CSX Transportation, Inc. v. Alabama Department of Revenue
This text of 886 F.3d 974 (CSX Transportation, Inc. v. Alabama Department of Revenue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
ED CARNES, Chief Judge:
The Railroad Revitalization and Regulatory Reform Act prohibits states from imposing a tax "that discriminates against a rail carrier."
I. BACKGROUND
A. Facts
CSX Transportation, Inc. is an interstate rail carrier that does business and pays taxes in a number of states including Alabama. In the shipment of freight interstate it and other rail carriers compete against trucking transport companies (motor carriers) and commercial ships, vessels, and barges (water carriers). Yet Alabama taxes each type of carrier differently on the purchase or use of diesel fuel inside the state. Rail carriers pay a 4% sales and use tax on diesel fuel,
1
while motor carriers
and water carriers are exempt from that tax,
see
The State deposits revenue from the sales and use tax that rail carriers pay into the general fund and earmarks it for education purposes.
In 2008 CSX sued the Alabama Department of Revenue, seeking to enjoin the Department from collecting the sales and use tax on the railroad's purchase or consumption of diesel fuel in the state. It also sought a declaratory judgment that the imposition of that tax violates the Railroad Revitalization and Regulatory Reform Act,
Congress enacted the 4-R Act to "restore the financial stability of the railway system of the United States" and to "foster competition among all carriers by railroad and other modes of transportation."
(1) Assess rail transportation property at a value that has a higher ratio to the true market value of the rail transportation property than the ratio that the assessed value of other commercial and industrial property in the same assessment jurisdiction has to the true market value of the other commercial and industrial property.
(2) Levy or collect a tax on an assessment that may not be made under paragraph (1) of this subsection.
(3) Levy or collect an ad valorem property tax on rail transportation property at a tax rate that exceeds the tax rate applicable to commercial and industrial property in the same assessment jurisdiction.
(4) Impose another tax that discriminates against a rail carrier.
B. Procedural History
Over the past decade, this case has made two trips to the Supreme Court, stopping along the way three times at the district court and five times here. Because it is all pretty much relevant, we will set out that procedural history in some detail.
In doing so, we will begin with a discussion of the first district court order, which dismissed CSX's complaint, and from there we will recount our decision on appeal and the Supreme Court's first decision. We will then discuss the district court's second opinion, our second decision on appeal, and the Supreme Court's second decision. Finally, we will discuss the third leg of the journey to date, starting with our second remand order and ending with the district court judgment from which CSX now appeals.
1. First Round of Proceedings
In round one of this case, the district court dismissed CSX's complaint and we affirmed.
CSX Transp., Inc. v. Ala. Dep't of Revenue
,
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ED CARNES, Chief Judge:
The Railroad Revitalization and Regulatory Reform Act prohibits states from imposing a tax "that discriminates against a rail carrier."
I. BACKGROUND
A. Facts
CSX Transportation, Inc. is an interstate rail carrier that does business and pays taxes in a number of states including Alabama. In the shipment of freight interstate it and other rail carriers compete against trucking transport companies (motor carriers) and commercial ships, vessels, and barges (water carriers). Yet Alabama taxes each type of carrier differently on the purchase or use of diesel fuel inside the state. Rail carriers pay a 4% sales and use tax on diesel fuel,
1
while motor carriers
and water carriers are exempt from that tax,
see
The State deposits revenue from the sales and use tax that rail carriers pay into the general fund and earmarks it for education purposes.
In 2008 CSX sued the Alabama Department of Revenue, seeking to enjoin the Department from collecting the sales and use tax on the railroad's purchase or consumption of diesel fuel in the state. It also sought a declaratory judgment that the imposition of that tax violates the Railroad Revitalization and Regulatory Reform Act,
Congress enacted the 4-R Act to "restore the financial stability of the railway system of the United States" and to "foster competition among all carriers by railroad and other modes of transportation."
(1) Assess rail transportation property at a value that has a higher ratio to the true market value of the rail transportation property than the ratio that the assessed value of other commercial and industrial property in the same assessment jurisdiction has to the true market value of the other commercial and industrial property.
(2) Levy or collect a tax on an assessment that may not be made under paragraph (1) of this subsection.
(3) Levy or collect an ad valorem property tax on rail transportation property at a tax rate that exceeds the tax rate applicable to commercial and industrial property in the same assessment jurisdiction.
(4) Impose another tax that discriminates against a rail carrier.
B. Procedural History
Over the past decade, this case has made two trips to the Supreme Court, stopping along the way three times at the district court and five times here. Because it is all pretty much relevant, we will set out that procedural history in some detail.
In doing so, we will begin with a discussion of the first district court order, which dismissed CSX's complaint, and from there we will recount our decision on appeal and the Supreme Court's first decision. We will then discuss the district court's second opinion, our second decision on appeal, and the Supreme Court's second decision. Finally, we will discuss the third leg of the journey to date, starting with our second remand order and ending with the district court judgment from which CSX now appeals.
1. First Round of Proceedings
In round one of this case, the district court dismissed CSX's complaint and we affirmed.
CSX Transp., Inc. v. Ala. Dep't of Revenue
,
The Supreme Court reversed our decision and held that denying rail carriers exemptions provided to other carriers can be a form of discrimination under the 4-R Act.
CSX Transp., Inc. v. Ala. Dep't of Revenue
("
CSX I
"),
2. Second Round of Proceedings
On remand, after holding a bench trial the district court ruled that Alabama's sales and use tax scheme does not discriminate against CSX.
CSX Transp., Inc. v. Ala. Dep't of Revenue
,
We reversed.
CSX Transp., Inc. v. Ala. Dep't of Revenue
,
We chose the competitive approach, reasoning that the functional approach disadvantages rail carriers by applying too broad a comparison class and that the competitive approach better accords with the 4-R Act's purpose. Id. at 869. Applying the competitive approach, we held that motor carriers and water carriers are competitors of, and as a result proper comparators to, rail carriers. Id. at 867. Because those two competitors are exempt from the sales and use tax, we reasoned that CSX had established a "prima facie case of discrimination," shifting the burden to the State to justify its facially discriminatory tax. Id. at 869.
We rejected the argument that the motor carrier exemption to the sales and use tax would be justified if motor carriers paid excise taxes in amounts substantially similar to the sales and use tax that the rail carriers paid. Id. We held, instead, that a court should look "only at the sales and use tax with respect to fuel to see if discrimination has occurred." Id. (quotation marks omitted). We reasoned that focusing solely on the specific tax that is allegedly discriminatory would avoid the "Sisyphean burden of evaluating the fairness of the State's overall tax structure in order to determine whether a single tax exemption causes a state's sales tax to be discriminatory." Id. at 871. Because the State failed to justify the motor carrier exemption, and because "no one can seriously dispute that the water carriers, who pay not a cent of tax on diesel fuel, are the beneficiaries of a discriminatory tax regime," we reversed and remanded with instructions to enter declaratory and injunctive relief for CSX. Id.
The Supreme Court granted certiorari on two questions: "whether the Eleventh Circuit properly regarded CSX's competitors as an appropriate comparison class for its subsection (b)(4) claim," and "whether, when resolving a claim of unlawful tax discrimination, a court should consider aspects of a State's tax scheme apart from the challenged provision."
Ala. Dep't of Rev. v. CSX Transp., Inc.
("
CSX II
"), 575 U.S. ----,
On the first question, the Court agreed with us that, "in light of [CSX's] complaint and the parties' stipulation, a comparison class of competitors consisting of motor carriers and water carriers was appropriate, and differential treatment vis-à-vis that class would constitute discrimination."
On the second question, about whether a state's other taxes should be considered in the analysis, the Court held that "an alternative, roughly equivalent tax is one possible justification that renders a tax disparity nondiscriminatory."
The Court remanded for us to consider "whether Alabama's fuel-excise tax is the rough equivalent of Alabama's sales [and use] tax as applied to diesel fuel, and therefore justifies the motor carrier sales-tax exemption."
3. Third Round of Proceedings
We vacated the district court's judgment and remanded for proceedings "consistent with the Supreme Court's opinion."
CSX Transp., Inc. v. Ala. Dep't of Revenue
,
The district court concluded that the motor carrier exemption does not violate the 4-R Act for two reasons. First, the court found that CSX's trains can operate on either clear diesel or dyed diesel, and that if CSX opted to purchase clear diesel, it would be subject to the excise tax, just like motor carriers, instead of the sales and use tax.
3
The court also determined that there were two reasons why the water carrier exemption does not violate the 4-R Act. First, it concluded that the exemption "does not violate the 4-R Act" because "CSX has suffered no competitive injury" from that exemption.
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
We review
de
novo
the district court's interpretation of the Supreme Court's rulings and the scope of the mandate.
Cox Enters., Inc. v. News-Journal Corp.
,
III. STANDING
The State contends that CSX lacks standing. It raises that issue for the first time in this appeal, but because standing goes to Article III jurisdiction a party can contest it "at any point in the litigation."
Fla. Wildlife Fed'n, Inc. v. S. Fla. Water Mgmt. Dist.
,
CSX meets those three requirements. Without a favorable decision it will suffer an injury in fact because it will continue to be liable for roughly $5 million per year in sales and use tax on diesel fuel.
See
Hein v. Freedom From Religion Found., Inc.
,
The State does not, of course, contest that CSX has paid, and unless it prevails here will continue to be liable for paying, the sales and use tax. It argues instead that CSX has not suffered an injury in fact because it failed to prove "that Alabama's exemption for water carriers actually injures CSX." But CSX's challenge seeks to prevent application of the sales and use tax on it, not an end to the exemption of the water carriers from the tax.
CSX I
,
IV. THE MOTOR CARRIER EXEMPTION
The Supreme Court remanded this case for us to consider "whether Alabama's fuel-excise tax is the rough equivalent of Alabama's sales [and use] tax as applied to diesel fuel, and therefore justifies the motor
carrier sales [and use] tax exemption."
CSX II
,
A. The District Court's Clear Fuel Ruling
The district court found that CSX's trains can operate on clear diesel and that if CSX chose to do so, it could avoid the sales and use tax and instead pay the excise tax, just like motor carriers, which would be perfectly nondiscriminatory.
"The mandate rule is a specific application of the 'law of the case' doctrine which provides that subsequent courts are bound by any findings of fact or conclusions of law made by the court of appeals in a prior appeal of the same case."
Friedman v. Mkt. St. Mortg. Corp.
,
The scope of the mandate that came out of our last decision was narrow. As to motor carriers, the Supreme Court had instructed us to consider only "whether Alabama's fuel-excise tax is the rough equivalent of Alabama's sales [and use] tax as applied to diesel fuel, and therefore justifies the motor carrier sales [and use] tax exemption."
CSX II
,
That ruling went beyond the scope of the mandate, which was limited to whether the excise tax and the sales and use tax are roughly equivalent.
CSX II
,
B. The District Court's "Roughly Equivalent" Ruling
The district court decided that the motor carrier exemption is justified because
the sales and use tax is "roughly equivalent" to the excise tax.
The district court interpreted "roughly equivalent" to carry its ordinary meaning and limited its inquiry to whether the "fuel-excise tax approximates the sales [and use] tax."
CSX Transp.
,
CSX doesn't question the district court's math. Instead, it questions the test that the district court applied. CSX argues that the proper test is the compensatory tax doctrine-a three-part dormant Commerce Clause test that would require us to compare not only the rate that rail carriers and motor carriers pay under the sales and use tax and the excise tax, but also how the State allocates revenue from those taxes. Appellant's Br. at 38-39 (citing
West Lynn Creamery, Inc. v. Healy
,
The crux of CSX's argument is that the excise tax is not roughly equivalent to the sales and use tax because the excise tax "is used exclusively to fund public highways," effectively subsidizing the infrastructure on which motor carriers travel, while "the railroad sales [and use] tax is deposited in the State's general fund, earmarked primarily for education."
Compare
CSX does not pretend that the 4-R Act's text supports its contention that a state's revenue expenditures control a claim under that statute. It argues instead that the Supreme Court in its decision implicitly guided us toward the compensatory tax doctrine and examining revenue expenditures in two ways. The first was by using the phrase "roughly equivalent," some variation of which appears in all compensatory tax doctrine cases, and the second was by citing the "foundational" compensatory tax doctrine case of
Gregg Dyeing Co. v. Query
,
1. The 4-R Act Is Concerned with the Imposition of Taxes, Not with the Expenditure of Revenue from Taxes
"We begin, as in any case of statutory interpretation, with the language of the
statute."
CSX I
,
Section 11501(b)(4) provides that no state shall "[i]mpose another tax that discriminates against a rail carrier." The syntax of the sentence makes clear that the source of discrimination must be the state's imposition of a tax. The relative pronoun "that" introduces the subordinate clause "that discriminates against a rail carrier." The subordinate clause modifies the antecedent "tax" and describes the kinds of taxes states may not impose. All of which is a fancy way of saying that § 11501(b)(4) doesn't prohibit all anti-railroad discrimination, but only that which occurs in the state's imposition of a tax. Which is, after all, what the provision says.
In spite of that, CSX would have us read that provision to require revenue from the sales and use tax paid by rail carriers to benefit them as much as revenue from the excise tax paid by motor carriers benefits those carriers. That reading of § 11501(b)(4) does not fit the meaning of "impose."
Impose
, Black's Law Dictionary (10th ed. 2014) ("To levy or exact (a tax or duty)."). States cannot "levy or exact" a revenue expenditure. CSX's proposed reading of § 11501(b)(4) also equates "tax" with revenue, even though "tax" by definition distinguishes the "charge ... imposed by the government" from the "revenue" it seeks to yield.
Tax
, Black's Law Dictionary (10th ed. 2014). Stripped to the rails, CSX's argument depends on calling revenues taxes. And "an argument that depends on calling a duck a donkey is not much of an argument."
Gilbert v. United States
,
CSX's interpretative remodeling of § 11501(b)(4) 's restriction on states would require us to rewrite the "[i]mpose another tax that discriminates against a rail carrier" language in one of two ways. The first way would be to add words to the provision so that no state could:
Impose another tax or appropriate revenue in a way that discriminates against a rail carrier.
Or subtract some language and add other language so that no state could:
Impose another tax thatdiscriminate[ ] against a rail carrier in any other way .
"But we are not allowed to add or subtract words from a statute."
Friends of the Everglades v. S. Fla. Water Mgmt. Dist.
,
Reading § 11501(b)(4) in context adds another layer of conviction to our conclusion.
See
Wachovia Bank, N.A. v. United States
,
For all of those reasons, we hold that how the State allocates its tax revenues is irrelevant to whether it "[i]mposes [a] tax that discriminates against a rail carrier."
2. The Supreme Court Did Not Tell Us to Apply the Compensatory Tax Doctrine
Undeterred by the plain text or by context, CSX contends that in deciding whether there is discrimination in violation of § 11501(b)(4) we must give weight to discriminatory revenue expenditures because the Supreme Court in
CSX II
told us to apply the compensatory tax doctrine. But the Court didn't tell us to do that. In fact, its opinion does not once use "compensatory" or any other derivative of the word "compensate." The Court has told us that it usually (almost always, we hope) says what it means and means what it says: "[A] good rule of thumb for reading our decisions is that what they say and what they mean are one and the same."
Mathis v. United States
, 579 U.S. ----,
Not to be derailed by the Supreme Court's failure to mention the compensatory tax doctrine, CSX argues that we still must apply that doctrine because the Court did use the term "rough equivalent," some variation of which appears in all compensatory tax doctrine cases. 6 CSX's argument is a fine example of a terminal logical fallacy known to logicians as an "illicit conversion" and to LSAT students as a "mistaken reversal." See, e.g. , Patrick J. Hurley and Lori Watson, A Concise Introduction to Logic 230-31 (13th ed. 2016); Steve Schwartz, Conditional Reasoning: Contrapositive, Mistaken Reversal, Mis taken Negation, LSAT Blog , April 10, 2009, http://lsatblog.blogspot.com/2009/04/conditional-reasoning-contrapositive.html. That all compensatory tax doctrine decisions feature the words "rough equivalent" does not mean that all decisions featuring those words are compensatory tax doctrine cases. Just as the fact that all birds are animals does not mean that all animals are birds.
As it happens, the Supreme Court has used the phrase "rough equivalent" in all sorts of contexts. It has used the term when talking about taxes in the due process and Commerce Clause contexts (to which the compensatory tax doctrine does not apply).
See
Moorman Mfg. Co. v. Bair
,
CSX's next argument for applying the compensatory tax doctrine is that the Supreme Court signaled that we should do so by citing
Gregg Dyeing
, which CSX characterizes as the "foundational building block of the compensatory tax analysis." According to CSX,
Gregg Dyeing
is cited "as shorthand for the Compensatory Tax Doctrine" by many courts, and it points to the Alabama Supreme Court's opinion in
White v. Reynolds Metals Co.
,
That is not a good example for CSX because in
White
the Alabama Supreme Court did not use
Gregg Dyeing
as "shorthand for the Compensatory Tax Doctrine," but simply cited it along with two other decisions for the proposition that the "United States Supreme Court has upheld taxing statutes that appeared to discriminate against interstate commerce by holding that the state's tax scheme compensated for the tax by a substantially equivalent tax on intrastate commerce."
Third, CSX argues that failure to apply the compensatory tax doctrine would "lead[ ] to absurd results." We may deviate from the plain meaning of a statute only if "the result produced by the plain meaning" is "truly absurd."
Merritt v. Dillard Paper Co.
,
The posited result does not strike us as "truly absurd"-or even absurd without an adverb, for that matter.
3. The Excise Tax Is Roughly Equivalent to the Sales and Use Tax
Having established that how a state allocates tax revenue is immaterial to whether two taxes are roughly equivalent under § 11501(b)(4), and that the Supreme Court did not direct us to apply the compensatory tax doctrine, we turn to the district court's ruling that the sales and use tax and the excise tax are roughly equivalent.
As an initial matter, the parties contest whether we should compare the rates that rail carriers and motor carriers pay in state taxes, or the combined rate they pay under state plus local taxes. We need not answer that question because the sales and use tax and the excise tax are roughly equivalent regardless of whether we consider local taxes. Considering only state taxes, over a recent nine-year period, rail carriers paid $0.0985 per gallon for dyed diesel while motor carriers paid $0.19 per gallon for clear diesel.
CSX Transp.
,
We agree with the district court that "roughly equivalent" bears its ordinary meaning and that two taxes are roughly
equivalent if the rates they impose approximate one another.
See
V. THE WATER CARRIER EXEMPTION
We now move from the roads to the waters. The Supreme Court recognized that, unlike the motor carrier exemption, the State could offer no rough equivalency justification for the water carrier exemption because water carriers pay no state taxes at all when they buy or consume diesel.
The district court ruled that the water carrier exemption does not violate the 4-R Act for two independent reasons. First, the court found that there was no violation because "CSX has suffered no competitive injury from the State's exemption of water carriers from the sales [and use] tax."
CSX Transp.
,
A. The District Court's "Competitive Injury" Ruling
There are two problems with the district court's ruling that the water carrier exemption does not violate the 4-R Act because CSX has not shown that the exemption causes it competitive injury. The first problem is that the parties stipulated that water carriers are among "[t]he principal competitors to rail carriers in the transportation of property in interstate commerce in the State of Alabama." Although a district court may set aside an erroneous stipulation where justice requires,
see, e.g.
,
Morrison v. Genuine Parts Co.
,
And we are supremely reluctant to allow a district court to relitigate a stipulated fact that the Supreme Court relied on for one of its holdings, which is that rail carriers and water carriers are a similarly situated comparison class.
CSX II
,
The second problem with the district court's ruling is that it is contrary to the Supreme Court decisions in
CSX I
and
CSX II
. While neither of those decisions explicitly held that competitive injury was not required, the two of them combined decided that discriminatory taxation had been shown and that the remaining question to be answered on remand was whether there was sufficient justification for it.
CSX I
,
Instead of putting the burden on the State to justify the difference in taxation, the district court put the burden on CSX to prove "discriminatory effect" or "competitive injury."
CSX Transp.
,
B. The District Court's "Compelled by Federal Law" Ruling
In remanding the case the Supreme Court recognized that if the water carrier exemption were "compelled by federal law," that might be sufficient justification.
CSX II
,
As an initial matter, we disagree with the district court that the water carrier exemption is "
compelled
by federal law" merely because the "imposition of a state sales [and use] tax on water carriers would
expose
the State to liability" under the Commerce Clause.
1. The Negative Commerce Clause
The Supreme Court applies a four-prong test to determine whether a
state tax violates the Commerce Clause.
See
Complete Auto Transit, Inc. v. Brady
,
The district court ruled that if imposed on water carriers the sales and use tax would not be fairly related to services that the State provides them because Alabama "provides virtually no services to interstate water carriers."
That ruling doesn't hold water. The Supreme Court rejected similar reasoning in
Commonwealth Edison Co. v. Montana
,
Instead, the fourth prong requires only that "the measure of a tax [be] reasonably related to the taxpayer's activities or presence in the State," in which case "the taxpayer will realize, in proper proportion to the taxes it pays, the only benefit to which the taxpayer is constitutionally entitled: that derived from his enjoyment of the privileges of living in an organized society."
Commonwealth Edison
,
Under the
Commonwealth Edison
standard, a tax on water carriers would be "fairly related" to the services provided by the State. It makes no difference that the federal government, instead of the State, foots the bill for barge-related services like river maintenance projects and commercial water traffic. The standard is unconcerned with "the services provided to the taxpayer on account of the activity being taxed."
Jefferson Lines
,
Water carriers purchasing or using diesel fuel in Alabama benefit from those privileges. That is doubtless true for the two categories of water carriers that, according to the record, regularly make landfall in Alabama. For example, water carriers engaged in "head-to-head competition" with CSX take product from feed mills "located between Decatur[, Alabama] and Guntersville[, Alabama] directly on the river system." Water carriers engaged in "river-to-truck competition" transport product from out of state to Albertville, Alabama and Ivalee, Alabama, where they "transfer [the product] and then truck it into their facilities." Those water carriers benefit from the State's provision of emergency services, access to the judicial system, roads, and other "advantages of civilized society," no matter how often they use those services.
See
Jefferson Lines
,
Even for water carriers that "may never contact state land,"
CSX Transp.
,
The question then is whether the "
measure
of the tax [is] reasonably related to the extent of [water carriers'] contact" with the state.
Commonwealth Edison
,
2. The Maritime Transportation Security Act
The State points to another federal law as compelling the water carrier exemption, arguing that taxing them could expose it to suit under the Maritime Transportation Security Act,
No taxes ... shall be levied upon or collected from any vessel or other water craft, or from its passengers or crew, by any non-Federal interest, if the vessel or water craft is operating on any navigable waters subject to the authority of the United States, or under the right to freedom of navigation on those waters[.]
And any such a lawsuit would not, in our view, succeed. The State bases its fears primarily on
Kittatinny Canoes, Inc. v. Westfall Township
, No. 183 CV 2013,
If as the State suggests § 5(b) of the Maritime Transportation Security Act invalidates the sales and use tax-which applies to diesel fuel because it is "tangible personal property,"
see
Properly construed, the Act forbids taxes imposed on the vessel itself, or on its crew members themselves, or on the passengers themselves-not taxes imposed on property purchased for use on or by a vessel, or by its crew, or by its passengers.
See, e.g.
,
Commercial Barge Line Co. v. Dir. of Revenue
,
If exempting water carriers from the sales and use tax that rail carriers pay is to be justified, it must be on some basis other than the Commerce Clause or the Maritime Transportation Security Act. The State has some more possibilities.
C. Other Justifications
The State advances two more arguments to justify the water carrier exemption: (1) "States can seek to avoid double taxation"; and (2) "States can charge a higher tax on a party that imposes higher costs on the State than its comparison class does." Neither argument persuades us.
1. Double Taxation
The State argues that the water carrier exemption is justified because water carriers pay $0.29 per gallon in federal tax in exchange for barge-related services.
The State cites only one decision in support of its avoiding double taxation argument.
See
Lawrence v. State Tax Comm'n of Miss.
,
Lawrence
involved a state's effort to avoid imposing two taxes on the same corporate income-once as the income comes into the corporation and again as that same income goes out as dividends.
Id.
at 284, 52 S.Ct. at 558-59. It did not involve, as this case does, a state tax and a federal tax that are of different types and serve different purposes.
See
And even if imposing a state tax and a federal tax that are measured in different ways and used for different purposes did qualify as "double taxation," the State offers no evidence that it has "adopted generally a policy of avoiding double taxation," which is necessary for two taxes to fall under
Lawrence
.
See
286 U.S. at 284, 52 S.Ct. at 558. Indications are that it does not have a policy of not taxing what the federal government taxes. For example, the State imposes an excise tax on diesel fuel that motor carriers purchase even though the federal government does too.
See
2. Disparate Burdens
The State also argues that the water carrier exemption is justified because water carriers "impose virtually no financial burden on the State" while rail carriers impose significant costs. The disparity in burdens, the State asserts, justifies the disparity in taxation.
The State relies on
Oregon Waste
,
The
Oregon Waste
decision does not control here. The Court's footnote musing about what might have been if something were different is doubtless dicta.
See
Edwards v. Prime, Inc.
,
Even if we could draw on dormant Commerce Clause decisions in deciding this 4-R Act case, the
Oregon Waste
dicta does not shed light on the sales and use tax at issue here. In that dicta the Court noted that evidence about disparate costs might salvage a facially discriminatory "cost-based surcharge."
Because the sales and use tax does not account for the relative burdens imposed by taxpayers, and because dicta from the dormant Commerce Clause decision in
Oregon Waste
does not control the result in this 4-R Act case, the State's "disparate burdens" argument does not justify the water carrier exemption. Having concluded that the water carrier exemption is not "compelled by federal law" and that neither of the State's "alternative rationales" justifies the water carrier exemption,
see
CSX II
,
VI. CONCLUSION
As to motor carriers, we agree with the district court that the excise tax is roughly equivalent to the sales and use tax because the average rates that rail carriers and motor carriers have paid differed "by some quantity between less-than-half-of-one cent and 3.5 cents" per gallon.
CSX Transp.
,
As to water carriers, their exemption is not "compelled by federal law."
CSX Transp.
,
We REVERSE the district court, hold that the State's sales and use tax violates the 4-R Act, and REMAND to the district court with instructions to enter declaratory and injunctive relief in favor of CSX consistent with this opinion.
Related
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