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C. 8
To: Board of Supervisors
From: Thomas L. Geiger, Chief Assistant County Counsel
Date: February  28, 2023
The Seal of Contra Costa County, CA
Contra
Costa
County
Subject: Deny claim for unitary property taxes paid for tax year 2020/21

APPROVE OTHER
RECOMMENDATION OF CNTY ADMINISTRATOR RECOMMENDATION OF BOARD COMMITTEE

Action of Board On:   02/28/2023
APPROVED AS RECOMMENDED OTHER
Clerks Notes:

VOTE OF SUPERVISORS

AYE:
John Gioia, District I Supervisor
Candace Andersen, District II Supervisor
Diane Burgis, District III Supervisor
Ken Carlson, District IV Supervisor
Federal D. Glover, District V Supervisor
Contact: Rebecca Hooley, Assistant County Counsel, (925) 655-2200
cc: Rebecca Hooley, Assistant County Counsel     Laura Strobel, County Administrator's Office     Robert Campbell, Auditor-Controller    
I hereby certify that this is a true and correct copy of an action taken and entered on the minutes of the Board of Supervisors on the date shown.
ATTESTED:     February  28, 2023
Monica Nino, County Administrator
 
BY: , Deputy

 

RECOMMENDATION(S):

DENY the claim filed by Sprint Spectrum LP in the amount of $220,399.68, plus interest, in unitary property taxes paid for tax year 2020/21.

FISCAL IMPACT:

No fiscal impact.

BACKGROUND:

Sprint Spectrum LP (“Claimant”) has filed a claim for refund of property taxes against the County and a number of other counties, essentially alleging that the statutory formula used to calculate its property tax rate violates the California Constitution.  
  






BACKGROUND: (CONT'D)
In January 2023, Sprint Spectrum LP submitted a claim in the amount of $220,399.68. [The claim is provided in Attachment A.] The claim is for property taxes paid for tax year 2020/21. Claimant requests interest on the requested refund amount.  
  
The claimant has submitted refund claims for prior years based on the same allegation, which the County has denied. Other counties that have received similar refund claims from this claimant appear to have uniformly denied the claims. Santa Clara County recently prevailed before the Court of Appeal on the basis that the statutory tax rate imposed on property owned by these entities does not violate the California Constitution.  
  
ANALYSIS:  
  
Under the California Constitution, certain property owned or used by utilities and telecommunication companies, among others, is annually assessed by the State Board of Equalization ("BOE"). (Cal. Const., article XIII, § 19.) The amount of such "unitary property" assessments attributed to the County by the BOE are then taxed by the County in accordance with a statutory formula. (See Rev. & Tax. Code, § 100.)  
  
The Auditor-Controller uses the amount of unitary property assessments annually provided by the BOE to calculate the amount of taxes to be levied on these properties in accordance with a formula mandated by state law (Rev. & Tax. Code, § 100). Based on this formula, the unitary tax rate for 2020/21 is 1.8320%. The Auditor-Controller has confirmed that the rate was correctly calculated pursuant to the State law, and the Office of the State Controller has deemed it correct.  
  
Claimant argues that it is entitled to a partial refund of taxes on the grounds that they were illegally levied because the formula used to calculate the rate is unconstitutional. However, the County is given no discretion on its calculation of the unitary tax rate; it is a mandated formula set by the State. A recent decision from the California Court of Appeals has affirmed the constitutionality of the rate. (County of Santa Clara v. Sup. Ct. (2023) 87 Cal.App.5th 347.) For these reasons, the claim should be denied.

CONSEQUENCE OF NEGATIVE ACTION:

Failure to take the recommended action would result in interest continuing to accrue on a potential court-ordered refund of property taxes.

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