Broussard v. Louisiana Tax Com'n
This text of 614 So. 2d 1341 (Broussard v. Louisiana Tax Com'n) 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.
Opinion
Daniel BROUSSARD, Vermilion Parish Assessor, Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
LOUISIANA TAX COMMISSION, Defendant-Appellant,
Amerada Hess Corporation, et al. (Intervenors), Defendants-Appellants.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Third Circuit.
Paul Gonsoulin Moresi, III, Abbeville, for Vermilion Parish Assessor, et al.
*1342 Vyrona Marie Wiltz, Krotz Springs, for Louisiana Tax Com'n, et al.
George Julien Domas, Carol Landis Dunne, New Orleans, for Amerada Hess.
Before GUIDRY, LABORDE and DECUIR, JJ.
GUIDRY, Judge.
This suit was consolidated on appeal with Broussard v. Louisiana Tax Commission 614 So.2d 1345 (La.App. 3rd Cir.1993), our docket number 92-693, also decided on this date. The issue presented in the companion matter will be disposed of in this opinion, however, we render a separate decree in the companion case.
This suit concerns a dispute over the property tax assessment value of certain oilfield equipment owned by Amerada Hess Corporation (AHC), Mobil Oil Exploration and Producing Southeast, Inc. and Mobil Exploration and Producing North America, Inc. (Mobil), intervenors-appellants. All of the property in question was, as of the tax reporting date, January 1, 1990, located in Vermilion Parish. Intervenors appeal from the district court's judgment reversing a Louisiana Tax Commission decision that the equipment be assessed as reported by the taxpayers in their amended reports. We reverse the judgment of the district court and reinstate the decision of the Louisiana Tax Commission.
FACTS
Intervenors are the owners of oilfield equipment used in the production of oil and gas in Vermilion Parish. The equipment is subject to ad valorem taxes assessed by the Vermilion Parish Assessor, Daniel Broussard. This dispute concerns the assessed value of the equipment and the taxpayers' resultant liability as of January 1, 1990. The taxpayers, on forms provided by the assessor, reported the value of their equipment as of January 1, 1990. The reports were filed with the assessor on March 1, 1990. The assessor added ten percent to the reported subsurface equipment value for leasehold field improvements which were allegedly omitted from the reports. He also added another ten percent to the reported surface equipment value for automatic control and communication equipment which the companies allegedly failed to list. The assessor did not specifically document the allegedly unreported equipment.
In response to Broussard's actions, AHC and Mobil filed protest notices requesting a review of the additional assessments by the Vermilion Parish Police Jury. The companies presented amended returns to the Police Jury, which were prepared after conducting field audits in response to the additional assessments. At a hearing on October 1, 1990, the Police Jury rejected intervenors' requests for removal of the additional assessments and certified the tax rolls as presented by the assessor. AHC and Mobil then appealed to the Louisiana Tax Commission, which held a hearing in this matter on November 29, 1990. At this hearing, the companies asserted that the leasehold field improvements added to the subsurface equipment value had in fact been properly included in their reports as intangible drilling costs. Additionally, intervenors argued that the automatic control and communication equipment added to the surface equipment value had in fact been properly included in their reports as component parts of larger reported items. The assessor, on the other hand, maintained that the companies' reports were incomplete and incorrect. He based the additions not on actual field audits but on his own personal research and consultation with persons who work in the oilfield industry.
The Tax Commission rendered a decision on February 19, 1991 which reversed the Police Jury decision and ordered that the equipment be assessed as reported by the companies in accordance with the rules promulgated by the Tax Commission. In doing so, the Commission reasoned as follows:
Concerning the surface equipment ... in a case in which the assessor believes that a report by a taxpayer is incomplete or incorrect, and the assessor adds an amount for property not reported, if the *1343 assessor is not denied access to the property or records of the taxpayer, it is the assessor's burden of proof to show which property has not been reported. The photographs used by the assessor to show the type of property which was likely omitted do not meet this burden. Likewise, an estimate of the percentage of value at a site usually represented by property such as leasehold improvements which the assessor has based on conversations with contractors who are not before the Commission under oath or available to be questioned by the taxpayer does not meet this burden.
Finally, if an assessor lists a separate property which was purchased as an integral part of another item, the value of the larger item must be reduced, as no property may be taxed twice in the same year.
With regard to the subsurface equipment, the assessor may not add an amount for the value of the Christmas tree or any other property which the Rules state is included in the calculation of the value of the subsurface equipment as a whole.
On March 15, 1991, Broussard appealed the Tax Commission's decision to the Fifteenth Judicial District Court. AHC and Mobil intervened in this proceeding. In written reasons rendered January 9, 1992, the district court reversed the Tax Commission's decision. The court determined that the Tax Commission abused its discretion by obligating the assessor to provide the taxpayer with "a precise list by item of the property which he believes was omitted from reports". The judge, in so ruling relied upon La.R.S. 47:1957(E), which provides, in pertinent part:
If the assessors find or have reason to believe that the list of taxable property furnished by any person is incomplete or incorrect, they shall add to the list of such property, which from the best information they can obtain, has been omitted or incorrectly described by the person signing the list.
The court reasoned that, in this statute:
The list referred to is the list of assessments to be delivered to the parish police jury, and then to the tax commission, but not to the taxpayer. Again, the tax commission errs in misplacing the primary responsibility for a complete and correct list of taxable property. That responsibility lies, by law, with the taxpayer, not with the assessor.
On January 22, 1992, the district court signed a judgment reversing the Tax Commission's decision and dismissing the taxpayers' protest and appeal.
AHC and Mobil were granted a suspensive appeal of the district court's judgment on February 4, 1992. The Tax Commission thereafter devolutively appealed. The assessor then filed a rule in the district court to assess court costs. On April 14, 1992, the district court assessed AHC and Mobil with all costs of the district court proceedings because it found the Tax Commission was statutorily exempt from the assessment of court costs. Additionally, the court ruled that the assessor, as prevailing party on the merits, should not be assessed court costs for reasons of equity. Judgment in accordance with these reasons was signed on April 22, 1992. AHC and Mobil appealed the separate judgment assessing court costs. This separate appeal bears our docket number 92-693.
Intervenors assign the following two errors to the judgment of the district court:
1.
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614 So. 2d 1341, 1993 WL 57759, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/broussard-v-louisiana-tax-comn-lactapp-1993.