Matter of the Comptroller

CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedNovember 22, 2024
Docket0081/23
StatusPublished

This text of Matter of the Comptroller (Matter of the Comptroller) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Matter of the Comptroller, (Md. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

In the Matter of the Comptroller of Maryland, No. 81, September Term, 2023. Opinion by Eyler, Deborah S., J. Filed November 22, 2024.

TAX GENERAL ARTICLE (“TG”) – SALES AND USE TAX – REFUND CLAIM – TIME TO FILE CLAIM AFTER NOTICE OF ASSESSMENT – EXEMPTION FROM SALES AND USE TAX FOR PRODUCTION ACTIVITY.

Potomac Edison, a public utility that sells electricity in Maryland, informed the Comptroller’s Office that it qualified for an exemption from sales and use tax under TG § 11-210(b), for tangible personal property it purchased to use directly and predominantly in a production activity. Potomac Edison buys the electricity it sells from a generating plant outside Maryland. It uses its own purchased equipment, comprising its transmission and distribution system (“T&D System”), to carry the electricity from the generating plant to its Maryland customers. As the electricity leaves the generating plant, travels, and arrives at the customers’ locations, the T&D System steps its voltage up and down to enable efficient travel and to make the electricity usable by the customers. Under TG § 11-101(f), a production activity can mean the processing of tangible personal property, including electricity, for resale.

The Comptroller undertook an audit, which lasted several years. After concluding the audit, it issued a notice of assessment, assessing sales and use tax based upon a finding that Potomac Edison was not entitled to the exemption. Potomac Edison filed a claim for a refund and when that was denied, appealed to the Maryland Tax Court. The Tax Court upheld the denial of the refund claim, and on judicial review the circuit court affirmed the decision of the Tax Court. In an appeal by Potomac Edison, this Court reversed the judgment of the Tax Court, holding that it had erred as a matter of law by interpreting TG § 11-210(b) as not permitting a finding that any of Potomac Edison’s T&D System was directly and predominantly used in a production activity. Potomac Edison Co. v. Md. Comptroller of the Treasury, No. 1645, Sept. Term, 2016 (filed Apr. 29, 2019). The matter was remanded to the Tax Court for further proceedings.

On remand, the Comptroller raised the issue of limitations for the first time, arguing that Potomac Edison’s refund claim was untimely under the four-year limitations provision in TG § 13-1104; and that a written agreement between Potomac Edison and the Comptroller to extend limitations was ineffective because TG § 13-1104 operates to suspend sovereign immunity for a period of time that only the legislature can extend. After an evidentiary hearing, the Tax Court found that some of the materials Potomac Edison purchased to construct its T&D System were exempt from sales and use tax and some were not; therefore, Potomac Edison was entitled to a refund of a portion of the sales and use tax assessed against it, plus interest. It further found that the Comptroller was estopped to raise limitations. In an action for judicial review, the circuit court reversed the Tax Court’s ruling on limitations but affirmed its ruling on production activity, and as a result affirmed a part of the Tax Court’s refund award, with interest. Potomac Edison noted an appeal on the limitations issue, and the Comptroller’s Office noted a cross-appeal on the production activity issue.

Held: Judgment of the circuit court vacated in part and remanded with instructions to affirm the judgment of the Tax Court.

Under TG § 13-508, a taxpayer has thirty days from the date the Comptroller mails its notice of assessment to make a claim for a refund of sales and use tax. That thirty-day period is an express exception to the four-year limitations provision in TG § 13-1104, and therefore is the controlling time in which to make the claim. Potomac Edison filed its refund claim with the Comptroller’s Office within the thirty-day period. Accordingly, the claim was timely. Because the timing of the refund claim was not controlled by TG § 13-1104, it is not necessary to decide the sovereign immunity issue.

The Tax Court heard evidence that the equipment comprising the T&D System falls into various categories. The court analyzed, based on expert witness testimony, whether each category of equipment was used directly and predominantly for the processing of electricity, which is a production activity. It determined that conductor, substation, and transformer equipment was used directly and predominantly to step up and step down voltage, a processing function necessary to make the electricity usable to end customers. (It also determined that certain equipment, such as support structures and electric meters, was not used for a processing function.) Accordingly, it concluded that this equipment was used in a production activity, and therefore was exempt from sales and use tax under TG § 11-210(b). The court’s findings were supported by substantial evidence in the record and were such that a reasonable mind would reach. The Tax Court’s decision that Potomac Edison was entitled to interest on the refund it was entitled to was supported by the governing statute. Circuit Court for Anne Arundel County Case No.: C-02-CV-22-000534 REPORTED

IN THE APPELLATE COURT

OF MARYLAND

No. 81

September Term, 2023

______________________________________

IN THE MATTER OF THE COMPTROLLER OF MARYLAND ______________________________________

Shaw, Albright, Eyler, Deborah S. (Senior Judge, Specially Assigned),

JJ. ______________________________________

Opinion by Eyler, Deborah S., J. ______________________________________

Filed: November 22, 2024

* Tang, Rosalyn, J. did not participate in the Court’s decision to designate this opinion for publication pursuant to Md. Rule 8-605.1.

Pursuant to the Maryland Uniform Electronic Legal Materials Act (§§ 10-1601 et seq. of the State Government Article) this document is authentic.

14:59:47 2024.11.22 '00'05- Gregory Hilton, Clerk This is the second appeal in a dispute between Potomac Edison Company (“Potomac

Edison”), appellant and cross-appellee, and the Comptroller of Maryland (“Comptroller”),

appellee and cross-appellant, over whether Potomac Edison is entitled to a refund of

Maryland sales and use taxes. In the first appeal, we vacated the judgment of the Circuit

Court for Baltimore City, which had affirmed a decision of the Maryland Tax Court that

Potomac Edison did not qualify for the exemption on which its refund claim was based.

We remanded for further proceedings in the Tax Court. Potomac Edison Co. v. Md.

Comptroller of the Treasury, No. 1645, Sept. Term, 2016 (filed Apr. 29, 2019) (“Potomac

Edison I”).

After an evidentiary hearing on remand, the Tax Court ruled that Potomac Edison

qualified in part for the exemption. It rejected the Comptroller’s newfound contention that

most of the refund claim was time-barred. The Tax Court awarded Potomac Edison a sales

and use tax refund of $2,420,163.20, plus interest.

The Circuit Court for Anne Arundel County reversed on the issue of timeliness,

reduced the refund award to $514,890.76, and otherwise affirmed.

Potomac Edison noted an appeal, presenting two questions, which we have

combined and rephrased as one:

I. Did the Tax Court err by ruling that Potomac Edison’s refund request was timely?

The Comptroller noted a cross-appeal, presenting three questions, which we have

combined and rephrased as two:

I. Did the Tax Court err by ruling that Potomac Edison predominantly uses its conductor, substation, and transformer equipment for a production activity, which is exempt from sales and use tax, rather than for the delivery of electricity, a non-exempt use?

II.

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Matter of the Comptroller, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-the-comptroller-mdctspecapp-2024.