McLane Western, Inc. v. S.D. Department of Revenue

2024 S.D. 1
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 10, 2024
Docket30217
StatusPublished

This text of 2024 S.D. 1 (McLane Western, Inc. v. S.D. 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
McLane Western, Inc. v. S.D. Department of Revenue, 2024 S.D. 1 (S.D. 2024).

Opinion

#30217-a-SPM 2024 S.D. 1

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF SOUTH DAKOTA

****

MCLANE WESTERN INC., MCLANE MINNESOTA, INC., Appellants,

v.

SOUTH DAKOTA DEPARTMENT OF REVENUE, Appellee.

APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE SIXTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT HUGHES COUNTY, SOUTH DAKOTA

THE HONORABLE CHRISTINA L. KLINGER Judge

AARON T. GALLOWAY of Lynn Jackson Shultz & Lebrun, P.C. Rapid City, South Dakota

JOSEY M. BLARE of Lynn Jackson Shultz & Lebrun, P.C. Sioux Falls, South Dakota Attorneys for appellants.

KIRSTEN E. JASPER Special Assistant Attorney General Pierre, South Dakota Attorneys for appellee.

CONSIDERED ON BRIEFS OCTOBER 3, 2023 OPINION FILED 01/10/24 #30217

MYREN, Justice

[¶1.] McLane Western, Inc. and McLane Minnesota, Inc. (collectively

McLane) made numerous refund requests totaling $537,522.07 to the South Dakota

Department of Revenue. The Department denied McLane’s refund requests, and

McLane subsequently requested a contested case hearing before the South Dakota

Office of Hearing Examiners (OHE). OHE granted the Department’s motion for

summary judgment in its proposed decision. The Department adopted the proposed

decision and denied McLane’s refund requests. McLane appealed to the circuit

court, which issued a memorandum decision and order affirming the Department’s

denial of McLane’s refund requests. McLane appeals.

Factual and Procedural Background

[¶2.] McLane is a South Dakota-licensed wholesaler of tobacco products.

McLane purchased tobacco products, known as Other Tobacco Products (OTP) 1,

from U.S. Smokeless Tobacco Brands, Inc. (UST Sales), also a South Dakota-

licensed wholesaler of tobacco products. UST Sales did not manufacture the

products it sold to McLane. It purchased the OTP from its affiliate, U.S. Smokeless

Tobacco Manufacturing Company, LLC (UST Manufacturing), a federally licensed

tobacco manufacturer. 2

1. OTP includes “cigars, snuff, chewing tobacco, and any other products made up or composed of tobacco in whole or in part, except cigarettes.” SDCL 10- 50-1(8).

2. Prior to 1990, McLane purchased the OTP from a federally licensed manufacturer known as UST Co. In 1990, UST Co. formed two subsidiaries (UST Sales and UST Manufacturing). The company’s reorganization caused McLane to purchase the OTP from a licensed wholesaler. In May 2014, UST (continued . . .) -1- #30217

[¶3.] After purchasing the OTP from UST Sales, McLane brought the

tobacco product into South Dakota. 3 Accordingly, McLane paid South Dakota’s 35%

tobacco tax imposed in SDCL 10-50-61 which provides:

[T]here is imposed, whether or not a sale occurs, a tax upon all tobacco products in this state and upon any person engaged in business as a licensed distributor or licensed wholesaler thereof, at the rate of thirty-five percent of the wholesale purchase price of such tobacco products. Such tax shall be imposed at the time the distributor or wholesaler brings or causes to be brought into this state tobacco products for sale; makes, manufactures, or fabricates tobacco products in this state for sale in this state; or ships or transports tobacco products to dealers in this state to be sold by those dealers. For the purposes of this chapter, wholesale purchase price is the price for which a manufacturer sells tobacco products to a licensed distributor or licensed wholesaler exclusive of any discount or other reduction. Any licensed distributor or licensed wholesaler who has paid tax pursuant to this section and subsequently sells the tobacco products to another licensed distributor or licensed wholesaler for resale, or sells the tobacco products outside of this state, shall receive a credit for the tax paid pursuant to this section on such tobacco products.

(Emphases added.)

[¶4.] From July 2011 until May 2014, McLane calculated the tobacco

tax it owed by using the amount it paid to UST Sales for the OTP as the tax

base. The amount McLane paid UST Sales for the OTP was more than what

UST Sales paid UST Manufacturing for the same OTP. The price paid by

________________________ (. . . continued) Sales merged with UST Manufacturing and McLane resumed purchasing OTP directly from a federally licensed manufacturer.

3. The parties stipulated that McLane brought the OTP into South Dakota. This is consequential because the tobacco tax is imposed at the time the tobacco is brought into South Dakota.

-2- #30217

McLane presumably included the operating costs of UST Sales and any profit

margin.

[¶5.] From August 13, 2014, until February 10, 2016, McLane submitted

numerous refund requests to the Department regarding the tax payments it made

throughout a 35-month reporting period. 4 McLane opined that it had overpaid its

tax obligation by $537,522.07. McLane reported that it had paid a 35% tax to South

Dakota based on the price it paid to UST Sales for the OTP. McLane argued that

its tax obligation should have been based on the price UST Sales (a “licensed

wholesaler” under the statute) paid to UST Manufacturing (a “manufacturer” under

the statute). The Department initially granted McLane’s refund request for the

July 2011 reporting period and issued a $20,822.67 credit. The Department

subsequently placed the refund credit “on hold” to further research the issue. The

parties continued to exchange correspondence from September 19, 2014, until April

3, 2019, when the Department issued its final letter denying McLane’s refund

requests.

[¶6.] McLane requested a contested case hearing before OHE. OHE

proposed a decision granting the Department’s motion for summary judgment and

denying McLane’s refund requests. The Department adopted the proposed decision

in its final decision and order. McLane appealed the Department’s final decision

and order to the circuit court.

4. The parties have stipulated that the reporting period at issue is recognized as being from July 2011 until May 2014.

-3- #30217

[¶7.] The circuit court issued a memorandum opinion affirming the

Department’s final decision and order. It held that the advance tax obligation

imposed by SDCL 10-50-61 was triggered when McLane caused the OTP to be

brought into South Dakota after purchasing the tobacco product from UST Sales. It

reasoned that under the circumstances, a strict reading of SDCL 10-50-61 would

cause an absurd result because it would permit McLane to bring the OTP into

South Dakota without being subjected to the state’s tobacco tax because McLane did

not purchase the OTP directly from a tobacco manufacturer. Based on this premise,

the circuit court concluded that it must look beyond the statute’s language to avoid

that absurd result. Ultimately, the circuit court concluded that the tax was

properly calculated based on the OTP purchase price McLane paid to UST Sales.

Standard of Review

[¶8.] This case involves the review of an interpretation of a statute as

applied to stipulated facts. Thus, “the application of a legal standard to those

[undisputed] facts is a question of law reviewed de novo.” State v. Doap Deng

Chuol, 2014 S.D.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

State v. Lamont
2001 SD 92 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 2001)
In Re Yanni
2005 SD 59 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 2005)
Gloe v. Union Insurance Co.
2005 SD 30 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 2005)
Fair v. Nash Finch Co.
2007 SD 16 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 2007)
Stehly v. Davison County
2011 S.D. 49 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 2011)
United States Tobacco Sales & Marketing Co. v. Department of Revenue
982 P.2d 652 (Court of Appeals of Washington, 1999)
State v. Doap Deng Chuol
2014 SD 33 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 2014)
Good Lance v. Black Hills Dialysis, LLC
2015 SD 83 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 2015)
Fluth v. Schoenfelder Constr., Inc.
2018 SD 65 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 2018)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2024 S.D. 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mclane-western-inc-v-sd-department-of-revenue-sd-2024.