Cable One, Inc. v. N.M. Taxation & Revenue Dep't

2018 NMCA 17
CourtNew Mexico Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 30, 2017
DocketA-1-CA-35126
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 2018 NMCA 17 (Cable One, Inc. v. N.M. Taxation & Revenue Dep't) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cable One, Inc. v. N.M. Taxation & Revenue Dep't, 2018 NMCA 17 (N.M. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

I attest to the accuracy and integrity of this document New Mexico Compilation Commission, Santa Fe, NM '00'04- 17:14:51 2018.03.12

Certiorari Granted, January 4, 2018, No. S-1-SC-36770

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO

Opinion Number: 2018-NMCA-017

Filing Date: October 30, 2017

Docket No. A-1-CA-35126

CABLE ONE, INC., a Delaware corporation,

Plaintiff-Appellee,

v.

NEW MEXICO TAXATION AND REVENUE DEPARTMENT, a governmental agency of the State of New Mexico, and DEMESIA PADILLA, in her official capacity as the Secretary of the New Mexico Taxation and Revenue Department,

Defendants-Appellants.

APPEAL FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF SANTA FE COUNTY Francis J. Mathew, District Judge

Sutin, Thayer & Browne, APC Justin R. Sawyer Timothy R. Van Valen Albuquerque, NM

Cahill Gordon & Reindel, LLP Cherie R. Kiser Sean P. Tonolli Washington, D.C.

for Appellee

Hector H. Balderas, Attorney General

1 Santa Fe, NM

New Mexico Taxation & Revenue Department Legal Services Bureau Diana A. Martwick, Special Assistant Attorney General Santa Fe, NM

for Appellants

OPINION

HANISEE, Judge.

{1} We have before us a matter of first impression—whether a company whose tangible property located in New Mexico is used to provide cable television programming, internet, and interconnected Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP) to customers comes within the definition of “communications system,” thereby subjecting it to reclassification and valuation by the New Mexico Taxation and Revenue Department (the Department). We hold Cable One’s tangible property falls squarely within the Property Tax Code’s (the Code), NMSA 1978, §§ 7-35-1 to -38-93 (1973, as amended through 2016), definition of “communications system” pursuant to Section 7-36-30(B)(1) and that the Department properly reclassified it and subjected it to valuation also pursuant to Section 7-36-30. The district court having concluded otherwise, we reverse.

BACKGROUND

{2} Cable One operates two cable systems in New Mexico: one in Sandoval County (the Rio Rancho system) and one in Chavez County (the Roswell system). Each system is capable of providing Cable One’s customers with cable television service (i.e., video programming), internet access, and interconnected VoIP. When Cable One began its operations in New Mexico in the early 1980s, its primary purpose was to provide cable television service. Between 2002 and 2011, Cable One repurposed a number of its channels in both the Rio Rancho and Roswell systems in order to provide high-speed data (internet) and interconnected VoIP services. Cable One’s tangible property within New Mexico includes a “headend” for each of the two systems it operates. According to Cable One, a “ ‘headend’ . . . serves as a collection system for signals over the cable television system” and “also houses equipment that enables Cable One to provide internet access service and interconnected VoIP service to customers over the same cable television system.” Cable One’s system uses optical means to transmit and receive information.

{3} In 2008, the Department “became aware that many cable companies were transitioning from one-way to two-way communication services.” Historically, cable television companies were considered to provide “one-way” service, meaning that their systems were designed to transmit but not receive information and were thus not considered

2 “communications systems” for purposes of central assessment.1 Telephone companies, by contrast, provide two-way service because their systems are capable of both transmitting and receiving information. In response to the “ever[-]evolving technological advancements [in] the cable television, broadband internet, VoIP, and traditional telephone industr[ies,]” the Department began centrally assessing “all cable companies operating in the state which provided two-way communications services that [Sections] 7-36-2 and 7-36-30 . . . governed.” Specifically, the Department now centrally assesses “all cable television companies which provide broadband internet and VoIP services.”

{4} Upon being notified that the Department reclassified Cable One’s property as a “communications system,” Cable One began paying its taxes under protest. Cable One filed a complaint in January 2014 seeking a partial refund of its 2013 taxes paid and a declaratory judgment that its property is not part of a communications system. In response to the district court’s question at the motion for summary judgment hearing regarding why its internet access and VoIP services did not qualify under Section 7-36-30(B)’s definition of “communications system,” Cable One conceded that those services “would fit within [Section 7-36-30(B)(1)’s] definition” but argued that the court could not look at Subsection (B)(1) “in a vacuum.” Cable One argued that “canons of statutory construction are clear . . . that [courts are] to look at a statute in its whole and give effect to every provision of it.” Cable One contended that the Department’s reliance on Subsection (B)(1)’s definition of “communications system” to guide its determination failed to consider the Code’s overall scheme of central assessment and whether the Legislature intended for property such as Cable One’s to come within that scheme. As evidence that the Legislature did not intend for its property to be centrally assessed, Cable One relied on (1) distinctions between it and other centrally-assessed industries, such as whether they are regulated by the Public Regulations Commission and cross county lines; (2) the definition of “plant” property contained in Section 7-36-30(B)(4), of which Cable One contended it had none, meaning it had no relevant property to be centrally assessed; (3) the failure of House Bill 617 (H.B. 617) during the 2008 legislative session, which would have amended the definition of

1 “Central assessment” generally refers to assessment by a state taxation authority rather than local assessors and denotes the use of a special method of valuation intended to address the challenge of uniformly valuing certain types of businesses and property. See Comcast Corp. v. Dep’t of Rev., 337 P.3d 768, 772-73 (Or. 2014) (en banc) (explaining that central assessment “had its origins in unit valuation, an assessment method that . . . was devised to address the difficult task of valuing a business . . . when the property of the business is located in more than one taxing district[,]” and “developed to remedy the perceived problems with unit valuations performed by local assessors”); see also § 7-36- 2(B), (C) (reserving to the Department the authority to assess the property of particular types of business); § 7-36-15(B) (prescribing a standard valuation method for all property “[u]nless a method or methods of valuation are authorized in Sections 7-36-20 through 7-36- 33”); §§ 7-36-22 to -25, and -27 to -33 (providing a special and different valuation method for each type of property subject to central assessment under Section 7-36-2(B), (C)).

3 “communications system;” and (4) the Department’s own long-standing construction that cable companies are not subject to central assessment, which Cable One argues should be controlling.

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2018 NMCA 17, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cable-one-inc-v-nm-taxation-revenue-dept-nmctapp-2017.