Chs v. Dor

2013 MT 100
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedApril 16, 2013
Docket12-0378
StatusPublished

This text of 2013 MT 100 (Chs v. Dor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chs v. Dor, 2013 MT 100 (Mo. 2013).

Opinion

April 16 2013

DA 12-0378

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF MONTANA

2013 MT 100

CHS, INC.,

Plaintiff and Appellant,

v.

MONTANA STATE DEPARTMENT OF REVENUE,

Defendant and Appellee.

APPEAL FROM: District Court of the Thirteenth Judicial District, In and For the County of Yellowstone, Cause Nos. DV 10-133, DV 10-2080 Honorable Susan P. Watters and Honorable Gregory R. Todd, Presiding Judges

COUNSEL OF RECORD:

For Appellant:

Jared M. Le Fevre, Jon Dyre, James P. Site, Crowley Fleck PLLP, Billings, Montana

For Appellee:

Derek R. Bell, Brendan R. Beatty, Special Assistant Attorneys General, Montana Dept. of Revenue, Helena, Montana

Submitted on Briefs: February 6, 2013 Decided: April 16, 2013

Filed:

__________________________________________ Clerk Chief Justice Mike McGrath delivered the Opinion of the Court.

¶1 CHS, Inc., asked the Thirteenth Judicial District Court, Yellowstone County, for a

declaratory judgment that the Montana Department of Revenue (DOR) used improper or

illegal methods of assessing CHS’s Montana properties for property tax purposes in 2009

and 2010. The court granted summary judgment for DOR on CHS’s claims, ruling that

the substantive arguments must be presented to the appropriate administrative tax appeal

boards. CHS appeals. We affirm.

¶2 CHS sets forth three issues on appeal:

¶3 1. Is the CHS challenge to the methods and procedures of assessment used by

DOR to assess CHS’s property within the scope of declaratory judgment actions that may

be brought directly in a Montana district court under § 15-1-406, MCA, without first

appealing to administrative tax appeals boards?

¶4 2. Is the CHS claim that DOR violated state law when it failed to equalize its

valuation of CHS’s property with similar properties within the scope of declaratory

judgment actions that may be brought directly in a Montana district court under § 15-1-

406, MCA, without first appealing to administrative tax appeal boards?

¶5 3. Was DOR’s assessment of CHS’s property made too late for tax year 2009?

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

¶6 CHS is a Minnesota corporation licensed to do business in Montana. This case

relates to state property taxes assessed on CHS’s coking refinery in Laurel, Montana, and

on its petroleum marketing terminals in Gallatin and Missoula Counties.

2 ¶7 As part of Montana’s state property tax appraisal process, CHS must submit an

annual Property Reporting Form to DOR. In 2009, CHS requested two separate

extensions of time to return its Property Reporting Form, and DOR granted those

extensions. On May 29, 2009, two months after the second agreed-upon extension

deadline, CHS notified DOR that certain figures it had reported were in error and

required adjustment.

¶8 DOR issued its original 2009 assessment of CHS’s property on or about August

22, 2009. CHS requested an informal review of the 2009 assessment notice, which is the

first step in protesting a tax assessment under § 15-7-102(3), MCA. Following the

informal review, DOR issued a revised assessment in January of 2010.

¶9 CHS remained dissatisfied with the 2009 assessment of its property. An aggrieved

taxpayer who is not satisfied by the results of informal review with DOR may continue

the administrative appeal process by appealing to the county tax appeal board, the State

Tax Appeal Board (STAB), and, eventually, petitioning for judicial review of the

administrative decisions. See §§ 15-2-301 through -303, 15-7-102(3) and (6), and 15-15-

101 through -104, MCA. In addition, § 15-1-406(1)(a), MCA, allows an aggrieved

taxpayer to bring a declaratory judgment action directly in a district court to establish that

an administrative rule or method or procedure of assessment or imposition of tax adopted

or used by DOR is “illegal or improper.”

¶10 CHS paid its 2009 property taxes under protest and then pursued both

administrative review and the declaratory judgment option for challenging its property

tax assessment. It filed this declaratory judgment action and, contemporaneously, filed 3 appeals with the county tax appeal boards in Yellowstone, Gallatin, and Missoula

Counties. In 2010, CHS again requested an informal review of its property tax

assessment with DOR, and then later filed a second declaratory judgment action,

challenging DOR’s assessment of its property taxes for tax year 2010. The two

declaratory judgment actions are consolidated for purposes of this appeal. The county tax

appeal boards have stayed the administrative proceedings before them, pending the

outcome of this action.

¶11 DOR filed a motion asking the District Court to grant it summary judgment. DOR

argued that CHS had failed to present facts stating a claim under § 15-1-406, MCA, and

that the types of challenges being made by CHS must first be presented to the

administrative tax appeal boards provided for under Montana statutes. In addition, DOR

requested summary judgment on CHS’s claims that DOR had failed to equalize CHS’s

properties with similar properties or to timely assess the property under the statutory

deadline contained in § 15-8-201, MCA.

¶12 In support of its motion for summary judgment, DOR filed a 10-page affidavit by

its appraiser, Seth Carlson. Carlson averred that he used a cost approach to valuation of

the property, making substantial deductions for physical depreciation and functional

obsolescence, but that he could not identify any economic obsolescence. He considered

performing an income approach to valuation, but ultimately did not do so because he

lacked the necessary income and expense information from CHS.1 Carlson also

1 The Property Reporting Form did not require disclosure of income or expense information, and CHS declined DOR’s requests that it provide such information. 4 considered employing a market data approach to valuation, but he did not identify any

particular sales that were comparable or useful. Carlson stated that, upon CHS’s request

for informal review with DOR, he reviewed and considered information that CHS

provided from its outside appraisers, Duff and Phelps. However, “[f]or a variety of

reasons,” Carlson determined the Duff and Phelps analysis could not serve as a legitimate

basis to modify or adjust the market value of CHS’s property.

¶13 In response to the motion for summary judgment, CHS provided the District Court

with an affidavit from a new outside consultant, Michael Remsha, who had analyzed the

values of CHS’s properties for purposes of this action. Remsha opined that DOR had not

taken into account all items of depreciation and obsolescence, resulting in an excessive

assessment. Remsha further stated that he had identified sales of comparable refineries

and used them to value the Laurel refinery, and that he also had identified applicable

revenues, expenses, and capitalization and discount rates to appraise the refinery under

the income approach.

¶14 Following briefing and a hearing, the District Court granted summary judgment

for DOR as to all of the CHS claims. The court determined that DOR had established the

nonexistence of material facts as to the illegality of the tax imposed on CHS, and that

CHS then had failed to meet its burden of presenting evidence that the method or

procedure of assessment was illegal or improper. The court ruled that Remsha’s affidavit

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CHS, Inc. v. Montana State Department of Revenue
2013 MT 100 (Montana Supreme Court, 2013)

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