Lorenzo v. Vermont Department of Taxes, No. 213-3-14 Wncv (Teachout, J., May 7, 2015)
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STATE OF VERMONT
SUPERIOR COURT CIVIL DIVISION
Washington Unit Docket No. 213-3-14 Wncv
SOL LORENZO
Appellant
v.
VERMONT DEPARTMENT OF TAXES
Appellee
DECISION
The Department’s Motion to Alter or Amend
In this tax appeal, the court ruled in a Decision issued February 4, 2015 that, as the issue
of domicile was presented to the Commissioner, the burden was on the Department to prove that
Mr. Lorenzo’s domicile in 2008 was Vermont, that the hearing officer imposed the wrong burden
of proof and erred by imposing it on Mr. Lorenzo, and that prejudice resulted.1 The court
vacated the administrative decision and remanded the case to the Department for a new domicile
hearing. The mandate specifies that the Department bears the burden of proving by a
preponderance that Mr. Lorenzo’s 2008 domicile was Vermont.
The Department filed a Rule 59 motion. It argues that the Commissioner found that Mr.
Lorenzo was domiciled in Vermont in 2006 and 2007, and that therefore the burden should
switch to Mr. Lorenzo to prove by clear and convincing evidence that his domicile changed to
Florida in 2008. The Department cites Quazzo v. Dep’t of Taxes, 2014 VT 81, for the
proposition that the party claiming a change of domicile has the higher burden of proof. It thus
argues that the court ruled in Mr. Lorenzo’s favor in error and, in any event, if the case is
remanded, the mandate should be modified to require either: (1) Mr. Lorenzo to prove a change
of domicile in 2008; or (2) the Department to first prove Mr. Lorenzo’s 2007 domicile and Mr.
Lorenzo to then prove a change of domicile for 2008.
The Commissioner’s findings
The Department argues that the Commissioner found that Mr. Lorenzo was domiciled in
Vermont in 2006 and 2007, or at least 2007. Thus, according to the Department, the court has
incorrectly switched the burden to it—the burden should have been on Mr. Lorenzo to prove the
change of domicile to Florida in 2008. This argument remains incorrect, however. The
Commissioner discussed some evidence regarding domicile in 2006 and 2007 but did not make a
clear domicile finding for either year. Under the Department’s domicile rule, this left the burden
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As explained in the court’s February 4 decision, the hearing officer purported to evaluate the evidence under a
deferential appellate standard of review rather than by making findings according to the evidentiary burden of proof
plainly required by the Department’s domicile rule. The Department’s suggestion that this error was harmless was
rejected in the February 4 decision and requires no elaboration here.
of proving 2008 domicile on the party advancing on that issue, which was the Department.
Because a previous domicile had not been established upon which to predicate a subsequent
change, the burden was by a preponderance. There is no basis for Rule 59 relief on this issue.
Quazzo and its implications
In Quazzo, the taxpayer wanted his domicile to be Vermont and the Department
challenged that. He owned a vacation home in Vermont for many years and claimed that at some
point his domicile switched from New York to Vermont. There was no dispute that he was
domiciled in New York up until the alleged switch to Vermont. The Supreme Court ruled that,
even though he had been claiming Vermont domicile for many years, and the Department had
been accepting that representation, now that domicile was in dispute, the taxpayer (the party
advancing on the issue) had the burden to prove the change of domicile from New York to
Vermont under the Department’s domicile rule.
Ideally, any time domicile is at issue, the parties would be able to stipulate to an agreed
upon location of domicile at some point in the past. Under the domicile rule, whichever party
claims a subsequent a change of domicile would have the burden to do so with clear and
convincing evidence. That is precisely what happened in Quazzo.
This case is more complicated. There was no agreed upon historical domicile on which
to predicate subsequent changes. The parties presented the predicate domicile location itself as a
disputed issue. Under the domicile rule, specification of which party has the burden of proof and
how heavy the burden is depends on who is claiming the particular location of domicile and
whether that location is establishing domicile in the first place or is a change from a prior,
established location of domicile.
In this case, the Commissioner did not make a finding on historical domicile and the
Department was claiming that Vermont is the 2008 domicile. The Department thus had the
burden of proving that by a preponderance of the evidence. That remains the posture of the case
on remand and the mandate accurately reflects that.
There is no basis for Rule 59 relief.
ORDER
For the foregoing reasons, the Department’s Motion to Alter or Amend is denied.
Dated at Montpelier, Vermont this ____ day of May 2015.
_____________________________
Mary Miles Teachout
Superior Judge
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