Everi Payments Inc., V Wa State Dept Of Revenue

432 P.3d 411
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedDecember 11, 2018
Docket50791-9
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 432 P.3d 411 (Everi Payments Inc., V Wa State Dept Of Revenue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Everi Payments Inc., V Wa State Dept Of Revenue, 432 P.3d 411 (Wash. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

Filed Washington State Court of Appeals Division Two

December 11, 2018

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DIVISION II EVERI PAYMENTS, INC., successor in No. 50791-9-II interest to, and formerly known as, GLOBAL CASH ACCESS, INC.,

Appellant,

v.

WASHINGTON STATE DEPARTMENT PUBLISHED OPINION OF REVENUE,

Respondent.

WORSWICK, J. — Everi Payments Inc., (Everi), a corporation that provides cash access

services at tribal casinos, appeals a superior court summary judgment order dismissing Everi’s

complaint for a business and occupational (B&O) tax refund. Everi argues that the B&O tax at

issue is improper because the tax is preempted by federal law through the Indian Gaming

Regulatory Act (IGRA), the Indian Trader Statutes, and the Bracker1 balancing test, and that the

tax is inconsistent with Department of Revenue Rule 192(7). Alternatively, Everi argues that if

the B&O tax is not completely preempted, there is a question of material fact as to the amount of

B&O tax Everi is obligated to pay because it was acting as the tribes’ agent when it received

some of its revenue.

1 The Bracker test balances federal, tribal, and state interests to determine whether federal law preempts state authority over conduct on tribal lands. White Mountain Apache Tribe v. Bracker, 448 U.S. 136, 142-45, 100 S. Ct. 2578, 65 L. Ed. 2d 665 (1980). No. 50791-9-II

We hold that the B&O tax assessed against Everi is neither preempted by federal law nor

inconsistent with Department Rule 192(7). Additionally, we hold that, as a matter of law, Everi

was not acting as the tribes’ agent when it collected revenue. Accordingly, we affirm the order

granting summary judgment to the Department of Revenue.

FACTS

Everi, formerly known as Global Cash Access Inc., is a Delaware for-profit corporation

headquartered in Las Vegas, Nevada. It is not a federally recognized Indian tribe or member of a

tribe. For its operations in the state, Everi employs Washington residents and also employs

nonresident employees who visit Washington and use Seattle-Tacoma airport and Washington

roads.

Everi provides cash access services to tribal casinos in the form of self-service kiosks

located on the casino floor.2 Cash access services include ATM (automatic teller machine)

withdrawals, credit card cash advances, debit card points-of-sale, and check cashing. Cash

access services allow patrons to obtain cash without leaving the casino floor. A casino patron

using cash access services pays a surcharge or transaction fee for the service. Everi

acknowledges that its cash access services and the kiosks are not games of chance or class I, II,

or III gaming. Everi also acknowledges that for the relevant time periods here, it did not track

whether kiosk patrons were Indian or non-Indian.

2 Everi’s only business activity at issue here is cash access services. Everi’s kiosks also provided “ticket-in, ticket out” for slot machine earnings redemption and bill-breaking. Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 946. Further, Everi was authorized by the Washington State Gambling Commission to sell gambling devices and games of chance.

2 No. 50791-9-II

To use one of Everi’s kiosks to access cash, a casino patron swipes or inserts his or her

debit or credit card. After validating the card, the machine requests the patron enter an amount

of cash to withdraw. Once the amount is entered, Everi’s kiosk notifies the patron that a fee will

be charged for the transaction and asks the patron if he or she agrees to pay the fee. If the patron

does not agree, the transaction is cancelled. No fee is collected if the transaction is cancelled. If,

however, the patron agrees to the fee, Everi then sends a request for approval for the cash and fee

to be withdrawn. The Everi kiosk sends the request for approval for the cash and fee to be

withdrawn to its third-party processor located in California.

The third-party processor obtains approval from the patron’s issuing financial institution

through the appropriate network (Visa, MasterCard, etc.). Once an approval message is

received, the patron’s financial institution sends the amount requested by the patron, plus the fee,

to Everi’s bank account, and the kiosk dispenses the requested cash to the patron. Everi earns

additional revenue from reverse interchange fees paid by the patron’s issuing bank to Everi.

Everi maintains contracts with a number of Indian tribes in Washington.3 These contracts

govern the types of services Everi provides and the amount of the fees Everi charges the casino

patrons for the cash access services. The contracts also determine what portion of the fees are

kept by Everi and what portion Everi distributes to the tribes as commissions. Depending on the

3 Everi was licensed by the Washington State Gambling Commission. As required by Washington-Tribal gaming compacts, Everi was a licensed gaming service provider for each tribe it contracted with. Washington-Tribal gaming compacts define “Gaming Services” as “the providing of any goods or services to the Tribe, whether on or off site, directly (or indirectly) in connection with the operation of Class II gaming in a Gaming Facility, including equipment, maintenance or security services for the Gaming Facility. Gaming Services shall not include professional legal and accounting services.” CP at 502.

3 No. 50791-9-II

contract, the commissions taken by the tribes were between 65 and 67 percent of the revenue

generated by all cash access transactions. The contracts stated that Everi was not exempt from

federal and state taxes based on its “net income, capital or gross receipts.” Clerk’s Papers (CP)

at 1240. The contracts did not expressly establish an agent/principal relationship between the

tribes and Everi.

The Department of Revenue audited Everi for the period of January 1, 2009 through June

30, 2012 and assessed $375,222 in B&O tax. Everi filed an appeal to the Department’s Appeals

Division, disputing the Department’s authority to tax the transaction. Everi’s appeal was

denied. Everi continued to pay B&O tax. From January 1, 2012 to December 31, 2015 Everi

paid a total of over $1,400,000 in B&O tax to the Department. The Department did not tax the

tribes on their gross revenue from commissions.

Everi then filed a Notice of Appeal and Complaint for Refund of Taxes in superior court,

seeking a refund of over $1,400,000 for the B&O tax assessed toward its on-reservation cash

access transactions. Everi contended that the tax was preempted by federal law and contrary to

the Department’s Rule 192. Everi filed a motion for summary judgment, and the Department

filed a cross motion for summary judgment. In its response brief to the Department’s cross

motion for summary judgment, Everi alleged that there was an issue of material fact regarding

the amount of gross income because it was acting as the tribes’ agent.

The trial court ruled that the B&O tax was not preempted by federal law because the

transactions at issue were between Everi and casino patrons, denied Everi’s motion for summary

judgment, and granted the Department’s cross motion for summary judgment. Everi appeals the

trial court’s summary judgment order.

4 No. 50791-9-II

ANALYSIS

I. LEGAL PRINCIPLES

We review the grant of a motion for summary judgment de novo and perform the same

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