Section 469 Of Article 2. Information From Taxpayer From California Revenue And Taxation Code >> Division 1. >> Part 2. >> Chapter 3. >> Article 2.
469
. (a) The assessor shall annually conduct a significant number
of audits of the books and records of taxpayers engaged in a
profession, trade, or business who own, claim, possess, or control
locally assessable trade fixtures and business tangible personal
property in the county to encourage the accurate and proper reporting
of property as required by this article. The assessor shall conduct
an audit of those taxpayers as provided by subdivision (b).
(1) For purposes of this section, "significant number of audits"
means at least 75 percent of the fiscal year average of the total
number of audits the assessor was required to have conducted during
the 2002-03 fiscal year to the 2005-06 fiscal year, inclusive, on
those taxpayers in the county that had a full value of four hundred
thousand dollars ($400,000) or more of locally assessable trade
fixtures and business tangible personal property.
(2) The assessor is not required to audit a taxpayer that is fully
exempt from property taxation under other provisions of law for
purposes of the requirements of this section.
(3) If the board audits a taxpayer because the taxpayer's
assessment was selected in a sampling of assessments from the local
assessment rolls pursuant to Section 15640 of the Government Code,
that audit may be deemed an audit by the assessor for purposes of the
requirements of this section.
(b) Each year the audits required by subdivision (a) shall be
conducted in the following manner:
(1) Fifty percent of the audits required by subdivision (a) shall
be performed on taxpayers selected from a pool of those taxpayers
that have the largest assessments of locally assessable trade
fixtures and business tangible personal property in the county.
(A) This pool of taxpayers shall be determined as follows:
(i) The assessor shall rank all of the taxpayers in the county in
descending order by the total locally assessed value of both trade
fixtures and business tangible personal property.
(ii) The assessor shall select a qualified number of those
taxpayers with the largest assessments for inclusion in the pool. The
qualified number shall be that number equal to 50 percent of the
audits required by subdivision (a) multiplied by four.
(B) Taxpayers in the pool shall be audited at least once within
each four-year period following the latest fiscal year covered by a
preceding audit and the audit may combine multiple fiscal years. The
assessor is relieved of the requirement to audit the taxpayer at
least once every four years if the assessor determines that the
taxpayer's assessments are no longer large enough for inclusion in
the pool.
(2) The remaining 50 percent of the required audits, as determined
by paragraph (1) of subdivision (a), shall be selected in a manner
that is fair and equitable to all taxpayers and may be based on
evidence of underreporting as determined by the assessor.
(3) Nothing in this subdivision is intended to prohibit the audit
of any taxpayer more frequently than once every four years.
(c) With respect to any audit of the books of a profession, trade,
or business, regardless of the full value of the trade fixtures and
business tangible personal property owned, claimed, possessed, or
controlled by the taxpayer, the following shall apply:
(1) Upon completion of an audit of the taxpayer's books and
records, the taxpayer shall be given the assessor's findings in
writing with respect to data that would alter any previously enrolled
assessment.
(2) Equalization of the property by a county board of equalization
or assessment appeals board pursuant to Chapter 1 (commencing with
Section 1601) of Part 3 of this division shall not preclude a
subsequent audit and shall not preclude the assessor from levying an
escape assessment in appropriate instances, but shall preclude an
escape assessment being levied on that portion of the assessment that
was the subject of the equalization hearing.
(3) If the result of an audit for any year discloses property
subject to an escape assessment, then the original assessment of all
property of the assessee at the location of the profession, trade, or
business for that year shall be subject to review, equalization and
adjustment by the county board of equalization or assessment appeals
board pursuant to Chapter 1 (commencing with Section 1601) of Part 3
of this division, except in those instances when the property had
previously been equalized for the year in question.
(4) If the audit for any particular tax year discloses that the
property of the taxpayer was incorrectly valued or misclassified for
any cause, to the extent that this error caused the property to be
assessed at a higher value than the assessor would have entered on
the roll had the incorrect valuation or misclassification not
occurred, then the assessor shall notify the taxpayer of the amount
of the excess valuation or misclassification, and the fact that a
claim for cancellation or refund may be filed with the county as
provided by Sections 4986 and 5096.