Loren Pourier, D/B/A Muddy Creek Oil and Gas, Inc. v. South Dakota Department of Revenue

2003 SD 21
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 26, 2003
DocketNone
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 2003 SD 21 (Loren Pourier, D/B/A Muddy Creek Oil and Gas, Inc. v. South Dakota Department of Revenue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Loren Pourier, D/B/A Muddy Creek Oil and Gas, Inc. v. South Dakota Department of Revenue, 2003 SD 21 (S.D. 2003).

Opinion

Unified Judicial System

LOREN POURIER, d/b/a MUDDY
 CREEK OIL AND GAS, INC., and
 MUDDY CREEK OIL AND GAS, INC.,

Plaintiffs and Appellants,
 v.
SOUTH DAKOTA DEPARTMENT OF REVENUE,

Defendant and Appellee.
 
[2003 SD 21]

South Dakota Supreme Court
Appeal from the Circuit Court of
The Sixth Judicial Circuit
Hughes County, South Dakota

Hon. Steven L. Zinter, Judge

VANYA S. HOGEN of
 Faegre & Benson LLP
Minneapolis, Minnesota

 

FRANK LAWRENCE of
 Holland & Knight LLP
 Los Angeles, California
Attorneys for plaintiff and appellants.

LAWRENCE E. LONG
Attorney General

 

 DAVID D. WIEST
 Assistant Attorney General
 Pierre, South Dakota
Attorneys for defendant and appellee.

 

MARIO GONZALEZ
 Pine Ridge, South Dakota

 

TRACY A. LABIN
Washington, DC
 Attorneys for Amicus Curiae
 Oglala Sioux Tribe.

Argued  November 19, 2002

Opinion Filed 2/26/2003


#22221

SABERS, Justice

[¶1.] Loren Pourier is an enrolled member of the Oglala Sioux Tribe and a resident of the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation in South Dakota.  Muddy Creek Oil and Gas, Inc., (Muddy Creek) is a South Dakota corporation whose sole shareholder and president is Pourier. The corporation’s principal place of business is Pine Ridge.  Muddy Creek purchased gas in Nebraska and trucked it to Pine Ridge for resale to consumers including reservation residents.  The South Dakota Department of Revenue (Department) imposed a state motor fuel tax on Muddy Creek and refused Muddy Creek’s refund request without a hearing.  Muddy Creek appealed to the circuit court.  After oral arguments, the circuit court entered an order remanding the case back to the Department for a full consideration of Muddy Creek’s claims.  The Department accepted the proposed decision against Muddy Creek from the Hearing Examiner and Pourier appealed that decision to the circuit court.  The court affirmed the Department’s ruling and Pourier appeals.  We reverse and remand.  

FACTS

[¶2.] Muddy Creek is licensed by South Dakota as a fuel importer, exporter, marketer and distributor.  It is also licensed by the Oglala Sioux Tribe to do business on the reservation, but does not hold a Federal Indian Trader license.

[¶3.] Muddy Creek purchases fuel at a terminal rack in Nebraska and trucks the fuel onto the reservation with its own tanker trucks.  The corporation sells the fuel at its retail gas station on the reservation.  It is apparently undisputed that approximately 90% of the purchasers are Indians who reside on the reservation.

[¶4.] South Dakota taxes motor fuel at in-state terminal racks and on importation.  SDCL 10-47B-5 and 10-47B-6.  Since Muddy Creek bought its motor fuel at an out-of-state terminal rack, it was taxed as an importer and was liable for the tax at the point of importation, regardless of use of the fuel once it entered the state.[1]   Muddy Creek has paid the tax under protest since 1995.  Pourier testified that he did not pass the tax through to his customers, but evidence at the administrative hearing led the circuit court to the finding that the tax was passed on to the consumers.  Specifically, sales to the federal government are exempted from the state motor fuel tax.  According to Muddy Creek’s own accounts and returns, the government paid 22 cents less per gallon than the pump price.  If Muddy Creek were not passing the tax on to the consumer, no such reduction from the pump price for the federal government would have been necessary.

[¶5.] Muddy Creek claims it is entitled to a refund of approximately $940,000.00 for taxes paid since July 1995.  The claim is based on the assertion that the State is taxing an Indian on an Indian reservation without explicit congressional authorization.  The circuit court held that the Hayden-Cartwright Act of 1936 provided the necessary authorization for the imposition of the motor fuel tax.  Muddy Creek appeals raising the following issues:

1.      Whether the Hayden-Cartwright Act expressly permits state taxation of motor fuel sales to tribal members by a Native American corporation operating on an Indian reservation.

2.      Whether Muddy Creek bears the legal incidence of the fuel tax.

3.      Whether the State’s motor fuel taxation scheme deprived Muddy Creek of procedural due process.

4.      Whether State statutes of limitation bar a challenge to an illegal tax in this case.

STANDARD OF REVIEW

[¶6.] SDCL 1-26-36 provides our standard of review for administrative appeals.  The statute

requires us to give great weight to the findings and inferences made by the [agency] on factual questions. We examine agency findings in the same manner as the circuit court to decide whether they were clearly erroneous in light of all of the evidence.  If after careful review of the entire record we are definitely and firmly convinced a mistake has been committed, only then will we reverse.  Questions of law, of course, are fully reviewable.

Sopko v. C & R Transfer Co., Inc., 1998 SD 8, ¶6, 575 NW2d 225, 228 (internal citations omitted).  Questions requiring application of a legal standard are reviewed de novo. Voeltz v. John Morrell & Co., 1997 SD 69, ¶9, 564 NW2d 315, 316.

[¶7.]

1.     

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Related

Pourier v. South Dakota Department of Revenue & Regulation
2010 SD 10 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 2010)
Pourier v. SD DEPT. OF REVENUE & REGULATION
2010 SD 10 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 2010)
Pourier v. South Dakota Department of Revenue
2004 SD 3 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 2004)

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Bluebook (online)
2003 SD 21, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/loren-pourier-dba-muddy-creek-oil-and-gas-inc-v-south-dakota-sd-2003.