Lscp, Lllp v. Courtney M. Kay-Decker, Director, Iowa Department of Revenue

861 N.W.2d 846, 2015 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 44
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedApril 10, 2015
Docket14–0494
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 861 N.W.2d 846 (Lscp, Lllp v. Courtney M. Kay-Decker, Director, Iowa Department of Revenue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lscp, Lllp v. Courtney M. Kay-Decker, Director, Iowa Department of Revenue, 861 N.W.2d 846, 2015 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 44 (iowa 2015).

Opinion

HECHT, Justice.

Iowa taxes the delivery of natural gas at variable tax rates depending on volume and the taxpayer’s geographic location within the state. In this appeal, we confront several constitutional challenges to that statutory framework.

I. Background Facts and Proceedings.

LSCP, LLLP 1 operates an ethanol manufacturing plant near Marcus, Iowa. Operations began in April 2003. The ethanol LSCP manufactures at its Marcus plant is sold primarily through a marketing firm for use as fuel. LSCP also produces several ethanol byproducts, all of which are marketed for use as feed for livestock.

LSCP’s manufacturing processes use a substantial volume of natural gas. The gas supplies energy for the plant’s steam boilers and is burned to provide ambient heat for the plant in the winter months. The relevant unit of measurement for the natural gas LSCP consumes is a therm. Between 2007 and 2010, LSCP consumed millions of therms of natural gas each year. 2

*852 There are no natural gas producers in Iowa. Accordingly, all natural gas consumed in the state necessarily comes from out-of-state suppliers through federally regulated interstate pipelines. Most consumers receive their natural gas from a state-regulated local distribution company (LDC). LDCs connect to • the interstate pipeline, redirect the natural gas at .a reduced pressure into pipes that are smaller in diameter, and move it to the locations where it is ultimately consumed. In other words, in the delivery of natural gas, the role of an LDC is analogous to the role played by utility companies delivering electricity to consumers. MidAmerican Energy is an example of an LDC.

Some consumers of natural gas bypass LDCs and connect directly to an interstate pipeline. Companies owning interstate pipelines must allow direct connections to any consumer agreeing to certain terms and conditions. See 18 C.F.R. § 284.8(a), (e) (2014). Some industrial consumers of natural gas connect directly because they require natural gas service at higher pressures not available from an LDC. Although the record does not reflect whether a need for higher pressure was a reason for LSCP’s choice, it is undisputed that LSCP bypassed an LDC and connected directly to an interstate pipeline.

In 1998, five years before LSCP began operations, the legislature restructured the statutes authorizing taxes on electricity and natural gas providers. See 1998 Iowa Acts ch. 1194, § 3 (codified at Iowa Code § 437A.2 (1999)). The new framework took effect January 1, 1999. Id. § 40. As the district court explained:

Prior to 1998, natural gas utility companies were taxed on the property they owned in the area the utility serviced— an ad valorem tax.... [CJhapter 437A replaced the ad valorem property tax system with an excise tax on the delivery, consumption, or use of natural gas — the “Replacement Tax.” Iowa Code § 437A.3(26).

Whereas the former system taxed property, the new system taxes activity. The general assembly expressly intended the new replacement tax scheme to preserve revenue neutrality, approximate the amount of taxes that were paid under the former ad valorem framework, and “remove tax costs as a factor in a competitive environment.” Id. § 3; Iowa Code § 437A.2 (2007).

Under the new replacement tax framework, the state is divided into fifty-two natural gas competitive service areas (CSAs). Iowa Code § 437A.3(22). Within each CSA, “[a] replacement delivery tax is imposed on every person who makes a delivery of natural gas to a consumer within th[e] state.” Id. § 437A.5(1). The statute contains a formula for calculating the amount of replacement tax due. See id. The amount of tax is equal to the number of therms a taxpayer delivered into a particular CSA multiplied by the delivery tax rate for that CSA. Id. § 437A.5(l)(a).

The Iowa Department of Revenue (the Department) calculated each CSA’s initial delivery tax rate using a statutorily-prescribed mathematical formula. See id. § 437A.5(3). First, the Department calculated average “centrally assessed property tax liability allocated to natural gas service of each taxpayer, other than a municipal utility, principally serving a natural gas [CSA] for the ■ assessment years 1993 through 1997 based on property tax payments made.” Id. § 437A.5(3)(a). The Department next determined “the number of therms of natural gas delivered to consumers which would have been subject to taxation ... in calendar year 1998” in each CSA had the replacement tax been in effect. Id. § 437A.5(3)(6). Finally, the initial tax rate was determined by dividing *853 the number computed under subsection (3)(a) by the number of therms calculated under subsection (3)(b). See id. § 437A.5(3)(c). With this initial determination as a baseline, any CSA’s delivery tax rate can be adjusted each tax year based upon the number of therms delivered within that CSA. See id. § 437A.5(l)(a), (8).

Typically, the replacement tax applies to LDCs because they remove natural gas from the interstate pipeline and deliver it to consumers. However, LSCP has bypassed an LDC. Thus, section 437A.5(1) does not directly apply to LSCP, because strictly speaking, LSCP does not deliver natural gas; the interstate pipeline does.

Interstate pipeline companies are exempt from the replacement tax. See id. § 437A.5(7) (providing the replacement tax in section 437A.5(1) does not apply to natural gas delivered by a pipeline other than those governed by chapter 479); id. § 479.2(2) (excluding interstate natural gas pipelines from the definition of “pipeline” under chapter 479). Yet, those who bypass LDCs by directly connecting to an interstate pipeline do not avoid the replacement tax under section 437A.5. Section 437A.5(2) imposes the replacement tax on consumers who directly connect and draw natural gas from an interstate pipeline. Id. § 437A.5(2) (“If natural gas is consumed in this state ... and the delivery, purchase, or transference of such natural gas is not subject to the tax imposed in subsection 1, a tax is imposed on the consumer at the rates prescribed under subsection 1.”). Accordingly, because LSCP is a direct-connect consumer and the interstate pipeline company is exempt, LSCP is required to pay the replacement tax on the therms of natural gas it consumes. As the district court noted, the statute essentially “treats a direct-connect consumer as delivering the natural gas to itself.”

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Bluebook (online)
861 N.W.2d 846, 2015 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 44, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lscp-lllp-v-courtney-m-kay-decker-director-iowa-department-of-revenue-iowa-2015.