Court Opinion

ID: 4266778
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2018-04-23 23:59:25.563345+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:31:06.869021
License: Public Domain

McKay v. Vermont Department of Taxes, No. 552-9-14 Wncv (Teachout, J., June 19, 2015)
[The text of this Vermont trial court opinion is unofficial. It has been reformatted from the original. The accuracy of the text and the
accompanying data included in the Vermont trial court opinion database is not guaranteed.]

                                                      STATE OF VERMONT

SUPERIOR COURT                                                                                         CIVIL DIVISION
Washington Unit                                                                                        Docket No. 552-9-14 Wncv

JOHN D. MCKAY
     Taxpayer–Appellant

           v.

STATE OF VERMONT DEPARTMENT OF TAXES
     Appellee

                                                     DECISION ON APPEAL

        At the administrative hearing below, the hearing officer made a domicile determination
for tax year 2007 that the taxpayer challenges on appeal. Review of the record shows that the
assigned hearing officer failed to apply the correct burden-of-proof on the issue as required by
the Department’s domicile regulation, Regulation § 1.5811(11)(A)(i) (Domicile Regulation), and
instead purported to employ an appellate standard of review at the evidentiary, administrative
hearing itself.1 This same error was made in the recent case of Lorenzo v. Dep’t of Taxes, No.
213-3-14 Wncv.

           The Domicile Regulation provides in part:

           (a) The party claiming domicile, or a change of domicile, shall carry the burden
           of proof.

           (b) The evidence required to establish both a change of residence and the
           intention to effect a change of domicile must be clear and convincing. The intent
           to change a domicile must be manifested by unequivocal acts.

           (c) A person’s course of conduct is accorded more weight than self-serving
           declarations of domicile.

           (d) An individual trying to establish Vermont as his or her domicile shall be
           subject to the same burden of proof as an individual claiming to have abandoned
           Vermont as his or her domicile.

Domicile Regulation § 5. In any case in which domicile is an issue—and especially in cases
such as this in which it is the pivotal issue—the correct allocation and weight of the burden of
proof is dependent on whether the issue is establishment (preponderance) or change (clear and
convincing) and on which is the advancing party.

1
 The Domicile Regulation is available at http://www.state.vt.us/tax/pdf.word.excel/legal/regs/15811.pdf. On
Westlaw, it may be found at Vt. Admin. Code 1-3-102 or VT ADC 10 060 039.
        Here, it appears clear enough that Mr. McKay and his family were domiciled in Virginia
in and prior to 2005, when they sold their Virginia home and moved to Italy. When they
returned to the United States, they came to Vermont. During this period, Mr. McKay’s legal
career had fallen apart and his marriage was quickly doing the same. His wife and children
wanted to stay in Vermont. He found employment in New York and began visiting the children
on weekends. He alleges that by 2007, the year in dispute, he was domiciled in New York. The
Department took the position that he was domiciled in Vermont.

         To properly apply the burden of proof required by the Domicile Regulation, the finder of
fact first needs to determine whether the issue is 2007 alone, in which case the issue is one of
establishment, or whether an earlier year and different location of domicile can be properly
established such that one of the parties is required to prove a subsequent change of domicile (or,
potentially, multiple changes of domicile). The hearing officer did not apply the Domicile
Regulation at all and failed to tease these issues apart.

        Rather than apply the Domicile Regulation, the hearing officer held as follows: “The
taxpayer bears the burden of showing that the Department’s assessment is erroneous, and that
showing must be clear and convincing. Travia’s, Inc. v. State, Dept. of Taxes, 2013 VT 62, ¶ 12
(citations omitted).” The quoted portion describes the standard of judicial review applicable on
appeal after the evidentiary, administrative hearing establishing the assessment. It does not
describe the evidentiary burden of proof at the administrative hearing itself. In this case, as in
Lorenzo, the correct allocation and weight of the burden of proof may well be outcome
determinative. The Court cannot conclude that the failure to apply the Domicile Regulation was
harmless.

       Although not clear in the record below, at the oral argument on appeal, the parties clearly
agreed that Mr. McKay’s domicile in 2006 was Vermont. Thus, on remand, Mr. McKay has the
burden of proving by clear and convincing evidence that his domicile in 2007 changed to New
York. While the State argued that the Court, on appeal, could review the evidence in the record
and find it insufficient as a matter of law to show a change of domicile for 2007, the Court
declines to undertake such an analysis. The issue of domicile can be highly nuanced and
generally is a matter of fact. In this case, the evidence is not so one-sided that the Court can
resolve it as a matter of law. The issue must be determined by the finder of fact.

                                            ORDER

       For the foregoing reasons, the Commissioner’s determination is vacated and this case is
remanded for a new hearing at which Mr. McKay has the burden of proving by clear and
convincing evidence that his domicile for 2007 changed from Vermont to New York, in accord
with the burden of proof required in the Department’s Domicile Regulation.

       Dated at Montpelier, Vermont this ____ day of June 2015.

                                                     _____________________________
                                                     Mary Miles Teachout
                                                     Superior Judge

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