Mayor and City Council of Baltimore v. VONAGE AM.

544 F. Supp. 2d 458
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maryland
DecidedApril 16, 2008
DocketCivil No. JFM 07-320
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 544 F. Supp. 2d 458 (Mayor and City Council of Baltimore v. VONAGE AM.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mayor and City Council of Baltimore v. VONAGE AM., 544 F. Supp. 2d 458 (D. Md. 2008).

Opinion

(2008)

MAYOR AND CITY COUNCIL OF BALTIMORE, Plaintiff,
v.
VONAGE AMERICA INC., Defendant.

Civil No. JFM 07-320.

United States District Court, D. Maryland.

April 16, 2008.

OPINION

J. FREDERICK MOTZ, District Judge.

Plaintiff Mayor and City Council of Baltimore ("the City") has brought suit against defendant Vonage America Inc. ("Vonage") pursuant to Md.Code Ann., Cts. & Jud. Proc. § 3-403,[1] for a declaratory judgment that the City's Telecommunications Tax applies to Vonage. (Compl. ¶¶ 1, 14-18.) In addition, under Maryland common law and Md.Code Ann. Art. 24 § 9-704,[2] the City requests that this court order Vonage to pay all amounts that it owes to the City under the City's Telecommunications Tax, including interest and penalties. (Compl. ¶¶ 1, 19-28.) Vonage has filed a counterclaim requesting that this court enter a judgment declaring, inter alia, that it is not subject to the City's Telecommunications Tax. (Answer and Countercl. at 5.) Plaintiff and defendant have filed cross-motions for summary judgment, and the respective opposition briefs have followed. For the reasons detailed below, I will grant plaintiff's motion and deny defendant's motion.

I.

The evidence on the summary judgment record is as follows. The City's Telecommunications Tax, which became effective on August 1, 2004, provides: "A tax is levied and imposed on each person who leases, licenses, or sells a telecommunications line to any customer: (1) for wired service, whose billing address or fixed service address is in the City; or (2) for wireless service, whose place of primary use is in the City."[3] Baltimore City Code (the "Code"), Art. 28 § 25-2. The Code defines "telecommunications line" as "a wired or wireless connection, identifiable by a unique telephone number, to an exchange, wireless, or other telecommunications service." Art. 28, § 25-1(e).

Vonage is a Delaware corporation qualified to do business in Maryland that offers a communications service known as "Digital Voice." (Pl.'s Mem. Ex. 1, Martinez Dep. 11:12-15, Sept. 25, 2007.) The service provides real-time, two-way voice communications of telephonic quality using a technology referred to as Voice over Internet Protocol ("VoIP"). (Id. 11:16-20.) Vonage assigns each of its subscribers a unique telephone number from the North American Numbering Plan. (Id. 36.) While Vonage customers relevant to this action may not have a fixed service address, they do have a fixed billing address in Baltimore City. (Id. 14:3-8.) Regardless of where these Vonage customers utilize their VoIP service, they are billed at only this fixed location. (Id. 14:9-21.)

To use Vonage's service, subscribers must have a broadband connection to the internet. (Id. 17, 20.) Vonage provides its subscribers with a terminal adapter ("TA") routing device that connects to the internet to access its service through the use of established protocols.[4] (Id. 17:18-18:9, 19:12-20:14.) To place a Vonage call to a non-Vonage subscriber, the Vonage subscriber dials the telephone number of a non-Vonage subscriber anywhere in the country using the number pad on the TA device or the number pad on his or her own telephone that is connected to the TA device.[5] (Id. 28, 111.) The TA device then generates and sends a Session Initiation Protocol ("SIP") message, containing the number that is being called and the number that is placing the call, to a Vonage "proxy server" to inform the server that a connection is alive and operating at a certain location.[6] (Id. 28:9-15, 110:6-11, 111:13-18.) Upon receiving the SIP message, the Vonage proxy server authenticates the numbers and conducts a "route look-up" to determine which Vonage "gateway" should handle the request.[7] (Id. 28:15-20, 111:22-112:6.) After the proper gateway has been located, the proxy server transmits the request to the gateway; this occurs entirely over the internet with no telephone wires or telephone lines involved in the process. (Id. 28:15-20, 115:1-4.)

The gateway's subsequent connection to the Public Switched Telephone Network ("PSTN") does, however, involve the use of telephone wires and lines, although Vonage does not directly connect telephone calls to the PSTN. (Id. 115:10-116:1.) Instead, Vonage maintains contractual agreements with different third-party carriers,[8] which are responsible for connecting, or "off-loading," the call from Vonage's gateway to the third-party carriers' telephone switches. (Id.) The third-party carriers are then responsible for continuing to process the call and make the eventual connection to the PSTN. (Id.) Once the call enters the PSTN, the call travels from one PSTN switch to another until it reaches the eventual recipient of the telephone call. (Id. 50:19-51:5, 115:14-116:1.) Vonage has no involvement in the process of transferring the call to the PSTN once the call has been "off-loaded" from the Vonage gateway to one of the third-party carriers. (Id. 51:6-10; 56:1-3.) Vonage never directly connects to any telephone lines or telephone wires to complete its calls. (Id. 115:10-13; Def.'s Mem. Ex. 2-3, Basic Call Processing Diagrams.)

As for inbound calls, a call placed from a "Plain Old Telephone Service" ("POTS") caller (a non-Vonage subscriber) to a Vonage subscriber is processed in the same manner as the outbound call, except in reverse order. Specifically, a POTS caller placing a call to a Vonage subscriber from a landline phone would first connect to the PSTN through his telephone carrier. (Martinez Dep. 116.) Once one of the several contracted third-party carriers that provides service to Vonage receives the call, the carrier sends the call to an inbound Vonage gateway, from which point it passes to the Vonage proxy server, and then to the Vonage TA device.[9] (Id.) Each step after Vonage receives the call occurs exclusively over the internet, in the same way that an outbound call transmits from the Vonage TA device to the Vonage proxy server to the Vonage gateway. (Id. 117-20.) Vonage does not connect to any telephone wires or telephone lines in processing an inbound call. (Id.) As for Vonageto-Vonage calls, they are not transmitted over the PSTN, but rather carried exclusively over the internet. (Def.'s Ex. 4, General Call Processing Diagram.)

By letters dated September 15, 2006 and November 17, 2006, the City put Vonage on notice that it was subject to the tax. (Compl. ¶¶ 10-12; Answer ¶¶ 10-12.) Vonage responded on October 26, 2006, maintaining that it is not subject to the tax and thus refusing to pay it. (Id.)

II.

Plaintiff's and defendant's cross-motions for summary judgment raise three issues: (1) whether the City's Telecommunications Tax is a valid and enforceable excise tax or an impermissible tax on intangible personal property; (2) assuming it is a valid excise tax, whether Vonage "leases, licenses, or sells a telecommunications line" within the meaning of the Art. 28, § 25-2; and (3) whether Vonage's counterclaim should be dismissed for lack of subject matter jurisdiction pursuant to the Tax Injunction Act, 28 U.S.C. § 1341. I will address the jurisdictional issue first, and the other two issues in turn.

A.

(1)

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Bluebook (online)
544 F. Supp. 2d 458, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mayor-and-city-council-of-baltimore-v-vonage-am-mdd-2008.