Bass Partnership v. Gravolet

105 So. 3d 224, 2012 WL 5872598
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 21, 2012
DocketNos. 2012-CA-0024, 2012-CA-0025, 2012-CA-0026, 2012-CA-0027, 2012-CA-0304, 2012-CA-0305, 2012-CA-0306, 2012-CA-0307, 2012-CA-0308, 2012-CA-0309
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 105 So. 3d 224 (Bass Partnership v. Gravolet) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bass Partnership v. Gravolet, 105 So. 3d 224, 2012 WL 5872598 (La. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

PAUL A. BONIN, Judge.

| ¶ Following their payment under-protest of taxes due on account of supplemental assessments on personal property and in order to recover the taxes paid to the sheriff/ex officio tax collector, a number of petroleum-producer firms1 in Plaquemines Parish invoked the original jurisdiction of the district court in their dispute with the parish assessor. The Plaquemines Parish assessor, after engaging a private firm to assist him, had concluded that the producers failed to report personal property subject to ad valorem taxation, and he thus reached back for a three-year period with the supplemental assessments.

The central issue presented at this stage in the litigation by the cross-motions for partial summary judgment is the scope and extent of the district court’s jurisdiction, that is, its power and authority, to review the assessor’s supplemental assessments and to afford any relief to the taxpaying producers. The producers contend that, unless the district court itself has such authority, La. R.S. 47:1966 A deprives them of their right under La. Const. Art. 7, § 18 E to challenge the ^correctness of the supplemental assessments. The assessor and the other defendants respond that the producers, by failing to self-report the property subject to taxation, forfeited any right to challenge the correctness of the supplemental assessments.2 The producers also contend that, in any event, the district court has the power and authority to review the assessor’s determination that property was omitted from the self-reporting form; and, they argue, the assessor wrongly decided that platforms, including well-protection platforms or key-ways, were not self-re[227]*227ported as part of the wells and were thus subject to supplemental assessments. The assessor and other defendants argue that because no platform, including a well-protection platform, is part of the well for ad valorem taxation purposes the producers’ failure to self-report any platform renders such unreported platforms subject to supplemental assessment.

In deciding the cross-motions for partial summary judgment, the district court ruled in effect that in exercising its original jurisdiction in this litigation it had no authority to consider any correctness challenge to the supplemental assessments and that La. R.S. 47:1966 A did not unconstitutionally deprive the producers of their right to such a challenge. The district court also ruled, however, that well-protection platforms or key-ways, as distinguished from other types of platforms, were not required to be self-reported separately from the well and were, thus, not subject to supplemental assessment.

1 ¡¡After our de novo review of these rulings, we agree with the district court’s evaluation of the scope and extent of its power and authority to review the supplemental assessments before it. We conclude that La. R.S. 47:1966 A constitutionally provides that a taxpayer who is required to self-report his personal property which is subject to ad valorem taxation and fails to do so forfeits his right to a correctness challenge of the resulting supplemental assessment. Consequently, the district court has no power or authority to review for correctness any supplemental assessment for such omitted property. But we also conclude that La. R.S. 47:1966 A does not purport to, and indeed does not, preclude a district court from exercising its original jurisdiction to review the assessor’s determination that a particular piece of property is subject to a supplemental assessment and, when appropriate, to invalidate a supplemental assessment. Such recourse by a taxpayer to the courts is a legality challenge and not a correctness challenge. And, in particular, we find as a matter of law that the district court properly applied the rules of the Louisiana Tax Commission and distinguished between well-protection platforms and other platforms for the purposes of determining which types the taxpayer must self-report separately from the well.

Therefore, we affirm the district court’s rulings on the cross-motions for summary judgment. We explain our decision in greater detail in the following Parts.

Jj?

In this Part we briefly summarize the history and procedural posture of this litigation.

A

By way of background, with respect to oil and gas properties, Louisiana has a self-reporting system that requires the owners of such properties to submit to the parish — using a document referred to as a LAT 12 form — a yearly listing of all of their properties situated within a given parish.3 The producers maintain that they reported their properties to the assessor for the years 2006, 2007, and 2008, as required by law. The assessor prepared the tax rolls for those years based on the taxpayer’s reports, and certified them to the Plaquemines Parish Board of Review. The Louisiana Tax Commission subsequently certified the Plaquemines Parish tax rolls for the years 2006-2008. The sheriff issued tax bills for those years based upon the certified tax rolls, and the [228]*228plaintiffs remitted ad valorem taxes to the parish accordingly.

In 2008, the assessor engaged an Oklahoma company, Visual Lease Services, to perform a survey of oil and gas equipment located in Plaquemines Parish. In 2009, Visual submitted to the assessor a detailed report regarding oil and gas equipment located in Plaquemines Parish. Based on Visual’s report, the assessor issued supplemental tax assessments to several oil and gas production companies for properties he asserted they had failed to report for tax years 2006, |s2007, and 2008. The supplemental assessment included a ten per cent penalty on the value of the property determined to have been omitted by the taxpayer from its original tax form.

The supplemental assessments were based on La. R.S. 47:1966. The producers subsequently filed written challenges to the supplemental assessments by way of letters to the assessor, and the assessor denied the challenges. The producers then timely paid the supplemental assessments under protest.

B

In accordance with La. R.S. 47:1966 A, the producers appealed the assessor’s denial of their protests by filing the underlying lawsuits. Each producer filed two lawsuits against the present defendants. In their first set of petitions, each producer asked the trial court to strike the supplemental assessments from the tax rolls as invalid and hold that the ten percent penalty imposed by the assessor was unfounded. The plaintiffs’ initial petitions further asked the district court to issue a declaratory judgment that the supplemental assessment violates the Louisiana Constitution of 1974. In their second set of petitions, each plaintiff asked for a formal refund from the sheriff of the taxes paid under protest. These petitions reiterated the prior petitions’ requests for relief, but also asked the district court to issue a declaratory judgment stating that the assessor’s actions violated their constitutional rights to due process under the law, and failed to adhere to the requirements of La. Const. Art. 7, § 18 E.

_kC

Subsequently, the producers filed several identical motions for partial summary judgment. Similarly, the defendants filed several identical motions for partial summary judgment in each of the presently consolidated cases.

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105 So. 3d 224, 2012 WL 5872598, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bass-partnership-v-gravolet-lactapp-2012.