Martin Marietta Aluminum, Inc. v. Hancock County Board of Education

806 F.2d 678
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedDecember 2, 1986
DocketNo. 85-6016
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 806 F.2d 678 (Martin Marietta Aluminum, Inc. v. Hancock County Board of Education) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Martin Marietta Aluminum, Inc. v. Hancock County Board of Education, 806 F.2d 678 (6th Cir. 1986).

Opinions

CORNELIA G. KENNEDY, Circuit Judge.

Plaintiff-appellant Martin Marietta Aluminum, Inc., (“Martin Marietta”) appeals the District Court’s grant of summary judgment for defendants-appellees Hancock County Board of Education, Hancock County, Kentucky, Hancock County Fiscal Court, and several officials (collectively referred to as “Board”). The Board refused to refund or credit to Martin Marietta’s current or future tax liabilities overpaid Utility Gross Receipts License Tax (“Tax”) totalling $161,314.00. Martin Marietta raises several issues on appeal: (1) whether the regulation promulgated by the Hancock County Fiscal Court that required Martin Marietta to follow certain procedures to claim the statutory exemption from the Tax conflicts with the enabling statute; (2) whether Martin Marietta is entitled to a refund or credit for the overpaid Tax; and (3) whether the Board’s refusal to refund or credit Martin Marietta for the excess Tax violates the equal protection clause under the fourteenth amendment of the United States Constitution and sections 171 and 172 of the Kentucky Constitution. We find that the regulation is valid and that Martin Marietta is not entitled to a refund or credit for the overpaid Tax and affirm.

The Utility Gross Receipts License Tax, Ky.Rev.Stat.Ann. §§ 160.613-160.617 (Baldwin 1981), enacted in 1966, provides that school boards may levy a utility gross receipts tax for support of their schools. Section 160.613(1) of the statute provides that the Tax shall be three percent of the “gross receipts” derived from the furnishing within the county of specified utilities. Section 160.613(1) further provides that the term

“gross receipts” shall not include amounts received for furnishing energy or energy-producing fuels, used in the course of manufacturing, processing, mining, or refining to the extent that the cost of the energy or energy-producing fuels used exceeds three per cent (2%) of the cost of production____

Thus, the statute provides an exemption from the Tax to the extent that the cost of energy or energy-producing fuels used by a manufacturer, processor, miner or refiner exceeds three percent of its cost of production. The statute is silent as to how this exemption is to be claimed. Section 160.-617 provides that any utility required to pay the Tax may increase its rates in any county in which it is required to pay the Tax by three percent. The utility is required to state separately on its bills to customers the amount of this increase and identify it as “[r]ate increase for school tax.”

In 1969, at the request of the Hancock County School Board, the Hancock County [680]*680Fiscal Court, the taxing authority of Hancock County, adopted an Ordinance and promulgated regulations for the levy of the Tax for the Hancock County Schools. The Ordinance appointed the Hancock County Treasurer as collector and administrator of the Tax, and required the Treasurer to account to the Board the taxes collected. The Ordinance and the regulations permit payment of the Tax in one of two ways: (1) a collecting utility adds three percent to its utility bills and pays this three percent to the Treasurer who remits the Tax to the Hancock County School Board (the Utility Payment Method); or (2) direct monthly payments of the Tax by the taxpayer to the Treasurer (the Direct Payment Method).

Taxes computed by the Utility Payment Method are arrived at by adding three percent to the user’s utility bill. Taxes computed by the Direct Payment Method are computed by exempting all energy costs in excess of three percent of the user’s cost of production. Taxpayers using the Direct Payment Method must make monthly payments to the Treasurer of Tax applicable to nonexempt energy and energy-producing fuels based on an estimate that the taxpayer makes at the beginning of its fiscal year. At the end of the fiscal year, the taxpayer makes an accurate accounting of its Tax liability and pays additional Tax or receives a refund or credit to its future Tax liability-1

One regulation adopted by the Hancock County Fiscal Court requires, as a condition to obtaining the exemption, that the taxpayer obtain an energy direct pay authorization from the Kentucky Department of Revenue and pay the Tax according to the Direct Payment Method.2 The regulation does not permit a utility user paying the Tax through the Utility Payment Method to claim the statutory exemption.

When the Tax was first enacted, Harvey Aluminum, the predecessor corporation to Martin Marietta, began paying the Tax by the Direct Payment Method. In April, 1970, however, it chose to change to the Utility Payment Method. Harvey Aluminum, and then Martin Marietta, continued to pay by the Utility Payment Method until 1981. Martin Marietta then requested the Board to refund or credit to its present or future Tax liability the $161,314.00 it had paid during the years 1977 through 1980, inclusive, which exceeded three percent of the cost of production. The Board denied this request and Martin Marietta filed this action.

The District Court granted the Board’s motion for summary judgment. It concluded that the regulation requiring the payment of the Tax by the Direct Payment Method in order to claim the exemption did not conflict with the enabling statute and that Martin Marietta paid the excess Tax voluntarily. Consequently, the District Court ruled that Martin Marietta was not entitled to a refund or credit.3

[681]*681I. The Enabling Statute

Martin Marietta does not allege that the Hancock County Fiscal Court lacked authority to promulgate regulations for the collection of the Tax.4 Martin Marietta contends that it is entitled to the statutory exemption from the Tax because during the four-year period its cost of energy and energy-producing fuels exceeded three percent of its cost of production. According to Martin Marietta, section 160.613(1) provides an unconditional entitlement to the exemption whatever the method of payment used by a taxpayer. Because the regulation promulgated by the Hancock County Fiscal Court limits the exemption to taxpayers paying by the Direct Payment Method, Martin Marietta contends that the regulation conflicts with the enabling statute and constitutes an attempt to amend, alter, enlarge or limit the terms of the legislative enactment. Martin Marietta also asserts that the Hancock County Fiscal Court, in conditioning the statutory exemption on the use of the Direct Payment Method, exercised its authority contrary to statute in violation of Ky.Rev.Stat.Ann. §§ 67.080(3) and 67.083(2).5

The Board contends that the statute permits fiscal courts to promulgate regulations providing for the collection of the Tax, and that the Hancock County regulation merely provides a detail for the collection of the Tax. The Board also emphasizes that Martin Marietta could have availed itself of the statutory exemption had it complied with the regulation.

An examination of Kentucky case law is necessary for this Court to determine whether the regulation is an attempt to amend, alter, enlarge or limit the Tax statute. The District Court in upholding the regulation relied upon Lamar v. Board of Educ.,

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Bluebook (online)
806 F.2d 678, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/martin-marietta-aluminum-inc-v-hancock-county-board-of-education-ca6-1986.