Chevron U.S.A., Inc. v. State, Department of Revenue

387 P.3d 25, 2016 Alas. LEXIS 138, 2016 WL 7321566
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 16, 2016
Docket7142 S-15891
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 387 P.3d 25 (Chevron U.S.A., Inc. v. State, Department of Revenue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chevron U.S.A., Inc. v. State, Department of Revenue, 387 P.3d 25, 2016 Alas. LEXIS 138, 2016 WL 7321566 (Ala. 2016).

Opinion

OPINION

STOWERS, Chief Justice.

1. INTRODUCTION

In this appeal oil producers (the Producers) 1 challenge an administrative decision (the Decision) in which the Alaska Department of Revenue (DOR) decided to treat separate oil and gas fields operated by common working interest owners as a single entity when calculating the Producers’ oil production tax obligations. Relying on a statute that gave DOR the discretion to “aggregate two or more leases or properties (or portions of them), for purposes of determining [their effective tax rate], when economically interdependent oil or gas production operations are not confined to a single lease or property,” 2 DOR concluded that operations on a number of smaller oil fields were economically interdependent with larger operations on the adjacent Prudhoe Bay oil field. The Producers argue that in interpreting the phrase “economically interdependent” in the Decision, DOR effectively promulgated a regulation without following the procedures *28 established in the Alaska Administrative Procedure Act (APA) 3 and, as a result, DOR’s Decision was invalid. We conclude that DOR’s Decision was not a regulation because it was a eommonsense interpretation of the statute and, therefore, DOR was not required to comply with APA rulemaking requirements. We affirm the superior court’s decision upholding DOR’s decision.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

A. Facts
1. An overview of Alaska’s taxes on oil production

The Prudhoe Bay oil field is one of the largest oil and gas fields yet discovered in the United States. Explorers discovered the Prudhoe Bay oil field in 1967 and the field began producing oil about ten years later. Just as oil production began in Prudhoe Bay, Alaska passed the initial version of the Oil and Gas Production Tax, which laid out a new system for taxing oil production in Alaska. 4 During the relevant time frame this legislation set the production tax rate for oil fields by multiplying, a constant nominal tax rate of 15% by the economic limit factor (ELF),, a coefficient between zero and one calculated for each individual oil field. 5 In other words, a higher ELF resulted in a higher tax rate, and a lower ELF resulted in a lower tax rate for any given oil field.

The legislature passed House Bill 118 in 1989, adding the “field size factor” as a component of the ELF formula. The field size factor is the total volume of production from a field during a given reporting month. 6 All else being equal, the field size factor produced a higher ELF (and therefore a higher tax rate) for larger fields and a lower ELF (and therefore a lower tax rate) for smaller fields. The legislature reasoned that smaller fields needed similar production infrastructure to larger fields but, because they produced less oil, smaller fields had poor economies of scale and were less profitable. 7 The *29 legislature hoped that including the field size factor in the ELF formula would create an economic incentive for oil producers to develop marginal fields that they would otherwise shut down or neglect for economic reasons. 8

However, including the field size factor in the ELF formula also created an incentive for oil producers to capitalize on tax breaks for smaller fields by classifying certain areas as independent fields even if the areas were economically interdependent with other, larger oil fields. Therefore, AS 43.55.013© (the Aggregation Statute) permitted DOR to aggregate two or more fields for the purpose of calculating the ELF “when economically interdependent oil or gas production operations are not confined to a single lease or property.” 9 Aggregating several fields into a single field for the purpose of calculating the ELF increased the field size factor and, by extension, increased both the ELF and the tax rate for these aggregated fields above what the ELF and the tax rate would have been for the individual areas. Whether DOR could aggregate the fields in question depended on whether the' fields were “economically interdependent.” However, the legislature never defined this term in the production tax statutes, and DOR never defined the term in related regulations.

To eliminate uncertainty whether DOR would aggregate particular fields, DOR adopted 15 Alaska Administrative Code 55.027(b), a regulation permitting producers to petition for assurance that DOR would not aggregate specific oil fields for the purpose of calculating the ELF. 10 To obtain this guarantee, producers had to show that (1) using comjnon production facilities would lower the costs of production; (2) DOR’s guarantee would increase the likelihood that producers would develop a new field; (3) oil would be accurately allocated; and (4) “operations .,. would not be economically interdependent in the absence of the proposed use of common production facilities.” 11 However, proving these factors did not guarantee an advance ruling because DOR had the discretion to aggregate or to decline to do so. 12 As with other related regulations, 15 AAC 55.027(b) also did not define “economically interdependent.” 13

In August 2006 the legislature repealed the ELF-based tax system and replaced it with a new production tax system, effective . retroactively to April 1, 2006. 14

2. Oil production at Prudhoe Bay

Before beginning production at Prudhoe Bay, the working interest owners of the field’s oil and gas leases combined those leases into a unit called the Prudhoe Bay Unit so that the working interest owners could conduct operations as if the entire unit area were a single lease. The Alaska Department of Natural Resources approved the creation of two separate Participating Areas within the Prudhoe Bay Unit; we refer to .them *30 jointly^as the Initial Participating Areas (Initial PAs). 15 Participating areas are made up of multiple lease tracts that participate in the production of hydrocarbons. The owner of each individual lease tract receives a certain percentage of the total production of all the wells drilled in that participating area. For tax purposes producers typically treat a participating area as a single lease or property when calculating production taxes, and DOR has typically accepted this characterization.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
387 P.3d 25, 2016 Alas. LEXIS 138, 2016 WL 7321566, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chevron-usa-inc-v-state-department-of-revenue-alaska-2016.