Appeal of Keith R. Mader 2000 Revocable Trust & a. ( 2020 )


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    THE SUPREME COURT OF NEW HAMPSHIRE
    ___________________________
    Board of Tax and Land Appeals
    No. 2019-0061
    APPEAL OF KEITH R. MADER 2000 REVOCABLE TRUST & a.
    (New Hampshire Board of Tax and Land Appeals)
    Argued: November 19, 2019
    Opinion Issued: June 5, 2020
    Cooper Cargill Chant, P.A., of North Conway (Randall F. Cooper on the
    brief and orally), for the petitioners.
    Donahue, Tucker & Ciandella, PLLC, of Exeter (Christopher T. Hilson
    and Brendan A. O’Donnell on the brief, and Mr. Hilson orally), for the
    respondent.
    HANTZ MARCONI, J. The petitioners1 appeal a decision of the New
    Hampshire Board of Tax and Land Appeals (BTLA) dismissing their appeals of
    the denials of applications for abatements of real estate taxes issued by the
    respondent, Town of Bartlett (Town). The BTLA dismissed the appeals because
    the petitioners’ abatement applications failed to comply with the signature and
    certification requirement of New Hampshire Administrative Rules, Tax 203.02
    1There are eighteen petitioners in this matter: Keith R. Mader 2000 Revocable Trust; Bearfoot
    Creek, LLC; Robert McInnis; Marie McInnis; Slalom Realty Trust; JR Realty Trust; Carol
    McPhearson; Bryce Blair; Kathi Blair; Eileen A. Figueroa Revocable Trust; Joseph A. Carlucci
    Living Trust; Mary F. Carlucci Living Trust; Mark J. Gallagher; Paula J. Gallagher; TJF Trust;
    Christopher Redondi; Amy Redondi; and Engeocom Bartlett, LLC.
    (Tax 203.02), and because the BTLA found that the petitioners did not
    demonstrate that these failures were “due to reasonable cause and not willful
    neglect.” See N.H. Admin. R., Tax 203.02(d). We vacate and remand.
    The following facts were found by the BTLA or are otherwise undisputed
    for the purposes of this appeal. The petitioners own property at a
    condominium development in Bartlett, and, with one exception, they are
    located out of state. On February 7, 2018, Attorney Randall F. Cooper received
    a message left by James Rader, the principal of the condominium developer,
    requesting legal representation due to a substantial increase in real estate
    taxes facing property owners. Cooper responded by e-mail that same day,
    communicating that he was willing to represent the property owners, but that
    he was leaving in two days for a vacation out of the country and would not
    return until February 26. Cooper assured Rader that, even though abatement
    applications were due to the Town by March 1, he would be able to timely
    submit them.
    Before leaving for vacation, Cooper contacted an appraisal firm to
    confirm the firm’s availability to perform an appraisal and sent Rader a
    representation agreement. According to the petitioners, they did not agree to
    the terms of the representation agreement until February 20, while Cooper was
    away on vacation.
    Cooper returned from vacation on February 26 and prepared the
    abatement applications, which were submitted to the Town on or about
    February 27. The petitioners did not personally sign or certify their respective
    applications. Rather, Cooper, as their attorney, signed on their behalf. As to
    each application, Cooper certified that there was a good faith basis for the
    application and that the facts as stated in the application were true to the best
    of his knowledge.
    The Town denied the abatement applications,2 and the petitioners
    appealed to the BTLA on August 27. By letter dated October 10, the BTLA
    requested “written proof” that the petitioners “signed the abatement
    applications filed with the Town in compliance with [Tax 203.02].” On October
    24, the petitioners filed a motion seeking an exception from Tax 203.02’s
    signature and certification requirement. The petitioners acknowledged that
    they had not personally signed or certified their respective abatement
    applications, but contended that the omissions were “due to reasonable cause
    and not willful neglect.” See N.H. Admin. R., Tax 203.02(d). In addition to
    their motion, the petitioners submitted personally signed affidavits in which
    2Although the Town denied the abatement applications, the lack of the petitioners’ signatures and
    certifications was not the reason for the denials. See RSA 76:16, III(g) (Supp. 2019); Henderson
    Holdings at Sugar Hill v. Town of Sugar Hill, 
    164 N.H. 36
    , 40 (2012).
    2
    they certified that they had good faith bases to seek abatements at the time
    their respective applications were filed.
    The BTLA denied the motion and dismissed the appeals. It found that
    the petitioners failed to comply with Tax 203.02’s signature and certification
    requirement, and further found that the petitioners had failed to demonstrate
    that these failures were “due to reasonable cause and not willful neglect.” As
    to the latter finding, the BTLA stated that “[t]he record presented indicates
    [that Cooper] made a conscious decision not to obtain the Taxpayers’
    signatures and certifications prior to filing,” and that his “anticipated vacation
    plans do not constitute reasonable cause.” The petitioners filed a motion for
    rehearing, which the BTLA denied. This appeal followed.
    Our standard for reviewing BTLA decisions is set forth by statute.
    Appeal of N.H. Elec. Coop., 
    170 N.H. 66
    , 72 (2017); see RSA 71-B:12 (2012);
    RSA 541:13 (2007). We will not set aside or vacate a BTLA decision except for
    errors of law, unless we are satisfied, by a clear preponderance of the evidence,
    that such order is unjust or unreasonable. Appeal of Town of Charlestown,
    
    166 N.H. 498
    , 499-500 (2014); see RSA 541:13. The appealing party has the
    burden of demonstrating that the BTLA’s decision was clearly unreasonable or
    unlawful. See Town of 
    Charlestown, 166 N.H. at 499
    ; RSA 541:13. The BTLA’s
    findings of fact are deemed prima facie lawful and reasonable. Town of
    
    Charlestown, 166 N.H. at 499
    ; see RSA 541:13. However, the interpretation of
    a statute or a regulation is to be decided ultimately by this court. See Appeal
    of Cole, 
    171 N.H. 403
    , 412 (2018); Appeal of Wilson, 
    161 N.H. 659
    , 661 (2011).
    If we find that the BTLA misapprehended or misapplied the law, its order will
    be set aside. See 
    Wilson, 161 N.H. at 661
    .
    Resolution of this case requires us to interpret administrative rules. The
    interpretation of a rule, like the interpretation of a statute, presents a question
    of law subject to de novo review. See Appeal of Cook, 
    170 N.H. 746
    , 749
    (2018). We use the same principles of construction when interpreting both
    statutes and administrative rules.
    Id. Where possible,
    we ascribe the plain
    and ordinary meaning to the words used in administrative rules. See Appeal of
    Silva, 172 N.H 183, 186-87 (2019). We construe all parts of an administrative
    rule together to effectuate its overall purpose and to avoid an absurd or unjust
    result. See
    id. at 187.
    Moreover, in construing the BTLA’s rules we are
    mindful that the statutory tax abatement scheme “is written to make the
    proceedings free from technical and formal obstructions.” GGP Steeplegate v.
    City of Concord, 
    150 N.H. 683
    , 686 (2004); see also Arlington Mills v. Salem, 
    83 N.H. 148
    , 154 (1927). Like the statutory scheme they are designed to
    implement, administrative rules governing tax abatement appeals “should be
    construed liberally, in advancement of the rule of remedial justice which” they
    implement. GGP 
    Steeplegate, 150 N.H. at 686
    (quotation omitted).
    3
    The submission of an abatement application to a municipality is a
    prerequisite to the BTLA’s review of an abatement request. See N.H. Admin. R.,
    Tax 203.02(a). Tax 203.02 imposes several requirements on municipal
    abatement applications. As is relevant to this case, the application must
    include “[t]he taxpayer’s signature . . . certifying that the application has a good
    faith basis and the facts stated are true.” N.H. Admin. R., Tax 203.02(b)(4).
    The rule further provides:
    The taxpayer shall sign the abatement application. An attorney or
    agent shall not sign the abatement application for the taxpayer.
    An attorney or agent may, however, sign the abatement application
    along with the taxpayer to indicate the attorney’s or agent’s
    representation. The lack of the taxpayer’s signature and
    certification shall preclude an RSA 76:16-a appeal to the board
    unless it was due to reasonable cause and not willful neglect.
    N.H. Admin. R., Tax 203.02(d) (emphasis added). Thus, although the rule
    plainly states that an attorney may not substitute his or her signature for the
    taxpayer’s, the lack of a taxpayer’s personal signature and certification on a
    municipal abatement application does not preclude an appeal of the denial of
    that application to the BTLA if the omission is “due to reasonable cause and
    not willful neglect.” Id.; see also Henderson Holdings at Sugar Hill v. Town of
    Sugar Hill, 
    164 N.H. 36
    , 40 (2012).
    There is no dispute in this case that the petitioners did not personally
    sign or certify their abatement applications. Instead, the petitioners contest
    the BTLA’s ruling that they did not demonstrate that the lack of signatures and
    certifications was due to reasonable cause and not willful neglect.
    We have not previously had occasion to construe the reasonable cause
    and not willful neglect exception in Tax 203.02. But cf. Appeal of Steele Hill
    Development, Inc., 
    121 N.H. 881
    , 884-85 (1981) (construing agency order
    imposing additional taxes as an implicit finding that plaintiff had not
    demonstrated that his failure to timely file tax return was due to reasonable
    cause rather than willful neglect under a since-repealed taxation statute, see
    RSA ch. 71-A (repealed 1985)). Although the question of whether reasonable
    cause or willful neglect exists in a particular case is one of fact for the BTLA,
    the questions of what elements constitute reasonable cause or willful neglect
    under Tax 203.02 are ones of law. See United States v. Boyle, 
    469 U.S. 241
    ,
    249 n.8 (1985); 
    Cook, 170 N.H. at 749
    . Thus, we analyze the reasonable cause
    and not willful neglect exception in Tax 203.02(d) de novo. See 
    Cook, 170 N.H. at 749
    .
    Neither “reasonable cause” nor “willful neglect” is defined in the BTLA’s
    regulations. See N.H. Admin. R., Tax 102.01-.40 (defining certain terms used
    in BTLA regulations). But cf. N.H. Admin. R., Tax 102.02 (“‘Accident, mistake,
    4
    or misfortune’ means something outside the party’s own control and not due to
    neglect, or something that a reasonably prudent person would not be expected
    to guard against or provide for.” (emphasis added)). We have noted, however,
    that “[w]illful is a word of many meanings depending upon the context in which
    it is used.” Appeal of Morgan, 
    144 N.H. 44
    , 52 (1999) (quotation omitted);
    accord Rood v. Moore, 
    148 N.H. 378
    , 379 (2002). Furthermore, although we
    have often stated that actions are not willful when taken accidentally or on the
    basis of a mistake of fact, see, e.g., Miller v. Slania Enters., 
    150 N.H. 655
    , 662
    (2004), our case law does not “indicate an intent to define ‘willful’ the same in
    every context,” 
    Morgan, 144 N.H. at 52
    . Nor does this oft-repeated
    construction mean that, in order for a given action to be nonwillful, it must
    have been taken accidentally or on the basis of a mistake of fact. In certain
    contexts, for example, we have analyzed whether noncompliance with a statute
    or regulation was willful based upon whether compliance was reasonably
    possible under the circumstances. See
    id. at 52-53;
    Ives v. Manchester
    Subaru, Inc., 
    126 N.H. 796
    , 801-02 (1985).
    In Morgan, we upheld a finding of the New Hampshire Board of
    Pharmacy that the petitioner willfully violated specific recordkeeping and data
    entry statutes because he was not prevented from complying with those
    statutes by “circumstances beyond his reasonable control.” 
    Morgan, 144 N.H. at 45
    , 53. Morgan is consistent with the construction we gave RSA 275:44
    (2010) in Ives. See 
    Ives, 126 N.H. at 801-02
    . RSA 275:44, IV, which was at
    issue in Ives, provides that “[i]f an employer willfully and without good cause
    fails to pay an employee wages as required under” other paragraphs of the
    statute, the employer is liable for liquidated damages. RSA 275:44, IV; see
    
    Ives, 126 N.H. at 801
    . In Ives, we stated that an employer willfully and without
    good cause fails to pay an employee wages under RSA 275:44, IV when the
    employer withholds wages “voluntarily, with knowledge that the wages are
    owed and despite financial ability to pay them.” 
    Ives, 126 N.H. at 802
    (emphasis added); see also Richmond v. Hutchinson, 
    149 N.H. 749
    , 751-52
    (2003) (applying construction of RSA 275:44, IV from Ives; rejecting argument
    that employer did not willfully withhold wages because the record showed the
    employer did not have a bona fide belief it was unable to pay said wages).
    Thus, Ives gave meaning to the “willfully and without good cause” standard in
    RSA 275:44, IV by focusing on whether the employer withheld wages even
    though the employer had the funds available to pay them. See 
    Ives, 126 N.H. at 801-02
    .
    The construction we gave to RSA 275:44, IV in Ives, which uses language
    similar to Tax 203.02(d)’s “reasonable cause and not willful neglect” standard,
    tracks with federal laws that can excuse the failure to meet certain tax return
    filing requirements. See Steele Hill 
    Development, 121 N.H. at 885
    (relying
    upon “[f]ederal courts that have dealt with . . . language similar to that before
    us” to conclude that the taxpayer had the burden of proving that his failure to
    file a tax return was due to reasonable cause and not willful neglect under a
    5
    since-repealed statute). The Internal Revenue Code “imposes mandatory
    penalties for the failure to file returns . . . unless the taxpayer can show that
    such failure was due to ‘reasonable cause’ and not due to ‘willful neglect.’”
    East Wind Industries, Inc. v. United States, 
    196 F.3d 499
    , 504 (3d Cir. 1999);
    see 26 U.S.C. § 6651(a) (2018). See generally Ann K. Wooster, Annotation,
    What, Other Than Reliance on Attorney, Accountant, or Other Expert,
    Constitutes “Reasonable Cause” Excusing Failure to File Tax Return or to Pay
    Tax, Under § 6651(a) of Internal Revenue Code of 1986 (26 U.S.C.A. § 6651(a)),
    
    168 A.L.R. Fed. 461
    (2001). Furthermore, taxpayers who fail to comply with
    certain information reporting requirements are not subject to penalties “if it is
    shown that such failure is due to reasonable cause and not to willful neglect.”
    26 U.S.C. § 6724(a) (2018); see In re Refco Public Commodity Pool, L.P., 
    554 B.R. 736
    , 742 (Bankr. D. Del. 2016).
    Although neither “reasonable cause” nor “willful neglect” is defined in the
    Internal Revenue Code, see East Wind 
    Industries, 196 F.3d at 504
    , the former
    is defined by Treasury Regulations, see 26 C.F.R. §§ 301.6651-1(c)(1) (2019),
    301.6724-1(a)(2) (2019). The Treasury Regulation applicable to the failure to
    timely file a tax return states that a delay in filing is due to reasonable cause
    “[i]f the taxpayer exercised ordinary business care and prudence and was
    nevertheless unable to file the return within the prescribed time.” 26 C.F.R.
    § 301.6651-1(c)(1). Similarly, the regulation applicable to the failure to comply
    with certain statutorily mandated information reporting requirements states
    that reasonable cause will exist if “[t]he failure arose from events beyond the
    filer’s control,” 26 C.F.R. § 301.6724-1(a)(2)(ii), and the filer establishes that he
    or she “acted in a responsible manner . . . both before and after the failure
    occurred,” 26 C.F.R. § 301.6724-1(a). See In re 
    Refco, 554 B.R. at 742
    . “[T]he
    threshold inquiry” under the federal reasonable cause standard “is whether,
    based on all the facts and circumstances, the taxpayer exercised ordinary
    business care and prudence.”
    Id. As for
    “willful neglect,” the United States Supreme Court construed that
    phrase in Boyle. See 
    Boyle, 469 U.S. at 245
    . The Court stated that the
    meaning of “willful neglect” had “become clear over the near-70 years of [the
    phrase’s] presence in the” Internal Revenue Code.
    Id. As used
    in the Code,
    “the term ‘willful neglect’ may be read as meaning a conscious, intentional
    failure or reckless indifference.”
    Id. “Stated another
    way,” to show that a
    failure was not due to willful neglect, “the taxpayer must show that the failure
    . . . was the result ‘neither of carelessness, reckless indifference, nor
    intentional failure.’” East Wind 
    Industries, 196 F.3d at 504
    (quoting 
    Boyle, 469 U.S. at 246
    n.4).
    We find these federal authorities involving materially identical language
    to Tax 203.02(d)’s “reasonable cause and not willful neglect” standard highly
    persuasive. See Steele Hill 
    Development, 121 N.H. at 885
    . Like the Second
    Circuit Court of Appeals, “we believe that ‘reasonable cause and not willful
    6
    neglect’ must refer not simply to whether the taxpayer acted voluntarily in the
    sense of acting consciously, but also to whether the filer’s reason for so acting
    was objectively reasonable under the circumstances.” Gerald B. Lefcourt, P.C.
    v. United States, 
    125 F.3d 79
    , 84 (2d Cir. 1997). In addition to the federal
    authorities discussed above, we draw support from our own case law
    construing similar standards, see 
    Ives, 121 N.H. at 801-02
    , our longstanding
    interpretive rule that the tax abatement scheme “should be construed
    liberally,” with the goal of making abatement proceedings “free from technical
    and formal obstructions,” GGP 
    Steeplegate, 150 N.H. at 686
    (quotation
    omitted); accord Arlington 
    Mills, 83 N.H. at 154
    , as well as the BTLA’s own
    regulations, which appear to contemplate that a party’s action is “not due to
    neglect” when it is attributable to “something outside the party’s own control”
    or to “something that a reasonably prudent person would not be expected to
    guard against or provide for,” N.H. Admin. R., Tax 102.02.
    For all of these reasons, we construe Tax 203.02(d)’s reasonable cause
    and not willful neglect exception as permitting abatement appeals to the BTLA
    despite the lack of a taxpayer’s signature and certification on the application at
    issue if the taxpayer can show that, despite exercising ordinary business care
    and prudence, it was not reasonably possible to submit the application with
    the taxpayer’s signature and certification, and can further show that he or she
    was not recklessly indifferent to the signature and certification requirement in
    preparing the application.
    In this case, the BTLA concluded that the administrative record was
    “bereft of supporting facts” that would warrant a finding that the lack of the
    taxpayers’ signatures was due to reasonable cause and not willful neglect
    because, in part, “[t]he record presented indicate[d] [that Cooper] made a
    conscious decision not to obtain the Taxpayers’ signatures and certifications”
    in preparing the abatement applications after returning from vacation.
    Although the BTLA did not explain how it construed Tax 203.02(d)’s reasonable
    cause and not willful neglect standard, that the BTLA offered Cooper’s
    “conscious decision” to omit the petitioners’ signatures as a justification for
    dismissing their appeals suggests that the BTLA construed the standard to
    focus, at least in part, on whether the omissions were intentional. Such a
    focus is perhaps understandable in light of Tax 203.02(d)’s use of the word
    “willful,” but the proper interpretation of “willful” in a given statute or
    regulation depends upon the context in which it appears. 
    Morgan, 144 N.H. at 52
    . In light of Tax 203.02’s context, as discussed above, we do not construe
    the rule’s reasonable cause and not willful neglect standard to focus on
    whether the taxpayers intended to submit applications without their signatures
    and certifications; rather, we construe the standard to permit abatement
    appeals to the BTLA despite noncompliance with the signature and certification
    requirement when the taxpayer can show that it was not reasonably possible to
    comply with that requirement despite exercising ordinary business care and
    prudence, and that the taxpayer was not recklessly indifferent to the signature
    7
    and certification requirement. See, e.g., Gerald B. Lefcourt, 
    P.C., 125 F.3d at 84
    ; see also 
    Ives, 121 N.H. at 801-02
    ; GGP 
    Steeplegate, 150 N.H. at 686
    ; cf.
    N.H. Admin. R., Tax 102.02.
    Because the BTLA did not have the benefit of the construction of Tax
    203.02(d) that we announce today, however, and because the primary issue
    presented by the petitioners’ motion was whether the lack of their signatures
    and certifications “was due to reasonable cause and not willful neglect” under
    Tax 203.02(d), we vacate the BTLA’s decision and remand for further
    consideration in light of our construction. See 
    Cook, 170 N.H. at 753
    . We
    trust that the BTLA will give appropriate weight to the circumstances in this
    case that bear on the objective reasonableness for the omitted signatures and
    certifications. Those circumstances include, but are not necessarily limited to,
    the following: the petitioners sought representation; the representation
    agreement was not signed until Cooper was away on vacation; Cooper had
    approximately three days to complete and file the abatement applications after
    returning from vacation; all but one of the petitioners were located out of state;
    and the Town did not reject the applications for the lack of signatures. See In
    re Hudson Oil Co., Inc., 
    91 B.R. 932
    , 950-51 (Bankr. D. Kan. 1988) (finding
    reasonable cause where time constraints made timely filing impossible).
    In addition to arguing that the omissions of their signatures and
    certifications were due to reasonable cause and not willful neglect, the
    petitioners appear to suggest that Tax 203.02(d) may be ultra vires insofar as it
    prohibits attorneys from signing abatement applications for their clients. See
    Bach v. N.H. Dep’t of Safety, 
    169 N.H. 87
    , 94 (2016) (concluding that
    administrative rules were ultra vires and thus unlawful because they changed
    the requirements of the statute they were intended to implement). In light of
    our decision reinstituting the petitioners’ abatement appeals, we need not
    address, at this time, whether the BTLA may lawfully promulgate a rule
    permitting the dismissals of property tax abatement appeals on the sole basis
    that the taxpayer’s attorney signed and certified the abatement application at
    issue. See Antosz v. Allain, 
    163 N.H. 298
    , 302 (2012). However, we take this
    opportunity to note that we do not view Wilson as necessarily determinative of
    that question. Wilson did not involve an attorney — with a special obligation of
    candor toward the tribunal, see N.H. R. Prof. Conduct 3.3 — who signed the
    necessary section of the abatement application certifying that the application
    has a good faith basis and that the facts stated in it are true. See 
    Wilson, 161 N.H. at 660
    (the nonattorney representative merely wrote on the signature line
    for the abatement applicants “See agent form,” but the accompanying agent
    authorization form signed by the applicants did not contain a certification that
    the facts stated in the abatement application were true). Nor do we view
    Henderson Holdings, the facts of which did not implicate Tax 203.02(d)
    because the petitioner appealed the denial of its abatement application to the
    superior court, not the BTLA, as controlling on that issue. See Henderson
    
    Holdings, 164 N.H. at 37-38
    , 40.
    8
    We have reviewed the remaining appellate arguments and conclude that
    under the circumstances of this case, they do not warrant further discussion.
    See Vogel v. Vogel, 
    137 N.H. 321
    , 322 (1993).
    In summation, we vacate the BTLA’s decision dismissing the petitioners’
    abatement appeals and remand for further consideration as to whether the
    omissions of the petitioners’ personal signatures and certifications on their
    applications were “due to reasonable cause and not willful neglect” as we have
    construed that phrase.
    Vacated and remanded.
    HICKS, BASSETT, and DONOVAN, JJ., concurred.
    9