Concept Mining, Inc. v. Helton

617 S.E.2d 845, 217 W. Va. 298, 2005 W. Va. LEXIS 20
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 28, 2005
Docket31866
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 617 S.E.2d 845 (Concept Mining, Inc. v. Helton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Concept Mining, Inc. v. Helton, 617 S.E.2d 845, 217 W. Va. 298, 2005 W. Va. LEXIS 20 (W. Va. 2005).

Opinion

The Opinion of the Court was delivered PER CURIAM.

Justice BENJAMIN, deeming himself disqualified, did not participate in the decision of this case.

Judge WILSON, sitting by temporary assignment.

PER CURIAM.

The appellant herein and respondent below, Virgil T. Helton, 1 Acting State Tax Commissioner of the State of West Virginia (hereinafter referred to as the “Tax Commissioner”), appeals from an order entered by the Circuit Court of Kanawha County on January 21, 2004. By that order, the circuit court determined that the Tax Commissioner was not permitted to appeal from the administrative decision finding that the appellees herein and petitioners below, Concept Mining, Inc., and The Ridge Land Company, Inc. (hereinafter collectively referred to as “Concept Mining” or “the Taxpayers”), were entitled to a refund of severance taxes they previously had paid to the Tax Commissioner. On appeal to this Court, the Tax Commissioner asserts that the circuit court erred by so ruling. Upon a review of the parties’ arguments, the record designated for appellate review, and the pertinent authorities, we affirm the circuit court’s decision.

I.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

The facts underlying the instant appeal are not in dispute. On June 5, 2002, Concept Mining and The Ridge Land Company separately filed petitions in the Tax Commissioner’s Office of Hearings and Appeals seeking refunds of severance taxes they had paid in tax years 1998 and 1999. Thereafter, the parties’ separate petitions were consolidated for consideration and decision by the Office of Hearings and Appeals. A hearing was then held on October 30, 2002, with final briefs of the parties due on January 31, 2003, and the case being submitted for final decision on that date.

In the meantime, legislative changes resulted in the creation of a successor tribunal to the Tax Commissioner’s Office of Hearings and Appeals: the Office of Tax Appeals. To effectuate a transition from the Office of Hearings and Appeals to the Office of Tax Appeals, the Legislature enacted W. Va.Code § 11-10-9 (2002) (Repl.Vol.2003), which provides, in pertinent part, that

(b) All petitions which are on the tax commissioner’s docket on the thirty-first day of December, two thousand two, for which no administrative hearing has been held, shall be transferred by the tax commissioner to the office of tax appeals no later than the thirty-first day of January, two thousand three; and thereafter, the petition shall, for all purposes except timeliness of filing, be treated as if it had been filed with the office of tax appeals.
(c) All petitions which are on the tax commissioner’s docket on the thirty-first day of Decembei’, two thousand two, for which an administrative hearing has been held prior to that date, shall remain on the tax commissioner’s docket and the tax commissioner shall issue an administrative decision no later than the thirty-first day of March, two thousand three.

For purposes of the instant proceeding, the primary result of this change in tax decision tribunals concerns the ability of the Tax Commissioner to appeal the administrative decision to the circuit court. Under the former system, the Tax Commissioner could *301 not appeal decisions rendered by the Tax Commissioner’s Office of Hearings and Appeals because the decisions were rendered by the Commissioner him/herself. See W. Va. Code § ll-10-10(a)(l) (2002) (Repl.Vol.2003) (“A taxpayer may appeal the administrative decision of the tax commissioner issued under section nine or fourteen [§ 11-10-9 or § 11-10-14] of this article, by taking an appeal to the circuit courts of this state within sixty days after being served with notice of the administrative decision.”). By contrast, under the current system, the Tax Commissioner is permitted to appeal decisions issued by the newly-formulated Office of Tax Appeals. See W. Va.Code § ll-10A-19(a) (2002) (Repl.Vol.2003) (“Either the taxpayer or the commissioner, or both, may appeal the final decision or order of the office of táx appeals[.]”). Cf. W. Va.Code § 11-10-10(a)(2) (“A taxpayer may appeal the administrative decision of the office of tax appeals in accordance with the provisions of section nineteen [§ 11-10A-19], article ten-a of this chapter.”).

Following the implementation of these statutory amendments, a final decision was rendered in the case sub judice on July 9, 2003, by the same administrative law judge who had conducted the aforementioned administrative hearing in this case on October 30, 2002, and who, at that time, was a hearing examiner for the Tax Commissioner’s Office of Hearings and Appeals. At the time of the final decision on July 9, 2003, however, this presiding hearing examiner was an administrative law judge for the Office of Tax Appeals and, consequently, issued his decision on that tribunal’s letterhead. In any event, the final decision ruled in favor of the Taxpayers and found them to be entitled to a refund of severance taxes they had paid because the imposition of such taxes on their mining activities violated their constitutional rights under the Import-Export Clause. 2

Because the final decision was presumably rendered by the Office of Tax Appeals, the Tax Commissioner appealed the unfavorable ruling to the Circuit Court of Kanawha County. By order entered January 21, 2004, the circuit court found and concluded that

(A) The Tax Commissioner appointed R. Michael Reed, Administrative Law Judge of the Office of Hearings and Appeals, to hear and decide this matter at the administrative level.
(B) The administrative hearing was held in this matter on October 30, 2002, with Judge Reed serving as the Hearing Examiner.
(C) With this matter having been placed on the docket of the Tax Commissioner’s Office of Hearings and Appeals prior to December 31, 2002 and the administrative hearing having been held prior to December 31, 2002, W. Va. Code § ll-10-9(e) required that this matter not be transferred to the Office of Tax Appeals but be resolved at the administrative level by the issuance of an administrative decision pursuant to W. Va.Code § ll-10-9(a) by the Tax Commissioner or an Administrative Law Judge designated by [him],
(D) The Final Decision issued by Judge Reed on July 9, 2003, despite purporting to be issued under the Office of Tax Appeals, is as a matter of law an administrative decision issued pursuant to W. Va.Code § 11 — 10—9(a). To hold otherwise would be to elevate form over substance which this Court is not inclined to do.
(E) Administrative decisions issued pursuant to W. Va.Code § ll-10-9(a) by the Tax Commissioner or an Administrative Law Judge designated by [him] may not be appealed by the Tax Commissioner to the Circuit Courts of this State. W. Vet. Code § 11-10-10. Only taxpayers are entitled to appeal such administrative decisions.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
617 S.E.2d 845, 217 W. Va. 298, 2005 W. Va. LEXIS 20, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/concept-mining-inc-v-helton-wva-2005.