D90 Energy, LLC v. Jefferson Davis Parish Board of Review

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 30, 2019
DocketCA-0019-0243
StatusUnknown

This text of D90 Energy, LLC v. Jefferson Davis Parish Board of Review (D90 Energy, LLC v. Jefferson Davis Parish Board of Review) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
D90 Energy, LLC v. Jefferson Davis Parish Board of Review, (La. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

STATE OF LOUISIANA

COURT OF APPEAL, THIRD CIRCUIT

19-243 c/w 19-244 c/w 19-245

D90 ENERGY, LLC

VERSUS

JEFFERSON DAVIS PARISH BOARD OF REVIEW

************ APPEAL FROM THIRTY-FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT, PARISH OF JEFFERSON DAVIS, NO. C-1-16; C-619-16; C-181-17 HONORABLE STEVE GUNNELL, DISTRICT JUDGE

************ SYLVIA R. COOKS JUDGE ************

Court composed of Sylvia R. Cooks, Billy H. Ezell, and John E. Conery, Judges.

REVERSED, JUDGMENT VACATED; JEFFERSON DAVIS BOARD OF REVIEW DECISION REINSTATED.

Brian A. Eddington 3060 Valley Creek Drive, Suite A Baton Rouge, LA 70808 (225) 924-4066 Attorney for Appellant, Donald Kratzer, Jefferson Davis Parish Assessor

Phyllis D. Sims Linda S. Akehin Angela Adolph Kean Miller LLP 400 Convention Street, Suite 700 Baton Rouge, LA 70802 (225) 387-0999 Attorneys for Appellee, D90 Energy, LLC

Terrence D. McCay Kean Miller LLP One Lakeshore Drive, Suite 1150 Lake Charles, LA 70629 (337) 430-0350 Kyle P. Polozola Kean Miller LLP 2020 W. Pinhook Road, Suite 303 Lafayette, LA 70508 (337) 235-2232 Attorney for Appellee, D90 Energy, LLC COOKS, Judge.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

D90 Energy, LLC (D90) acquired three oil wells and one saltwater disposal

well in Jefferson Davis Parish in October 2012. D90’s tax representative, Cochran

& Company (Cochran), submitted a letter to Jefferson Davis Tax Assessor, Donald

Kratzer (Kratzer), in March of 2013, with a copy of a document identified as an

“Assignment, Conveyance and Bill of Sale” (Bill of Sale) along with a copy of a

cancelled check in the amount of $100,000. On the basis of these documents

Cochran asserted its client D90 had purchased the three wells in Jefferson Davis

Parish from Goldking Resources for the sum of $100,000, despite the written

representation in the Bill of Sale that the wells were purchased “for and in

consideration of Ten and No/100 ($10) and other good and valuable consideration.”

No other documentation was provided to Kratzer by D90 or anyone on its behalf.

Based on its letter and attached documentation, Cochran asserted D90’s wells should

be valued by Kratzer at $100,000 for tax assessment purposes. D90 submitted these

same documents for subsequent tax years including 2014 and 2015, asserting each

time these wells should be valued at $100,000 for tax assessment purposes. For tax

year 2016, D90 informed Kratzer that the wells were all shut in but provided no

supporting documentation. Based upon that representation D90 asserted the

property should now be valued at $10,000. Kratzer found public information from

the State of Louisiana indicating the wells were shut in as of June 2, 2017.

Kratzer did not consider the information submitted by D90 sufficient to make

a determination of the value for assessing ad valorem property taxes on these wells.

Additionally, Kratzer did not use D90’s suggested sales price valuation approach as

the sole method to establish fair market value, but, instead, used valuation tables

promulgated by the Louisiana Tax Commission (Commission) which resulted in a

valuation of $3,347,240 for tax year 2013 and $3,347,240 for tax year 2014. The method used for valuation was based on the “age of the well; the depth of the well;

the type of well; and the production.” The Jefferson Davis Parish Board of Review

(the Board) determined the values to be the same as those of Assessor Kratzer. D90

appealed that decision to the Louisiana Tax Commission (Commission). The

Commission’s Assistant Director, Celeste Moss, calculated the value for tax year

2013 at $3,344,584, according to her application of the Commission’s Rules and

Regulations. The Commission, using documentary evidence and testimony

presented at the hearing before it, determined that the correct fair market value of

the property for 2013 and 2014 was $235,000. The Commission arrived at this

valuation accepting D90’s evidence of a purchase price of $100,000 and D90’s

evidence submitted to the Commission that it had a plug-and-abandon liability cost

of $135,000 for each of the three wells. Assessor Kratzer, having been provided the

same information by D90 for tax year 2015 as for the previous years assessed the

wells at $3,140,372 for tax year 2015. D90 suggested to Kratzer that the actual

value, based on the alleged sale price, should be $100,000. The Board upheld the

assessor’s valuation. The Commission set a fair market value for tax year 2015 at

the same $235,000 as for the previous tax years on the same basis. For tax year

2016, Kratzer valued the property at $1,821,213. D90 maintained the value for tax

year 2016 should be lowered to $10,000 based on its assertion that the wells were

shut in as of December 2016. The Board again upheld Kratzer’s valuation. The

Commission set the fair market value for tax year 2016 at $145,000.

D90 paid its tax obligation for 2013 and 2014 under protest but it did not pay

any tax, under protest or otherwise, for tax years 2015 and 2016. D90 objected to

all four years of assessments and filed protests with the Jefferson Davis Board of

Review. The Board denied all of D90’s protests and upheld Kratzer’s assessments

for 2013, 2014, 2015 and 2016. D90 appealed those rulings to the Louisiana Tax

Commission. Kratzer filed exceptions challenging D90’s right to attack the

2 assessments for 2015 and 2016 because D90 had not paid those taxes under protest

or otherwise.

At the hearing before the Tax Commission D90 introduced new evidence and

testimony in addition to the documents it originally provided to Kratzer. As to the

information regarding each tax year submitted to the Commission in support of

D90’s position it is admitted that all such information regarding a given tax year was

available to D90 at the time it or its agent submitted the original limited information

to Kratzer. The Commission rendered a decision in which it determined the fair

market value of the wells as recited above. It did not rule on Kratzer’s exceptions

concerning tax years 2015 and 2016, stating:

The Commission rules allow for properly documented sales to be considered by the Assessor as evidence of Fair Market Value. Based on testimony and the evidence provided at [sic] hearing, we find the Fair Market Value of the wells in questions [sic] to be $100,000, plus the cost of plugging and abandonment. The Taxpayer stated that the prior owner was beginning the process to plug and abandon and, therefore, discounted the wells by an equal amount, which was reflected in the sales price.

Therefore, the total Fair Market Value for each of years 2013 and 2014 of the wells in question should be $235,000 considering the $100,000 purchase price and the plug and abandon liability cost of $135,000 for the three wells.

Despite D90’s admission at the hearing that it had not paid any amount of its

2015 or 2016 tax obligation, the Commission reached the same decision regarding

tax years 2015 and 2016 without mentioning Kratzer’s exceptions. Kratzer appealed

the Commission’s rulings to the district court. The cases were consolidated and after

a hearing on the consolidated matters the district court affirmed the Commission’s

rulings and ordered all taxes paid under protest be refunded to D90. The trial court

stated its reasons for ruling orally:

I have to look at it from the viewpoint that the tax commissioners listened to the testimony. It viewed the witnesses. I do that all the time. It goes up on appeal, okay.

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