiff possessed no right or remedy
    pursuant to section 3804 of the Political Code which existed apart from the statute
    itself and which the legislature could not cut off by repeal. The general
    relationship of sovereign and taxpayer is not founded on nor does it create any
    contractual rights. (Perry v. Washburn [(1862)] 
    20 Cal. 318
    , 350; Spurrier v.
    Neumiller [(1918)] 
    37 Cal.App. 683
    .) A right to a credit or refund of taxes is
    purely statutory. (Spurrier v. Neumiller, supra; Bell v. County of Los Angeles
    [(1928)] 
    90 Cal.App. 602
    , citing Brooks v. County of Tulare [(1897)] 
    117 Cal. 465
    .)” (Southern Service, supra, 15 Cal.2d at p. 11.)9
    The discussion in Southern Service undermines the Court of Appeal‟s
    conclusion that a statutory refund action occupies the “same class” as the common
    law right of action against a tax collector. (People v. One 1941 Chevrolet Coupe,
    supra, 37 Cal.2d at p. 300.) Under our modern refund statutes, whether a tax
    payment was voluntary or involuntary is irrelevant. A taxpayer may seek a refund
    even without protesting the payment. This is a far cry from the common law right
    of action reviewed in Southern Service, which extended only to payments
    extracted under compulsion.10 The Court of Appeal reasoned that Gonzales‟s
    9
    The court noted, however, that the Legislature‟s repeal did not affect “the
    common-law right to a refund of taxes involuntarily paid.” (Southern Service,
    supra, 15 Cal.2d at p. 12.)
    10
    Of course, in a sense all tax payments are “compelled” by law. But the bar
    for demonstrating compulsion as an element of the common law refund action was
    extraordinarily high. Even a threat by the collector to sell the taxpayer‟s property
    was insufficient, if the conveyance would not result in a cloud on the title. “The
    payment of a tax to prevent a threatened sale of real estate is not compulsory,
    unless the conveyance by the officer will have the effect to deprive the owner of
    (footnote continued on next page)
    13
    notice to the state that he intended to seek a refund would have made his payment
    of additional taxes under the amnesty program “involuntary” for purposes of the
    common law. This view is inconsistent with California law.11 It is also beside the
    point, because an involuntary payment is not required under the refund statutes
    authorizing Gonzales‟s claim. The absence of this element clearly distinguishes
    the statutory proceeding from the common law action. Indeed, even the early tax
    refund statutes, which required a payment under protest, were such a significant
    relaxation of the earlier rule that they were deemed an abrogation of the common
    law, not a continuation of it. (Southern Service, supra, 15 Cal.2d at p. 10;
    Hellman v. City of Los Angeles, supra, 147 Cal. at p. 655.)
    Statutory tax refund actions have been compared for some purposes to the
    common law writ of assumpsit, which was rooted in contract or quasi-contract.
    (Northrop Aircraft v. Cal. Emp. etc. Com., supra, 32 Cal.2d at pp. 879-880 [noting
    that refund action is akin to assumpsit but declining to apply common law
    remedial principles]; Jogani v. Superior Court, supra, 165 Cal.App.4th at pp. 905-
    907 [discussing contractual character of assumpsit]; see also City of Philadelphia
    (footnote continued from previous page)
    some defense to the tax, or throw upon him the burden of showing its illegality. If
    the officer‟s want of authority will appear upon the face of the deed, or if the
    illegality of the proceedings will necessarily appear in any attempt by the
    purchaser to disturb the owner in the possession of the land, a payment to prevent
    such sale is not made under duress.” (Phelan v. San Francisco (1898) 
    120 Cal. 1
    ,
    5, discussing the common law liability of tax collectors.)
    11
    Southern Service makes it clear that a protest “does not deprive the
    payment of its voluntary character.” (Southern Service, supra, 15 Cal.2d at p. 8.)
    A more lenient rule appears in federal cases, where a payment under protest was
    considered involuntary. (City of Philadelphia v. The Collector, supra, 
    72 U.S. 720
    , 731-732; Elliott v. Swartwout, supra, 35 U.S. at p. 153.)
    14
    v. The Collector, supra, 
    72 U.S. 720
    , 731 [appropriate remedy to recover taxes
    erroneously or illegally assessed is “an action of assumpsit for money had and
    received”].) The Southern Service court, however, held that the statutory cause of
    action for a tax refund is a purely legislative creation, with no foundation in
    contract. (Southern Service, supra, 15 Cal.2d at p. 11.) This settled proposition
    supports the conclusion that the statutory right of action occupies a different class
    from the common law form of action in which a jury trial was available. (See
    People v. Union Oil Co. (1957) 
    48 Cal.2d 476
    , 481; Kuykendall v. State Bd. of
    Equalization (1994) 
    22 Cal.App.4th 1194
    , 1214, fn. 27.)
    We long ago recognized the distinct character of tax proceedings in the
    context of tax collection: “The state through its legislature can avail itself of the
    judicial power as the means by which it will collect the tax, and in such
    proceedings it may prescribe such procedure as may best avail for that purpose,
    irrespective of the mode of procedure provided for the determination of
    controversies between individuals . . . . Although the tax is an obligation from the
    citizen to the state, it is not of the same character of obligation as exists between
    citizens, and for the purposes of its collection the state is not limited to the same
    mode or to the same procedure which it prescribes for individuals in the collection
    of obligations between themselves.” (People v. Central Pacific R. R. Co. (1895)
    
    105 Cal. 576
    , 589; accord, Sonleitner v. Superior Court, supra, 158 Cal.App.2d at
    pp. 261-262; see also Hagar v. Board of Supervisors of Yolo County (1874) 
    47 Cal. 222
    , 234 [“the right of trial by jury, has no application to proceedings for the
    collection of taxes”].)
    The same general principles apply to the tax refund statutes. The statutory
    cause of action is fundamentally different in character from the old private right of
    action against tax collectors. This is not an instance where the Legislature
    15
    authorized “ „the type of action which was cognizable in a common-law court
    . . . at the time of the adoption of the Constitution of California.‟ ” (People v. One
    1941 Chevrolet Coupe, supra, 37 Cal.2d at p. 300.) Although “ „[t]he
    constitutional right of trial by jury is not to be narrowly construed‟ ” (ibid.), the
    distinctions between the common law and statutory rights of action for a tax
    refund are broad.12 Moreover, California‟s Constitution took effect at a time when
    the federal right to seek a tax refund had evolved into a statutory one, subject to
    congressional restriction in its particulars, including the right to a jury trial. We
    conclude that article I, section 16 of the California Constitution does not require a
    jury trial in a statutory action for a state income tax refund.
    12
    The Court of Appeal relied on a concurring opinion in Blanton v.
    Womancare, Inc. (1985) 
    38 Cal.3d 396
    , 411, for the proposition that in cases of
    doubt, a litigant‟s right to trial by jury must be preserved. We have followed this
    approach in cases, like Blanton, that involve waiver of the right to a jury trial.
    (See Grafton Partners v. Superior Court (2005) 
    36 Cal.4th 944
    , 956.) However,
    when the issue is whether the right to a jury exists at all in a particular kind of
    action, we are guided by a different body of case law, mindful that the right is not
    to be narrowly construed.
    16
    DISPOSITION
    We reverse the Court of Appeal‟s judgment.
    CORRIGAN, J.
    WE CONCUR:
    CANTIL-SAKAUYE, C. J.
    KENNARD, J.
    BAXTER, J.
    WERDEGAR, J.
    CHIN, J.
    YEGAN, J.
    
    Associate Justice, Court of Appeal, Second Appellate District, Division
    Six, assigned by the Chief Justice pursuant to article VI, section 6 of the California
    Constitution.
    17
    See next page for addresses and telephone numbers for counsel who argued in Supreme Court.
    Name of Opinion Franchise Tax Board v. Superior Court
    __________________________________________________________________________________
    Unpublished Opinion
    Original Appeal
    Original Proceeding
    Review Granted XXX 
    177 Cal.App.4th 36
    Rehearing Granted
    __________________________________________________________________________________
    Opinion No. S176943
    Date Filed: June 6, 2011
    __________________________________________________________________________________
    Court: Superior
    County: San Francisco
    Judge: John Kennedy Stewart
    __________________________________________________________________________________
    Counsel:
    Edmund G. Brown, Jr., and Kamala G. Harris, Attorneys General, David S. Chaney, Chief Assistant
    Attorney General, Gordon Burns, Deputy State Solicitor General, Paul D. Gifford, Assistant Attorney
    General, William L. Carter and Jeffrey A. Rich, Deputy Attorneys General, for Petitioner.
    No appearance for Respondent.
    Martin A. Schainbaum and Bryant W. H. Smith for Real Party in Interest and Respondent.
    Counsel who argued in Supreme Court (not intended for publication with opinion):
    Jeffrey A. Rich
    Deputy Attorney General
    1300 I Street, Suite 1300
    Sacramento, CA 94244-2550
    (916) 324-5154
    Martin A. Schainbaum
    351 California Street, Suite 800
    San Francisco, CA 94104-2406
    (415) 777-1040
    

Document Info

Docket Number: S176943

Citation Numbers: 51 Cal. 4th 1006, 252 P.3d 450, 125 Cal. Rptr. 3d 158, 2011 Cal. LEXIS 5467

Judges: Corrigan

Filed Date: 6/6/2011

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/19/2024