City of Valdez v. Polar Tankers, Inc.

182 P.3d 614, 2008 Alas. LEXIS 59, 2008 WL 1836710
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedApril 25, 2008
DocketS-12218, S-12223
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 182 P.3d 614 (City of Valdez v. Polar Tankers, Inc.) 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
City of Valdez v. Polar Tankers, Inc., 182 P.3d 614, 2008 Alas. LEXIS 59, 2008 WL 1836710 (Ala. 2008).

Opinion

*616 OPINION

EASTAUGH, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION _

The City of Valdez adopted an ad valorem property tax on large vessels docking at private facilities in Valdez, and the city council thereafter adopted an apportionment formula based on days spent in port for taxing large vessels engaged in interstate commerce. Several transporters of oil, including Polar Tankers, Inc., challenged the tax in superior court, alleging that it violated the Due Process, Commerce, and Tonnage Clauses of the Federal Constitution. We hold that the apportionment formula does not create a risk of duplicative taxation; it was therefore error to declare the ordinance unconstitutional as applied.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

A. Factual History

In 1999 the City of Valdez adopted Ordinance No. 99-17, an ad valorem property tax ("vessel tax") on certain large vessels docking at private facilities in the city. Part A of the ordinance describes the affected vessels:

Boats and vessels of at least 95 feet in length for which certificates of documentation have been issued under the laws of the 'United States are subject to taxation at their full and true value unless the vessel is used primarily in some aspect of commercial fishing or docks exclusively at the Valdez Container Terminal where it is subject to municipal dockage charges. [1]

The city subsequently interpreted the exception for vessels docking exclusively at the Valdez Container Terminal to also apply to vessels docking exelusively at other city-owned docks. Part B of the ordinance provides for taxation on an "apportionment basis" and for adoption of assessment formulas:

Vessels operated in intrastate, interstate or foreign commerce that have acquired a taxable situs elsewhere, shall be assessed on an apportionment basis. The assessor shall allocate to the City the portion of the total market value of the property that fairly reflects its use in the City. The assessor shall establish formulas for caleu-lating the proportion of the total market value allocated to the City. The assessment formula shall be approved by the city council. [2]

The vessel tax was proposed to address what was described as a serious erosion of the city's tax base, much of which is oil- and gas-related property. For several years before passage of the ordinance, the portion of the city's tax base consisting of oil and gas property had been declining rapidly, and it would continue to decline under a depreciation formula negotiated between the State of Alaska and the owners of the Trans Alaska Pipeline System (TAPS).

In accordance with Part B of the 1999 vessel tax ordinance, in 2000 the city council adopted a resolution containing an apportionment formula. Section 1 of Resolution No. 00-15 adopted a tax apportioned on the days spent in port:

A vessel owner will pay the personal property tax based on 100 percent of the assessed value, times a ratio determined by the number of days spent in Valdez divided by the total number of days spent in all ports, including Valdez, where the vessel has acquired a situs for taxation. [3]

We refer to this as a "port-day" apportionment formula. The formula also exempts "periods when a vessel is tied up because of strikes or withheld from the Alaska service for repairs." 4 Section 2 of the 2000 resolution contingently provides for adoption of "another apportionment formula that will more fairly represent how value should be apportioned." 5 It provides:

If a taxpayer claims that in a particular case the apportionment formula approved *617 in this Resolution does not reasonably represent the portion of the total value of the vessel that should be apportioned to the taxing situs of Valdez, the taxpayer may petition, or the assessor may require, the use of another apportionment formula that will more fairly represent how the value should be apportioned among Valdez and other taxing jurisdictions. [6]

Polar Tankers, Inc. operates tanker vessels that transport crude oil from the TAPS terminal in Valdez to ports in Washington, California, and Hawaii. In Valdez, Polar loads crude oil at the Alyeska Marine Terminal, a private dock owned by a consortium of oil companies-the TAPS owners. Polar is a wholly owned subsidiary of ConocoPhillips Company. The city issued tax statements for each of the assessed vessels in early July of 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, and 2004. Polar paid the assessed taxes under protest each year. The taxes it paid each year were: $440,221.24 in 2000; $398,157.62 in 2001; $1,037,530.12 in 2002; $1,433,072.20 in 2008; and $1,657,249.02 in 2004.

B. Procedural History

After the city enacted the apportionment resolution in 2000, Polar sued the city in superior court, claiming the vessel tax violated the Due Process, Commerce, and Tonnage Clauses of the Federal Constitution. Polar was initially joined by several other tankship companies. Over the next three years, the city settled with all of the plaintiffs except Polar and SeaRiver Maritime, Inc. In 2004 the superior court granted these plaintiffs' motion for summary judgment, holding that the vessel tax was an unconstitutional duty on tonnage. The city moved for reconsideration. The superior court granted the reconsideration motion, vacated its earlier ruling, and directed the parties to brief seven legal and factual questions. In January 2005 the superior court issued a decision and order ruling that the apportionment method violated the Due Process and Commerce Clauses. It declined to rule on the Tonnage Clause issue. The city moved for summary judgment on that issue, and the superior court granted the city's motion in July and concluded that, assuming the vessel tax was fairly apportioned, the tax would not violate the Tonnage Clause.

In January 2006 the superior court issued its final judgment holding that the tax did not violate the Tonnage Clause, but that the port-day apportionment formula, as applied to the plaintiffs, violated the Due Process and Commerce Clauses. The judgment permitted the city to levy the vessel tax as soon as it adopted a constitutional apportionment formula, and required the city to repay all taxes overpaid by the plaintiffs, as calculated using the new apportionment formula. The city moved for clarification of the final judgment. The court denied the clarification motion but stayed the judgment and ordered that the city could not "levy against Plaintiffs any amount of tax beyond the amount that would be due using this apportionment formula: Days in Valdez/365." The court ordered that the amount be paid into a court-supervised account until the appeal was terminated by agreement of the parties or decision of this court. Finally, the superior court denied all parties' motions for attorney's fees.

Three parties appealed.

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Related

Polar Tankers, Inc. v. City of Valdez, Alaska
557 U.S. 1 (Supreme Court, 2009)

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Bluebook (online)
182 P.3d 614, 2008 Alas. LEXIS 59, 2008 WL 1836710, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-valdez-v-polar-tankers-inc-alaska-2008.