Corrections Corp. of America of Tennessee, Inc. v. State

2007 NMCA 148, 170 P.3d 1017, 142 N.M. 779
CourtNew Mexico Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 18, 2007
DocketNo. 26,246
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 2007 NMCA 148 (Corrections Corp. of America of Tennessee, Inc. v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Corrections Corp. of America of Tennessee, Inc. v. State, 2007 NMCA 148, 170 P.3d 1017, 142 N.M. 779 (N.M. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

OPINION

BUSTAMANTE, Judge.

{1} Corrections Corporation of America of Tennessee, Inc. and Corrections Management Services, Inc. (collectively CCA) appeal the district court’s denial of CCA’s claim for a refund of gross receipts tax. CCA contends that its agreements with various governmental agencies to incarcerate prisoners constitute leases of real property and, therefore, that receipts from those agreements are deductible under the applicable tax statute. The district court held that the contracts do not constitute leases and thus the denial of the deduction was proper. We affirm, holding that, as a matter of law, the contracts are not leases for real property as contemplated by the Gross Receipts and Compensating Tax Act (the Gross Receipts Act), NMSA 1978, §§ 7-9-1 to -100 (1966, as amended through 2006).

BACKGROUND

{2} CCA, a private company providing prison services, owns and operates three prison facilities in New Mexico. CCA entered into agreements to provide prison services and facilities with the federal Bureau of Prisons (BOP) and the New Mexico Corrections Department (NMCD). We refer to BOP and NMCD collectively as the “governmental entities.” With NMCD, CCA contracted for use of and services at the New Mexico Women’s Correctional Facility in Grants, New Mexico (the Grants facility). With BOP, CCA contracted for use of and services at the Cibola County Correctional Center near Milan, New Mexico (the Cibola facility). We first set out some of the details of those contracts.

THE GRANTS FACILITY

{3} In 1988, CCA and NMCD entered into a “Management Services Agreement,” pursuant to NMSA 1978, § 33-1-17 (1995), the statute that allowed the state to contract with the private prison industry to provide prisons and correctional services for the state of New Mexico. The agreement required CCA “to provide services for the operation of an adult female facility for the State of New Mexico.” The contract allowed for renovation of existing facilities or construction of an entirely new one. The legislature appropriated $1,003,300 to NMCD for the “operation of a two hundred-bed facility.” CCA built the facility according to the specifications detailed in the agreement.

{4} As an “independent contractor,” CCA had “the sole right to supervise, manage, operate, control, and direct the performance of the details [of operating the facility].” CCA had the keys to the entire facility, including “security” areas, whereas NMCD had keys for “administrative” and “programming” areas within the prison facility but not to the housing and secure pods.

{5} NMCD did have access to the prisons and could direct CCA to allow NMCD to enter the facilities. NMCD representatives, the Governor of New Mexico, members of the legislature, and other people as designated by NMCD, had access to the Grants facility at all times. Indeed, by contract, NMCD was required to monitor the quality of CCA’s performance of the corrections services.

{6} In exchange for the corrections services, NMCD paid CCA “a ‘Contractor Per Diem Rate’ ” based on the number of inmates incarcerated at the facility each day. Under the terms of the original 1988 contract, that rate was set at $69.75 per inmate for each inmate exceeding 150 inmates. If NMCD housed 150 inmates or fewer, the per diem rate formula did not apply, and instead NMCD paid a flat rate of $318,234.38 per month.

{7} In 1998, the original payment clause was amended to reflect a change in the per diem rate and the minimum flat rate provision was replaced with the obligation that NMCD keep the facility at 90% of capacity. If NMCD housed fewer than 90% of capacity, the amended contract called for the parties to “renegotiate” a new per diem rate.

{8} Again, in 1999, the contract was amended to reflect another change in the per diem rate. This last change reduced the per diem to $52.28 for the first 322 inmates, $45.28 for the next 194, and $11.28 for the last 80 up to the facility’s then-capacity of 596 inmates.

{9} Under the agreement, NMCD had “first priority on its inmates entering the facility,” but in the event that NMCD did not fill the facility to capacity with inmates, CCA had the right to “increase the inmate population ... by accepting inmates from other federal or state jurisdictions.”

{10} The agreement provided that in the event CCA defaulted on its obligations to provide correctional services, CCA would have to lease the facility to NMCD “at fair market rental value” and NMCD was free to hire another contractor to perform the correctional services.

THE CIBOLA FACILITY

{11} In June 2000, CCA contracted with BOP to provide a low-security prison and correctional services at the Cibola facility. CCA’s agreement with BOP for the use and services at the Cibola facility was similar to the agreement with NMCD for the Grants facility. Under the terms of that agreement, CCA was required to take all of BOP’s inmate referrals and CCA could “house only inmates designated to the facility by BOP.” As in the Grants contract, BOP retained the right to monitor CCA’s performance on-site, which included the right to conduct unannounced inspections. Four full-time federal officials worked at the Cibola facility monitoring the institution and the contract performance. CCA could not deny BOP access to the Cibola facility. Although BOP set guidelines for prospective employees and contractors, BOP could not require CCA to hire particular guards; they just set the standards.

{12} CCA contracted with Cibola County to house Cibola County Jail inmates in a “totally separate housing unit within the facility under the same roof.” The CCA assistant warden for the Cibola facility was the assistant warden for the entire facility, not just the part utilized by BOP. In CCA’s original claim for a refund, CCA included information on the percentages of space in the Cibola facility “PJeased” not only to BOP, but also to Cibola County, the states of New Mexico and Idaho, and to the United States Marshal. Also, with the Grants facility, CCA was paid on the agreement with BOP “based upon a daily official ... inmate count.”

CCA’S CLAIM FOR REFUND

{13} CCA filed a claim for a refund with the Taxation and Revenue Department (the Department) based on the theory that some of its receipts were deductible under the Gross Receipts Act. The Gross Receipts Act imposes a five percent tax on all receipts of “any person engaging in business.” § 7-9-4(A). There is a presumption “that all receipts of a person engaging in business are subject to the gross receipts tax.” § 7-9-5(A). Section 7-9-53(A) allows for the deduction of receipts from the gross receipts tax for the sale or lease of real property.

{14} CCA’s original claim for a refund filed with the Department involved receipts from all three facilities; however, it only raised issues in this appeal involving the Grants and Cibola facilities. The original refund claim was for $2,465,276.38 for the period from January 1999 to October 2002. CCA does not specify on appeal the amount for which it seeks a refund; instead, it argues for the application of a specific valuation method. CCA asks this Court to remand for calculation of the amount refunded for the alleged leases. However, because we affirm the district court, we do not address the valuation issue.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2007 NMCA 148, 170 P.3d 1017, 142 N.M. 779, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/corrections-corp-of-america-of-tennessee-inc-v-state-nmctapp-2007.