In Re Nestle USA, Inc., Switchplace, LLC, and Nsbma, Lp

359 S.W.3d 207, 55 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 308, 2012 WL 424562, 2012 Tex. LEXIS 130
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 10, 2012
Docket11-0855
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 359 S.W.3d 207 (In Re Nestle USA, Inc., Switchplace, LLC, and Nsbma, Lp) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Nestle USA, Inc., Switchplace, LLC, and Nsbma, Lp, 359 S.W.3d 207, 55 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 308, 2012 WL 424562, 2012 Tex. LEXIS 130 (Tex. 2012).

Opinion

Justice HECHT

delivered the opinion of the Court.

In this original proceeding, petitioners seek a declaration that the Texas franchise tax 1 is unconstitutional, an injunction prohibiting its collection, and mandamus relief compelling the Comptroller to refund the taxes they paid from 2008 through 2011. Petitioners did not pay their taxes under protest or request a refund from the Comptroller, statutory prerequisites to taxpayer suits in the district court 2 but not, relators contend, for suit in this Court. We disagree. We hold that the statutory prerequisites are conditions on the legislative waiver of the State’s immunity from suit. Accordingly, we dismiss the case for want of jurisdiction.

Petitioners are Nestle USA, Inc., a Delaware corporation, Switchplaee, LLC, a Texas limited-liability company, and NSMBA, LP, a Texas limited partnership. Nestle and its affiliates manufacture and distribute food and beverages in the United States. In Texas, Nestle engages only in wholesale activities. Switchplaee, headquartered in Dallas, is a global temporary housing company that provides accommodations for relocation, business travel, temporary assignments, and other related services for businesses and their employees. NSMBA rents large equipment, such as generators, air conditioners, cooling towers, and trailers, for use in construction. Petitioners contend that the Texas franchise tax violates the Equal and Uniform Clause of the Texas Constitution 3 and the Equal Protection, 4 Due Process, 5 and Commerce Clauses 6 of the United States Constitution.

Taxpayer suits generally, and suits challenging the franchise tax in particular, are permitted by chapter 112 of the Tax Code. Section 112.052(a) provides that “[a] person may bring suit against the state to recover [a] ... franchise ... tax ... if the person has first paid the tax under protest as required by Section 112.051”. 7 Section 112.051 applies to a tax collected by the Comptroller “under any law”. 8 It requires that the protest must be submitted with *209 the payment, 9 must be in writing, 10 and must “state fully and in detail each reason for recovering the payment.” 11 A copy of the protest must be attached to the original petition, 12 and “[t]he issues to be determined in the suit are limited to those arising from the reasons expressed in the written protest as originally filed.” 13 Suit must be brought against the tax collector, the Comptroller, and the Attorney General 14 within ninety days after the protest payment is made. 15 Chapter 112 also allows injunctive relief, subject to conditions that include the prior filing of a statement of grounds with the Attorney General, and either the payment of taxes due or the posting of a bond for twice the amount due. 16

Chapter 112 also allows a taxpayer to sue following the Comptroller’s denial of an administrative refund claim. 17 The taxpayer must move the Comptroller for rehearing of the denial of the claim, pay any additional tax found due, 18 and bring suit against the Comptroller and Attorney General 19 within thirty days after the motion is denied. 20

Chapter 112 allows no other actions to challenge or seek refunds of the taxes to which it applies. Section 112.108 prohibits the issuance of any “restraining order, injunction, declaratory judgment, writ of mandamus or prohibition, order requiring the payment of taxes or fees into the registry or custody of the court, or other similar legal or equitable relief against the state or a state agency relating to the applicability, assessment, collection, or constitutionality of a tax” 21 other than an order issued as provided under the statute. 22 The only exception is that prepayment of the tax as a prerequisite to suit is excused when it “would constitute an unreasonable restraint on the party’s right of access to the courts.” 23

Petitioners did not pay their taxes under protest or ask the Comptroller for a refund. 24 They contend that the requirements of chapter 112 apply only to taxpayer suits brought in the district court and not to one brought as an original proceeding in this Court. Section 112.001 mandates that taxpayer suits permitted by chapter 112 be brought in the district court in Travis County. 25 But in 2006, the Legislature overhauled the Texas Franchise Tax Act and as part of those revisions, in section 24 of the bill, conferred on this Court “exclusive and original jurisdiction over a challenge to the constitutionali *210 ty of this [bill] or any part of this [bill]”. 26 Petitioners argue that section 24 jurisdiction creates a right to sue independent of chapter 112.

The text of section 24 does not support petitioners’ argument. As we noted in In re Allcat Claims Service, L.P., 27 section 24 is simply “a specific, limited exception” to section 112.001. 28 In all other respects, we observed, a taxpayer suit “is subject to chapter 112”. 29 We did not specifically consider the applicability of chapter 112’s protest-payment and refund-claim prerequisites to section 24 suits because the taxpayer in Allcat had complied with chapter 112. But the history of 112 shows the importance of its requirements in all taxpayer suits it permits.

Chapter 112’s procedures originated in the Suspense Statute of 1933. 30 The Suspense Statute provided that state taxes could be paid under protest and would then be held in suspense pending resolution of the taxpayer’s complaint in a suit brought by him against the public official who had collected the tax. Before then, a taxpayer could challenge a state tax in a suit for injunctive 31

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
359 S.W.3d 207, 55 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 308, 2012 WL 424562, 2012 Tex. LEXIS 130, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-nestle-usa-inc-switchplace-llc-and-nsbma-lp-tex-2012.