ANR Pipeline Co. v. Louisiana Tax Commission

646 F.3d 940, 178 Oil & Gas Rep. 701, 2011 U.S. App. LEXIS 14735, 2011 WL 2812658
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJuly 19, 2011
Docket11-30101
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 646 F.3d 940 (ANR Pipeline Co. v. Louisiana Tax Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
ANR Pipeline Co. v. Louisiana Tax Commission, 646 F.3d 940, 178 Oil & Gas Rep. 701, 2011 U.S. App. LEXIS 14735, 2011 WL 2812658 (5th Cir. 2011).

Opinion

EDWARD C. PRADO, Circuit Judge:

ANR Pipeline Co., Tennessee Gas Pipeline Co., and Southern Natural Gas Co. (collectively, “appellants”) own interstate natural-gas pipelines subject to a 25% ad valorem tax under Louisiana Constitution article 7, § 18. They brought and won a state-court suit alleging certain intrastate pipelines were unconstitutionally given more favorable tax treatment by being taxed only at a 15% rate from 1994-2003, 1 but the state court’s remedy was not what they expected. Instead of simply refunding appellants the 10% difference in taxes they had paid under protest, the court also ordered appellants’ tax liability to be recalculated under the same fair-market-value (“FMV”) determination process to *943 which the intrastate pipelines were subjected. 2 The Louisiana courts have upheld the judgment and remedy as consistent with Louisiana law mandating equal treatment, and the Louisiana and United States Supreme Courts have declined to hear appellants’ petitions challenging the remedy imposed. The subsequent revaluation process has been consumed by litigation in the Louisiana courts. Appellants have since brought suit in Louisiana court for the same violations for the 2004-2009 tax years, and that litigation is currently pending.

Appellants brought suit in federal court on August 9, 2010, alleging Due Process, Equal Protection, and Commerce Clause violations, via 42 U.S.C. § 1983, resulting from the revaluation process. Specifically, they contend that the process violates Louisiana law in various ways and denies appellants the 10% in taxes that they paid under protest that they are “owed.” Appellants also bring the same constitutional claims for the 2004-2009 tax years as raised in the pending state-court litigation. On appeal is the district court’s grant of the defendants’ motion to dismiss. We hold that the district court properly dismissed appellants’ suit because their federal claims are barred by the Tax Injunction Act, 28 U.S.C. § 1341.

I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

A. State Court Proceedings

Appellants own interstate natural-gas pipelines subject to a 25% ad valorem tax under the Louisiana Constitution. Article 7, § 18 of the Louisiana Constitution (“Ad Valorem Taxes”) provides that “public services properties! ] excluding land” are subject to a 25% tax whereas “other property” is subject to a 15% tax. La. Const, art. VII, § 18(B). Section 18(D) outlines how property subject to the ad valorem taxes is valued. It provides that: “Each assessor shall determine the fair market value of all property subject to taxation within his respective parish or district except public service properties, which shall be valued at fair market value by the Louisiana Tax Commission [(“LTC”)] or its successor.” Id. § 18(D). Under Louisiana Law, “public service properties” are “the immovable, major movable, and other movable property owned or used but not otherwise assessed in this state in the operations of each ... pipeline company,” among other entities. La.Rev.Stat. § 47:1851(M). “Pipeline companies” are defined as:

“any company that is engaged primarily in the business of transporting oil, natural gas, petroleum products, or other products within, through, into, or from this state, and which is regulated by (1) the Louisiana Public Service Commission, (2) the Interstate Commerce Commission, or (3) the Federal Power Commission, as a “natural gas company” under [federal law].”

Id. § 47:1851(K).

Because all interstate pipelines running through Louisiana are regulated by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, 3 all interstate pipelines are “public service” property and subject to ad valorem taxation at the 25% rate by the LTC. Intrastate pipelines that sell to local natural-gas distributing systems are regulated by the *944 Louisiana Public Service Commission (“PSC”) and therefore are classified as public service property and subject to taxation at the 25% rate by the LTC, but other intrastate pipelines are not so regulated and therefore are classified as “other property” and subject to 15% taxation by local parish tax assessors.

For all the applicable tax years, appellants had been taxed at the 25% rate and had their pipelines’ FMV calculated by the LTC. Appellants filed their taxes under protest during tax years 1994-2003 because they believed the different tax rates for intra- and interstate natural-gas pipelines were unconstitutional. In 2005, appellants filed suit in the 19th Judicial District Court for East Baton Rouge Parish (“the 19th JDC”), claiming the differing tax rates violated the Equal Protection and Due Process clauses of the Louisiana and United States constitutions, the Commerce Clause, and the uniformity requirement of the Louisiana Constitution. Specifically, appellants argued that intrastate PSC-regulated pipelines (“PSC pipelines”) were impermissibly classified by the LTC as “other property” and taxed at the 15% rate, rather than at the 25% rate.

Appellants won their suit. The 19th JDC determined that the PSC pipelines received preferential treatment and that the LTC’s disregard for the uniformity requirement in the Louisiana Constitution violated the Equal Protection and Due Process clauses of the Louisiana and United States Constitutions. The court pretermitted deciding the facial constitutionality of the tax regime under the Commerce Clause, on the ground that appellants would receive a full remedy on its other claims. Rather than simply award appellants the taxes they had paid under protest, the court decided they would receive the exact same treatment as the PCS pipelines. That is, appellants’ pipelines would be treated as if it were “other property” for purposes of both the lower rate and the FMV-evaluation process. The local parish assessors thus had to first determine appellants’ pipelines’ FMV for the 1994-2003 years, calculate the taxes owed for those years using the 15% FMV calculation, and then refund appellants the difference — -if any — between the taxes paid and the taxes owed under the new calculation. The 19th JDC remanded the case to the LTC with instructions to require the local parish assessors to revalue appellants’ pipelines in a timely manner.

Appellants appealed the remedy fashioned by the 19th JDC to the Louisiana First Circuit Court of Appeal, arguing that their due process rights would be violated by the reassessment. The First Circuit rejected the appeal on the ground that the remedy was proper under Louisiana precedent and that it did not violate their due process rights because there were ample state-law protections. ANR Pipeline Co. v. La. Tax Comm’n, 923 So.2d 81, 93, 97-98 (La.Ct.App.2008) (“ANR VI”).

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Bluebook (online)
646 F.3d 940, 178 Oil & Gas Rep. 701, 2011 U.S. App. LEXIS 14735, 2011 WL 2812658, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anr-pipeline-co-v-louisiana-tax-commission-ca5-2011.