MidAmerican Energy v. CIR

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedNovember 15, 2001
Docket00-3958
StatusPublished

This text of MidAmerican Energy v. CIR (MidAmerican Energy v. CIR) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
MidAmerican Energy v. CIR, (8th Cir. 2001).

Opinion

United States Court of Appeals FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT ___________

Nos. 00-3958/3959/3960/3961 ___________

MidAmerican Energy Company, * * Appellant, * * v. * Appeals from the * United States Tax Court. * Commissioner of Internal Revenue, * * Appellee. * ___________

Submitted: September 10, 2001

Filed: November 15, 2001 ___________

Before MORRIS SHEPPARD ARNOLD and BRIGHT, Circuit Judges, and KYLE1, District Judge ___________

MORRIS SHEPPARD ARNOLD

MidAmerican Energy Company, a public utility and retail distributor of electricity and natural gas, sued the Commissioner of Internal Revenue in 1997, largely as a result of changes to the Internal Revenue Code. MidAmerican claimed in that suit that it was being double-taxed at the end of the year because the Commissioner incorrectly rejected its method of accounting, and that it was entitled

1 The Honorable Richard H. Kyle, United States District Judge for the District of Minnesota, sitting by designation. to a deduction after state regulators forced it to disgorge "excessive" profits. The Tax Court rejected both claims. See MidAmerican Energy v. Commissioner, 114 T.C. 570 (2000). We affirm.

I. The Tax Court concluded that although MidAmerican's contention that it was being double-taxed was “essentially an accounting dispute,” 114 T.C. at 577, it was nonetheless one that the Code resolved. We agree. The 1986 revision of the Code denied utilities the right to use the so-called "cycle meter-reading" method of accounting, a method that had allowed them to defer income from the last billing cycle of a tax year to the next tax year. Under that method, for instance, a utility could bill for services through December 15, and those charges would be counted as income for that tax year; charges for the period of December 16-31, however, would be billed in January and counted as income for that tax year. MidAmerican maintains that it stopped using this accounting method as of 1987, but the Commissioner concluded that MidAmerican's new accounting method continued to defer some income from the last billing cycle of tax years 1987 through 1990.

The relevant portion of the Code provides that "any income attributable to the sale or furnishing of utility services to customers shall be included in gross income not later than the taxable year in which such services are provided to such customers." 26 U.S.C. § 451(f)(1). If services are provided within the last two weeks of December, then revenues realized from those services must be included as income within that tax year, even if bills for those services are sent or paid in the following year.

MidAmerican notes that its monthly billings to customers include a Purchased Gas Adjustment ("PGA"), which is designed to pass through to customers any fluctuations in wholesale gas costs. According to MidAmerican, the PGA does more than just account for market fluctuations: MidAmerican claims that it makes the

-2- billing period serve as a "proxy" for an actual calendar month. A customer might be billed $100 on December 15, for example, and MidAmerican contends that part of that $100 is intended to cover the company's gas costs for the period of December 16 through December 31. According to MidAmerican, the consumption between November 16 and December 15 ( multiplied by current wholesale gas prices) is used to estimate gas costs for the remainder of December; that is, the PGA for November 16 through December 15 serves as a "proxy" for actual gas costs for the entire month of December. Variations in the estimated and actual gas costs are later reconciled in supplemental adjustments to income. MidAmerican argues that under these circumstances it should not have to include the portion of the January bill attributable to gas costs for December 16 through December 31 as part of the preceding year's gross income.

We think that the issue in this case is relatively straightforward: either part of the January bill is attributable to gas used the previous December or it is not. MidAmerican's counsel conceded below that a given month's billing for gas costs is based on usage from the month before: He told the Tax Court that "those bills that are rendered during the month of December include a slice of the consumption from the month of November, it's absolutely true, but they are intended to now pay costs that are incurred during the month of December, calendar December, December 1 through December 31." Thus the heart of MidAmerican's argument seems to be intent. MidAmerican intends that costs billed in one period serve as a "proxy" for costs in a following period.

The intent of the taxpayer, however, cannot change the relevant facts – either the bill includes usage from the prior month or it does not. If MidAmerican multiplies cost per unit by the number of units used between November 16 through December 15 and issues a bill, the argument that the gas costs in that bill are actually for gas costs incurred from December 1 through December 31 has no basis in reality. As we see it, it is simply a fanciful, self-serving description of what is happening.

-3- MidAmerican concedes that the January bill includes usage from the prior calendar year, and therefore, we believe, it concedes the entire argument. Under § 451(f)(1), revenues from that bill that derive from usage that occurred in December constitute "income attributable to the ... furnishing of utility services" in December and thus must be included in the prior year.

MidAmerican responds that it is paying a full year's worth of taxes under its method, even if that year does not coincide with the calendar year. As MidAmerican's counsel put it to the Tax Court, "[t]he fact that it's not the exact same 12 months as the calendar year that we file our tax return for simply shouldn't matter." We believe that this is an argument that should be addressed to Congress. As currently written, § 451(f)(1) is quite explicit in requiring that income be attributed to the year in which the service that generated that income is provided.

MidAmerican notes that its accounting methods are dictated, at least in part, by state utility regulators. While that may be true, the Supreme Court has recognized "the vastly different objectives that financial and tax accounting have," and that "any presumptive equivalency between tax and financial accounting would be unacceptable." Thor Power Tool Co. v. Commissioner, 439 U.S. 522, 542-43 (1979); see also Frank Lyon Co. v United States, 435 U.S. 561, 577 (1978). The Code grants the Internal Revenue Service authority to use its own accounting methods if the methods used by the taxpayer do not produce an accurate accounting of income. See 26 U.S.C. § 446(b). We conclude that the Commissioner correctly exercised that authority in requiring MidAmerican to count income from gas used in the final days of December even though that income did not accrue until the following year.

II. When state utility regulators determine rates for MidAmerican, those rates compensate for the amount that MidAmerican is expected to pay in federal income tax. When Congress cut the tax rate from 46 percent to 39.95 percent and then to

-4- 34 percent, MidAmerican kept the difference and thus made substantially higher profits than state regulators had anticipated.

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Bluebook (online)
MidAmerican Energy v. CIR, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/midamerican-energy-v-cir-ca8-2001.