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TAXATION: GENERAL PROVISIONS OF TITLE
58.1 (secrecy of information)
TRADE AND COMMERCE: TRANSACTING BUSINESS UNDER ASSUMED NAME.
Commissioner of revenue may release
names and addresses of businesses licensed within his locality for
purposes of solicitation. Business is considered trading under
assumed or fictitious name when assumed or fictitious name
certificate is filed in appropriate clerk’s office.
The Honorable Gene R. Ergenbright
Commissioner of the Revenue for the City of Staunton
December 19, 2002
Issues Presented
You ask several questions regarding the disclosure of
information received by your office. You first ask whether a
commissioner of the revenue may distribute, upon request, a list of
the names and addresses of businesses licensed within his locality.
Second, you ask when a business is considered to be trading under
an assumed or fictitious name for purposes of § 58.1-3.
Finally, you inquire whether a commissioner of the revenue may
disclose the names and addresses of licensed businesses within his
locality to be used for solicitation purposes.
Response
It is my opinion that § 58.1-3 does not prohibit a
commissioner of the revenue from releasing the names and addresses
of businesses licensed within his locality. It is further my
opinion that a business is considered to be trading under an
assumed or fictitious name, for the purposes of § 58.1-3,
when an assumed or fictitious name certificate is filed as required
by § 59.1-69(A). Finally, it is my opinion that a
commissioner of the revenue may release the names and addresses of
licensed businesses within his locality to be used for solicitation
purposes.
Applicable Law and Discussion
You first ask whether a commissioner of the revenue is
prohibited from releasing the names and addresses of businesses
licensed within his locality. Section 58.1-3(A) requires that tax
officials keep confidential certain information received by
them:
Except in accordance with a proper judicial order or as
otherwise provided by law, the … commissioner of the revenue
… shall not divulge any information acquired by him in the
performance of his duties with respect to the transactions,
property, including personal property, income or business of any
person, firm or corporation.
Section 58.1-3(B) permits the release of certain
information by a commissioner of the revenue. Section 58.1-3(B)
provides, in part, that "[t]his section shall not be construed to
prohibit a local tax official from disclosing whether a person,
firm or corporation is licensed to do business in that locality and
divulging, upon written request, the name and address of any
person, firm or corporation transacting business under a fictitious
name."
Section 58.1-3(A) protects information related to "transactions,
property, including personal property, income or business of any
person, firm or corporation."1 The
disclosure prohibition does not extend to whether a person, firm or
corporation is licensed to do business.2 Section 58.1-3(B) provides an explicit
exception to the confidentiality requirements of
§ 58.1-3(A). This Office previously has concluded that a
commissioner of the revenue is authorized to release the names,
addresses, and telephone numbers of businesses licensed within his
locality.3
You also ask when a business is considered to be trading under
an assumed or fictitious name for the purposes of
§ 58.1-3(B).4 An assumed or
fictitious name certificate is required when the name under which
business is transacted does not fairly disclose true
ownership.5 While § 58.1-3(B)
does not prohibit a commissioner of the revenue from releasing the
names and addresses of businesses licensed within his locality, it
does require a written request before a commissioner may disclose
the true ownership of businesses using assumed or fictitious
names.
Chapter 5 of Title 59.1, §§ 59.1-69 through
59.1-76, sets forth the requirements for transacting business in
the Commonwealth under an assumed or fictitious name. "[T]he object
of [Chapter 5] is to protect the public by giving information as to
the person with which it deals and to afford it protection against
possible fraud and deceit."6 Section
59.1-69(A) prohibits any "person" from conducting or transacting
business in Virginia under an assumed or fictitious name without
filing an assumed or fictitious name certificate.7
The primary purpose of statutory construction is to "ascertain
and give effect to legislative intent."8 Statutes are to be read as a whole rather
than in isolated parts.9 Section
58.1-3(B) removes from the protection of privacy the actual
identity of a business trading under a fictitious name; requires a
written request prior to the release of the true identity of a
business; and provides access to such information to the public.
The apparent purpose of Chapter 5 of Title 59.1 and the exemption
from privacy under § 58.1-3(B) is to protect the public
from fraud and deceit by persons trading under assumed and
fictitious names. Accordingly, the phrase, "assumed or fictitious
name," should have the same meaning in both statutory schemes.
Therefore, a business required by § 59.1-69(A) to sign,
acknowledge, and file an assumed or fictitious name certificate
with the appropriate circuit court is a business considered to be
trading under a fictitious name for purposes of
§ 58.1-3(B).
You also inquire whether the names and addresses of licensed
businesses may be disclosed when the proposed use is for
solicitation purposes. You believe § 58.1-4 may prohibit
you from releasing the names and addresses of licensed businesses
when you suspect that the information will be used for solicitation
purposes. Section 58.1-4 prohibits, "for the purpose of
solicitation," the disclosure of any information gathered by a
person, firm or corporation preparing a state tax return required
by Title 58.1 or federal income tax or estate tax return for
another party.
Section 58.1-4 is a general prohibition against the disclosure
of certain tax information by parties who prepare tax returns for
other persons. Regardless of a commissioner of the revenue’s
involvement in completing or assisting with a Business Professional
and Occupation License application or return, once the license is
issued, § 58.1-3(B) specifically allows a local tax
official to disclose the name and address of a business that is
licensed in his locality. Section 58.1-3(B) authorizes the release
of this information without regard to the motivations behind the
request. The general prohibitions provided in § 58.1-4
may not be interpreted to repeal by implication the disclosure
specifically authorized by § 58.1-3.10 A commissioner of the revenue, therefore,
is not prohibited from releasing nonprotected information that will
be used for purposes of solicitation.11
As commissioner of the revenue, you may provide the name and
address of a business licensed within your locality. You need not
do so, however, absent a request pursuant to The Virginia Freedom
of Information Act.12 Upon such
request, a commissioner of the revenue is not required to create a
list that does not already exist.13
Conclusion
Accordingly, it is my opinion that § 58.1-3 does not
prohibit a commissioner of the revenue from releasing the names and
addresses of businesses licensed within his locality. It is further
my opinion that a business is considered to be trading under an
assumed or fictitious name, for the purposes of § 58.1-3,
when an assumed or fictitious name certificate is filed as required
by § 59.1-69(A). Finally, it is my opinion that a
commissioner of the revenue may release the names and addresses of
licensed businesses within his locality to be used for solicitation
purposes.
Footnotes:
1See also 1989 Op. Va. Att’y Gen. 304, 305
(concluding that commissioner of revenue may not release
information related to amounts of coal and taxes collected from
coal company).
22001 Op. Va. Att’y Gen. 175,
176 (copy enclosed).
3See 1981-1982 Op. Va. Att’y Gen. 377, 378
(citing § 58-46, predecessor to § 58.1-3(B),
for proposition that release of information does not identify
particular reports or returns); see also 1982-1983 Op. Va. Att’y Gen. 727, 728
(extending 1982 opinion to include disclosure of licensees’
telephone numbers).
4I assume that you are seeking
guidance as to when a written request is required in connection
with the release of information regarding the true ownership of a
business.
5See Tate v. Atlanta
Oak Flooring Co., 179 Va. 365, 368-69, 18 S.E.2d 903,
905 (1942).
6Tate, 179 Va. at 367-68,
18 S.E.2d at 904.
7"No person, … shall conduct or
transact business in this Commonwealth under any assumed or
fictitious name unless such person, … shall sign and
acknowledge a certificate setting forth the name under which such
business is to be conducted or transacted, and the names of each
person, … owning the same, with their respective post-office
and residence addresses … and file the same in the office of
the clerk of the court in which deeds are recorded in the county or
city wherein the business is to be conducted." Va. Code Ann.
§ 59.1-69(A) (Michie Repl. Vol. 2001).
8Turner v. Commonwealth,
226 Va. 456, 459, 309 S.E.2d 337, 338 (1983) (citing
Tiller v. Commonwealth, 193 Va. 418, 69 S.E.2d 441
(1952)).
9See Tilton v.
Commonwealth, 196 Va. 774, 784, 85 S.E.2d 368, 374
(1955) (noting principle that "every provision in or part of a
statute shall be given effect if possible"), quoted in
Gallagher v. Commonwealth, 205 Va. 666, 669,
139 S.E.2d 37, 39 (1964); see also Op. Va. Att’y
Gen.: 1996 at 26, 27; 1994 at 93, 95, 1985-1986 at 177, 178.
10See Supervisors v.
Commonwealth, 116 Va. 311, 313, 81 S.E. 112, 112-13
(1914) (noting that law does not favor repeal by implication,
unless repugnance is plain, and then only to extent of repugnancy);
see also 1996 Op. Va. Att’y Gen. 134, 135.
11See generally Associated Tax Service v.
Fitzpatrick, 236 Va. 181, 186-87, 372 S.E.2d 625,
628-29 (1988) (holding that real estate tax information must be
released pursuant to Freedom of Information Act request regardless
of purpose or motivation behind request).
12Va. Code Ann.
§§ 2.2-3700 to 2.2-3714 (LexisNexis Repl. Vol. 2001
& Supp. 2002).
131982-1983 Op. Va. Att’y
Gen., supra note 3, at 728.
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