California 2015 2015-2016 Regular Session

California Assembly Bill AB567 Introduced / Bill

Filed 02/24/2015

 BILL NUMBER: AB 567INTRODUCED BILL TEXT INTRODUCED BY Assembly Member Gipson FEBRUARY 24, 2015 An act to amend Section 481 of the Revenue and Taxation Code, relating to taxation. LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST AB 567, as introduced, Gipson. Property taxation: change in ownership statement: confidentiality of information. Existing law requires, upon a change in control or change in ownership of a legal entity that owns an interest in real property in this state, or when requested by the State Board of Equalization, that the person or legal entity acquiring ownership control, or the legal entity that has undergone a change in ownership, file a change in ownership statement with the board, as specified, listing all counties in which the legal entity owns real property. Existing law requires all information requested by the assessor or the board regarding change in ownership reporting or furnished in a change in ownership statement to be held secret, except as specifically provided. This bill would provide that information requested or furnished in a change in ownership statement, with respect to a legal entity and its real property does not include the fact that a change in ownership statement has been filed with the board or that the board has issued a determination to the assessor relating to a change in ownership statement, and that the board and the assessor are not required to hold these facts secret. This bill would also provide that the disclosure by the board or the assessor that such a change in ownership statement has been filed, where the filing was prompted by information collected by the Franchise Tax Board from the property tax query on the taxpayer's state income tax return, does not violate the confidentiality of taxpayer return information. Vote: majority. Appropriation: no. Fiscal committee: no. State-mandated local program: no. THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA DO ENACT AS FOLLOWS: SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following: (a) Transparency in assessed value information is critical to the integrity of the property tax system. The public should have sufficient information to provide assurance that property tax laws are equitably applied and that the property tax burden is fairly distributed. To this end, existing law requires the assessment roll, which lists the assessed value for every property, to be open to public inspection. Existing law further requires a quarterly list of all recorded property transfers occurring in the prior two years to be open to public inspection in each county. (b) The right to privacy is a personal and fundamental right protected by Section 1 of Article I of the California Constitution and by the 14th Amendment to the United States Constitution. All individuals have a right to privacy in information pertaining to them. It is the Legislature's intent that detailed information requested by the county assessor or the Board of Equalization and furnished in the change in ownership statement shall continue to be held in secret by the assessor and the Board. However, the Legislature does not intend for the board or the assessor to hold secret the fact that (1) an individual or legal entity has filed a change in ownership statement with the board pursuant to Section 480.1 with respect to a change in control as defined in subdivision (c) of Section 64, or pursuant to Section 480.2 with respect to a change in ownership as defined in subdivision (d) of Section 64 or that (2) the board has issued a determination to the assessor relating to the statement filed with the board that a change in control or change in ownership has occurred. These facts should not be considered to be confidential information furnished in the change in ownership statement and should not required to be held secret by the assessor and the board. (c) The public interest is not served by holding secret factual information concerning legal entity changes in ownership that become public when assessment roll updates reflect assessed value changes. Furthermore, the public interest is not served when available information concerning legal entity changes in ownership is not made public, similar to other transfers in property interests, merely because the transaction did not require the recordation of any documents. (d) This act balances the taxing authority's responsibility to safeguard confidential taxpayer information with the public's right to timely information. (e) That local county assessors require the state's assistance to administer current change in ownership law as it relates to the transfers of ownership interests in legal entities. The law requires the Franchise Tax to include a question on state income tax returns to assist the State Board of Equalization and the county assessor in the determination of when legal entity owned property undergoes a change of ownership for property tax purposes. The Franchise Tax Board collects these responses for the purpose of transmitting the information to the State Board of Equalization. The use of the state income tax return is a practical and cost effective method to annually communicate with legal entities operating in this state. In some instances, a legal entity change in ownership statement filed with the State Board of Equalization will have been prompted by the legal entity's response to this question. (f) That the disclosure by the State Board of Equalization or assessor that a statement has been filed with the State Board of Equalization in the case where the filing was prompted by a legal entity's response to the property tax query on a state income tax return should not be deemed to violate the confidentiality of taxpayer return information. The provisions of this act allowing the disclosure of limited facts serves a public policy that overrides the confidentiality of return information collected by the Franchise Tax Board. SEC. 2. Section 481 of the Revenue and Taxation Code is amended to read: 481.  (a)    All information requested by the assessor or the board pursuant to this article or furnished in the change in ownership statement shall be held secret by the assessor and the board. All information furnished in either the preliminary change in ownership statement or the change in ownership statement shall be held secret by those authorized by law to receive or have access to this information. These statements are not public documents and are not open to inspection, except as provided in Section 408.  (b) (1) Information requested or furnished in a change in ownership statement for a change in control or a change in ownership as defined in subdivision (c) or (d) of Section 64 does not include the fact that a change in ownership statement has been filed with the board or that the board has issued a determination to the assessor relating to a change in ownership statement filed with the board. The board and the assessor are not required to hold these facts secret.   (2) Notwithstanding any other law, the disclosure by the board or assessor that a change in ownership statement has been filed in the case where the filing was prompted by information collected by the Franchise Tax Board from the property tax query on the taxpayer's state income tax return as required by Section 64 shall not be deemed to violate the confidentiality of taxpayer return information.