HCA-HEALTHONE, LLC v. City of Lone Tree

197 P.3d 236, 2008 Colo. App. LEXIS 1423, 2008 WL 4426896
CourtColorado Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 2, 2008
Docket07CA1446
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 197 P.3d 236 (HCA-HEALTHONE, LLC v. City of Lone Tree) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Colorado Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
HCA-HEALTHONE, LLC v. City of Lone Tree, 197 P.3d 236, 2008 Colo. App. LEXIS 1423, 2008 WL 4426896 (Colo. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

Opinion by

Judge BERNARD.

In this action for a refund of municipal use tax payments, defendants, the City of Lone Tree (the City) and its manager, appeal the district court's order granting summary judgment for plaintiff, HCA-Healthone, LLC (HCA). We affirm, and we remand to the district court to determine whether attorney fees and costs on appeal should be awarded to HCA.

I. Background

A. History of the City's Use Tax

The City was incorporated as a statutory city in December 1995. See §§ 31-1-208, 31-2-101, C.R.8.2008. In July 1996, the City Council adopted an ordinance (the 1996 ordinance). It had two express purposes: to impose a 1.5% tax on the sales of tangible and personal property, and the furnishing of services, that occurred in the City; and to establish a 1.5% use tax "for the privilege of using, or consuming, in the City ... any construction and building materials, purchased at retail."

The 1996 ordinance stated that, upon its adoption by the City Council, it would be submitted to the City's voters for approval at an election held in November 1996, to "be conducted in the manner provided by" Colorado Constitution article X, section 20, the Taxpayers' Bill of Rights (TABOR). This issue appeared on the November ballot, and its title stated: I

SHALL [THE CITY'S] TAXES BE INCREASED $3.0 MILLION ANNUALLY, SUCH REVENUES TO BE GENERATED SOLELY FROM A SALES TAX NOT TO EXCEED A RATE OF ONE AND ONE-HALF PERCENT PER DOLLAR OF TAXABLE TRANSACTIONS, BEGINNING IN FISCAL YEAR 1997, AND BY WHATEVER ADDITIONAL AMOUNTS ARE PRODUCED EACH YEAR THEREAFTER FROM A SALES TAX NOT TO EXCEED A RATE OF ONE AND ONE-HALF PERCENT PER DOLLAR OF TAXABLE TRANSACTIONS; AND SHALL THE CITY BE AUTHORIZED TO COLLECT AND SPEND, AS A VOTER APPROVED REVENUE CHANGE, SUCH SALES TAX REVENUES ... AS MORE SPECIFICALLY SET FORTH IN [the 1996 ordinance]?

A copy of the 1996 ordinance was incorporated as part of the ballot issue's language. The electorate approved the ballot issue, and the 1996 ordinance went into effect on January 1, 1997.

The City became a home rule city under section 31-2-204, C.R.S.2008, in May 1998. In May 1999, the City Council enacted a new ordinance (the 1999 ordinance), which repealed and replaced the 1996 ordinance. The purpose for the new ordinance was to create a "comprehensive sales tax [o]rdinance establishing the taxes, exemptions, collection and administrative authority and procedures." Like the 1996 ordinance, the 1999 ordinance established a 1.5% sales tax on the sales of tangible personal property and the furnishing of services; and a 1.5% use tax "for the privilege of using, or consuming in the City . any construction and building materials, purchased at retail." The 1999 ordinance was not submitted to the voters.

It was, however, repealed by an ordinance passed by the City Council in 2003 (the 2003 ordinance), which, as relevant here, significantly expanded the use tax to 1.5% "for the privilege of storing, using, distributing or consuming in the City any article of tangible personal property, purchased at retail." The 2008 ordinance stated that the 1999 ordinance would be repealed unless the 2003 ordinance was found to be unenforceable. If that event occurred, then the 1999 ordinance would be "deemed in full force and effect." Otherwise, the 2003 ordinance stated it would *239 become effective in July 2008. The 2008 ordinance did not contain any language requiring that it be approved by the City's voters.

In 2004, the City passed an ordinance (the 2004 ordinance) submitting the expanded use tax to the voters and, upon the voters' approval of the expanded tax, repealing the 2008 ordinance. The 2004 ordinance stated, in relevant part:

e TABOR "requires any tax policy change of a district that results or would result in a net tax revenue gain to have voter approval in advance"; and
@The City "proposes upon an approving vote of its qualified and registered electors to restate with amendment its sales and use tax ordinance which will constitute a tax policy change resulting in a net tax revenue gain without, however, any tax rate increase, new tax, extension of an expiring tax, or property tax increase or mill levy increase above that of the prior year."

The voters did not approve the 2004 ordinance at the November election.

After the defeat of the 2004 ordinance at the polls, City officials issued several documents which indicated that they believed that the existing use tax only applied to construction and building materials. For example, a December 2004 letter from the City's sales tax administrator stated that the City "does not require anyone to pay use tax other than on construction and building materials." The City also refunded use taxes paid by several businesses between 2003 and 2006 on property that did not constitute construction and building materials.

In May 2006, the City's voters approved a ballot issue that read:

SHALL CITY ... TAXES BE INCREASED BY UP TO $700,000 ANNUALLY FOR FISCAL YEAR 2003 (FIRST FISCAL YEAR DOLLAR INCREASE) AND BY WHATEVER ADDITIONAL AMOUNTS ARE PRODUCED EACH YEAR THEREAFTER, (SUCH INCREASE RESULTING FROM A CHANGE IN APPLICATION OF THE SALES AND USE TAX TO INCLUDE CERTAIN TRANSACTIONS OCCURRING OUTSIDE THE CITY FOR WHICH A CITY SALES OR USE TAX IS NOT OTHERWISE PAID, AND NOT FROM ANY SALES OR USE TAX RATE INCREASE, ANY NEW TAX, ANY EXTENSION OF AN EXPIRING TAX, AND NOT FROM ANY PROPERTY TAX INCREASE OR MILL LEVY INCREASE), AND SHALL SUCH INCREASED TAXES CONSIST OF SALES AND USE TAXES IMPOSED BY THE CITY THROUGH ORDINANCES ADOPTED FROM TIME TO TIME, SUCH ORDINANCES SUBJECT ONLY TO THE LIMITATIONS CONTAINED IN THE COLORADO AND U.S. CONSTITUTIONS§ ... AND SHALL THE DELAY IN VOTING ON THIS BALLOT QUESTION SINCE 2003 BE APPROVED AS A VOTER APPROVED DELAY OF UP TO FOUR YEARS AS PERMITTED BY [TABOR]?

In June 2006, the City Council passed an ordinance (the 2006 ordinance) that

impos[ed] a [1.5%] use tax to be paid by every person or entity for exercising the taxable privilege of storing, using, distributing or consuming tangible personal property at retail in the City.

The declarations of policy in the 2006 ordinance included a statement that (1) TABOR "requires any tax policy change of a district that results or would result in a net tax revenue gain to have voter approval in advance"; and (2) in May 2006, the City's voters

voted to restate with amendment the City's sales and use tax ordinance which will constitute a tax policy change resulting in a net tax revenue gain without, however, any tax rate interest increase, new tax, extension of an expiring tax, or property tax increase or mill levy increase above that of the prior year.

The 2006 ordinance became effective in July 2006.

Thereafter, the City posted information on its Internet website informing taxpayers about the "New ... Use Tax Regulations in Effect." The website stated that (1) the City had approved an ordinance "[this summer *240 ... that [has] an impact on all persons that do business in the City"; (2) "effective immediately, the City ...

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197 P.3d 236, 2008 Colo. App. LEXIS 1423, 2008 WL 4426896, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hca-healthone-llc-v-city-of-lone-tree-coloctapp-2008.