Harris Cnty. Appraisal Dist. v. PXP Aircraft, LLC

569 S.W.3d 256
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 29, 2018
DocketNO. 01-17-00793-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 569 S.W.3d 256 (Harris Cnty. Appraisal Dist. v. PXP Aircraft, LLC) 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
Harris Cnty. Appraisal Dist. v. PXP Aircraft, LLC, 569 S.W.3d 256 (Tex. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

Michael Massengale, Justice

This is an appeal from a summary judgment rendered in favor of PXP Aircraft, LLC, a commercial aircraft owner that unsuccessfully protested an ad valorem tax penalty. The penalty was imposed pursuant to Tax Code section 21.10 for a late-filed application to allocate the portion of the aircraft's fair market value that fairly reflected use in Texas. On judicial review and cross-motions for summary judgment, the trial court ruled that the Harris County Appraisal District imposed the penalty in error. The appraisal district challenges jurisdiction over the petition for judicial review and argues that the trial court erred by granting summary judgment in favor of the taxpayer and by failing to grant its cross-motion for summary judgment.

We overrule the jurisdictional challenge but reverse the summary judgment and remand for further proceedings.

Background

PXP Aircraft, LLC owns several commercial aircraft that it leases to commercial air carriers. In January 2015, the Harris County Appraisal District sent a letter to PXP Aircraft about procedures to "render" the aircraft for appraisal. For these purposes, "rendition" is the reporting of taxable property by its owner to the appraiser.1 The appraisal district's stated "purpose" in sending the letter was to make PXP Aircraft "aware of rendition requirements." The letter advised that the deadline for filing the rendition statement was April 15, 2015, and that in some cases the application could be filed electronically using the appraisal district's "iFileTM system."

The appraisal district's letter did not explicitly address the separate statutory requirements for requesting an "allocation" of the market value of the aircraft among the several jurisdictions-inside and outside Texas-in which the aircraft were used. For these purposes, "allocation" is a determination of the ratio of usage of personal property within distinct geographic areas when the property has been used in more than one geographic area.2 If a commercial aircraft is used both *260inside and outside Texas, the owner may apply to the chief appraiser in the appraisal district for an allocation of the portion of the aircraft's overall usage that is attributable to Texas, and taxes are collected only for the allocable portion of the aircraft's fair market value that fairly reflects its use in Texas.3 While the January 2015 letter did not specifically address the procedure to request an extension to file the allocation application, it did state that the "iFileTM system is available to request extensions for all types of personal property accounts."

Before Tax Code sections 21.09 and 21.10 became effective on June 14, 2013,4 there was no statutory deadline for the allocation application. At the times relevant to this dispute, completed allocation application forms were due to be filed by May 1 every year.5 The chief appraiser was authorized to extend the allocation application deadline by written order for up to 60 days upon good cause shown.6 In contrast, renditions were due by April 15,7 one extension of the rendition-statement deadline to May 15 would be granted automatically on request, and an additional extension of 15 days was available "upon good cause shown in writing by the property owner."8

The chief appraiser shall accept and approve or deny an application for an allocation, even after the deadline for filing the application has passed, if the application is filed before the date the appraisal review board approves the appraisal records.9 When a late-filed allocation application is accepted and approved by the chief appraiser, the property owner is subject to a penalty.10 The Tax Code does not provide grounds for waiver of the penalty for a late-filed allocation application.11

PXP Aircraft electronically requested and received an automatic 30-day extension, to May 15, 2015, to complete its rendition filing for the aircraft.12 This request was acknowledged by the appraisal district in a document titled "Request for Extension to May 15 for Filing 2015 Rendition." The acknowledgement stated: "Your rendition extension request has been submitted." The document further stated: "The automatic 30-day extension of the deadline for filing a rendition on the property ... has been granted." It explained the procedure for obtaining "an additional 15 day extension based on good cause": "you must have filed a timely request for the *261May 15 extension" and "[y]ou must explain your reason for your good cause request."13 The document made no express reference to granting an extension to file the allocation application.

PXP Aircraft subsequently filed its rendition paperwork along with its allocation application form on May 14, 2015. Later that year, the appraisal district sent PXP Aircraft its 2015 Property Tax Statement for the aircraft. In addition to $12,800 in property taxes owed, the appraisal district assessed a penalty of $102,000. The statement noted that an "Allocation Penalty Exists."

PXP Aircraft asked the appraisal district to waive the penalty, paid the undisputed amount of the tax, and initiated a tax protest. In its notice of protest, PXP Aircraft challenged the penalty and asserted that it "should be waived/voided." PXP Aircraft also completed the appraisal district's penalty waiver request form. Of two choices reflected on the form-"Rendition Penalty" or "Additional Information Request Penalty"-PXP Aircraft marked a box indicating that the "waiver type" being requested was "Rendition Penalty."

PXP Aircraft sought review of the penalty before the appraisal review board. The review board conducted a hearing but denied PXP Aircraft the opportunity to present evidence or testimony. The review board ultimately upheld the penalty.

PXP Aircraft petitioned in Harris County district court for judicial review. The appraisal district filed a plea to the jurisdiction, and the parties later filed cross-motions for summary judgment with respect to the imposition of the penalty. PXP Aircraft sought a summary judgment to remove the penalty, arguing that its allocation application form was filed by the extended rendition deadline, and it had followed the appraisal district's procedures for allocation filings. The appraisal district argued that PXP Aircraft failed to appreciate the distinction between the Tax Code's separate allocation and rendition provisions and that the acceptance and approval of the late-filed allocation application required the imposition of an allocation penalty.

The trial court granted summary judgment to PXP Aircraft, denied the appraisal district's motion, and did not expressly rule on the jurisdictional plea. In its summary-judgment order, the court stated that PXP Aircraft "timely and properly rendered the Aircraft," that the penalty "was assessed in error," that the appraisal district "failed to remove and/or waive the penalty and interest once PXP Aircraft provided evidence that the property was timely and properly rendered," and that PXP Aircraft "is entitled to a waiver of the penalty and interest erroneously assessed."

Analysis

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Bluebook (online)
569 S.W.3d 256, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harris-cnty-appraisal-dist-v-pxp-aircraft-llc-texapp-2018.