HALL, Chief Justice:
Defendants Salt Lake County (the “County”) and State Tax Commission of Utah (the “Commission”) appeal from an order of summary judgment issued by the Third Judicial District Court in favor of plaintiff Kennecott Corporation (“Kenne-cott”). We reverse.
I. FACTS
The material facts in this ease are not in dispute. On May 24, 1983, Kennecott received a notice of assessment from the Commission informing Kennecott of its property tax 'liability (the “assessment”) for 1983. Kennecott filed a timely objection to the assessment pursuant to Utah Code Ann. § 59-7-12
and paid its taxes for 1983 under protest.
The assessment was based on Utah Code Ann. § 59-5-109,
now repealed. That section allowed counties to tax locally assessed property at a lower rate than state-assessed property. Before the Commission, Kennecott claimed that the assessment violated article XIII, sections 2 and 3 of the Utah Constitution
because it taxed Kennecott’s state-assessed property at a higher rate. That action, Kennecott alleged, violated article XIII’s prohibition against unequal taxation of property in Utah.
After an informal hearing on the issue in 1983, the Commission denied Kennecott’s petition to reduce the assessment. Before a formal hearing was held on the matter, this court decided
Rio Algom Corp. v. San Juan
County.
In
Rio Algom,
we determined that section 59-5-109 violated article XIII, sections 2 and 3 of the Utah Constitution and was therefore unconstitutional.
We also declared that our decision rendering section 59-5-109 unconstitutional would be prospective and effective on January 1, 1984, for all except the six plaintiffs before the court in that case.
As to those plaintiffs, the unconstitutionality of the statute would be retroactive.
At the formal hearing before the Commission on September 11, 1984, Kennecott again argued that the assessment violated its rights under article XIII, sections 2 and 3 and that the
Rio Algom
case should apply to it as well because its claim was pending before the Commission at the time
Rio Algom
was decided. On June 27,1985, the Commission issued a final decision sustaining the assessment. In its decision, the Commission interpreted
Rio Algom
as ap
plying retroactively only to the six plaintiffs in that case and not to Kennecott.
On November 24, 1985, Kennecott filed suit in district court to recoup the amount of tax paid under protest. Kennecott raised the same argument in district court as it raised before the Commission. The Commission filed a motion to dismiss, claiming that
Rio
Algom’s prospective application meant that section 59-5-109 was still valid as to Kennecott’s 1983 assessment. The district court denied the Commission’s motion, determining that the Commission was wrong in its conclusion that
Rio Algom
barred Kenneeott's claim for overpayment of taxes.
The district court then remanded the case to the Commission to determine the amount of tax money that Kennecott should be refunded. After the Commission determined that amount in August 1990, the district court granted Kennecott’s motion for partial summary judgment as to the assessment. This appeal by the County and the Commission followed.
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
The district court’s determination that
Rio Algom
does not bar Kennecott’s claim is a legal conclusion. We accord a trial court’s legal conclusions no deference but review them for correctness.
III. INTERPRETING
RIO ALGOM
Defendants claim that the district court erred when it determined that Kenne-cott was entitled to the same relief granted to the six plaintiffs in
Rio Algom.
They argue that
Rio Algom
specifically affords retroactive relief only for the litigants in that case and that it is otherwise prospective.
Kennecott asserts that
Rio Algom
did not reach the issue of whether litigants with claims pending at the time the case was decided could also benefit from the decision and that the decision therefore does not preclude us from determining that Kennecott may so benefit.
The decision reached by the court in
Rio Algom
bars all claims arising before the decision’s operable date, including Kenne-cott’s claim. As we stated there:
[W]e direct that our holding of unconstitutionality be prospective and effective only from and after January 1, 1984. As to the six plaintiff-taxpayers who are parties to this appeal, however, this decision shall be retroactive for the year for which this suit for refund was brought.
Hence, the opinion’s plain language dictates that it apply only to those litigants and only for 1981, the tax year for which the suit in
Rio Algom
was brought. Because Kennecott was not a party to that case and seeks redress for the 1983 tax year instead of 1981, it cannot partake of the relief provided the
Rio Algom
plaintiffs.
Kennecott’s claim that
Rio Algom
did not contemplate providing relief to those with claims pending and thus is not disposi-tive on that issue is not borne out by the case. In
Rio Algom,
we discussed explicitly the various ways of effectuating our determination that section 59-5-109 was unconstitutional:
[I]n cases holding that state taxes or assessment procedures were unconstitutional, numerous state courts have directed that their holdings should have only prospective effect.
[[Image here]]
... [S]ome decisions that give only prospective effect to a holding of unconstitutionality as to all other parties give the holding retroactive effect as to the litigants or others who have litigation pending.
This statement reveals that we were cognizant of the various available options for
applying our holding in
Rio Algom
and specifically rejected its application to “others who [had] litigation pending.”
Therefore,
Rio Algom
is controlling on the issue and specifically excludes Kennecott’s claim.
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HALL, Chief Justice:
Defendants Salt Lake County (the “County”) and State Tax Commission of Utah (the “Commission”) appeal from an order of summary judgment issued by the Third Judicial District Court in favor of plaintiff Kennecott Corporation (“Kenne-cott”). We reverse.
I. FACTS
The material facts in this ease are not in dispute. On May 24, 1983, Kennecott received a notice of assessment from the Commission informing Kennecott of its property tax 'liability (the “assessment”) for 1983. Kennecott filed a timely objection to the assessment pursuant to Utah Code Ann. § 59-7-12
and paid its taxes for 1983 under protest.
The assessment was based on Utah Code Ann. § 59-5-109,
now repealed. That section allowed counties to tax locally assessed property at a lower rate than state-assessed property. Before the Commission, Kennecott claimed that the assessment violated article XIII, sections 2 and 3 of the Utah Constitution
because it taxed Kennecott’s state-assessed property at a higher rate. That action, Kennecott alleged, violated article XIII’s prohibition against unequal taxation of property in Utah.
After an informal hearing on the issue in 1983, the Commission denied Kennecott’s petition to reduce the assessment. Before a formal hearing was held on the matter, this court decided
Rio Algom Corp. v. San Juan
County.
In
Rio Algom,
we determined that section 59-5-109 violated article XIII, sections 2 and 3 of the Utah Constitution and was therefore unconstitutional.
We also declared that our decision rendering section 59-5-109 unconstitutional would be prospective and effective on January 1, 1984, for all except the six plaintiffs before the court in that case.
As to those plaintiffs, the unconstitutionality of the statute would be retroactive.
At the formal hearing before the Commission on September 11, 1984, Kennecott again argued that the assessment violated its rights under article XIII, sections 2 and 3 and that the
Rio Algom
case should apply to it as well because its claim was pending before the Commission at the time
Rio Algom
was decided. On June 27,1985, the Commission issued a final decision sustaining the assessment. In its decision, the Commission interpreted
Rio Algom
as ap
plying retroactively only to the six plaintiffs in that case and not to Kennecott.
On November 24, 1985, Kennecott filed suit in district court to recoup the amount of tax paid under protest. Kennecott raised the same argument in district court as it raised before the Commission. The Commission filed a motion to dismiss, claiming that
Rio
Algom’s prospective application meant that section 59-5-109 was still valid as to Kennecott’s 1983 assessment. The district court denied the Commission’s motion, determining that the Commission was wrong in its conclusion that
Rio Algom
barred Kenneeott's claim for overpayment of taxes.
The district court then remanded the case to the Commission to determine the amount of tax money that Kennecott should be refunded. After the Commission determined that amount in August 1990, the district court granted Kennecott’s motion for partial summary judgment as to the assessment. This appeal by the County and the Commission followed.
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
The district court’s determination that
Rio Algom
does not bar Kennecott’s claim is a legal conclusion. We accord a trial court’s legal conclusions no deference but review them for correctness.
III. INTERPRETING
RIO ALGOM
Defendants claim that the district court erred when it determined that Kenne-cott was entitled to the same relief granted to the six plaintiffs in
Rio Algom.
They argue that
Rio Algom
specifically affords retroactive relief only for the litigants in that case and that it is otherwise prospective.
Kennecott asserts that
Rio Algom
did not reach the issue of whether litigants with claims pending at the time the case was decided could also benefit from the decision and that the decision therefore does not preclude us from determining that Kennecott may so benefit.
The decision reached by the court in
Rio Algom
bars all claims arising before the decision’s operable date, including Kenne-cott’s claim. As we stated there:
[W]e direct that our holding of unconstitutionality be prospective and effective only from and after January 1, 1984. As to the six plaintiff-taxpayers who are parties to this appeal, however, this decision shall be retroactive for the year for which this suit for refund was brought.
Hence, the opinion’s plain language dictates that it apply only to those litigants and only for 1981, the tax year for which the suit in
Rio Algom
was brought. Because Kennecott was not a party to that case and seeks redress for the 1983 tax year instead of 1981, it cannot partake of the relief provided the
Rio Algom
plaintiffs.
Kennecott’s claim that
Rio Algom
did not contemplate providing relief to those with claims pending and thus is not disposi-tive on that issue is not borne out by the case. In
Rio Algom,
we discussed explicitly the various ways of effectuating our determination that section 59-5-109 was unconstitutional:
[I]n cases holding that state taxes or assessment procedures were unconstitutional, numerous state courts have directed that their holdings should have only prospective effect.
[[Image here]]
... [S]ome decisions that give only prospective effect to a holding of unconstitutionality as to all other parties give the holding retroactive effect as to the litigants or others who have litigation pending.
This statement reveals that we were cognizant of the various available options for
applying our holding in
Rio Algom
and specifically rejected its application to “others who [had] litigation pending.”
Therefore,
Rio Algom
is controlling on the issue and specifically excludes Kennecott’s claim.
Alternatively, Kennecott asks this court to reject the selective-prospectivity approach used in
Rio Algom
and instead to adopt an approach in which a new rule of law will always be applied retroactively to other litigants. In support of this argument, Kennecott cites
James B. Beam Distilling Co. v.
Georgia,
in which a plurality of the United States Supreme Court rejected the use of selective prospectivity in a tax case.
In
Beam,
the plaintiff, a Kentucky bourbon manufacturer, brought an action against the state of Georgia, alleging that a Georgia statute that imposed an excise tax on imported alcohol at double the rate of the tax on alcohol manufactured from Georgia-grown products violated the Commerce Clause
of the United States Constitution.
Shortly before plaintiff Beam brought its case, the Supreme Court, in
Bacchus Imports, Ltd. v. Dias,
struck down as unconstitutional a Hawaii statute that similarly differentiated between imported and local alcoholic products. In
Beam,
the Georgia Supreme Court affirmed the trial court’s determination that the tax scheme violated the Commerce Clause and that the statute’s invalidation would be applied prospectively only.
In a decision that includes five separate opinions, the Supreme Court reversed the state court’s holding as to prospectivity and instead held that the
Bacchus
decision applied retroactively to the plaintiff in
Beam.
Although the
Beam
plurality retroactively applied a decision invalidating a statute to a similarly situated litigant, this court is not bound to do the same. As Justice Souter noted in the lead opinion, “[S]ince the question is whether the court should apply the old rule or the new one, retroac-tivity is properly seen in the first instance as a matter of choice of law, ‘a choice ... between the principle of forward operation and that of relation backward.’ ”
That choice, Justice Souter continued, “is a
federal
one where the rule at issue itself derives from
federal law,
constitutional or otherwise.”
It follows from that analysis that when the rule involved is one of state law, as is the case here, the decision of prospectivity or retroactivity belongs to the state.
Moreover, Justice Souter’s opinion was based on “stare decisis and the rule of law generally[,]” as opposed to any constitutional provision.
Beam
therefore
provides no constitutional rule that would mandate our adherence.
This court has developed a sound theoretical framework for determining when a new rule of law in a civil case will be applied retroactively. In
Van Dyke v.
Chappell,
we noted that retroactive or prospective operation is not a question of judicial power but instead depends “solely upon an appraisal of the relevant judicial policies to be advanced.”
We stated that in making the determination,
we look to the impact retroactive application would have on those affected. When we conclude that there has been justifiable reliance on the prior state of the law or that the retroactive application of the new law may otherwise create an undue burden, the court may order that a decision apply only prospectively.
We think that our framework is sound and decline to abandon it for the analysis set forth by the
Beam
plurality.
Applying the above test to the facts in this case makes it clear that retroactivity would not be appropriate. As we stated above, allowing recovery would be contrary to the holding in
Rio Algom.
Moreover, the County relied justifiably on its belief that section 59-5-109 was valid when it collected taxes from Kennecott and other taxpayers. To permit Kennecott and unknown others to collect taxes paid before the statute was declared unconstitutional would place an undue and unexpected financial burden on the County. For the foregoing reasons, the trial court’s decision that
Rio Algom
does not preclude Kenne-cott from seeking a tax refund is incorrect and must be reversed.
IV. CONSTITUTIONALITY OF SELECTIVE PROSPECTIVITY
Kennecott asserts that allowing the
Rio Algom
plaintiffs to recoup for an unconstitutional tax assessment but denying it relief will violate its rights to due process and equal protection under the United States and Utah Constitutions. The record of the proceedings below does not indicate that Kennecott raised either an equal protection challenge under the federal or the state constitution or a separate due process claim under the Utah Constitution. Because those claims were not raised before the trial court, we will not consider them on appeal.
We therefore address only Ken-necott’s claim under the Due Process Clause of the United States Constitution.
In support of its due process claim, Ken-necott cites the United States Supreme Court case of
McKesson Corp. v. Division of Alcoholic Beverages & Tobacco.
In
McKesson,
the Florida Supreme Court held that the state’s liquor tax scheme violated the Commerce Clause but refused to grant a refund to the plaintiff McKesson for tax
es paid pursuant to the unconstitutional tax.
The United States Supreme Court reversed, holding that the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment mandates that the state provide some relief to rectify the unconstitutional deprivation of the taxes the petitioner paid under protest.
McKesson
is inapplicable here. In
McKesson,
the Court repeatedly stated that its decision was based on Florida’s violation of the Commerce Clause.
In this case, the tax scheme was stricken as a violation of the Utah Constitution’s prohibition against unequal taxation. No federal law ' was involved. This court has repeatedly recognized that “[t]he purely prospective application of a state court decision overruling prior authority in a civil case [involving state law] violates no right under the United States Constitution.”
Thus, federal law does not govern the question of whether a state court decision involving state law should be applied retroactively or prospectively.
Our conclusion is supported by the oft-cited case of
Great Northern Railway v. Sunburst Oil & Refining
Co.,
in which the Supreme Court determined that a state court’s refusal to make a ruling retroactive did not violate the Due Process Clause of the United States Constitution. In so holding, Justice Cardozo stated:
[T]he Federal Constitution has no voice upon the subject [of retroactivity versus prospectivity]. A state in defining the limits of adherence to precedent may make a choice for itself between the principle of forward operation and that of relation backward....
The choice for any state may be determined by the juristic philosophy of the judges of her courts, their conceptions of law, its origin and nature. We review, not the wisdom of their philosophies, but the legality of their acts.
We find no violation of the United States Constitution’s due process guarantee.
Moreover,
McKesson
involved a situation in which a plaintiff successfully challenged a tax scheme but was being denied a remedy by the state.
Thus, the plaintiff had an actual right to recover and was being denied an adequate remedy.
Here, Ken-necott seeks to recover money it paid for the 1983 tax year. Unlike the plaintiff in
McKesson,
Kennecott has no right to a remedy because the decision invalidating section 59-5-109 did not take effect until January 1, 1984, after its taxes for 1983 became due.
For the foregoing reasons, we hold that Kennecott is not entitled to the relief afforded the
Rio Algom
plaintiffs. The decision of the trial court is therefore reversed.
HOWE, Associate C.J., DURHAM and ZIMMERMAN, JJ., and BILLINGS, Court of Appeals Judge, concur.
STEWART, J., having disqualified himself, does not participate herein; BILLINGS, Court of Appeals Judge, sat.