Boyd Louisiana Racing, Inc. v. Cynthia Bridges, Secretary, Department of Revenue and Taxation, State of Louisiana

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 8, 2020
Docket2018CA1309, 2018CA1310, 2018CA1311
StatusUnknown

This text of Boyd Louisiana Racing, Inc. v. Cynthia Bridges, Secretary, Department of Revenue and Taxation, State of Louisiana (Boyd Louisiana Racing, Inc. v. Cynthia Bridges, Secretary, Department of Revenue and Taxation, State of Louisiana) 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
Boyd Louisiana Racing, Inc. v. Cynthia Bridges, Secretary, Department of Revenue and Taxation, State of Louisiana, (La. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

STATE OF LOUISIANA

COURT OF APPEAL

j FIRST CIRCUIT

2018 CA 1309

BOYD LOUISIANA RACING, INC. VERSUS CYNTHIA BRIDGES, SECRETARY, DEPARTMENT OF REVENUE & TAXATION, STATE OF LOUISIANA

Consolidated With

2018 CA 1310

BOYD GAMING CORPORATION VERSUS CYNTHIA BRIDGES, SECRETARY, DEPARTMENT OF REVENUE & TAXATION, STATE OF LOUISIANA

2018 CA 1311

BOYD KENNER, INC. VERSUS CYNTHIA BRIDGES, SECRETARY, DEPARTMENT OF REVENUE & TAXATION, STATE OF LOUISIANA

Judgment Rendered: ' JAN 0 8 202Q

On Appeal from the Nineteenth Judicial District Court In and for the Parish of East Baton Rouge State of Louisiana Docket No. C539824 c/ w C548765 c/ w C548766

Honorable Todd W. Hernandez, Judge Presiding

Russell J. Stutes, Jr. Counsel for Defendant/ Appellant Shelley Bouillion Cynthia Bridges, Secretary of the Department J. Michael Veron of Revenue and Taxation, State of Louisiana Lake Charles, Louisiana

Linda S. Akchin Counsel for Plaintiffs/ Appellees Jaye A. Calhoun Boyd Louisiana Racing Inc., Boyd Gaming William J. Kolarik, II Corporation, and Boyd Kenner, Inc. Baton Rouge, Louisiana

BEFORE- WHIP' , C. J., MCCLENDON, AND HIGGINBOTHAM, JJ.

qcyu ch McCLENDON, 7.

In these consolidated tax cases, the defendant appeals a district court's

judgment that granted a partial summary judgment in favor of the plaintiffs. For the

following reasons, we affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Boyd Gaming Corporation ( Boyd Gaming) is engaged in the gaming industry,

owning and operating through its numerous subsidiaries and affiliate casinos and horse-

racing facilities throughout the nation. Boyd Gaming is domiciled in Nevada. Boyd

Gaming directly owns two Louisiana subsidiaries, Boyd Kenner, Inc. ( Boyd Kenner) and

Boyd Louisiana Racing, Inc. ( Boyd Louisiana Racing). Boyd Kenner is a partner in

Treasure Chest, LLC, a casino in Kenner, Louisiana. Boyd Louisiana Racing owns Boyd' s

Racing, LLC, which owns and operates Delta Downs, a pari- mutuel racetrack and casino

in Vinton, Louisiana.

For the tax years 2002, 2003, and 2004 ( the audit period), each of the Boyd

entities reported and paid income and franchise taxes as reflected on their returns.

Boyd Kenner and Boyd Louisiana Racing filed their state tax returns as Louisiana

entities, and Boyd Gaming filed its Louisiana tax returns as a nonresident.

In 2005 and 2006, the State of Louisiana, Department of Revenue and Taxation

the Department) issued a Notice of Proposed Tax Due to each of the plaintiffs, Boyd

Gaming, Boyd Louisiana Racing, and Boyd Kenner, following an income and franchise

tax audit for the audit period. The audits resulted in an upward adjustment of the

taxable capital base for each of the three entities and the assessment of additional

corporate franchise taxes, with interest, to their businesses. Originally, Boyd Gaming

paid a total of $ 373, 515. 00 in franchise taxes, Boyd Louisiana Racing paid a total of

331, 371. 00 in franchise taxes, and Boyd Kenner paid a total of $ 116, 076. 00 in

franchise taxes. Following the audits, the plaintiffs were assessed additional taxes and

interest, for the tax years 2002, 2003, and 2004, in the following amounts: Boyd

Gaming was assessed a total of $ 1, 082, 930. 63, Boyd Louisiana Racing was assessed a

total of $ 277, 033. 72, and Boyd Kenner was assessed a total of $ 244, 548. 66. The

plaintiffs paid to the Department the additional franchise taxes and interest, under

N protest, and notified the Department that they would be seeking a refund of the

amounts paid.

Thereafter, each of the plaintiffs filed a petition for appeal in the district court

seeking a refund for the payment of the taxes paid under protest and asserting that the

Department erroneously determined that the additional franchise tax and interest were

due. After the matters were consolidated, the plaintiffs filed a motion for partial

summary judgment on the issue of liability. According to the plaintiffs, the

Department' s audit determination that they had underpaid Louisiana franchise taxes

was erroneous, in part, because the auditors' applications and interpretations of the

pertinent law and regulations were incorrect. Particularly, they asserted that the

auditors misapplied costs and values to taxable income, based on a misunderstanding

of the cash management system employed by the Boyd entities. The plaintiffs also

generally asserted that in assessing the taxes, the auditors ignored established

accounting principles, precedents, and the franchise tax law itself. In response, the

Department asserted, and continues to maintain on appeal, that genuine issues of

material fact remain that negate the grant of summary judgment and, further, that it

correctly applied the law in computing the additional corporate franchise taxes owed by

the plaintiffs.

After a hearing, the district court issued written reasons on October 1, 2014,

finding that there was no evidence of any disputed issues of material fact and that the

central dispute in the case involved the interpretation and application of the law. After

consideration of the applicable law, the district court granted the plaintiffs' motion for

partial summary judgment. Thereafter, the district court signed a judgment on

November 24, 2014, granting a partial summary judgment on the issue of liability in

favor of the plaintiffs. The Department appealed.

Subsequently, this court ex proprio motu examined the record and noted a

potential jurisdictional defect in the judgment. Following the submission of memoranda

and oral argument, we determined that the judgment did not contain sufficient decretal

language to constitute a final appealable judgment, declined to convert the invalid

appeal to a supervisory writ, dismissed the appeal, and remanded the matter for further

3 proceedings. See Boyd Louisiana Racing, Inc. v. Bridges, 15- 0393 ( La. App. 1 Cir

12/ 23/ 15) ( unpublished), 2015 WL 9435285.

After this court's decision, the plaintiffs filed a Motion for Entry of Judgment and attached a proposed judgment. The district court signed the proposed judgment on

August 9, 2016, prior to the scheduled hearing on the motion, and mailed notice of the

judgment to the parties. The judgment granted the motion for partial summary

judgment on the issue of liability, as follows:

1. Because all management services were performed in its offices in Nevada rather than in Louisiana, the Department of Revenue erred in its auditor's adjustments with respect to the management fees collected by Boyd Gaming Corporation.

2. Because Boyd Gaming used generally accepted " equity accounting" principles to value its investment in subsidiaries, the adjustments to surplus and undivided profits made by the Department of Revenue' s auditor were not proper.

3. The participation of the Taxpayers in the common cash management system used by Boyd Gaming Corporation and ail its affiliates, including Boyd Kenner and Boyd Louisiana Racing, was not a borrowing of capital by Boyd Gaming, Boyd Kenner or Boyd Louisiana Racing, so the auditor' s adjustments to borrowed capital were

incorrect.

4. Partnership tax losses were properly included in Boyd Gaming' s volume of business ratio for the Periods at Issue because the regulation prohibiting that inclusion was not in effect during the years 2002- 2004.

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Boyd Louisiana Racing, Inc. v. Cynthia Bridges, Secretary, Department of Revenue and Taxation, State of Louisiana, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boyd-louisiana-racing-inc-v-cynthia-bridges-secretary-department-of-lactapp-2020.