Connecticut General Statutes
Chapter 202 - Collection of State Taxes
Section 12-35. - Duties of state collection agencies. Statute of limitations on collection by Commissioner.

(a)(1) Wherever used in this chapter, unless otherwise provided, “state collection agency” includes the Treasurer, the Commissioner of Revenue Services and any other state official, board or commission authorized by law to collect taxes payable to the state and any duly appointed deputy of any such official, board or commission; “tax” includes not only the principal of any tax but also all interest, penalties, fees and other charges added thereto by law; and “serving officer” includes any state marshal, constable or employee of such state collection agency designated for such purpose by a state collection agency and any person so designated by the Labor Commissioner.

(2) Upon the failure of any person to pay any tax, except any tax under chapter 216, due the state within thirty days from its due date, the state collection agency charged by law with its collection shall add thereto such penalty or interest or both as are prescribed by law, provided, (A) if any statutory penalty is not specified, there may be added a penalty in the amount of ten per cent of the whole or such part of the principal of the tax as is unpaid or fifty dollars, whichever amount is greater, and (B) if any statutory interest is not specified, there shall be added interest at the rate of one per cent of the whole or such part of the principal of the tax as is unpaid for each month or fraction thereof, from the due date of such tax to the date of payment.
(3) Upon the failure of any person to pay any tax, except any tax under chapter 216, due within thirty days of its due date, the state collection agency charged by law with the collection of such tax may make out and sign a warrant directed to any serving officer for distraint upon any property of such person found within the state, whether real or personal. An itemized bill shall be attached thereto, certified by the state collection agency issuing such warrant as a true statement of the amount due from such person.
(A) Such warrant shall have the same force and effect as an execution issued pursuant to chapter 906. Such warrant may be levied on any real property or tangible or intangible personal property of such person, and sale made pursuant to such warrant in the same manner and with the same force and effect as a levy of sale pursuant to an execution. In addition thereto, if such warrant has been issued by the Commissioner of Revenue Services, the commissioner's deputy, the Labor Commissioner, the executive director of the Employment Security Division or any person in the Employment Security Division in a position equivalent to or higher than the position presently held by a revenue examiner four, such serving officer shall be authorized to place a keeper in any place of business and it shall be such keeper's duty to secure the income of such business for the state and, when it is in the best interest of the state, to force cessation of such business operation. In addition, the Attorney General may collect any such tax by civil action. Each serving officer so receiving a warrant shall make a return with respect to such warrant to the appropriate collection agency within a period of ten days following receipt of such warrant.
(B) Each serving officer shall collect from such person, in addition to the amount shown on such warrant, such officer's fees and charges, which shall be twice those authorized by statute for serving officers, provided the minimum charge shall be five dollars and money collected pursuant to such warrant shall be first applied to the amount of any fees and charges of the serving officer. In the case of an employee of the state acting as a serving officer the fees and charges collected by such employee shall inure to the benefit of the state.
(4) For the purposes of this subsection, “keeper” means a person who has been given authority by an officer authorized to serve a tax warrant to act in the state's interest to secure the income of a business for the state and, when it is in the best interest of the state, to force the cessation of such business's operation, upon the failure of such business to pay taxes owed to the state.
(b) (1) Any such warrant on any intangible personal property of any person may be served by mailing a certified copy of such warrant by certified mail, return receipt requested, to any third person in possession of, or obligated with respect to, receivables, bank accounts, evidences of debt, securities, salaries, wages, commissions, compensation or other intangible personal property subject to such warrant, ordering such third person to forthwith deliver such property or pay the amount due or payable to the state collection agency that has made out such warrant, provided such warrant may be issued only after the state collection agency making out such warrant has notified the person owning such property, in writing, of its intention to issue such warrant. The notice of intent shall be: (A) Given in person; (B) left at the dwelling or usual place of business of such person; or (C) sent by certified mail, return receipt requested, to such person's last known address, not less than thirty days before the day the warrant is to be issued.
(2) Any such warrant on any intangible personal property of any person may be served by electronic mail, facsimile machine or other electronic means on any third person in possession of, or obligated with respect to, receivables, bank accounts, evidences of debt, securities, salaries, wages, commissions, compensation or other intangible personal property subject to such warrant, ordering such third person to forthwith deliver such property or pay the amount due or payable to the state collection agency that has made out such warrant, provided such warrant may be issued only after the state collection agency making out such warrant has notified the person owning such property, in writing, of its intention to issue such warrant. The notice of intent shall be: (A) Given in person; (B) left at the dwelling or usual place of business of such person; or (C) sent by certified mail, return receipt requested, to such person's last-known address, not less than thirty days before the day the warrant is to be issued. Any such warrant for tax due may further include an order to such third person to continually deliver, during the one hundred eighty days immediately following the date of issuance of the warrant or until the tax is fully paid, whichever occurs earlier, all intangible personal property that is due and that becomes due to the person owing the tax. Except as otherwise provided in this subdivision, such warrant shall have the same force and effect as an execution issued pursuant to chapter 906.
(c) (1) Except as provided in subdivision (3) of this subsection:
(A) The Commissioner of Revenue Services may not collect a tax after ten years from the date the tax was reported on a return that was filed with the commissioner; and
(B) If the commissioner makes an assessment of any tax within the statute of limitations applicable to the period for which such assessment was made, the commissioner may not collect such tax after ten years from the date such assessment became final.
(2) Any taxes that remain unpaid after the applicable ten-year period shall be deemed abated as of the first day of the eleventh year succeeding the date the return was filed or the assessment became final, as applicable.
(3) This subsection shall not apply to any taxes for which the commissioner has entered into an agreement under the provisions of section 12-2d or 12-2e or to any taxes that have been secured by the recording of a lien on the real property or personal property of a taxpayer.
(1949 Rev., S. 1713; 1969, P.A. 388, S. 1; P.A. 74-214, S. 1, 2; P.A. 75-613, S. 1, 4; P.A. 76-367, S. 1, 2; P.A. 77-614, S. 139, 610; P.A. 80-307, S. 1, 31; P.A. 81-64, S. 1, 23; 81-411, S. 9, 42; P.A. 82-72, S. 2, 3; P.A. 87-86; P.A. 89-157, S. 3, 4; June Sp. Sess. P.A. 91-14, S. 6, 30; P.A. 93-144, S. 1; P.A. 95-26, S. 50, 52; P.A. 00-99, S. 39, 154; 00-174, S. 52, 83; P.A. 17-147, S. 10; P.A. 18-26, S. 8; P.A. 19-186, S. 4; P.A. 22-110, S. 1; 22-117, S. 31.)
History: 1969 act provided that interest be not less than 0.75% per month except as per chapter 216 on overdue taxes; P.A. 74-214 included in definition of “serving officer” employees of state collection agency, deleted references to marshals, substituted “any property of the taxpayer within the state, whether real or personal” for “the goods, realty or body of such person”, required bond for serving officers other than tax department employees, added provision re deposit of returns by serving officers and deleted ten-day deadline for making return; P.A. 75-613 deleted reference to civil action by attorney general for collection, replaced former provisions re warrants and service with new provisions and required fees and charges collected by state employee to inure to state's benefit; P.A. 76-367 increased interest per month on overdue taxes to 1%; P.A. 77-614 substituted commissioner of revenue services for tax commissioner, effective January 1, 1979; P.A. 80-307 increased interest to 1.25% per month for taxes becoming due on or after July 1, 1980, but not later than June 30, 1981, and returned interest to 1% thereafter; P.A. 81-64 amended the penalty provision related to taxes not paid when due to provide for a minimum penalty of $50, effective July 1, 1981; P.A. 81-411 provided for continuance of interest on delinquent taxes at 1.25% per month, effective June 18, 1981, and applicable to income years commencing on or after December 28, 1980; P.A. 82-72 added provision that money collected under warrant shall be first applied to fees and charges of serving officer and inserted technical clarification re provisions not applicable to succession and transfer taxes; P.A. 87-86 specifically made the serving officer's authority to place a keeper in a place of business applicable to warrants issued by the labor commissioner or the executive director of the employment security division and defined “keeper”; P.A. 89-157 included “designees of commissioner of labor” in the definition of “serving officer”; June Sp. Sess. P.A. 91-14 added Subsec. (b) concerning service of warrants by mail; P.A. 93-144 amended Subsec. (a) to permit the issuance of tax warrants and placement of keepers in businesses by individuals in the employment security division at or above the level of a revenue examiner four; P.A. 95-26 amended Subsec. (a) to lower interest rate from 1.25% to 1% and made technical changes, effective July 1, 1995, and applicable to taxes due and owing on or after July 1, 1995, whether or not those taxes first became due before said date (Revisor's note: A reference in Subsec. (a) to “Commissioner of Labor” was replaced editorially by the Revisors with “Labor Commissioner” for consistency with customary statutory usage); P.A. 00-99 replaced reference to sheriff and deputy sheriff with state marshal in Subsec. (a), effective December 1, 2000; P.A. 00-174 amended Subsec. (b) by designating existing provisions as Subdiv. (1), redesignating existing Subdivs. (1), (2) and (3) as Subparas. (A), (B) and (C), and adding new Subdiv. (2) re service of warrants by electronic means, effective May 26, 2000; P.A. 17-147 amended Subsec. (b)(2) by adding provision re order for continual delivery of intangible property, and making technical changes, effective July 1, 2017; P.A. 18-26 amended Subsec. (b)(2) to replace “intangible property” with “intangible personal property”; P.A. 19-186 amended Subsec. (b)(2) by adding provision authorizing warrant on intangible personal property to be served by other electronic means; P.A. 22-110 amended Subsec. (a) by redesignating existing provisions as Subdivs. (1) to (4) and making technical changes; P.A. 22-117 amended Subsec. (a) by redesignating existing provisions as Subdivs. (1) to (4) and making technical changes, and added Subsec. (c) re limit on time period that Commissioner of Revenue Services may collect a tax, effective May 27, 2022 (Revisor's note: The word “recoding” in Subsec. (c)(3) was changed editorially by the Revisors to “recording”, for accuracy).
Cited. 164 C. 497; 183 C. 117.

Structure Connecticut General Statutes

Connecticut General Statutes

Title 12 - Taxation

Chapter 202 - Collection of State Taxes

Section 12-35. - Duties of state collection agencies. Statute of limitations on collection by Commissioner.

Section 12-35a. - Lien on personal property as security related to delinquent state taxes.

Section 12-35b. - Definitions for sections concerning state liens on real property related to tax delinquency. Use of electronic signature by commissioner.

Section 12-35c. - Collection in courts of other states or District of Columbia. Enforcement in this state of tax liabilities of other states or District of Columbia.

Section 12-35d and 12-35e. - Tax amnesty program related to any state tax unpaid for taxable periods ending on or before March 31, 1990, to be conducted during the period September 1, 1990, to November 30, 1990. Tax amnesty program related to any sta...

Section 12-35f. - Offset of tax refunds.

Section 12-35g. - Tax amnesty program for unpaid tax for periods ending November 30, 2008.

Section 12-35h. - Credit of taxpayer's account for unpaid taxes collected by certain agents of the state.

Section 12-35i. - Tax amnesty program for unpaid taxes for periods ending November 30, 2012.

Section 12-35j. - Facilitation of issuance of tax warrants.

Section 12-36. - Jeopardy collection of taxes due state.

Section 12-37. - State suspense tax book.

Section 12-38. - Interest on taxes, fees and assessments due from municipality to the state.

Section 12-39. - Abatement of state taxes. Commissioner to prepare and maintain a list of state taxes which have been abated.

Section 12-39a. - Payment date when last date is a Saturday, Sunday, holiday or date for a permissible delay under the federal Internal Revenue Code.

Section 12-39aa. - Tax returns, claims, statements or other documents concerning state taxes. When deemed received.

Section 12-39b. - Records of cancellation or revision of tax liability.

Section 12-39bb. - Records of department. Reproductions of records.

Section 12-39c. - Monthly reports concerning state taxes to committee of General Assembly having cognizance of state revenue.

Section 12-39cc. - Data match system with financial institutions.

Section 12-39d and 12-39e. - Tax returns, related documents and payments concerning state taxes; when deemed to be filed with and received by the state. Filing deadline requirements.

Section 12-39dd. - Duplicate information returns required to be filed by reporting entities. Penalties.

Section 12-39f. - Refund of state taxes. Limit on interest added or awarded.

Section 12-39g. - State taxes and related penalties due from any taxpayer to be applied as reduction of any amount payable by the state to such taxpayer. Certain exceptions.

Section 12-39h. - Application of partial payment toward state tax liability in penalties, tax and interest.

Section 12-39i and 12-39j. - Taxpayer may request application of payment to tax attributable to specific errors in a return. Annual inventory of estimated loss in state revenue related to each exemption under state taxes.

Section 12-39k. - Granting of extensions requested by persons other than the taxpayer.

Section 12-39l. - Tax appeals. Definition. Appointment of judges to hear tax appeals by Chief Court Administrator.

Section 12-39m. - Posting of bond by taxpayer objecting to an assessment. Regulations.

Section 12-39n. - Taxpayer's Bill of Rights.

Section 12-39o. - Issuance or renewal of license when taxes owed or returns outstanding.

Section 12-39p. - Disaster-related or emergency-related work performed in the state by certain out-of-state businesses and out-of-state employees; presence in the state for state tax purposes.

Section 12-39r. - Payment of state taxes by credit card, charge card or debit card.

Section 12-39s. - Cancellation of unpaid portion of erroneously or illegally assessed taxes and credit or refund of erroneously or illegally collected taxes.

Section 12-39t. - Suspension of statute of limitations for filing a claim for refund of taxes.

Section 12-39u. - Offsetting of overpayments and underpayments of taxes.

Section 12-39v. - Refund to person of tax collected from customer.

Section 12-39w. - Claims for refund where results of civil audit, investigation, examination or reexamination have become final.

Section 12-39z. - Rounding of dollar amounts in returns, statements or other documents.