Jones County School District v. Mississippi State Oil & Gas Board

CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMay 2, 2011
Docket2011-CA-00712-SCT
StatusPublished

This text of Jones County School District v. Mississippi State Oil & Gas Board (Jones County School District v. Mississippi State Oil & Gas Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jones County School District v. Mississippi State Oil & Gas Board, (Mich. 2011).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF MISSISSIPPI

NO. 2011-CA-00712-SCT

JONES COUNTY SCHOOL DISTRICT AND JONES COUNTY SCHOOL BOARD

v.

MISSISSIPPI DEPARTMENT OF REVENUE f/k/a MISSISSIPPI STATE TAX COMMISSION; MISSISSIPPI STATE OIL & GAS BOARD; BEAN RESOURCES, INC.; DENBURY RESOURCES, INC.; AND VENTURE OIL & GAS, INC.

AND

MISSISSIPPI DEPARTMENT OF REVENUE f/k/a MISSISSIPPI STATE TAX COMMISSION

JONES COUNTY SCHOOL DISTRICT; JONES COUNTY SCHOOL BOARD; BEAN RESOURCES, INC.; DENBURY RESOURCES, INC.; VENTURE OIL & GAS, INC.; AND THE SECRETARY OF STATE OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI

THE SECRETARY OF STATE OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI

MISSISSIPPI DEPARTMENT OF REVENUE f/k/a MISSISSIPPI STATE TAX COMMISSION

AND BEAN RESOURCES, INC.; DENBURY RESOURCES, INC.; AND VENTURE OIL & GAS, INC.

MISSISSIPPI DEPARTMENT OF REVENUE f/k/a MISSISSIPPI STATE TAX COMMISSION AND MISSISSIPPI STATE OIL & GAS BOARD

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 05/02/2011 TRIAL JUDGE: HON. FRANKLIN C. MCKENZIE, JR. COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: JONES COUNTY CHANCERY COURT ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANTS: TERRY L. CAVES JERRY DEAN SHARP WILLIAM GARNER CHENEY, JR. OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL BY: ROGER GOOGE, JR. NANCY MORSE PARKES ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEES: JAMES L. POWELL BRIDGETTE TRENETTE THOMAS STEPHANIE V. ROGERS HOWARD O. LEACH JOHN JEFFREY TROTTER GLENN GATES TAYLOR C. TED SANDERSON, JR. NATURE OF THE CASE: CIVIL - STATE BOARDS AND AGENCIES DISPOSITION: AFFIRMED IN PART; REVERSED IN PART AND REMANDED - 03/07/2013 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED: MANDATE ISSUED:

EN BANC.

PIERCE, JUSTICE, FOR THE COURT:

¶1. This case concerns three main issues. The first issue is whether a school district is

liable for oil and gas severance taxes on its royalty interests derived from oil and gas

production on sixteenth-section land. The chancellor ruled that it is not. He found that

2 sixteenth-section lands are held in trust for the benefit of local township schools and that

payment of severance taxes diverts money from the purposes of that trust. The second issue

is whether the statute of limitations restricts the time period in which a school district can

seek a refund of severance taxes that it had paid erroneously. The chancellor ruled that a

three-year statute of limitations applied to any refund claims. The final issue is whether a

school district is liable for administrative expense taxes on its royalty interests derived from

oil and gas production on sixteenth-section land. The chancellor ruled that it is. He

characterized these assessments as fees, not taxes, and reasoned that trustees are allowed to

pay reasonable expenses associated with administering trust property.

¶2. This Court finds that the judgment should be affirmed in part and reversed in part.

First, we acknowledge that school districts are not liable for oil and gas severance taxes on

sixteenth-section royalty interests, but for different reasons than those cited by the chancellor.

School districts, as political subdivisions of the state, are not included within the definition

of “persons” made subject to these taxes. Second, pursuant to Article 4, Section 104 of the

Mississippi Constitution, statutes of limitation in civil causes do not run against the state or

its subdivisions. The chancery court, however, should make a determination as to whether

the doctrines of waiver and/or estoppel apply in this case. Finally, school districts are liable

for administrative expense taxes on sixteenth-section royalty interests. These assessments

are “fees,” not “taxes”; the Legislature has expressly made the state and its subdivisions

subject to these fees; and no constitutional provision or other law is violated by requiring

school districts to pay them.

FACTS

3 ¶3. The Jones County School Board, which governs the Jones County School District,

leased sixteenth-section property to Venture Oil & Gas, Inc., for oil, gas, and mineral

exploration. The School District reserved a one-eighth royalty interest. From November 1,

1997, to September 30, 2006, Venture withheld the School District’s proportionate share of

oil and gas severance taxes from the School District’s royalty interest and remitted those

taxes on behalf of the School District.

¶4. In 2006, Venture and the School District learned of three Attorney General opinions

that had concluded that school districts’ royalty interests from oil and gas production on

sixteenth-section lands are not subject to any severance tax. These opinions are discussed

infra in Issue I.B.2. Based on those opinions, Venture and the School District requested a

refund of $248,277 from the Mississippi Department of Revenue.1 Months later, they also

requested a refund from the Mississippi State Oil and Gas Board of administrative-expense

taxes that Venture had paid to the Oil and Gas Board on the School District’s behalf.

¶5. The Department of Revenue denied Venture’s and the School District’s request for

a severance-tax refund. It found that Venture was “liable for the full amount of the severance

tax,” and it rejected the argument that no severance tax was owed just because oil and gas

production had occurred on state-owned land. Thereafter, Venture continued to withhold the

School District’s portion of the severance taxes, but it did not remit those taxes to the

Department of Revenue.

1 In 2009, as this litigation was pending, the Legislature eliminated the Mississippi State Tax Commission and created the Mississippi Department of Revenue and the Mississippi Board of Tax Appeals in its stead. 2009 Miss. Laws 1228-1379; see Miss. Code Ann. § 27-3-1 (Rev. 2010).

4 ¶6. The Oil and Gas Board, in contrast, initially granted a maintenance-tax refund of

$8,338. But, more than one year later, the Oil and Gas Board changed its stance. It took the

position that school districts are required to pay administrative-expense taxes on royalty

interests derived from oil and gas production on sixteenth-section lands.

¶7. Aggrieved by the Department of Revenue’s decision, Venture and the School District

filed suit in the Chancery Court of the Second Judicial District of Jones County. Venture and

the School District requested that the Department of Revenue be ordered to refund severance

taxes paid from November 1, 1997, to September 30, 2006, and sought “temporary,

preliminary, and permanent injunctive and declaratory relief” against further imposition of

any severance taxes.

¶8. Just before filing suit, the School District had written a letter to the Department of

Revenue and to the Oil and Gas Board. In its letter to the Department of Revenue, the

School District requested additional refunds for severance taxes that Eagle Oil and Gas Co.;

Denbury Energy Services, Inc.; and Bean Resources, Inc., had paid on its behalf. The total

refund request exceeded $2 million. The Department of Revenue responded that, according

to its records, the School District itself had never filed an “Oil and Gas Severance tax return.”

Thus, it denied the School District’s refund request because “only [a] taxpayer can seek

refund of an overpayment of taxes.” In its letter to the Oil and Gas Board, the School District

likewise sought a refund for maintenance taxes that Eagle and Denbury had paid on its

behalf.

¶9. More than two months after its initial suit, the School District filed a second suit. It

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Jones County School District v. Mississippi State Oil & Gas Board, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-county-school-district-v-mississippi-state-o-miss-2011.