In Re Louis Dreyfus Pipeline LP Tax Litigation

339 S.W.3d 378, 2008 Tex. LEXIS 1188, 2008 WL 5784599
CourtUnited States Judicial Panel on Multidistrict Litigation
DecidedApril 16, 2008
Docket08-0131
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 339 S.W.3d 378 (In Re Louis Dreyfus Pipeline LP Tax Litigation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Judicial Panel on Multidistrict Litigation primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Louis Dreyfus Pipeline LP Tax Litigation, 339 S.W.3d 378, 2008 Tex. LEXIS 1188, 2008 WL 5784599 (jpml 2008).

Opinion

*379 On Review By the Multidistrict Litigation Panel

Justice McCLURE

delivered the opinion of the MDL Panel.

Louis Dreyfus Pipeline LP (Dreyfus) is in the business of transporting crude oil and natural gas liquids. It owns and operates a pipeline system that winds through thirty counties of this state, from Liberty County in southeastern Texas to Winkler County in far west Texas. Dreyfus has filed individual lawsuits against 29 of the thirty County Appraisal Districts (Districts), challenging the appraised value of the pipeline for property tax purposes. It complains that the valuations were not based on the market value of the pipeline as required by Texas law.

Dreyfus has filed a motion to transfer these cases to a pretrial court for consolidated and coordinated pretrial proceedings. Rule 13 authorizes this panel to transfer “related” cases from different trial courts to a single pretrial court provided the transfer will accomplish two purposes: (1) serve the convenience of the parties and witnesses, and (2) promote the just and efficient conduct of the litigation. Tex. R. Jud. Admin. 13.3. In its motion, Dreyfus maintains that the underlying facts, circumstances, and legal arguments in these lawsuits are identical. It suggests that the only difference is the specific location of the pipeline which is inconsequential because the value of the pipeline does not vary from county to county.

*380 Plainly stated, the crux of the matter is whether Dreyfus has sufficiently distinguished its ad valorem tax cases from those we considered in Valero I and Valero II. 1 It has not. For the reasons set forth below, we deny the motion to transfer.

PROCEDURAL POSTURE

We begin with a bit of procedural history. Dreyfus asserts that multi-county property should be consolidated as a matter of law because the Legislature has determined that for property tax purposes, certain properties may be consolidated for appeal. Pipeline property regulated by the Texas Railroad Commission and located in more than one county may be consolidated for appeal in the district court of any county in which an appraisal review board order is appealed. Tex. Tax Code Ann. § 42.221 (Vernon 1993). Dreyfus argues that the Legislature has determined that common issues of fact and law predominate in property tax appeals involving pipelines like the one in issue here.

Dreyfus filed individual lawsuits in each of the 29 counties. It then filed a motion for transfer and consolidation of all of the cases in district court in Midland County. The motion was denied by the trial court because of what Dreyfus characterizes as a “technicality”. While it disagrees that the court’s ruling was correct, it concluded that “bringing this [Rule 13] motion is more efficacious than pursuing an application for writ of mandamus.”

The trial court’s order acknowledged that the purpose of Section 42.221 is to allow consolidation of appeals from various appraisal review boards when a petition for review is filed in a single district court. But it does not authorize a district judge to transfer to its docket petitions for review already filed and pending in another district against a taxing entity within that other court’s jurisdiction. While Section 42.221 offered a remedy, Dreyfus did not properly avail itself of relief. In mentioning this procedural posture, we should not be heard to express either agreement or disagreement with the trial court’s ruling. We mention it because we disagree with Dreyfus that the legislative intent behind Section 42.221 automatically entitles Dreyfus to a transfer pursuant to Rule 13. We thus proceed to the initial question before us.

ARE THE CASES “RELATED”?

Under Rule 13.2(f), cases are “related” if they involve “one or more common questions of fact.” Tex. R. Jud. Admin. 13.2(f); Tex. Gov’t Code § 74.162 (Vernon 2005). Dreyfus contends that the common issue among the 29 lawsuits is the correct appraised value of a pipeline for ad valorem tax purposes. It distinguishes our Valero opinions on this basis: the valuation of the Dreyfus pipeline does not involve the same “inherently individualized and local process.” Valero addressed challenges to the valuation of refineries, pipelines, terminals, and convenience stores by 42 appraisal districts. Here, argues Dreyfus, the issue is limited to the valuation of a single pipeline, the market value of which is not determined by local factors that vary from county to county. Dreyfus further claims that the pipeline system is personal property, not real property, which has been fully depreciated.

All of the defendant Appraisal Districts oppose consolidation and their reasoning is substantially similar. Indeed, they persuasively argue that the pipeline is not a *381 single homogeneous unit extending through multiple counties: “Rather, it is a web of feeder lines and lengths, which have different ages and sizes.” Because the value of a pipeline is not the same from county to county, they claim location is clearly relevant. The value is likely to be subject to a number of variables unique to each county. For example:

• The pipelines vary from county to county in diameter, condition, and age.

• The segments were built in stages such that they will be depreciated differently according to age and condition. Some segments in Anderson County were installed in 1993. The pipe in Pecos County was buried in 1955.

• Pipe in one county may require extensive maintenance while pipe in another county may be in good condition.

• Oñ or gas production in one part of the state may be greater than another, thus affecting demand for pipeline usage in that area.

• A willing buyer might pay more for new segments, and may factor in the repair history of each segment.

Nor, we are told, is the Dreyfus property limited to the pipeline itself. The properties in Navarro and Polk Counties include microwave repeater stations. Dreyfus also owns real property in Navarro County. 2 Bosque County informs us that Dreyfus’s property there includes a compressor station, a 310 foot communications tower, an eight inch oil pipeline installed in 1927, a twelve inch gas pipeline installed in 1947, a twelve inch oil pipeline installed in 1943 and an eight inch gas pipeline installed in 2006. In that regard, the Districts contend this case is indistinguishable from Valero. They submit that “the characteristics of pipeline segments are far more dissimilar to each other than inventory consisting of the same merchandise from store to store.” Like inventory, they continue, the appraised value of the segments will be determined by their own characteristics.

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339 S.W.3d 378, 2008 Tex. LEXIS 1188, 2008 WL 5784599, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-louis-dreyfus-pipeline-lp-tax-litigation-jpml-2008.