Gulf Oil Corp. v. State, Department of Revenue

755 P.2d 372, 101 Oil & Gas Rep. 413, 1988 Alas. LEXIS 43, 1988 WL 65481
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 25, 1988
DocketS-1985
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 755 P.2d 372 (Gulf Oil Corp. v. State, Department of Revenue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gulf Oil Corp. v. State, Department of Revenue, 755 P.2d 372, 101 Oil & Gas Rep. 413, 1988 Alas. LEXIS 43, 1988 WL 65481 (Ala. 1988).

Opinion

OPINION

MOORE, Justice.

In this case, we must determine the proper state tax treatment of some extraordinarily high tax payments made by Gulf Oil Corporation to Kuwait, Iran, Nigeria, Ecuador, Venezuela, and Angola (hereafter the “KINEVA” countries) — payments that amounted to nearly all of Gulf’s income in those countries. We must also determine the appropriate valuation of some Alaska oil drilling leaseholds that cost up to $12 million per year, but turned out to be nonproductive.

During the years in question, Alaska required companies that operated partly instate and partly out-of-state to compute their Alaska taxable income by multiplying their worldwide net income by the fraction of that income allocable to Alaska. Worldwide net income is determined pre-tax— that is, without deductions for income taxes paid to other jurisdictions. AS 43.20.-031(c). In determining its worldwide net income on its 1975 to 1977 Alaska tax returns, Gulf deducted taxes it paid to the KINEVA countries. Gulf reasoned that the foreign taxes were not income taxes, since they were based on imputed revenues slightly higher than actual revenues. The first question of this case is whether those payments were income taxes within the meaning of the Alaska tax statutes. If so, they ordinarily would not be deductible in determining worldwide income.

Another question, on Gulf’s 1972 through 1977 returns, involves the fraction of Gulf’s worldwide income allocable to Alaska. One factor in determining that fraction is the proportion of Gulf’s worldwide property located here. In that computation, property is ordinarily valued at cost. *374 AS 43.19.010, art. IV, 1! 11. We must determine whether Gulfs non-producing Alaska oil leaseholds should be valued at cost or at zero. Valuing the leaseholds at zero would decrease the fraction of Gulfs worldwide income allocable to this state, and thus decrease Gulfs Alaska tax.

Beyond statutory interpretation, both of these questions involve fairness: The apportionment statute grants the Department of Revenue (DOR) discretion to alter the amount of income allocated to this state, to avoid an unfair result. AS 43.19.010, art. IV, II18. Also, the federal Constitution requires that state taxes be fairly apportioned to value earned in the state. Gulf claims that to deny a deduction for the foreign “income taxes,” or to value the dry leaseholds at cost, would result in such a distortion as to violate the statutory and constitutional requirements of fairness.

I.

A. Formula apportionment

When a state seeks to tax a multi-state or multi-national business, it must determine the amount of income that is properly allocable to in-state activities. The traditional way of determining state income was through separate accounting by geographic area. In some contexts, though, this method has been criticized as too manipulable, and inadequately reflective of subtle but important contributions to income not resulting from formal ledger transactions. 1 See Container Corp. v. Franchise Tax Bd., 463 U.S. 159, 164-65, 103 S.Ct. 2933, 2940, 77 L.Ed.2d 545, 553 (1983); Mobil Oil Corp. v. Commissioner of Taxes, 445 U.S. 425, 438, 100 S.Ct. 1223, 1232, 63 L.Ed.2d 510, 521 (1980).

Consequently, most states that imposed a corporate income tax began to use the formula apportionment method to determine state income. Under this approach, state income is determined by multiplying a company’s worldwide income 2 by the fraction of that income attributable to in-state activities. The fraction is determined by a formula, using objective determinants of in-state activity. 3

In 1959, Alaska substantially adopted the Uniform Division of Income for Tax Purposes Act (UDITPA), which contains a three-factor apportionment formula. Ch. 175, § 1, SLA 1959; see AS 43.20.130 (repealed 1975). Then, in 1970, Alaska adopted the Multistate Tax Compact, containing an apportionment formula virtually identical to the one in the UDITPA. Ch. 124, SLA 1970. See AS 43.19.010, art. IV, lili 9-18. 4 The Supreme Court considers *375 this three-factor formula “a benchmark against which other apportionment formulas are judged.” Container Corp., 463 U.S. at 170, 103 S.Ct. at 2943, 77 L.Ed.2d at 556.

The first step in calculating an enterprise’s Alaska income pursuant to the UD-ITPA formula is to determine its worldwide income. Since 1975, the Alaska statutes have provided that “[i]n computing the tax under this chapter, the taxpayer is not entitled to deduct any taxes based on or measured by net income.” AS 43.20.031(c). 5 In other words, worldwide income in the Alaska formula is pre-tax income. 6 If Alaska allowed deductions for income taxes already paid to other states or countries, the worldwide income figure would be lower, thereby creating the possibility that Alaska would collect less tax than another jurisdiction simply by taxing later in time.

The next step in calculating the Alaska income of an enterprise is to determine the proportion of the company’s business done in Alaska. To arrive at this fraction, the UDITPA formula relies on three indicators of business activity — property, payroll, and sales. The fraction of worldwide income attributable to Alaska is computed by averaging the proportion of the taxpayer’s property that is located in-state, the proportion of the taxpayer’s payroll that is paid in-state, and the proportion of the taxpayer’s sales that occur in-state. AS 43.-19.010, art. IV, H1T 9-17.

In-state In-state In-state
property + payroll + sales
Alaska World-Total Total Total
taxable wide X property payroll sales
income income

The UDITPA formula provided a practical and generally fair approach to calculating the proportion of worldwide income earned in-state. As with any formula, however, it did not always perfectly ascribe the correct amount of income to Alaska. 7 - 8 For this reason, when the three-factor UD-ITPA formula produced unfair results, the apportionment statute gave the tax administrator discretion to use other reasonable methods to calculate in-state income. AS 43.19.010, art. IV, fl 18.

B. The KINEVA taxes

During the years in question, Gulf’s foreign oil production occurred primarily in *376 the KINEVA countries.

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Bluebook (online)
755 P.2d 372, 101 Oil & Gas Rep. 413, 1988 Alas. LEXIS 43, 1988 WL 65481, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gulf-oil-corp-v-state-department-of-revenue-alaska-1988.