In re Indianapolis Downs, LLC

462 B.R. 104, 2011 Bankr. LEXIS 4071, 55 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 170, 2011 WL 5101762
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Delaware
DecidedOctober 26, 2011
DocketNo. 11-11046 (BLS)
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 462 B.R. 104 (In re Indianapolis Downs, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Indianapolis Downs, LLC, 462 B.R. 104, 2011 Bankr. LEXIS 4071, 55 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 170, 2011 WL 5101762 (Del. 2011).

Opinion

OPINION1

BRENDAN LINEHAN SHANNON, Bankruptcy Judge.

Before the Court is Indianapolis Downs, LLC’s (“Indianapolis Downs” or the “Debtor”) motion for a determination of the legality of certain taxes under § 505(a) of the Bankruptcy Code2 (the “Tax Motion”).3 This contested matter4 presents a dispute between Indianapolis Downs, a corporate debtor in the gaming industry, and the Indiana Department of Revenue (the “Department”),5 a state taxing authority. The parties disagree over whether an Indiana tax reaches all, or only part, of the Debtor’s revenue from slot-machine wagering. The Debtor claims the latter, arguing that the tax does not extend to slot-machine revenue that it must, by statute, transfer to third parties. The Department insists, however, that the tax extends to all slot-machine receipts, without exception. The Department also challenges the Court’s jurisdiction over this dispute on the basis of sovereign immunity, the Tax Injunction Act, and various abstention doctrines.

The Court concludes that it has jurisdiction and that the Debtor’s view of the Indiana tax is correct. First, jurisdiction lies because § 505(a) of the Bankruptcy Code gives the Court the express authority [109]*109to determine the Debtor’s tax obligations. Second, the state tax does not reach the slot-machine revenues that the Debtor must set aside for others because the Debtor acts as a mere conduit for those funds; that is, it cannot use and does not enjoy the benefits of that money. The Court will grant the Tax Motion.

I. BACKGROUND

Indianapolis Downs, a debtor in these chapter 11 cases, operates a combined horse racing track and casino — “racino,” for short — in Shelbyvillé, Indiana. It employs over 1,000 people and provides its patrons a wealth of wagering options. In addition to betting on horse races, visitors to Indianapolis Downs can try their luck at roughly two thousand electronic wagering games, including slot machines. The games are available at Indianapolis Downs thanks to a 2007 law (as codified at Ind. Code § 4-35-1-1 et seq. (2011), the “Raci-no Statute”) that extended the privilege of operating slot machines beyond riverboat casinos, where they had been on offer since 1993, to the state’s horse racing tracks. Under the statute, two tracks may be licensed to run racinos; the Debtor is one of them.6 As a licensee, the Debtor is subject to all of the Racino Statute’s provisions, two of which give rise to this dispute.

The Graduated Tax: The Racino Statute imposes a graduated tax (the “Graduated Tax”) on the adjusted gross receipts (“AGR”) that the Debtor receives from slot-machines wagering.7 Id. § 4-35-8-1(a) (the “Graduated Tax Provision”). AGR includes “all cash and property ... received by a” racino from slot-machine wagering, minus what is “paid out to patrons as winnings” and certain “uncollectible” amounts. Id. § 4-35-2-2. Depending on how much AGR the Debtor takes in each year, the Graduated Tax rate ranges from 25% (on the first $100 million of AGR) to 35% (on AGR above $200 million). Id. § 4-35-8-1(a)(1)-(3). After applying the proper rate, the Debtor remits what it owes to the Department “before the close of ... business” the next day. Id. § 4-35-8-1(b).

The Set-Aside Funds: In addition to paying the Graduated Tax, the Debtor must, each month, “distribute” 15% of its slot-machine AGR (the “Seb-Aside Funds”) to various third parties, as detailed in the Racino Statute and its implementing regulations. Id. § 4-35-7-12(b) (the “Set-Aside Funds Provision”); 71 Ind. Admin. Code 1-1-1 et seq (2011).

• The first $1.5 million of Set-Aside Funds goes to “the treasurer of the state for deposit in the Indiana tobacco master settlement agreement fund[.]” Ind.Code § 4-35-7-12(b).
• The next $250,000 goes to “the Indiana horse racing commission, for deposit in the gaming integrity fund[.]” Id.
Funds beyond that go to horse racing purse trust accounts and to various horsemen’s associations to “promot[e] the equine industry or equine welfare^] or for a benevolent purpose that ... is in the best interests of horse racing in Indiana.” Id. § 4-35-7-12(b), (c); see 71 Ind. Admin. Code 4-2-7.
[110]*110• Finally, after the Debtor makes all of those distributions, and if certain statutory caps are met, any remaining Set-Aside Funds are deposited in Indiana’s general fund. Ind.Code § 4 — 35—7—12(j).8

For as long as it has been a racino, Indianapolis Downs has calculated and paid the Graduated Tax on its slot-machine AGR without excluding the Seh-Aside Funds. For instance, in the 2011 fiscal year, it paid Indiana approximately $69 million in Graduated Tax, of which $10.4 million represented taxes paid on the Set-Aside Funds. The Debtor objects to the $10.4 million payment, arguing that because it is statutorily obliged to distribute the Seh-Aside Funds to others, it never actually “receives” that money.9

In November 2010, five months before filing for bankruptcy, Indianapolis Downs filed a timely claim with the Department seeking a refund of all taxes it had paid to that point on the Seh-Aside Funds. The Department denied the claim and the Debtor appealed. On August 31, 2011, it lost the initial appeal at the administrative level.

Meanwhile, in April 2011, Indianapolis Downs voluntarily entered bankruptcy.10 Three months later, it filed the Tax Motion, asking the Court to enter an order under § 505(a)(1) of the Bankruptcy Code “declaring that the Debtor need not include the 15% Set-Aside [F]unds in its calculation and payment of the Graduated Tax.”11 Significantly, the Debtor does not use the Tax Motion to request a refund for the taxes it has already paid — the issue on which it lost its initial appeal in August. Rather, the relief sought in the Tax Motion is limited to fixing the Debtor’s present and future tax obligations. The Department objected to the Tax Motion12 and, following the Debtor’s reply,13 the Court heard oral argument.14 Because the Department has lodged several challenges to the Court’s jurisdiction, the Court’s analysis begins there, and then proceeds to the merits.

II. LEGAL ANALYSIS

A. The Department Challenges the Court’s Jurisdiction

The Department first contends that either sovereign immunity or the Tax Injunction Act, 28 U.S.C. § 1341, operate to shield it from the Court’s jurisdiction. But if the Court finds it has jurisdiction, the Department asks the Court to abstain [111]*111from hearing this dispute and allow an Indiana state court to decide it. The Court has carefully considered the Department’s arguments but rejects them.

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Bluebook (online)
462 B.R. 104, 2011 Bankr. LEXIS 4071, 55 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 170, 2011 WL 5101762, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-indianapolis-downs-llc-deb-2011.