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Agenda - 06-18-2013 - 7d
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Agenda - 06-18-2013 - 7d
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BOCC
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6/18/2013
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Regular Meeting
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Agenda
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7d
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Minutes 06-18-2013
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Refunds and Releases 5 14 <br /> 3.Which taxes must be released or refunded under G.S. 105-381? <br /> The Machinery Act defines the term"tax" as "the principal amount of any tax, cost,penal- <br /> ties and interest imposed upon property tax or dog license tax."12 This definition means that <br /> G.S. 105-381 controls the refund or release of all property taxes, including special service <br /> district taxes and rural fire district taxes. G.S. 105-381 does not control the refund or release <br /> of other local taxes,such as privilege license taxes and occupancy taxes,nor does it control the <br /> refund or release of costs and fees,such as special assessments and nuisance abatement costs, <br /> that by statute are collectible as property taxes.See Question 7 for details on the refund and <br /> release of other taxes and fees. <br /> 4.Does G.S. 105-381 govern the refund or release of interest? <br /> Yes. Because the term"taxes"as used in GS 105-381 includes interest, any refund or release of <br /> interest must conform to the restrictions in that statute. Only when interest is levied illegally or <br /> added due to a clerical error can it be released or refunded. For example,if the tax office miscal- <br /> culates the interest owed by a taxpayer,that interest charge could be refunded or released under <br /> G.S. 105-381. <br /> What if the taxpayer claims that he or she was charged interest only because the tax office <br /> failed to send a tax bill in a timely fashion or sent an inaccurate tax bill? The North Carolina <br /> Supreme Court answered this question in the negative when it decided In re Morgan two years <br /> ago.13 In this case,the taxpayer listed her house with the Henderson County assessor but the <br /> house was never assessed or taxed due to tax office error. Eight years later the tax office learned <br /> of its mistake and sent retroactive tax bills,plus interest,for each year the house had escaped <br /> taxation. The taxpayer contested both the principal taxes and the interest. The Supreme Court <br /> ruled in favor of the county,approving not only the principal taxes but also the addition of inter- <br /> est to the tardy tax bills. The court's decision relied on G.S. 105-348,which provides taxpayers <br /> with notice of their taxes regardless of when or if they receive tax bills, and G.S. 105-394,which <br /> forgives minor defects—"immaterial irregularities"in the language of the statute—during the <br /> taxation process.14 Although the taxpayer in Morgan did not seek a release under G.S. 105-381, <br /> the result would be the same had she done so.Morgan makes clear that it is legal for interest to <br /> accrue on taxes billed after the delinquency date due to tax office error.A release is,therefore, <br /> not justified under G.S. 105-381. <br /> property that was disposed of prior to January 1.This relatively common situation involves a dispute over <br /> the valuation of the taxpayer's aggregate personal property as opposed to a dispute over the existence of <br /> taxable property.Accordingly,the taxpayer's opportunity to contest the issue should be through the list- <br /> ing and appraisal appeal period,not through the refund and release process. <br /> 12.G.S.105-273(15). <br /> 13.362 N.C.339,661 S.E.2d 733(2008). <br /> 14.For more on Morgan and the immaterial irregularity provisions,please see Christopher B. <br /> McLaughlin and Stan C.Duncan,"Discovery,Immaterial Irregularity,and the Morgan Decision,"Prop- <br /> erty Tax Bulletin No.147(March 2009),available online at www.sog.unc.edu/pubs/electronicversions/ <br /> pdfs/ptb147.pdf. <br /> ©2010 School of Government.The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill <br />
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