Grosz v. Cal. Dept. Tax & Fee Administration ( 2023 )


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  • Filed 1/23/23 (unmodified opinion attached)
    CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION ONE
    STANLEY E. GROSZ,                            B309418
    Plaintiff and Appellant,              (Los Angeles County
    Super. Ct. No.
    v.                                    19STCV27757)
    CALIFORNIA DEPARTMENT                        ORDER MODIFYING
    OF TAX AND FEE                               OPINION AND
    ADMINISTRATION, et al.,                      DENYING REHEARING
    Defendants and                         [NO CHANGE IN
    Respondents;                           JUDGMENT]
    AMAZON SERVICES, LLC, et
    al.,
    Real Parties in Interest
    and Respondents.
    THE COURT:
    It is ordered that the opinion filed herein on January 9, 2023, be
    modified as follows:
    1.      On page 25, the last full paragraph of footnote 12, the
    following citations are to be inserted after the below quotations
    as follows:
    “[A] court will not take judicial notice of a case that
    was not cited in the briefs.” (Eisenberg et al., Cal.
    Practice Guide: Civil Appeals and Writs (The Rutter
    Group 2022) ¶ 5:158.1.) Neither will appellate courts
    “take judicial notice of matters irrelevant to the
    dispositive point on appeal.” (Id. at ¶ 5:156.2.)
    There is no change in judgment.
    Appellant’s petition for rehearing is denied.
    ____________________________________________________________
    CHANEY, J.            BENDIX, Acting P. J.        BENKE, J. *
    *Retired Associate Justice of the Court of Appeal, Fourth
    Appellate District, Division One, assigned by the Chief Justice
    pursuant to article VI, section 6 of the California Constitution.
    2
    Filed 1/9/23 (unmodified opinion)
    CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION ONE
    STANLEY E. GROSZ,                       B309418
    Plaintiff and Appellant,         (Los Angeles County
    Super. Ct. No.
    v.                               19STCV27757)
    CALIFORNIA DEPARTMENT
    OF TAX AND FEE
    ADMINISTRATION, et al.,
    Defendants and
    Respondents;
    AMAZON SERVICES, LLC, et
    al.,
    Real Parties in Interest
    and Respondents.
    APPEAL from orders of the Superior Court of Los Angeles
    County, Elaine Lu, Judge. Affirmed.
    Dakessian Law, Mardiros H. Dakessian; Capstone Law,
    Ryan H. Wu, and Tyler Anderson for Plaintiff and Appellant.
    Rob Bonta, Attorney General, Tamar Pachter, Assistant
    Attorney General, Lisa W. Chao, and Douglas J. Beteta, Deputy
    Attorneys General, for Defendants and Respondents.
    Hueston Hennigan, John C. Hueston, Moez M. Kaba,
    Joseph A. Reiter, and Michael H. Todisco for Real Parties in
    Interest and Respondents.
    ____________________________
    In addition to its own products, Amazon fulfills orders for
    products sold by third-party merchants through a program it
    calls “Fulfillment by Amazon” (FBA). 1 The trial court in this
    action described the program as alleged in the First Amended
    Complaint (FAC): “To support this program, Amazon contracts
    with merchants (‘FBA Merchants’) who supply the products
    ordered by consumers through Amazon’s website. [Citation.]
    Amazon provides advertising, packaging, [and] delivery of the
    products supplied by the FBA Merchants. [Citation.] Amazon
    also processes payments for sales on behalf of the FBA
    Merchants.” 2 According to the FAC, the state agency responsible
    1The Real Parties in Interest are Amazon.com, Inc.,
    Amazon Services, LLC, Amazon Fulfillment Services, Inc.,
    Amazon Payments, Inc., and Amazon Capital Services, Inc.
    According to the operative complaint, these parties act in concert
    to administer the FBA program.
    2 On its Web site, Amazon summarizes the program this
    way: “Fulfillment by Amazon (FBA) is a service that allows
    businesses to outsource order fulfillment to Amazon. Businesses
    send products to Amazon fulfillment centers and when a
    customer makes a purchase, [Amazon] pick[s], pack[s], and
    ship[s] the order. [Amazon] can also provide customer service
    and process returns for those orders.”
    2
    for collecting sales and use tax (currently the California
    Department of Tax and Fee Administration (DTFA)) 3 has
    historically not collected from Amazon sales and use taxes for
    products sold through the FBA program. 4
    Stanley Grosz filed a taxpayer action under Code of Civil
    Procedure section 526a (Section 526a) seeking a declaration that
    the DTFA “has a mandatory duty to assess and collect” sales and
    use tax specifically from Amazon for products sold through the
    ( [as of January
    6, 2023].)
    3Before July 1, 2017, the agency responsible for collecting
    sales and use taxes was the State Board of Equalization. The
    Taxpayer Transparency and Fairness Act of 2017 created the
    DTFA and transferred the Board of Equalization’s authority and
    responsibility for sales and use taxes (among other things) to the
    DTFA. (Stats. 2017, ch. 16, §§ 5, 14, 15; Gov. Code, §§ 15570,
    15570.20, 15570.22; Rev. & Tax. Code, § 20.)
    4 In his opening brief, Stanley Grosz—the taxpayer who
    filed suit against the DTFA—explains that this appeal is limited
    to DTFA’s “failure to collect tax from Amazon on FBA [s]ales
    transacted prior to October 1, 2019 . . . .” In 2019, the
    Legislature passed and the Governor signed Assembly Bill No.
    147, which the Legislature called the Marketplace Facilitator Act
    (MFA). (Stats. 2019, ch. 5, § 2.) The bill made the MFA
    operative on October 1, 2019. (Stats. 2019, ch. 5, § 2; Rev. & Tax.
    Code, § 6049.5, subd. (a).) The MFA appears on its face to relate
    to transactions like the FBA transactions alleged in the FAC. We
    do not construe any part of the MFA here, but note only that it
    appears that Grosz has attempted to expressly exclude from his
    lawsuit any transactions occurring after the MFA’s operative
    date.
    3
    FBA program, and an injunction requiring the DTFA to do so.
    The DTFA and its Director, Nicolas Maduro, 5 and the Amazon
    entities that Grosz named in his FAC as Real Parties in Interest
    all demurred to the FAC.
    The trial court sustained the respondents’ demurrers
    without leave to amend. The trial court reasoned that the
    Revenue and Taxation Code vests the DTFA with discretion to
    determine whether the FBA Merchant or Amazon is the “retailer”
    in any given FBA transaction for purposes of collecting sales and
    use tax. Because the determination is discretionary and not
    ministerial, the trial court reasoned that Grosz had no standing
    to pursue his action. (See Silver v. Watson (1972) 
    26 Cal.App.3d 905
    , 909 (Silver).)
    We agree with the trial court, and will affirm the trial
    court’s order sustaining the respondents’ demurrers without
    leave to amend.
    BACKGROUND
    Because this case is before us after a trial court sustained
    demurrers, and because we must accept the factual allegations in
    the operative complaint as true for purposes of our review of the
    trial court’s order, the facts we recite here are drawn from the
    allegations in Grosz’s FAC.
    The FAC alleged that in addition to selling its own
    products, Amazon “contracts with FBA Merchants in order to
    offer various products supplied by FBA Merchants for sale on
    www.amazon.com.” According to the FAC, FBA Merchants send
    their goods to Amazon fulfillment centers, where Amazon stores
    5   We refer to the DTFA and Maduro collectively as the
    DTFA.
    4
    the goods until they are sold to consumers. Amazon “handle[s]
    all the storing, packaging, and shipping of property held” in its
    fulfillment centers and “controls which fulfillment centers are
    used for the storage of products supplied by FBA Merchants.”
    Amazon handles payment processing services for FBA Merchants’
    goods that are sold on the Amazon Web site, and “processes
    transactions for invoiced orders, as well as payments, refunds,
    and adjustments” on the FBA transactions. According to the
    FAC, Amazon “receives and holds sales proceeds on behalf of FBA
    Merchants.”
    According to the FAC, California imposes sales and use
    taxes (see Rev. & Tax. Code, §§ 6051, 6201) on “retailers.”
    “Under California law,” the FAC states, “the ‘retailer’ is
    responsible for paying to the State of California sales tax on
    qualifying transactions” and “is also responsible for collecting use
    tax on qualifying transactions from purchasers and remitting it
    to the State.”
    Citing California Code of Regulations, Title 18, section
    1569 (Regulation 1569), the FAC stated that “Amazon is the
    ‘retailer’ for FBA [s]ales in California . . . .”
    According to the FAC, Amazon “has not [paid] and does not
    pay sales tax or collect and remit use tax to California for sales in
    California of [goods] supplied by FBA Merchants.” The FAC
    further alleged that the DTFA “has not [collected] and does not
    attempt to collect sales and use tax from Amazon for sales of
    [goods] in California supplied by FBA Merchants.”
    Based on those allegations, the FAC alleged two causes of
    action. First, the FAC alleged in a cause of action for injunctive
    relief that “Amazon is liable for at least three years of past-due
    taxes, interest, and penalties” and that the DTFA “had a
    5
    mandatory duty to assess and collect from Amazon sales and use
    tax” for sales of FBA Merchants’ products in California. Grosz
    seeks an injunction “mandating that [the DTFA] comply with its
    duty to enforce California’s sales and use tax law by requiring
    Amazon to pay to the State sales and use tax on FBA [s]ales.” In
    his second cause of action, Grosz seeks declaratory relief in the
    form of a “judicial determination of the rights and duties of [the
    DTFA] with respect to whether at all times relevant hereto
    Amazon is and was a retailer under California law responsible for
    paying sales and use tax to the State on FBA [s]ales and as such
    [the DTFA] has a mandatory duty to assess and collect such tax
    from Amazon.”
    Grosz alleged that he was bringing the action under Section
    526a, which creates taxpayer standing under certain
    circumstances.
    The DTFA and Amazon both demurred to the FAC. Among
    a host of other arguments, the DTFA argued that the
    determination about who is a “retailer” under the Revenue and
    Taxation Code or the accompanying regulations is left to the
    discretion of the DTFA. 6 “Determinations that a party is a
    ‘retailer’ in California, liable for the sales tax or collection of the
    use tax, required to file a tax return, and collection is worth
    pursuing,” the DTFA argued, “require the [DTFA] to act
    according to the dictates of its own judgment.” The DTFA argued
    that under Section 526a, “a taxpayer must allege a governmental
    action was mandatory, not discretionary . . . .” “A mandatory
    duty to act,” the DTFA argued, “is one where the government
    6 Again, the arguments in this case focus on transactions
    that occurred before the enactment of Marketplace Facilitator Act
    in 2019.
    6
    agency or officer has a clear, present and ‘ministerial duty’ to act
    . . . , meaning the agency or officer ‘is required to perform in a
    prescribed manner in obedience to the mandate of legal authority
    and without regard to his own judgment or opinion concerning
    such act’s propriety or impropriety, when a given state of facts
    exists.’ ” Amazon joined in the DTFA’s arguments, and included
    its own argument regarding Grosz’s standing to enjoin the
    DTFA’s discretionary acts. 7
    7  Amazon filed and the trial court granted a request for
    judicial notice of a 2012 letter from the State Board of
    Equalization (BOE) concluding that under the facts as explained
    to the BOE and detailed in the letter, neither Amazon nor any of
    its related entities was a “retailer” under Regulation 1569. The
    BOE’s determination in its advice letter appears to have been
    based largely on its understanding that in order to effectuate a
    sale from an FBA Merchant to a consumer in most instances,
    Amazon had to submit the order to the FBA Merchant and the
    FBA Merchant had to approve the order. On that basis, Amazon
    did not have the power to transfer title or cause title to be
    transferred from the FBA Merchant to the consumer without
    action by the FBA Merchant. In other instances, one of the
    Amazon entities that did not have physical possession of the
    property (and was therefore not a “retailer” under Regulation
    1569) had authority to transfer title, and another Amazon entity
    without authority to transfer title (and therefore not a “retailer”
    under Regulation 1569) had physical possession of the property.
    The BOE’s letter is based on many BOE communications
    with Amazon’s accountants and contains facts different from
    those alleged in the FAC. While we recognize that the BOE
    interpreted the statutes and regulations at issue in this case the
    way it did in 2012 based on the facts before it at that time, we
    also recognize that the BOE’s letter goes to great lengths to limit
    itself to the facts recited in the letter. Judicial notice of what the
    BOE did is judicial notice only of the BOE’s action, and not of the
    7
    The trial court agreed with the DTFA’s and Amazon’s
    contention that Grosz lacked standing under Section 526a
    because his lawsuit sought an injunction directing the DTFA how
    to exercise its discretion. Quoting Silver, supra, 26 Cal.App.3d at
    page 909, the trial court explained that “ ‘[a] taxpayer may not
    bring an action on behalf of a public agency unless the governing
    body has a duty to act, and has refused to do so. If the governing
    body has discretion in the matter, the taxpayer may not
    interfere.’ ” (Italics added by trial court.) The trial court
    explained the distinction between ministerial and discretionary
    acts, and explained, quoting Sonoma Ag Art v. Department of
    Food & Agriculture (2004) 
    125 Cal.App.4th 122
    , 127 that “ ‘[e]ven
    if mandatory language appears in [a] statute creating a duty, the
    duty is discretionary if the [public entity] must exercise
    significant discretion to perform the duty.’ ” Citing a variety of
    Revenue and Taxation Code provisions, the trial court explained
    in depth that the DTFA “is the proper entity vested with
    authority to make the determination as to which party—FBA
    Merchants or Amazon—is the retailer” for purposes of sales and
    use tax on FBA transactions. “Indeed,” the trial court reasoned,
    “by asserting that it was mandatory for the [DTFA] to determine
    that Amazon was the retailer for the transactions at issue,
    [Grosz] is conceding that [the DTFA] was the proper entity vested
    with the authority to make the determination of which party was
    the retailer.” The trial court reasoned that Grosz’s argument was
    not that the DTFA did not have the authority to determine the
    facts in the BOE’s letter, which are different than the facts
    asserted in the FAC. (See Chacon v. Union Pacific Railroad
    (2020) 
    56 Cal.App.5th 565
    , 573 [judicial notice may be taken of a
    document, but not the truth of its contents].)
    8
    identity of the retailer under the applicable statutory scheme, but
    rather that “the statutory scheme mandated that [the DTFA]
    conclude that Amazon was the retailer . . . .”
    The trial court then examined the legal authority that the
    parties identified as relevant—“Revenue and Tax[ation] Code
    [sections] 6014, 6015, and 6006, as well as [Regulation] 1569”—to
    determine whether those statutes “mandated the legal conclusion
    that Amazon (and not the FBA Merchants) were the retailer for
    the FBA [s]ales described in the FAC.” On its examination, the
    trial court noted that “inasmuch as Amazon may qualify as a
    ‘retailer’ under Revenue and Tax[ation] Code sections 6014 and
    6015, these definitions of ‘retailer’ apply with equal, if not
    greater, force to the FBA Merchants, who source and sell their
    products on Amazon.com.” The trial court pointed out that
    Grosz’s argument “appeared to urge that the [trial] court
    abandon Revenue and Tax[ation] Code sections 6014 and 6015
    altogether in its analysis” and consider “Revenue and Tax[ation]
    Code section 6007[, subdivision ](a)(2) and [Regulation] 1569 in
    isolation and at the exclusion of all other provisions of the
    statutory scheme in determining which party—Amazon or the
    FBA Merchants—were the retailers for purposes of the sales and
    use taxes.”
    The trial court declined to do so, explaining: “The
    determination of which party—FBA Merchants or Amazon—was
    the retailer necessarily entailed consideration of all sections of
    the vast statutory scheme and required discretion especially
    considering ‘the “highly technical,” “intensely detailed and fact-
    specific sales tax system governing an enormous universe of
    transactions.” ’ ” The trial court understood the statutes to mean
    that “[b]ecause there is but one transaction or sale of the product
    9
    to the customer, [the DTFA] may collect the sales and use taxes
    either from Amazon or from the FBA Merchants, but not both.
    Because the definition of ‘retailer’ set forth in the statutes cited
    by [Grosz] . . . apply with equal or greater force to the FBA
    Merchants, [Grosz] has merely demonstrated at best that [the
    DTFA] could have chosen either Amazon or the FBA Merchants
    as the ‘retailer’ liable for sales and use taxes for each FBA sale,
    meaning that [the DTFA] had the discretion to choose either
    one.” “The mere fact that [Grosz] disagrees with the outcome of
    [the DTFA]’s discretionary determination,” the trial court
    explained, “does not mean that [the DTFA] violated a mandatory
    duty.”
    Because the trial court concluded that the determination
    whether Amazon or a given FBA Merchant was the “retailer” for
    purposes of sales and use tax was discretionary and not
    ministerial, the trial court concluded that Grosz did not have
    standing to challenge the DTFA’s determination. And because
    Grosz’s lawsuit was premised on the alleged failure of the DTFA
    to perform a duty that was discretionary, rather than mandatory,
    the trial court concluded that there was no reasonable possibility
    that Grosz could amend his complaint to state a viable cause of
    action. On that basis, the trial court denied Grosz leave to
    amend his complaint.
    Based on its order sustaining the DTFA’s and Amazon’s
    demurrers without leave to amend, the trial court directed the
    clerk to enter an order dismissing the matter. Grosz filed a
    timely notice of appeal.
    10
    DISCUSSION
    A. The Law
    1. Demurrer
    “A demurrer tests the sufficiency of the allegations in a
    complaint as a matter of law. [Citation.] We review the
    sufficiency of the challenged complaint de novo. [Citation.] We
    accept as true the properly pleaded allegations of fact in the
    complaint, but not the contentions, deductions or conclusions of
    fact or law. [Citation.] We also accept as true facts which may be
    inferred from those expressly alleged. [Citation.] We consider
    matters which may be judicially noticed, and we ‘give the
    complaint a reasonable interpretation, reading it as a whole and
    its parts in their context.’ [Citation.] . . . The complaint’s
    ‘allegations must be liberally construed, with a view to
    substantial justice between the parties.’ [Citation.] The
    judgment or order of dismissal entered after the demurrer is
    sustained must be affirmed if any of the grounds for demurrer
    raised by the defendant is well taken and disposes of the
    complaint. [Citation.] But it is error to sustain a general
    demurrer if the complaint states a cause of action under any
    possible legal theory.” (In re Electric Refund Cases (2010) 
    184 Cal.App.4th 1490
    , 1500.)
    2. Code of Civil Procedure Section 526a
    “The purpose of [S]ection 526a, ‘which applies to citizen and
    corporate taxpayers alike, is to permit a large body of persons to
    challenge wasteful government action that otherwise would go
    unchallenged because of the standing requirement.
    [Citation.] . . . [A]lthough by its terms the statute applies to local
    governments, it has been judicially extended to all state and local
    agencies and officials. [Citations.]’ [Citation.] ‘ “[T]he individual
    11
    citizen must be able to take the initiative through taxpayers’
    suits to keep government accountable on the state as well as on
    the local level.” ’ ” (Vasquez v. State of California (2003) 
    105 Cal.App.4th 849
    , 854, fn. omitted.)
    “It is established that an action lies under [S]ection 526a
    not only to enjoin wasteful expenditures, but also to enforce the
    government’s duty to collect funds due the State. ‘ “A taxpayer
    may sue a governmental body in a representative capacity in
    cases involving [its] . . . failure . . . to perform a duty specifically
    enjoined.” [Citation.] This well-established rule ensures that the
    California courts, by entertaining only those taxpayers’ suits that
    seek to measure governmental performance against a legal
    standard, do not trespass into the domain of legislative or
    executive discretion. [Citations.] This rule similarly serves to
    prevent the courts from hearing complaints which seek relief that
    the courts cannot effectively render; the courts cannot formulate
    decrees that involve the exercise of indefinable discretion; their
    decrees can only restrict conduct that can be tested against legal
    standards. [Citations.]’ ” (Vasquez v. State of California, supra,
    105 Cal.App.4th at pp. 854-855, italics added.)
    “The cases have . . . been careful to note that [S]ection 526a
    has its limits. In particular, the courts have stressed that the
    statute should not be applied to principally ‘political’ issues or
    issues involving the exercise of the discretion of either the
    legislative or executive branches of government.” (Humane Society
    of the United States v. State Bd. of Equalization (2007) 
    152 Cal.App.4th 349
    , 356, italics added; see Silver, supra, 26
    Cal.App.3d at p. 909 [“[i]f the governing body has discretion in
    the matter, the taxpayer may not interfere”].)
    12
    3. Sales and Use Tax “Retailer”
    “The California Sales and Use Tax Law (Rev. & Tax. Code,
    § 6001 et seq.) embodies a comprehensive tax system created to
    impose an excise tax, for the support of state and local
    government, on the sale, use, storage or consumption of tangible
    personal property within the state. [Citation.] The two taxes,
    sales and use, are mutually exclusive but complementary, and
    are designed to exact an equal tax based on a percentage of the
    purchase price of the property in question. In essence ‘ “[a] sales
    tax is a tax on the freedom of purchase . . . [a] use tax is a tax on
    the enjoyment of that which was purchased.’ ” [Citations.] [¶]
    The use tax supplements the sales tax by imposing on those
    subject to it the same tax burden as would otherwise be assessed
    under the sales tax.” (Wallace Berrie & Co. v. State Bd. of
    Equalization (1985) 
    40 Cal.3d 60
    , 66-67, fns. omitted.)
    Specifically, California law imposes a tax on “the gross
    receipts of any retailer from the sale of all tangible personal
    property sold at retail in this state . . . .” (Rev. & Tax. Code,
    § 6051.) The sales tax is imposed on and collected from
    “retailers.” (Ibid.) California law also imposes a tax on the
    “storage, use, or other consumption in this state of tangible
    personal property purchased from any retailer . . . .” (Rev. & Tax.
    Code, § 6201.) This tax is imposed on the retail purchaser, but is
    collected from the purchaser by the “retailer” and remitted to the
    state. (Rev. & Tax. Code, §§ 6202, 6203.)
    Pertinent to this appeal, the Sales and Use Tax Law states
    that “ ‘[r]etailer’ includes,” among other things, “[e]very seller
    who makes any retail sale or sales of tangible personal property .
    . .” and “[e]very person engaged in the business of making sales
    for storage, use, or other consumption . . . .” (Rev. & Tax. Code,
    13
    § 6015, subd. (a)(1) & (2).) A “ ‘[s]eller’ includes every person
    engaged in the business of selling tangible personal property of a
    kind the gross receipts from the retail sale of which are required
    to be included in the measure of the sales tax.” (Rev. & Tax.
    Code, § 6014.) “A ‘retail sale’ . . . means a sale for a purpose other
    than resale in the regular course of business in the form of
    tangible personal property.” (Rev. & Tax. Code, § 6007.) And a
    “ ‘sale’ ” means, among other things, “[a]ny transfer of title or
    possession, exchange, or barter, conditional or otherwise, in any
    manner or by any means whatsoever, of tangible personal
    property for a consideration. ‘Transfer of possession’ includes
    only transactions found by the [DTFA] to be in lieu of a transfer
    of title, exchange, or barter.” (Rev. & Tax. Code, § 6006, subd.
    (a).)
    The Sales and Use Tax Law expressly makes the DTFA
    responsible to enforce its provisions and allows it to “prescribe,
    adopt, and enforce rules and regulations relating to [its]
    administration and enforcement.” (Rev. & Tax. Code, § 7051.)
    The DTFA may also “prescribe the extent to which any ruling or
    regulation shall be applied without retroactive effect.” (Ibid.)
    One such regulation—the regulation that Grosz contends
    disposes of this matter—is Regulation 1569, which states in full:
    “A person who has possession of property owned by another, and
    also the power to cause title to that property to be transferred to
    a third person without any further action on the part of its owner,
    and who exercises such power, is a retailer when the party to
    whom title is transferred is a consumer. Tax applies to his gross
    receipts from such a sale. [¶] Pawnbrokers, storage men,
    mechanics, artisans, or others selling the property to enforce a
    14
    lien thereon, are retailers with respect to sales of the property to
    consumers and tax applies to the receipts from such sales.”
    B. Analysis
    Because taxpayers have no authority to enjoin
    discretionary government activity under Section 526a (Silver,
    supra, 26 Cal.App.3d at p. 909), the outcome of Grosz’s appeal
    turns on whether the DTFA has discretion to determine who the
    “retailer” is for purposes of a transaction subject to the Sales and
    Use Tax Law. 8
    Grosz contends that the trial court erred when it concluded
    that the determination of who is a “retailer” under the Sales and
    Use Tax Law for purposes of Amazon’s FBA program involves an
    exercise of discretion, and therefore is not properly the subject of
    a Section 526a suit. According to Grosz, Regulation 1569 governs
    the outcome of the suit, because it requires the DTFA to conclude
    that Amazon was the retailer for purposes of FBA sales in
    California, to the exclusion of FBA Merchants.
    At the outset, we address what appears in Grosz’s briefing
    to be an argument Grosz intended to make (but ultimately did
    not make) about the proper function of both the trial court and
    this court in reviewing the sufficiency of a complaint on
    demurrer. Grosz alludes to, but never develops, an argument
    that the FAC “alleges that, under the Revenue and Tax[ation]
    Code . . . Amazon is the ‘retailer’ liable for payment of sales and
    use tax on FBA [s]ales.” Grosz then characterizes the trial court’s
    conclusion on the central question in this case as “a merits
    8 Grosz concedes that a sales or use tax can only be applied
    once to a retail transaction—that Amazon and any particular
    FBA Merchant “cannot both be held liable for tax on the same . . .
    sale.”
    15
    determination that is impermissible on a demurrer.” Grosz
    contends that the trial court “committed two principle errors.
    First,” Grosz argues, “the trial court misapplied the law.” (Italics
    added.) Grosz continues: “Second, the trial court’s reasoning
    crosses into merits issues that must be resolved on an evidentiary
    record . . . [because] [t]he trial court made a merits finding that
    the FBA Merchants were in fact ‘retailers’ under the [Revenue
    and Taxation Code] with respect to FBA [s]ales.” Grosz argues
    that this “merits finding” turns on “factually contested issues.” 9
    In his FAC, Grosz made several statements, in a section
    entitled “factual allegations,” that he appears to allude to as facts
    that the trial court should have taken (and we should take) as
    true. Namely, he contends that California imposes sales and use
    taxes under certain circumstances and that “retailers” are
    responsible for paying sales tax and collecting and remitting use
    tax. In the same “factual allegations” section, the FAC selectively
    quotes from Revenue and Taxation Code sections 6014 and 6015
    and Regulation 1569 to define “retailer” and “seller.” And
    ultimately—again in the same “factual allegations” section—the
    FAC states: “Amazon is the ‘retailer’ for FBA [s]ales in California
    because, among other reasons, one or more Amazon entities—
    either individually or collectively—satisfies the requirements of
    California Revenue and Taxation Code [sections] 6014, 6015 and
    [Regulation] 1569. Amazon is also the ‘retailer’ because, among
    other reasons, one or more Amazon entities is/are the
    9This characterization, of course, undermines Grosz’s
    argument on appeal. If something is a “ministerial” task, it is
    counterintuitive to suggest that the resolution of the question
    would ultimately turn on “factually contested issues” that require
    the development of a factual record.
    16
    ‘retailer(s)’—either individually or collectively—under California
    Revenue and Taxation Code [section] 6007, regarding sales in
    California of Products supplied by FBA Merchants that are not
    otherwise engaged in business in California. Notably, ownership
    of property is not required for one to be considered a ‘retailer.’ ”
    These are not factual allegations. They are legal
    conclusions.
    To the extent Grosz’s allusions to “determination[s] that
    [are] impermissible on a demurrer” refer to the trial court’s
    interpretation of the Revenue and Taxation Code and its
    associated regulatory scheme to determine whether the identity
    of a “retailer” is a discretionary question for the DTFA, we reject
    Grosz’s characterization. The DTFA’s, Amazon’s, and Grosz’s
    arguments both in the trial court and here center exclusively on
    questions of statutory interpretation. Statutory construction
    questions are “pure questions of law.” (Regents of University of
    California v. Superior Court (1999) 
    20 Cal.4th 509
    , 531.)
    Specifically—and more to the point—the determination
    whether the question of who is a retailer under the Sales and Use
    Tax Law is discretionary or ministerial is a question of law.
    (Alejo v. Torlakson (2013) 
    212 Cal.App.4th 768
    , 779-780 [“ ‘In
    most cases, the appellate court must determine whether the
    agency had a ministerial duty capable of direct enforcement or a
    quasi-legislative duty entitled to a considerable degree of
    deference. This question is generally subject to de novo review on
    appeal because it is one of statutory interpretation’ ”].) As did
    the trial court, we note that for purposes of a demurrer, “[t]he
    court does not . . . assume the truth of contentions, deductions or
    conclusions of law.” (Aubry v. Tri-City Hospital Dist. (1992) 
    2 Cal.4th 962
    , 967.)
    17
    On the statutory interpretation question, we conclude, as
    did the trial court, that the determination of who is a “retailer”
    under the Sales and Use Tax Law and relevant regulations is one
    that invokes the discretion of the DTFA; making that designation
    is not a ministerial task.
    As Grosz confirmed at oral argument in this matter, courts
    in Section 526a actions “can only restrict conduct that can be
    tested against legal standards.” (Harman v. City and County of
    San Francisco (1972) 
    7 Cal.3d 150
    , 161.) “[T]he courts cannot
    formulate decrees that involve the exercise of indefinable
    discretion . . . .” (Ibid.)
    At oral argument, Grosz identified County of Sonoma v.
    State Bd. of Equalization (1987) 
    195 Cal.App.3d 982
     (Sonoma), as
    the case most favorable to his argument. In that case, Grosz
    argued, a taxpayer had standing under Section 526a to require
    the BOE to collect a sales tax on geothermal steam even though
    the BOE’s interpretation of a particular Revenue and Taxation
    Code section was that the law exempted sales of geothermal
    steam.
    The nature of the dispute in Sonoma compared to the
    nature of the dispute here highlights the context of a ministerial
    action as opposed to a discretionary action, and provides us a
    framework from which to analyze the statutes involved here. In
    Sonoma, “[f]acilities to take advantage of the geothermal energy
    resources in the area known as The Geysers in Sonoma County
    were first construed in 1957. Several companies captured the
    steam and sold it to utility companies which used it to spin
    turbines, thereby generating electricity. . . . [Citation.] No sales
    tax was collected by the Board on sales of the geothermal steam
    in these circumstances because it considered the sales to be
    18
    exempt” under the Revenue and Taxation Code. (Sonoma, supra,
    
    195 Cal.App.3d 982
    , 986.) The Court of Appeal determined that
    the taxpayer who brought suit under Section 526a had standing
    to sue because he was not challenging an exercise of discretion,
    but rather the extent of the BOE’s authority in the first instance.
    (Id. at p. 989.) In other words, the taxpayer was not challenging
    an exercise of discretion, but rather was challenging whether the
    BOE had any discretion to exercise.
    Either there was, as the BOE argued, an exemption, in
    which case no taxes were to be collected. Or there was no
    exemption, and taxes were to be collected. The question was one
    of statutory interpretation, and there was no BOE discretion to
    be exercised. Here, by contrast, the question is not whether the
    law imposes a tax, but rather on whom, based on language in
    several interrelated statutes. The question here, as the trial
    court pointed out, is not whether the DTFA has discretion, but
    rather how it must exercise that discretion. That is the critical
    distinction between this case and Sonoma.
    Grosz attempts to overcome this distinction by arguing that
    because of the language of Regulation 1569, there is only one
    possible way the DTFA could exercise its discretion—that there is
    only one conclusion to be drawn about who a “retailer” is under
    the appropriate statutes. For Grosz to have standing, then, we
    must interpret the language of Regulation 1569 in the same way
    he does.
    To be designated what Grosz terms “the” retailer under
    Regulation 1569, Grosz contends, one must meet three
    “elements”: “(1) the person [or entity] has possession of property
    owned by another; (2) the person [or entity] has the power to
    cause title to that property to be transferred to a third person
    19
    without any further action on the part of the owner; and (3) the
    person [or entity] exercises that power.” Because Amazon meets
    those three elements, Grosz argues, Regulation 1569 renders
    Amazon the only retailer for purposes of FBA sales through the
    words “[t]ax applies”: “Tax applies to his gross receipts from such
    a sale.”
    Grosz argues that the trial court should have limited its
    analysis to Regulation 1569. Indeed, Grosz contends that “the
    court erred in reaching for the wider statutory and
    administrative Sales and Use Tax scheme to ignore the
    application of the specific regulation” because “The FAC explains”
    that FBA transactions “meet the elements of Regulation 1569.”
    However, in urging us to adopt his argument (and his
    reading of Regulation 1569, which we address below), Grosz
    correctly tells us that “California courts apply the regular rules of
    statutory construction when interpreting regulations.” (See Trejo
    v. County of Los Angeles (2020) 
    50 Cal.App.5th 129
    , 140.) He
    then tells us—again correctly—that “the words of a regulation are
    to be interpreted ‘in context, harmonizing to the extent possible all
    provisions relating to the same subject matter.’ ” (Quoting Simi
    Corp. v. Garamendi (2003) 
    109 Cal.App.4th 1496
    , 1506, italics
    added.)
    As a matter of statutory interpretation, then, it would have
    been inappropriate for the trial court to make its determination
    in this matter by taking selected language in Regulation 1569 out
    of context and ignoring other statutory provisions “relating to the
    same subject matter”—provisions that Grosz cited in his FAC and
    oppositions to the demurrers.
    As in any case involving statutory interpretation, we begin
    with the text of the statute. (Bruni v. The Edward Thomas
    20
    Hospitality Corp. (2021) 
    64 Cal.App.5th 247
    , 255.) Here, Grosz
    argues that Regulation 1569 is dispositive. Regulation 1569
    states: “A person who has possession of property owned by
    another, and also the power to cause title to that property to be
    transferred to a third person without any further action on the
    part of its owner, and who exercises such power, is a retailer
    when the party to whom title is transferred is a consumer. Tax
    applies to his gross receipts from such a sale. [¶] Pawnbrokers,
    storage men, mechanics, artisans, or others selling the property
    to enforce a lien thereon, are retailers with respect to sales of the
    property to consumers and tax applies to the receipts from such
    sales.”
    We do not interpret Regulation 1569 in the same way Grosz
    urges. As an initial matter we note that the plain language of
    Regulation 1569 does not designate any particular person or
    entity as “the” retailer in any set of circumstances, but rather as
    “a retailer.” And the language “[t]ax applies to his gross receipts
    from such sales” does not lead us to a different conclusion. That
    is because, as we understand from other portions of the Revenue
    and Taxation Code, “tax” may “apply” in any given situation
    covered by the Sales and Use Tax Law, but who collects it, from
    whom it is due, and how and when it is paid are all questions,
    among many others, that may have different answers depending
    on the contours of an individual transaction. To say that a “tax
    applies” is not the same as saying that the tax is owed by or
    collectible from one particular person or entity as part of a multi-
    party transaction. It is merely a statement that the transaction
    in question is one to which either sales or use “tax applies.”
    Consequently, even if we were to limit our review, as Grosz
    urges, to the language of Regulation 1569, we would not conclude
    21
    that it commands the DTFA to tax Amazon to the exclusion of
    any other participant in an FBA transaction. 10
    Moreover, to determine whether the designation of a
    taxpayer as a “retailer” under the Sales and Use Tax Law is
    discretionary or ministerial requires us to examine more than
    just Regulation 1569. The Sales and Use Tax Law itself
    expressly defines “Retailer” in Revenue and Taxation Code
    section 6015. According to section 6015, “ ‘Retailer’ includes: [¶]
    (1) Every seller who makes any retail sale or sales of tangible
    personal property, and every person engaged in the business of
    making retail sales at auction of tangible personal property
    owned by the person or others. [¶] (2) Every person engaged in
    the business of making sales for storage, use, or other
    consumption or in the business of making sales at auction of
    tangible personal property owned by the person or others for
    storage, use, or other consumption.” 11 (Rev. & Tax. Code, § 6015,
    subd. (a)(1) & (2).) Section 6015 also provides that “[w]hen the
    [DTFA] determines that it is necessary for the efficient
    10 We also again note that it is the DTFA that is charged
    with “prescrib[ing], adopt[ing], and enforc[ing] rules and
    regulations relating to the administration and enforcement of”
    the Sales and Use Tax Law, and the DTFA “may prescribe the
    extent to which any ruling or regulation shall be applied without
    retroactive effect.” (Rev. & Tax. Code, § 7051, italics added.)
    Consequently, the DTFA is statutorily clothed with some
    discretion regarding even the application of Regulation 1569.
    11 The third definition of “retailer” is “[a]ny person
    conducting a race meeting under Chapter 4 of Division 8 of the
    Business and Professions Code, with respect to horses which are
    claimed during such meeting.” (Rev. & Tax. Code, § 6015, subd.
    (a)(3).)
    22
    administration of this part to regard any salesmen,
    representatives, peddlers, or canvassers as the agents of the
    dealers, distributors, supervisors, or employers under whom they
    operate or from whom they obtain the tangible personal property
    sold by them, irrespective of whether they are making sales on
    their own behalf or on behalf of the dealers, distributors,
    supervisors, or employers the board may so regard them and may
    regard the dealers, distributors, supervisors, or employers as
    retailers for purposes of this part.” (Rev. & Tax. Code, § 6015,
    subd. (b).)
    In addition to expressly giving the DTFA discretion to
    determine who “may [be] regard[ed] . . . as retailers” for purposes
    of the Sales and Use Tax Law under the circumstances outlined
    in Revenue and Taxation Code section 6015, subdivision (b), we
    note the broad discretion the Legislature has given the DTFA
    generally. (Gov. Code, §§ 15570 et seq.)
    Before the BOE’s “duties, powers, and responsibilities”
    under the Sales and Use Tax Law were transferred from the BOE
    to the DTFA (upon the DTFA’s establishment) (Gov. Code, §
    15570.2), we considered the discretion vested in the BOE (and
    now the DTFA) to determine the identity of a “retailer” under the
    Sales and Use Tax Law. (Associated Beverage Co. v. Board of
    Equalization (1990) 
    224 Cal.App.3d 192
    .) At the time, there was
    obviously record evidence before us about the BOE’s “usual
    procedure in considering . . . on a case by case basis” whether to
    classify any particular taxpayer as a “Section 6015 retailer.” (Id.
    at p. 202.) “The essential determination,” we said in that case, “is
    that the reclassification of certain taxpayers is necessary to the
    efficient administration of the sales tax.” (Ibid.) We upheld a
    regulation the BOE had promulgated that “treat[ed] all suppliers
    23
    of a certain class of vending machine operators as retailers.”
    (Ibid.) We noted that “[g]enerally, [the BOE] does not apply . . .
    section 6015 on an industry- or class-wide basis, but looks at an
    individual business and determines whether it is appropriate to
    regard the initial purveyor as the retailer, thereafter following” a
    procedure to make a final determination about who constitutes
    the “retailer” in a given scenario. (Id. at pp. 202-203.)
    In requests for judicial notice in the trial court and here,
    the parties provided us with several legal opinions issued by the
    BOE regarding whether a taxpayer was a retailer under Revenue
    and Taxation Code section 6015 and, in the case of one of Grosz’s
    requests for judicial notice, under Regulation 1569. 12 As we
    12 Grosz has filed three requests for judicial notice in this
    court. The first, filed November 22, 2021, requested judicial
    notice of three legal opinion letters from BOE counsel regarding
    Regulation 1569 and the designation of taxpayers under that
    regulation. The DTFA argues that the letters at issue are not
    subject to judicial notice because they are opinions of BOE
    counsel and are not “official acts,” but rather are merely
    correspondence from BOE employees. Regardless of how the
    letters are characterized, we grant the November 22, 2021
    request for judicial notice.
    Grosz filed a second request for judicial notice on February
    2, 2022, this time requesting that we judicially notice a request
    for judicial notice that the DTFA filed in a case in another Court
    of Appeal that attached several documents. Although the
    relevance to this appeal of a request for judicial notice filed in a
    different appeal and any document attached to that request for
    judicial notice is tenuous, at best, we nevertheless grant the
    February 2, 2022 request for judicial notice.
    On September 19, 2022, Grosz filed a third request for
    judicial notice. This request asked us to judicially notice a
    complaint that the State of California has filed against Amazon
    24
    noted in footnote 7 above, Amazon requested and in 2012 the
    BOE provided a legal opinion regarding whether Amazon was a
    retailer for purposes of FBA transactions.
    “ ‘Taking judicial notice of a document is not the same as
    accepting the truth of its contents or accepting a particular
    in the San Francisco County Superior Court for alleged violations
    of the Cartwright Act (Bus. & Prof. Code, §§ 16720 et seq.) and
    the Unfair Competition Law (Bus. & Prof. Code, §§ 17200 et seq.).
    The complaint discusses transactions that appear to fall within
    the FBA program, among other transactions, and refers to
    Amazon as a “retailer” in various places. The request also asks
    us to judicially notice an opinion from the Commonwealth Court
    of Pennsylvania purporting to decide “cross-applications for
    summary relief.” The opinion refers to “[t]he key issue” in the
    case as “whether non-Pennsylvania businesses that sell
    merchandise through Amazon’s FBA Program must collect and
    remit Pennsylvania sales tax pursuant to Section 237(b)(1) of the
    Tax Reform Code of 1971 . . . .”
    We grant Grosz’s third request for judicial notice as to the
    complaint the State of California filed against Amazon in the San
    Francisco County Superior Court.
    We deny the request as to the Commonwealth Court of
    Pennsylvania opinion. “[A] court will not take judicial notice of a
    case that was not cited in the briefs.” Neither will appellate
    courts “take judicial notice of matters irrelevant to the dispositive
    point on appeal.” The interpretation of a sister state’s statute by
    that state’s courts that was not discussed in the briefs is not
    relevant to our consideration of the issues on this appeal. Indeed,
    the question at issue on that appeal—whether non-Pennsylvania
    businesses that sell merchandise through Amazon’s FBA
    Program must collect and remit Pennsylvania sales tax—has no
    bearing on whether the determination of who is a retailer under
    California’s Sales and Use Tax Law is a ministerial task or
    involves the exercise of DTFA discretion.
    25
    interpretation of its meaning.’ [Citation.] While courts take
    judicial notice of public records, they do not take notice of the
    truth of matters stated therein.” (Herrera v. Deutsche Bank
    National Trust Co. (2011) 
    196 Cal.App.4th 1366
    , 1375.)
    We make no comment on either the BOE’s analysis or any
    party’s characterization of what the judicially noticed letters do
    or do not establish vis-à-vis the Sales and Use Tax Law. Neither
    do we endorse or reject any of the contents of any of the judicially
    noticed documents. The letters attached to Grosz’s first request
    for judicial notice in this court and to Amazon’s request for
    judicial notice in the trial court do, however, demonstrate that
    the determination about whether a taxpayer is a retailer under
    the Sales and Use Tax Law involves analysis of a number of facts
    and circumstances. The BOE, and now the DTFA, obviously
    considered a host of factors and, in some cases, required
    extensive communication with the taxpayer to develop an
    understanding of relevant facts to ultimately determine whether
    a particular taxpayer was a retailer under Revenue and Taxation
    Code section 6015.
    The BOE’s powers have shifted to the DTFA. But we have
    no reason to believe that the scope of those powers or the
    discretion vested the agency has changed in any way. To the
    contrary, upon its creation, the DTFA was designated “the
    successor to, and [was] vested with, all of the duties, powers, and
    responsibilities” of the BOE. (Gov. Code, § 15570.22.)
    In sum, and contrary to Grosz’s arguments here, there is no
    statute or regulation that conclusively establishes that the DTFA
    must pursue Amazon for sales and use taxes related to FBA
    transactions. Indeed, the language of Revenue and Taxation
    Code section 6015, subdivision (a) makes it clear that there may
    26
    be multiple “persons” (as that term is statutorily defined) who the
    DTFA may regard as “retailers” for the purposes of a single
    transaction. The statutory framework of the Sales and Use Tax
    Law and the statutes vesting the DTFA with authority to
    administer that statutory framework also generally lead us to
    conclude that whether a taxpayer is a retailer for purposes of the
    Sales and Use Tax Law is a discretionary determination and not
    a ministerial task. Consistent with those conclusions, we agree
    with the trial court that Grosz’s lawsuit may not proceed under
    Section 526a. (Silver, supra, 26 Cal.App.3d at p. 909; cf. Sonoma,
    supra, 195 Cal.App.3d at p. 989.)
    At oral argument, Grosz forcefully contended that if we
    were to reach the conclusion that we have reached, the DTFA’s
    determination about the identity of a “retailer” under the Sales
    and Use Tax Law would be “unreviewable.” There are, in fact, at
    least two ways the DTFA’s determination can be reviewed. The
    Sales and Use Tax Law gives the DTFA the authority to “bring
    an action . . . in the name of the people of the State of California
    to collect” delinquent taxes, for example. (Rev. & Tax. Code,
    § 6711.) In a collection action, “the provisions of the Code of Civil
    Procedure relating to service of summons, pleadings, proofs,
    trials, and appeals are applicable to the proceedings.” (Rev. &
    Tax. Code, § 6712.) The Sales and Use Tax Law also has a
    detailed procedure through which a taxpayer can challenge the
    DTFA’s determinations through a refund process, and ultimately
    in court. (Rev. & Tax. Code, §§ 6901 et seq., 6932.) It is not at all
    accurate, then, that the DTFA’s exercise of discretion is
    unreviewable simply because it is not subject to review in this
    forum and by this mechanism.
    27
    We affirm the trial court’s order sustaining the DTFA’s and
    Amazon’s demurrers and dismissing the lawsuit.
    DISPOSITION
    The trial court’s orders are affirmed. The respondents are
    awarded their costs on appeal.
    CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
    CHANEY, J.
    We concur:
    BENDIX, Acting P. J.
    BENKE, J. *
    *Retired Associate Justice of the Court of Appeal, Fourth
    Appellate District, Division One, assigned by the Chief Justice
    pursuant to article VI, section 6 of the California Constitution.
    28
    

Document Info

Docket Number: B309418M

Filed Date: 1/23/2023

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 1/23/2023