18670
. (a) The Franchise Tax Board may by notice, served personally
or by first-class mail, require any employer, person, officer or
department of the state, political subdivision or agency of the
state, including the Regents of the University of California, a city
organized under a freeholders' charter, or a political body not a
subdivision or agency of the state, having in their possession, or
under their control, any credits or other personal property or other
things of value, belonging to a taxpayer or to an employer or person
who has failed to withhold and transmit amounts due pursuant to this
article, to withhold, from the credits or other personal property or
other things of value, the amount of any tax, interest, or penalties
due from the taxpayer or the amount of any liability incurred by that
employer or person for failure to withhold and transmit amounts due
from a taxpayer under this part and to transmit the amount withheld
to the Franchise Tax Board at the times that it may designate.
However, in the case of a depository institution, as defined in
Section 19(b) of the Federal Reserve Act (12 U.S.C.A. Sec. 461(b)(1)
(A)), amounts due from a taxpayer under this part shall be
transmitted to the Franchise Tax Board not less than 10 business days
from receipt of the notice. To be effective, the notice shall state
the amount due from the taxpayer and shall be delivered or mailed to
the branch or office reported in information returns filed with the
Franchise Tax Board, or the branch or office where the credits or
other property is held, unless another branch or office is designated
by the employer, person, officer or department of the state,
political subdivision or agency of the state, including the Regents
of the University of California, a city organized under a freeholders'
charter or a political body not a subdivision or agency of the
state.
(b) (1) At least 45 days before sending a notice to withhold to
the address indicated on the information return, the Franchise Tax
Board shall request a depository institution to do either of the
following:
(A) Verify that the address on its information return is its
designated address for receiving notices to withhold.
(B) Provide the Franchise Tax Board with a designated address for
receiving notices to withhold.
(2) Once the depository institution has specified a designated
address pursuant to paragraph (1), the Franchise Tax Board shall send
all notices to that address unless the depository institution
provides notification of another address. The Franchise Tax Board
shall send all notices to withhold to a new designated address 30
days after notification.
(3) Failure to verify or provide a designated address within 30
days of receiving the request shall be deemed verification of the
address on the information return as the depository institution's
designated address.
(c) (1) Notwithstanding Section 8112 of the Commercial Code and
Section 700.130 of the Code of Civil Procedure, when the Franchise
Tax Board, pursuant to this section or Section 18670.5, issues a levy
upon, or requires by notice, any person, financial institution, or
securities intermediary, as applicable, to withhold all, or a portion
of, a financial asset for the purpose of collecting a delinquent tax
liability, the person, financial institution, or securities
intermediary, as defined in Section 8102 of the Commercial Code, that
maintains, administers, or manages that asset on behalf of the
taxpayer, or has the legal authority to accept instructions from the
taxpayer as to the disposition of that asset, shall liquidate the
financial asset in a commercially reasonable manner within 90 days of
the issuance of the order to withhold. Within five days of
liquidation, the person, financial institution, or securities
intermediary, as applicable, shall remit to the Franchise Tax Board
the proceeds of the liquidation, less any reasonable commissions or
fees, or both, which are charged in the normal course of business.
(2) If the value of the financial assets to be liquidated exceeds
the tax liability, the taxpayer may, within 60 days after the service
of the order to withhold upon the person, financial institution, or
securities intermediary, instruct the person, financial institution,
or securities intermediary as to which financial assets are to be
sold to satisfy the tax liability. If the taxpayer does not provide
instructions for liquidation, the person, financial institution, or
securities intermediary shall liquidate the financial assets in a
commercially reasonable manner and in an amount sufficient to cover
the tax liability, and any reasonable commissions or fees, or both,
which are charged in the normal course of business, beginning with
the financial assets purchased most recently.
(3) For purposes of this section, a financial asset shall include,
but not be limited to, an uncertificated security, certificated
security, or security entitlement as defined in Section 8102 of the
Commercial Code, a security as defined in Section 8103 of the
Commercial Code, or a securities account as defined in Section 8501
of the Commercial Code.
(d) Any corporation or person failing to withhold the amounts due
from any taxpayer and transmit them to the Franchise Tax Board after
service of the notice shall be liable for those amounts. However, in
the case of a depository institution, if a notice to withhold is
mailed to the branch where the account is located or principal
banking office, the depository institution shall be liable for a
failure to withhold only to the extent that the accounts can be
identified in information normally maintained at that location in the
ordinary course of business.