AFFIRMED
Per Curiam:
Solution One Mortgage, LLC (hereinafter referred
to as Appellant) appeals from the March 3, 2004, final order of the
Circuit Court of Kanawha County by which Appellant's appeal from a final decision
of the West Virginia Office of Tax Appeals regarding a sales and use tax assessment
was dismissed for failure to file the appeal bond required pursuant to West Virginia
Code § 11-10A-19 (e) (2000) (Repl. Vol. 2003). Appellant contends that the
lower court erred as a matter of law by dismissing the administrative appeal
against the appellee, Commissioner of the West Virginia Department of Tax and
Revenue (hereinafter referred to as Tax Commissioner), on procedural
grounds and thereby refusing to hear the appeal on the merits. After careful
examination of the issues raised in conjunction with the applicable law, we affirm
the decision of the court below.
[S]ubsequent to the [ALJ] hearing,
the West Virginia State Tax Commissioner allowed that mortgage brokers who begin
collecting, reporting, and remitting sales taxes on a going forward basis beginning
July 1, 2003 would not be assessed for any period prior to July 1, 2003.
It
is the intention of the West Virginia State Tax Department to allow Solution
One Mortgage, LLC to collect, report and remit sales tax on mortgage brokering
services on a going forward basis beginning July 1, 2003. In exchange
for continued compliance with our notice, the Department will not pursue sales
tax on mortgage brokering services for any tax period prior to July 1, 2003.
. . .
The record shows that the Tax Department sent a similar Amended Notice to
all mortgage brokers. According to the Tax Commissioner, Appellant accepted
the offer proposed in the letter and began prospective payment of consumer
sales and service taxes in July 2003.
On October 28, 2003, Appellant sought judicial
review of the ALJ's decision pursuant to the provisions of West Virginia Code § 11-10A-19.
In February 2004, the Tax Commissioner filed a motion to dismiss the appeal based
on Appellant's failure to post an appeal bond as required under West Virginia
Code § 11-10A-19(e). (See
footnote 2) Appellant countered the motion by claiming that an appeal
bond is not required when a question of law is the sole issue on appeal. Characterizing
the Commissioner's going forward basis amendment to the sales and
use tax assessment as a withdrawal of the assessment for the period prior to
July 1, 2003, Appellant stressed that the only issue on appeal was the ruling
regarding the professional services exemption.
The lower court granted the motion to dismiss,
finding in its order of March 3, 2003, that the court did not have jurisdiction
of the matter because an appeal bond had not been filed, nor a waiver of the
bond sought, within the statutorily prescribed ninety-day period. It is from
this order that the present appeal is taken.
It
is the intention of the West Virginia State Tax Department to allow Solution
One Mortgage, LLC to collect, report and remit sales tax on mortgage brokering
services on a going forward basis beginning July 1, 2003. In exchange for continued
compliance with our notice, the Department will not pursue sales tax
on mortgage brokering services for any tax period prior to July 1, 2003.
(Emphasis added.) Similarly, the Amended Notice to mortgage brokers stated:
Mortgage
brokers who comply with the requirements of this notice and who also fulfill
their sales tax collection and remittance responsibilities on a going-forward
basis, will not be assessed for any periods prior to July 1, 2003 for sales tax
collection on the activity of mortgage brokering.
*
* *
Failure
to fulfill these requirements for sales tax compliance will result in the implementation
of Tax Department compliance measures.
It is clear from the face of the letter to Appellant and of the amended notice
to mortgage brokers generally that the Tax Department unequivocally retained
the authority to enforce assessments involving sales and use taxes for periods
preceding July 1, 2003, should Appellant or other mortgage brokers not comply
with the going forward basis agreement. The letter and amended
notice simply stated the terms and conditions of repayment and did not serve
to extinguish or withdraw the assessed and enforceable debt. Thus when
Appellant sought judicial review of the Office of Tax Appeals decision in the
court below, the assessment remained part of the appealed order and Appellant
was subject to the statutory bond requirement.
Appellant also argues that the lower court
should not have dismissed the appeal for failure to post a bond because doing
so contradicts our decision in Frantz v. Palmer, 211 W.Va. 188, 564 S.E.2d
398 (2001). We find Appellant's reliance on Frantz misplaced. In Frantz we
held that if a taxpayer follows the statutory alternative to posting an appeal
bond by requesting that the Tax Commissioner waive the bond upon a showing of
sufficient assets, then the aggrieved party can appeal an adverse waiver decision
to the circuit courts. Our precise holding in this regard is set forth in syllabus
point five of Frantz as follows:
A
taxpayer who chooses to proceed under the statutory alternative for an appeal
bond under West Virginia Code § 11-10-10(d) (1986) (Repl.Vol.1999),
and who otherwise complies with the statutory requirements for requesting a waiver
of the appeal bond requirement, is entitled to apply to the circuit court for
a review of any adverse determination concerning bond waiver.
Since Appellant did not proceed under the statutory alternative of seeking
a waiver, Frantz provides no guidance or resolution to the matter before
us.
Absent pursuit of possible statutory alternatives,
the filing of a statutory bond is mandatory and the failure to do so is grounds
for dismissal. See, e.g. Frantz v. Palmer, 211 W.Va. at 194, 564 S.E.2d
at 404 (2001) ([T]his Court has generally viewed compliance with statutorily-imposed
deadlines for the posting of bonds to prosecute an action or perfect an appeal
as jurisdictional in nature.); Stevens v. Saunders, 159 W.Va. 179,
183, 220 S.E.2d 887, 890 (1975) ([S]tatutes which require the giving of
bond as a prerequisite to the prosecution of an appeal are strictly construed
and their requirements are mandatory and jurisdictional. An untimely filing of
such a bond dictates the dismissal of a case.) (citations omitted).