ANR Pipeline Co. v. Louisiana Tax Commission

94 So. 3d 734, 179 Oil & Gas Rep. 738, 2012 WL 1592754, 2012 La. LEXIS 1311
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMay 8, 2012
DocketNo. 2011-C-2078
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 94 So. 3d 734 (ANR Pipeline Co. v. Louisiana Tax Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana 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, 94 So. 3d 734, 179 Oil & Gas Rep. 738, 2012 WL 1592754, 2012 La. LEXIS 1311 (La. 2012).

Opinion

WEIMER, Justice.

11 This matter has a complicated and convoluted procedural history, which has ultimately resulted in a “cobweb of litigation,” as appropriately recognized by the appellate court. Currently before this court are the issues of whether the reassessment of public service properties issued on remand of this matter in accordance with a court order constituted a local assessment by the local assessors or a central assessment by the Louisiana Tax Commission (LTC) and whether, in this taxpayers’ action, the assessors have a right to challenge a decision of the LTC relative to those reassessment valuations. For the reasons that follow, we conclude that the ^reassessments are central assessments governed by the provisions of La. Const, art. VII, § 18 and La. R.S. 47:1851, et seq. We further find that, once joined by the taxpayers as defendants in the taxpayers’ Section 1856 action for judicial review, the assessors are entitled to challenge the LTC’s final determination of the reassessment valuations. Accordingly, we find the lower courts erred in sustaining the taxpayers’ exceptions of no right of action and dismissing the assessors’ cross-appeals.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

This case has its genesis in 1994 when ANR Pipeline Company (ANR) first challenged the ad valorem taxes assessed against its public service pipelines by filing a protest with the Louisiana Tax Commission (LTC). Thereafter, through 2003, ANR filed annual protests with the LTC. Tennessee Gas Pipeline Company (TGP) and Southern Natural Gas Company (SNG) also filed protests with the LTC regarding the ad valorem taxes assessed against their public service pipelines from 2000 to 2003.

ANR, TGP, and SNG (collectively taxpayers) are foreign corporations that provide natural gas transportation, storage, and balancing services in Louisiana and in interstate commerce and are regulated by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission pursuant to the Natural Gas Act, 15 U.S.C. § 717, et seq. These companies each own interstate natural gas transmission pipelines in Louisiana, which properties are classified and taxed in Louisiana for ad valorem tax purposes as public service properties. See La. R.S. 47:1851(K) [736]*736and (M).2 A number of intrastate natural 13gas, oil, and other liquid pipeline companies are regulated by the Louisiana Public Service Commission as provided in La. R.S. 30:551(A) and qualify as pipeline companies under La. R.S. 47:1851(K). The pipelines of the intrastate companies do not qualify as “public service properties.” The intrastate pipelines are instead classified as “other property” by local assessors and assessed at 15 percent of fair market value pursuant to La. Const, art. VII, § 18(B), while the pipelines of the interstate companies are classified as “public service property” by the LTC and assessed at 25 percent of fair market value pursuant to La. Const, art. VII, § 18(B).

In their separate protest proceedings with the LTC, the taxpayers made a constitutional challenge concerning that portion of the ad valorem taxes assessed to them in excess of 15 percent of fair market value. Meanwhile, the taxpayers filed separate suits against the LTC in 2000 in the Nineteenth Judicial District Court for the

Parish of East Baton Rouge (19th JDC) (ANR I).3 In those suits, the taxpayers sought a declaratory judgment and refund of the taxes paid under protest, asserting that the disparate treatment of intrastate and interstate pipeline companies violates the uniformity requirement of La. Const, art. VII, § 18(A), the equal protection and due process clauses of the state and federal constitutions, and the commerce clause of the federal constitution. The taxpayers also alleged that La. R.S. 47:1851(K) is unconstitutional. The district court suits were consolidated for trial.

14After trial, the district court rendered a declaratory judgment in favor of the taxpayers, finding that the actions of the LTC in the administration of Louisiana’s ad valorem tax scheme as it pertains to the taxpayers’ public service pipelines violates the equal protection and due process clauses of the state and federal constitutions.4 Instead of awarding a cash refund or a credit against future taxes under the then-applicable version of La. R.S. 47:1856(F)(l)(a),5 the district court re[737]*737manded the matter to the LTC with instructions that it require parish assessors to “assess the public service pipelines of the plaintiffs for each of the years at issue and that taxes thereof be calculated [at] 15% of those assessments[.]” The district court further ordered the LTC to issue the taxpayers a full refund of the difference between the amounts paid for each year and the reassessed amount, plus interest.

|fiOn appeal, the appellate court affirmed the declaratory judgment rendered in favor of the taxpayers as to the equal protection and due process violations, as well as the remand to the LTC for purposes of reassessment. Citing La. R.S. 47:1837, the appellate court recognized that “[o]n remand, it is within the province and authority of the Commission to correct errors in appraisal and/or assessment of public service properties.” ANR Pipeline Co. v. Louisiana Tax Com’n, 05-1142 (La.App. 1 Cir. 9/7/05), 923 So.2d 81, 92 (ANR VI). Regarding the taxpayers’ challenge of the appropriateness of the remedy ordered by the district court, the appellate court found that the remedy was just and equitable in that the taxpayers would have ample opportunity to object to the local assessors’ valuations pursuant to La. R.S. 47:1992(B). ANR VI, 923 So.2d at 97-98. With regard to the refunds, the judgment was modified to recognize that LTC’s duty to ultimately issue refunds was to be accomplished through modification of the tax rolls under La. R.S. 47:1837. ANR VI, 923 So.2d at 99.

Subsequently, this court denied the taxpayers’ writ application in ANR VI,6 and the decision became final, prompting a series of orders by the LTC relating to the reassessment of the taxpayers’ properties by the various parish assessors. In particular, the LTC issued Order No. 03-22-06, canceling the determinations of assessed values issued by the LTC and ordering the assessors to reassess the taxpayers’ property “utilizing the same valuation methodology used by their offices in assessing non-public service properties during the tax years in question and thereafter determine the assessed value of the [taxpayers’] property ... at a rate of ^fifteen percent (15%) of fair market value.” Pursuant to the LTC’s orders, the assessors began the reassessments.

In ANR Pipeline Co. v. Louisiana Tax Com’n, 08-1148 (La.App. 1 Cir. 10/17/08), 997 So.2d 92, writ denied, 09-0025, 09-0027 (La.3/6/09), 3 So.3d 484 (ANR VII), the appellate court stated that, on remand to the LTC, the process required: (1) completion of the reassessments of taxpayers’ public service pipelines by the LTC; (2) calculation of the taxes on those properties based on 15 percent of those assessments; [738]*738and (8) refund of the difference, if any, between the amounts paid for the tax years at issue and the reassessed amounts. ANR VII, 997 So.2d at 104. While reassessment resulted in a decrease in taxes in some parishes, it resulted in an increase in taxes in other parishes.

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94 So. 3d 734, 179 Oil & Gas Rep. 738, 2012 WL 1592754, 2012 La. LEXIS 1311, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anr-pipeline-co-v-louisiana-tax-commission-la-2012.