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Texas’s Catch-22 Refund Procedure; Are Refund Assignments Still Valid?

Nouvelles fiscales avr. 30, 2021

Texas’s Catch-22 Refund Procedure; Are Refund Assignments Still Valid?

In Best Buy Stores, Inc. v. Hegar, No. 03-19-00246-CV (Tex. App. – Austin, April 16, 2021), the Third Court of Appeals found that the customers of Best Buy lacked standing to sue for refunds of taxes paid in error. Between 1998 and 2007, customers could receive rebates on purchases of certain products by submitting applications to Best Buy. Because the rebates reduced the taxable sales price of the products, the rebates also reduced the amount of sales tax due on the purchases. Unfortunately, Best Buy did not include sales tax in its rebate payments. A 2009 Comptroller letter ruling provides “(a) mail-in rebate from the seller may be used to reduce the taxable sales price of the item. The seller should refund the sales tax that was collected on the part of the sales price that was rebated back to the customer.” Accordingly, a group of customers attempted to pursue a class-action refund claim against Best Buy.

The Comptroller’s rule on refunds provides alternative methods for obtaining a refund of sales tax paid in error to a seller. The seller may refund the tax to the customer and file a claim for refund with the Comptroller. As an alternative, the seller may simply assign its refund rights to the purchaser, after which the purchaser may file a claim directly with the Comptroller [34 TAC § 3.325(a)(1)]. In accordance with the rule, Best Buy assigned its refund rights to its customers (assignees) “individually and on behalf of all others similarly situated.”

The assignees filed refund claims with the Comptroller. The claims were denied during the administrative hearings process on the grounds that “class-action” refund claims are not allowed. When the assignees subsequently filed a refund suit, the Comptroller responded with a plea to the jurisdiction, arguing (among other things) that the assignees lacked “constitutional standing” to sue. 

The Comptroller argued that, because Best Buy never refunded the tax to its customers, the district court lacked subject matter jurisdiction over the assignees’ suit. Tax Code § 111.104(f) provides that no taxes may be refunded to a person who has collected the taxes unless the taxes have been refunded to the person from whom they were collected. The Court rejected the Comptroller’s contention, holding that the refund requirement is not a jurisdictional prerequisite to a suit. Instead, subsection (f) is about the right to relief and bars recovery of the tax until taxes collected have been refunded to the person from whom they were collected. 

However, in discussing subsection (f), the Comptroller also raised a constitutional standing issue. In a supplemental briefing requested by the Court, the Comptroller argued that Best Buy lacked standing to sue because it had not sustained an injury. In finding for the Comptroller, the Court explained that a plaintiff must be personally injured to have constitutional standing to sue. The Court acknowledged that the assignees were the injured parties but, nevertheless, held that their right to sue was entirely derivative of Best Buy’s rights under the tax code. Thus, the assignees had no standing to sue because (i) they did not pay the tax directly to the state as required by Tax Code § 111.104(b) and (ii) they received refund assignments from a vendor that suffered no injury because it did not refund any of the tax.

As discussed above, Best Buy was following the Comptroller’s own rule when it assigned its refund rights to its customers. However, based on this decision, the refund assignments did not confer constitutional standing on the purchasers to pursue their claims in court. Instead, the decision suggests that a seller must refund at least a portion of the taxes collected in error prior to assigning its right to refund to ensure that both the seller and its assignees have standing. It is unclear why or how a seller would both refund tax and issue a refund assignment to the customer; the rule contemplates that the assignment is an alternative to a refund. This case has enormous implications for future refund claims because it injects significant uncertainty into a process that has been prescribed by rule and followed for decades by the agency and taxpayers alike. If this decision survives on appeal, any customer who paid taxes in error and received refund assignments from the seller may be denied access to the courts—a terrible blow to due process rights.

TECHNICAL INFORMATION CONTACTS:

Mark L. Nachbar
Principal
Ryan
213.627.1719
mark.nachbar@ryan.com

John Christian
Director
Ryan
512.476.0022
john.christian@ryan.com

The material presented in this communication is intended to provide general information only and should solely be seen as broad guidance and not directed to the particular facts or circumstances of any individual who may read this publication. No liability is accepted for acts or omissions taken in reliance upon the content of this piece. Before taking (or not taking) any action, readers should seek professional advice specific to their situation from Ryan, LLC or other tax professionals. For additional information about this topic, please contact us at info@ryan.com.