Gulf Chemical & Metallurgical Corp. v. Hegar

460 S.W.3d 743, 2015 Tex. App. LEXIS 2825, 2015 WL 1478195
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 26, 2015
DocketNO. 03-12-00772-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 460 S.W.3d 743 (Gulf Chemical & Metallurgical Corp. v. Hegar) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gulf Chemical & Metallurgical Corp. v. Hegar, 460 S.W.3d 743, 2015 Tex. App. LEXIS 2825, 2015 WL 1478195 (Tex. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

OPINION

David Puryear, Justice

Gulf Chemical and Metallurgical Corporation brought suit under Texas Tax Code Chapters 112 and 171 to recover $1,357,920 in franchise taxes that it paid for tax years 2005, 2006, and 2007. After the parties agreed to an order bifurcating the non-jury trial, the trial court tried the issue of whether the methodology that Gulf sought to use in calculating its franchise tax apportionment factor for the years at issue was proper. The trial court found that Gulfs methodology was not proper and entered a final judgment concluding that Gulf was not entitled to any refund. Gulf appeals. We will reverse the trial court’s judgment and remand this cause for further proceedings to determine the amount of refund to which Gulf is entitled.

BACKGROUND

Gulf performs environmental disposal and recycling services for oil refineries by processing their spent fuel catalyst, recovering the precious metals contained therein, and selling the metals at a profit. According to the deposition of Gulfs controller, Jeffrey Masters, Gulf charges a “service payment” or “environmental fee” to each refinery customer and, as part of the same transaction, provides the customer with a discount in the form of ■ a “metal purchase payment” or “metals credit,” which functions as a form of profit-sharing from the metal sales with the customer. Masters explained that even though the two amounts are identified separately on invoices, Gulf considers them as comprising one transaction, and the amounts are “netted” together in determining whether the customer owes Gulf or Gulf owes the customer, depending on the quantity and value of the metals contained in each receipt of spent catalyst.

Masters testified that the “whole purpose” of Gulfs business is to extract and sell the precious metals from the spent catalyst and that without the metal extraction and sale, its “environmental reclamation services” would be “a losing proposition.” He referred to Gulfs acquiring the spent catalyst as a “purchase” from the refineries and noted that Gulfs general ledger tracks the service payments and metals credits separately for internal “management reporting pur[745]*745poses” and “tracking costs.”1 Despite these separately tracked “trial balance” accounts, Masters testified that there is a difference between “management reporting” and “financial reporting.” Management reporting, he explained, is used for internal purposes, while financial reporting must comply with generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP) and is used for federal and external reporting. Masters testified that under GAAP the service payments and metals credits should be “netted” together to determine Gulfs gross revenue.

Several contracts between Gulf and its customers were submitted as joint exhibits at trial. One contract representative of those in effect for the years at issue specified that Gulfs customer would pay it a “treatment charge of U.S. $[redacted amount] per ton [of spent catalyst] less metal credits based on the ‘As Received Weight’ of the spent catalyst.” Gulf agreed to “apply a credit for content of primary metals contained in the spent catalyst” and that the “metals credit shall be credited [to customer] to offset the treatment charge.”2 The contract further specified that Gulf would submit “one invoice to [customer] by the 15th of every month along with a statement showing ... quantity of spent catalyst processed, metals credits, processing fee, [and] net fee owing by [customer] or payment to [customer].”

Also admitted as joint exhibits were reports of independent auditors reviewing Gulfs financial statements for each of the three tax years. Under a heading entitled “Revenue Recognition,” these reports represented that Gulf “records environmental sales revenue, net of estimated metals credits, when the spent catalyst has been delivered to [Gulfl’s plant” and that “[f]or those sales under specified customer agreements, which have variable contingent pricing components, net revenue, if any, related to the variable contingent component is not recognized until such time as the price is fixed and determinable.”

Gulfs expert witness, CPA Lester Sprouse, testified that GAAP governs corporations using the accrual method of accounting, which method is appropriate for Gulfs type of business and which method Gulf used during the tax years at issue.3 He also testified that the “metals credits” Gulf provides to' its refinery customers must be considered “allowances” or “sales incentives” under GAAP because they operate as “contra-revenue” to reduce gross receipts. In other words, as a corporation using the accrual method and subject to GAAP, Gulf should net the metals credits with the service payments in determining gross revenue rather than consider the sum total of the service payments as gross revenue.

In reviewing Gulfs federal income tax returns for the three years, Sprouse identified a non-material, “presentation” error in which Gulf erroneously included the metals credits on line 2 of its form 11204 [746]*746as “cost of goods sold” rather than as an “allowance” on line 1, which would have reduced its “gross receipts” entered on line l.5 Sprouse averred that not only would it have been “appropriate” for Gulf to have deducted the metals credits before determining gross revenue, but because Gulf was using the accrual method and following GAAP, the metals credits “should have been netted in [Gulfs] gross receipts” on line 1. However, Sprouse testified that the way a corporation “presents” its gross receipts on form 1120, even if erroneous, does not “change” the accounting method it uses in its business or affect GAAP’s treatment of allowances. With respect to this particular error, Sprouse noted that there was no need or incentive for Gulf to amend its federal tax returns because there would have been no difference in its ultimate tax liability (because the metals credits were deducted elsewhere from taxable income) and, therefore, “no reason” to amend; amendment would merely constitute an added expense.

The trial court also admitted as a joint exhibit an abstract issued by the Emerging Issues Task Force (EITF) which, according to Sprouse, is a subcommittee of the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants and Financial Accounting Standards Board. Sprouse explained that this abstract, known as EITF 01-09, became effective in 2002. See Emerging Issues Task Force Issue No. 01-09, Accounting for Consideration Given by a Vendor to a Customer (Including a Reseller of the Vendor’s Products) (abstract), ¶ 9. EITF 01-09 specifies that its purpose is to “codify and reconcile [certain issues addressing] the accounting for consideration given by a vendor to a customer.” It further states that “cash consideration (including a sales incentive) given by a vendor to a customer is presumed to be a reduction of the selling prices of the vendor’s products or services and, therefore, should be characterized as a reduction of revenue when recognized in the vendor’s income statement.” Sprouse explained that as soon as EITF abstracts are issued, “they become GAAP,” and that EITF 01-09 specifically applies to the metals credits here, which operate as sales incentives, requiring them to be netted against gross receipts. The Comptroller did not rebut Sprouse’s or Masters’s testimony.

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460 S.W.3d 743, 2015 Tex. App. LEXIS 2825, 2015 WL 1478195, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gulf-chemical-metallurgical-corp-v-hegar-texapp-2015.