Cig Exploration v. STATE, DEPT. OF REV.
This text of 880 P.2d 601 (Cig Exploration v. STATE, DEPT. OF REV.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
CIG EXPLORATION, INC.; and Colorado Interstate Gas Company, Appellants (Plaintiffs),
v.
STATE of Wyoming, DEPARTMENT OF REVENUE, Appellee (Defendant).
Supreme Court of Wyoming.
Lawrence J. Wolfe and Susan E. Laser-Bair of Holland & Hart, Cheyenne, for appellants.
Joseph B. Meyer, Atty. Gen., Vicci M. Colgan, Michael L. Hubbard, Sr. Asst. Attys. Gen., Cheyenne, for appellee.
*602 Before GOLDEN, C.J., and THOMAS, CARDINE,[*] MACY[**] and TAYLOR, JJ.
GOLDEN, Chief Justice.
In response to two certified questions, we hold that WYO.STAT. § 39-6-304(g) (1985), now repealed, was a statute of repose, rather than one of limitations, and thus it required that the taxpayer file an application for severance tax refund within two years of the date of overpayment. Having so concluded, we need not reach the second certified question which asks, if WYO.STAT. § 39-6-304(g) was a statute of limitations, did it permit only the property operator who originally filed the tax forms to file the refund application.
BACKGROUND
In December, 1989, appellants, Colorado Interstate Gas Company and CIG Exploration, filed applications with the State of Wyoming for severance tax refunds for natural gas production from 1979 to 1987. The refund claims followed the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission's (FERC) order directing appellants to reduce their natural gas prices for those years and issue refunds for the difference between the two prices. Appellants sought severance tax refunds of approximately $911,000 for the difference between the amount of the tax paid on the higher prices initially charged, and later reduced by the FERC, and the amount of the tax which would have been paid at the reduced price.
Appellants filed their applications for severance tax refunds more than two years after paying the taxes but less than two years after FERC ordered the price reduction and refund. Appellee, the Department of Revenue (Department), denied appellants' refund claims as untimely, relying upon the following language in WYO.STAT. § 39-6-304(g):
All applications for refunds shall be made within two (2) years from payment of the erroneous tax.
The Department also ruled that application for severance tax refunds must be filed by the operator of the property.
Appellants appealed the Department's decision to the State Board of Equalization and contemporaneously filed a declaratory judgment action in district court. On September 13, 1993, the district court, upon stipulation of the parties and pursuant to Wyoming Rules of Appellate Procedure 11, certified to this court the questions set forth below. On November 17, 1993, this court issued an Order Agreeing to Answer Certified Question.
CERTIFIED QUESTIONS
The district court certified the following questions for our review:
1. Whether the statute of limitations for severance tax refunds in W.S. 39-6-304(g) (1985, repealed 1988) requires an application for refund to be filed within two years of the date of overpayment, when discovery occurred after that time.
2. Whether a severance tax refund claim must be filed by the operator of the property who originally filed the tax forms, instead of a working interest owner.
DISCUSSION
In Enron Oil & Gas Co. v. Freudenthal, 861 P.2d 1090, 1093 (Wyo.1993) and Amoco v. State Bd. of Equalization, 797 P.2d 552, 555 (Wyo.1990), this court held that the language of WYO.STAT. § 39-6-304(g)[1] was clear and unambiguous and required that all applications for severance tax refunds be made within two years of payment of the tax. Appellants acknowledge these holdings but contend they did not resolve the question whether WYO.STAT. § 39-6-304(g) is a statute of limitations or one of repose because in both Enron and Amoco, appellants assert, this court contradicted its holdings and applied *603 the statute as one of limitations.[2] Thus appellants contend an ambiguity exists, and they request that we now resolve that alleged ambiguity and declare WYO.STAT. § 39-6-304(g) a statute of limitations and hold appellants' refund applications should have been considered from the date appellants discovered they were entitled to a refund, not from the date of payment of the tax.
Appellants contend we should declare WYO. STAT. § 39-6-304(g) a statute of limitations because the plain language of the statute supports such an interpretation and because the legislature has acquiesced in the Department's interpretation of the statute as one of limitations. We do not agree that this court's decisions in Enron and Amoco created an ambiguity, and we reiterate our holding from those cases that WYO.STAT. § 39-6-304(g) requires that refund applications be filed within two years from payment of the tax.
We turn first to appellants' contention that this court has treated WYO.STAT. § 39-6-304(g) as a statute of limitations. To support this position, appellants point to the following language in Enron and Amoco:
In fact, Enron's assertion that it could not apply for its tax refund until the amount was determined by the Chevron appeals is contradicted by the record. Amended returns can and almost always are filed before the Board rules on take-in-kind appeals. Enron could have filed its refund claims but failed to do so.
Enron, 861 P.2d at 1094.
Our ruling today only addresses the issue of whether the statute applies to the adjustments filed by Amoco. We do not decide whether the Department has correctly applied the statute in other instances.
Amoco, 797 P.2d at 555.
Appellants argue this language demonstrates this court reached its conclusion that neither taxpayer filed timely applications only after determining each failed to exercise diligence in discovering the existence of and/or amount of their refundsthat a finding of diligence would have changed the result in each case and may change the result in future cases. A determination of diligence, appellants argue, is irrelevant unless the statute is one of limitations as opposed to repose. We disagree with appellants' interpretation of the above-quoted language from Enron and Amoco.
In Enron, we declined the taxpayer's invitation to create an exception to the requirement of WYO.STAT. § 39-6-304(g) that applications for refunds be filed within two years of payment. We held that this court does not possess the authority to legislate an exception to an unambiguous statute because it would be fair or equitable to do so and also noted that, in that instance, fairness did not demand creation of such an exception because "Enron could have filed its refund claims but failed to do so." Enron, 861 P.2d at 1094. Read in context, our conclusion that the taxpayer did not act diligently in filing its application was clearly unrelated to our determination that the statute unambiguously required application for refund be made within two years from payment, and our conclusion that the taxpayer had not acted diligently did not dictate the outcome of the case.
Likewise, the language appellant relies upon from Amoco
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