The Volokh Conspiracy
Mostly law professors | Sometimes contrarian | Often libertarian | Always independent
Refusing to Accept Crumpled $1 Bills as Property Tax Payment Doesn't Violate First Amendment
From Lull v. County of Sacramento, decided Tuesday by Magistrate Judge Jeremy Peterson (E.D. Cal.):
Plaintiff claims that defendants engaged in retaliation forbidden by the First Amendment when they refused to let him pay some of his property taxes with crumpled one-dollar bills emptied from garbage bags, which he brought to the Sacramento County Department of Finance office on tax day. Defendants maintain that, although they do accept some cash payments and had previously accepted one from plaintiff, they refused the payment at issue because it did not comply with the county's requirements for cash payments and because they did not have the resources to process it. Plaintiff disputes that defendants' rejection of his payment was motivated by these considerations, claiming instead that defendants sought to suppress his protest, but he offers scant evidence of this. I recommend that the court grant summary judgment for defendants….
In 2017, plaintiff was behind on his property tax payments and was under pressure from his mortgage holder to pay the taxes. He needed to pay by February 6 to avoid either a fee, a higher interest rate, or default. Plaintiff sought to make his tax payment in one-dollar bills, which he alleges was intended as a form of protest. Before attempting such a cash payment, he consulted with the county attorney, Keith Floyd. Floyd told him that coins were not an acceptable form of payment, but dollar bills would be acceptable under certain conditions, namely:
- All tendered bills would have to be in a readily countable condition. This means the bills must be flat when presented. No folded, crinkled, wadded up, rolled, or otherwise altered bills would be accepted.
- The payment would have to be offered in person at an agreed upon date and time. The Department of Finance needs to ensure that it has adequate staffing resources available to count the money during regular business hours while you or your representative remain present during the process.
- The Department of Finance would allow for one recount if the counted total appeared to be less than the tax bill amount.
Plaintiff arranged with Floyd to pay with 16,400 one-dollar bills on February 6, 2017.
When plaintiff came to the Department of Finance's public counter at 8:10 a.m., the 16,634 bills that he presented did not comply with the requirements that Floyd had laid out. Specifically, some of the bills were folded and crumpled, not flat. Plaintiff dumped them from garbage bags onto the counter, spilling some onto the floor. He also taped fake bills to the counter and spoke about his protest, recording it on video. Despite the condition of the bills, the county still accepted them as payment. Processing plaintiff's payment took 35 hours of staff time and involved six staff members.
On February 9, Floyd sent plaintiff a letter confirming that plaintiff had made a partial payment on February 6 and stating that he still had an outstanding balance, which was due by April 10, 2017. The letter notified plaintiff that "the Department of Finance's duty to serve the rest of the public through its normal budgeted operations prohibits accepting any further payment attempts in single, folded dollar bills. Placing a large pile of dollar bills on the Department of Finance public floor area also creates a significant security risk."
Department of Finance officials recognized the need for a policy on cash acceptance, in part because of the burden of processing plaintiff's payment on February 6. Thus, in addition to the guidance provided by the county attorney in advance of the February 6 payment, Ben Lamera, the director of finance, implemented an informal cash acceptance policy for the Department of Finance sometime prior to April 10. The policy stated:
- Bills must be readily countable (i.e. not folded, crinkled, or otherwise manipulated).
- Large quantities of bills or coins may not be placed on the public counter, floor, or any other place within the public area. The Tax Collector has the right to refuse the payment in coins of property taxes, penalties and interest.
- Large quantities of bills must be tendered by the customer in stacks that can be quickly placed in Department counting machines.
- The limit for non-tax payments made in coin is approximately $150 at a location where there is an automated coin counter and $5 at locations without one.
- All counting must occur at the public counter with the customer present.
- For payments involving significant quantities of cash, transactions must be able to be completed in a reasonable amount of time, during regular business hours. The county does not accept partial payments for property tax payments. Any counted cash must be returned to the customer if counting of tendered cash is not completed by the close of business, unless the customer offers to make a non-property tax partial payment.
On April 10, 2017, the state tax deadline, plaintiff came to the Department of Finance's public counter without an appointment and attempted to make a tax payment with folded and crumpled one-dollar bills contained in two trash bags.
Plaintiff recorded his appearance on video and spoke with members of the public and county employees. While he was in line, a security officer approached him and asked that he not dump money on the floor. The officer indicated that he did not know whether plaintiff's form of payment would be accepted. Defendant Mark Aspesi, a senior accounting manager, was working at the counter and refused to accept plaintiff's payment. There was a line of customers stretching out the door because it was tax day. Aspesi later testified that he refused the payment because the office's staff was busy and it would have taken a long time to count so many dollar bills. Plaintiff left without paying his taxes….
At issue is a single claim of First Amendment retaliation. To prevail, plaintiff would need to show that: "(1) he engaged in constitutionally protected activity; (2) as a result, he was subjected to adverse action by the defendant that would chill a person of ordinary firmness from continuing to engage in the protected activity; and (3) there was a substantial causal relationship between the constitutionally protected activity and the adverse action." …
As for the first required element, plaintiff offers little to back up his claim that he engaged in constitutionally protected activity. Speech is protected by the First Amendment, but making a payment in a particular form is conduct, not speech—and conduct receives far more limited First Amendment protection. Although plaintiff apparently intended his choice of a form of payment—crumpled and folded one-dollar bills presented on tax day—to have an expressive element, it might merit no First Amendment protection at all….
But even if I accept the questionable proposition that the relevant activity was protected by the First Amendment, plaintiff has failed to offer evidence sufficient to satisfy the third element of retaliation: he has not shown that there was a substantial causal relationship between his purported constitutionally protected activity and the county's adverse action—its refusal to accept his second payment. On the other hand, defendants point to copious evidence in the record that plaintiff's form of payment was refused because the bills were not readily countable and could not be processed that day….
It is telling that both times that plaintiff brought trash bags full of money to the county office, he was permitted to engage in speech. He was able to film his interactions on April 10. He and his videographer were permitted to shove crumpled dollar bills through the service window, and he was able to speak out on video to county employees and members of the public. The evidence does not show that the county sought to shut down his protest, but rather that plaintiff ignored reasonable restrictions on cash payments, of which he had advance notice, and that this led to the rejection of his payment. Nothing in the record indicates that plaintiff's payment would have been rejected had his bills been stacked and readily countable….
Editor's Note: We invite comments and request that they be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of Reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
Should have stuck with constitutionally-approved checks wrote out on underwear.
The court will always side with the government, against the ordinary person.
I have to admit, had I been on line behind him, I would have been angry.
Which is one reason the court sided with the government -- which it doesn't always do. Sometimes, the government is right.
I would have yelled, how much does the dipshit owe? I will pay it. Then take the barrel of bills and use them myself to annoy merchants who are rude.
No, you wouldn't have.
"This bill is legal tender for all debts, public and private"
No, the government is NOT right in this case
Why would you be angry to have been in line after him.
If he were permitted to pay with crumpled singles delaying you for hours, that would have been a victory for the 'little guy', and show that the courts had sided against the government.
Leaving aside the first amendment issue - if the government can refuse to accept legal tender, what does the phrase "legal tender for all debts public and private" even mean? Because that's what my dollar bills say.
I realize it's inconvenient, but why isn't the government legally obligated to take cash, without condition? It's their own promise on the bills. (That should cover coins too).
Yes, that's what I was thinking too. Usually there is some exception to that legal tender law, so that people don't have to accept denominations smaller than X for the payment of a sum larger than Y, but I don't know whether that's the law in the US.
According to the Federal Reserve
https://www.federalreserve.gov/faqs/currency_12772.htm
Which makes me wonder what "legal tender" in 31 U.S.C. 5103 means if not that. The Fed says that it means " that all U.S. money as identified above is a valid and legal offer of payment for debts when tendered to a creditor", but without an obligation to accept such valid offer of payment, I'm not sure what exactly "valid" means in this context.
As I understand it, if you incur a debt, and your creditor did not make advance limitations on how it could be paid, they have to accept cash. But if they up front state that they will only take payment in a specified form, before the debt is incurred, your incurring it is considered to be agreement to those terms.
That said, the government itself should always take it's own currency as payment.
That makes sense.
As for whether the government should take its own currency as payment, the Federal government probably should, but I'm not sure what the principled reason would be for treating the states and their subdivisions the same way.
"That said, the government itself should always take it’s own currency as payment."
State and local governments don't have their own currency.
Article 1, section 10, in part reads, "No State shall ... make any Thing but gold and silver Coin a Tender in Payment of Debts;"
So I suppose they should be required to accept precious metals.
If that's the rule, then the state should lose. He clearly incurred the debt (ran up the taxes) long before the department passed this set of rules about allowable payment types. That remains true even of the second payment since it was still a payment of back taxes.
And that's before you consider that we subjects do not have a meaningful opportunity to consent to the terms of the payment.
Also, as I understand it, retail transactions paid in full at point of sale are not debts with in the meaning of 31 U.S.C. 5103.
That's because you don't take ownership until you've paid, so at no time do you have a debt.
That's a weird way of reasoning. Once I agree a valid contract that requires me to pay a sum of money, I have a debt. The debt may not come due until the product has been delivered, but the debt exists all the same.
That's not a retail transaction.
There's no contract when you walk up to the register with your basket of groceries. You can abandon the basket at any time. Therefore, you don't have ownership - which means you can't have a debt yet.
That's a specific kind of retail transaction - a supermarket. And in a supermarket you don't agree a contract until the cashier offers you, on behalf of the store, a sale at a certain price which you then accept. But even then there will be a period between offer & acceptance, on the one hand, and the moment you pay. During that period you have a debt.
There is no debt because there is no contract to buy at any point. The cashier can give me my total, I can agree to pay, and find out I forgot my wallet, or that I have less cash than I thought I did, or my card was declined. None of these scenarios put me in a position where I am obligated to come back and pay, nor is the retailer obligated to let me take my unpaid-for purchases. At any point I can abandon my cart and walk out
This is of course not just at the supermarket, but pretty much all retailer-to-consumer transactions
That's actually an interesting one, as a matter of pure legal theory. Clearly no supermarket is going to require you to get money and/or let you walk out with your groceries. But as a legal matter, I would probably say that what happened there is that you and the supermarket concluded a contract, and then cancelled it by mutual agreement. (Which parties to a contract are obviously allowed to do.)
My understanding is that the "tender" part is not the same as payment.
If a "tendered" payment is not accepted by the entity owed, the payment must still be made later in an acceptable form, but the one who "tendered" payment cannot be charged with a crime or assessed interest or fees associated with that "tender".
Say you have a meal in a 'pay after eating' kind of restaurant, and tender cash payment. The restaurant refuses the payment. They cannot try to have you arrested for non-payment, but instead must make reasonable arrangements to accept some other form of payment at a later date. Or if you "tender" rent or (tax payments) at the deadline, but it is refused, then there cannot be non-payment fees or interest added to the amount that was "tendered" but refused.
Or at lest that is how it used to be before federal regulators and other bureaucrats got involved.
It's an example of "FU, Government Wins."
Well, one can argue they are, just not like this.
For example, the person is free to send this currency over to the office of mutilated currency, get fresh bills, then submit the fresh bills.
It is not at all stated that every random municipality must accept every form of damaged currency. I think that clause is satisfied as long as the office of mutilated currency exists, that can take any bill, which is does, so there is no problem.
"Leaving aside the first amendment issue – if the government can refuse to accept legal tender, what does the phrase “legal tender for all debts public and private” even mean? Because that’s what my dollar bills say."
The op cites an Arizona case on the legal tender issue, "(finding that the government may specify the form that transfers of legal tender may be required to take..."
IIUC this seems wrong, given that the purpose of the legal tender acts are to insure the validity of government-issued currency. Of course, I may not UC.
Well, squirrelloid, I agree they are obligated to accept cash.
However, clearly that doesn't mean they have to accept cash that's obviously been used as toilet paper, cash with some unknown white powder all over it, cash taped to a brick thrown through the window, or an attempt to shove a wad of the cash down the throat of the clerk.
And it works both ways. If the law says the state has to send him notice of taxes due, that doesn't mean they can throw it in a crumpled ball on his lawn during a rainstorm and say that was the notice.
I'd say paying with 16400 $1 bills is OK. Dumping them on the floor and deliberately delaying other people trying to pay their taxes, not so much.
I really really hope that this frivolous lawsuit was filed pro se.
Frivolous only to the vile scumbag elitist lawyers.
Surprised that after the County refused to accept the bills for a tax payment, they didn't have the County Sheriff seize the cash through civil asset forfeiture based on possible drug residue on one of the bills and add it to the county coffers, then seize the guy's home for non-payment of taxes.
And since cash is used in most illegal drug deals, almost 90% of cash in circulation has some trace of cocaine on it.
https://www.nationalgeographic.com/science/article/cocaine-on-money-drug-found-on-90-of-us-bills
The tax authority should have seized the can of cash in civil forfeiture for review by a drug dog. Doubled their money that way.
Clever legally adequate point.
If the taxing authority didn't want to accept the "legal tender" in payment of its demand, why did it denominate that demand in that "legal tender?"
If I owe someone $5 and offer him a five dollar bill, and he refuses it, then as far as I'm concerned my obligation is discharged. "You owe me X." "OK, here's X." "DO NOT WANT!" "Ok, fine."
Just to pile on, that the government may not suppress a protest does not imply that it is required to actively participate.
That point occurred to me too, and I think it’s a good one.
In his very faint defense, I would say that even if the gov’t doesn’t help facilitate the protest, it would still be improper to penalize him after the fact simply by virtue of having protested. Like if he had otherwise tried to make proper and full payment, but done so while wearing a t-shirt that said “F___ the County” and they refused to accept it because of his attire. In that situation, the act of protesting is punished even though it’s not actually prevented from happening. But of course, that’s a far cry from what happened here.
Legalities aside, I'm struck by how much trouble this gentleman went to in order to harass the poor cashier. Getting over 16k in one dollar bills, taking the time to crumple them, wrinkle them, and make them otherwise difficult to count; it must be awful to go through life like that.
And while, in general, I agree government should accept its own currency, I also think government is within its right to put outer limits on the extent to which cranks are permitted to harass people who are doing their jobs. It's not that they refused to accept currency; it's that they refused to accept currency that had been deliberately rendered difficult to count.
I think that's the most honest take. Yes, the state should always be able to accept greenbacks. However, there are limits as to what is reasonable. This is just going out of your way to be a complete jerk and deliberately waste people's time.
I don't know about all the legal angles, but from a moral angle, the guy is being the jerk here.
But, don’t you see? He’s clearly a victim of abusive treatment by the government. In particular, that includes the [checks notes] County Attorney who gave him what amounts to free legal advice on the taxpayers’ dime about the various payment options.
I'm wondering if he crumpled/wrinkled them himself, or if that's just how they came from whatever source he obtained them from, and he simply declined to clean them up
By the way, for sheer entertainment, go to youtube and do a search for "sovereign citizen".
Could you say he did it just for the Lullz?
But be careful not to confuse that with a YouTube search for "sovereign syre"
It's obvious that the world is moving in the direction of cashless societies. But there are enormous obstacles going from 90% cashless to 100%.
Sweden tried it. The banks and merchants said that they don't want to carry the burden and the expenses of handling cash. It would be easier for them to go 100% cashless.
But then they realized that some people can't get bank accounts. Perhaps they were convicted of bank fraud. Perhaps they are homeless and have no mailing address. Perhaps they are incarcerated, and released once in a while for a weekend leave (they do that in Sweden. Inmates even get vacations.) So the government was forced to say that everyone must bear the expense of allowing cash indefinitely, regardless of how few people use it.
Perhaps they were convicted of bank fraud.
I very much doubt that that would prevent you from getting a bank account in Sweden, or that the bank would even have a way of knowing.
Perhaps they are incarcerated
Why would an incarcerated person not be able to get a bank account?
Perhaps they are children who just want to buy a candy bar with their $2 per week allowance.
And yes, if you are convicted of financial crimes, a lot of banks will conduct background checks and blacklist you. If you eliminate cash, all of these edge cases must be addressed, and it's to the point that it's not feasible.
I'm sure that's what American banks would do, because America has no meaningful privacy laws and, more generally, treats ex-convicts as lifelong pariahs. But AT was talking about Sweden, where neither of those things is true.
As for the broader question whether America could move to a cashless society, I think the first challenge is to move to a chequeless one. Babysteps...
Another reason is that the person does not have a "person number". The person number ID is required in Sweden. Nevertheless a significant number of people, especially refugees, don't have one. When I moved to Sweden, it took three months for my person number to come.
Bank robbers can be excluded from bank premises. Convicted hackers can be banned from using a computer.
Homeless people with no mailing address can be rejected by the banks. Many of the Sami people have no mailing address.
Ben of Houston mentioned small children.
Prison inmates are infamous for running scams from inside prisons. That's why they are not allowed to have phones, or unrestricted Internet, or doing online financial transactions.
I have seen them using tablets which are locked down except for a few uses white listed by the authorities. For example, they can only send or receive email from people approved by the prison authorities.
I stand by the assertion that even in Sweden, not everyone can have a bank account.
It took 35 hours to count $16K? Even if it takes a second per dollar and you count it twice, it should've taken less than 10 hours.
You forget all the tasks involved: uncrumpling, organizing, stacking, binding the stacks, and rest breaks because your hands are cramping. This was a whole number of people and the 35 is man-hours.
If you legally tender payment and it is refused, I suspect that you could argue that makes you immune to late payment fees.
Otherwise, the merchant or the landlord could refuse all payments until the ludicrous late fee kicked in.
"Tax payments after August 31 are subject to a late fee."
"Sorry, tax office closed until September 1."
[The next one actually happened in 2020.]
IRS: Sorry, but due to the pandemic IRS can not process checks received for the next 6 months.
IRS: Our computers say you have not made your payment. Fees and penalties will be assessed.
A simpler solution might be a policy where they reserve the right to refuse (or outright refuse in advance) to accept cash payments in excesss of $1,000.00 or some other amount that allow most smaller payments to go forward while weeding out those who are just looking to pull stunts like this.
As usual, when looking for an example of a sensible law that's actually been enacted somewhere, start with Canada: https://laws-lois.justice.gc.ca/eng/acts/c-52/page-1.html#h-142377
If they are good enough for strippers, they should be good enough for the County of Sacramento.
Some people are concerned about drug residue on currency.
Perhaps they haven't thought about other sorts of residue.
I could think of no faster way to stop the wasteful printing of coins than SCOTUS ruling government must accept all forms of legal tender as payments.
Appeasing boorish misfits is a mistake. The court should award fees to the municipal authorities -- this plaintiff appears to be a serial litigator and loser of the 'sovereign citizen' variety. Society should not subsidize this malcontent.
Another way to handle it, and probably legal, is to add a processing fee to the tax bill, e.g.
Pay online: $2
In person check, credit card, or cash stacked, wrapped neatly, and handed directly to the cashier: $4
Any other legal methods: Billed by actual personnel time consumed, including salary, fringe benefits, and overhead cost.