Minnesota Power & Light Co. v. United States

6 Cl. Ct. 558, 55 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 1603, 1984 U.S. Claims LEXIS 1254
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedNovember 21, 1984
DocketNo. 617-81T
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 6 Cl. Ct. 558 (Minnesota Power & Light Co. v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Court of Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Minnesota Power & Light Co. v. United States, 6 Cl. Ct. 558, 55 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 1603, 1984 U.S. Claims LEXIS 1254 (cc 1984).

Opinion

OPINION

YOCK, Judge.

The plaintiff in this case seeks a refund of federal excise taxes and interest in the [559]*559amount of $24,599.15, paid in highway use tax assessments for the tax years ended June 30, 1973, June 30,1974, June 30,1975, and June 30, 1976, plus statutory interest. The assessments were based upon a determination by the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) that the plaintiffs utility trucks, equipped with pintle hooks capable of towing heavy-duty trailers, should be taxed as truck-trailer combinations rather than as single unit vehicles. The plaintiff paid the assessed taxes and, after the IRS disallowed its claim for refund, filed suit in the United States Court of Claims. On October 1, 1982, the case was transferred to this Court. The defendant has now filed a motion for summary judgment. For the reasons discussed in this opinion, the defendant’s motion for summary judgment is denied.

Facts

The plaintiff, Minnesota Power and Light Company, is a public utility company engaged in generating, transmitting and distributing electricity and natural gas in northeastern Minnesota. During the tax years in issue, the plaintiff owned and operated approximately 295 utility trucks which were used in connection with constructing, maintaining and repairing the plaintiff’s utility system. Almost all of these trucks were equipped with coupling devices, known as pintle hooks,1 capable of towing either trailers with two or more axles or trailers with one axle but having gross vehicle weights of 6,000 pounds or more (both of these types of trailers are hereinafter referred to as heavy-duty trailers). While the plaintiff owned approximately 64 trailers during the years in issue, only about 40 trailers can be classified as heavy-duty trailers.

On its federal highway use tax returns, filed for the tax years ended June 30, 1973, through June 30, 1976, the plaintiff classified its utility trucks as single unit vehicles and paid the use taxes applicable to that class of highway motor vehicles. During a subsequent audit, the IRS determined, without considering whether trucks of the type in question are customarily used in combination with such trailers, that the presence of pintle hooks on the plaintiff’s trucks caused those vehicles to be “equipped for use in combinations” with trailers. Accordingly, the IRS reclassified those trucks as “truck-trailer combinations,” a classification subject to a higher tax rate than the rate applicable to “single unit” vehicles.

On the basis of its reclassification of the plaintiff’s utility trucks as truck-trailer combinations, the IRS assessed additional highway use taxes against the plaintiff. The plaintiff paid the assessments and timely filed claims for refunds in the amount of $24,599.15.2 The primary basis for such refund claims was that the plaintiff’s utility vehicles were not “customarily” used as truck-trailer combinations. In effect, the plaintiff’s position was and is that the IRS can utilize an “equipped for use” test, under its authority contained in section 4482(b) and set out in Treas.Reg. § 41.4482(b)-l(d), for purposes of administrative convenience in collecting the subject excise taxes. However, the plaintiff argues that the IRS cannot disregard the statutorily mandated “customary use” test, when faced with a taxpayer who asserts that his vehicles are not customarily used in a manner consistent with the type of equipment (e.g., a pintle hook) with which his vehicles are equipped. As a result, the plaintiff’s argument before this Court seeks the judicial recognition of a two-prong test. First, all vehicles which are “equipped for use in combinations” may be administratively classified as single units, truck-trailer combinations, or tractor-trailer [560]*560combinations, depending upon the appropriate formula devised by the IRS pursuant to section 4482(b). However, the second prong of the test requires, upon such classification by the IRS and subsequent challenge by the taxpayer, that the taxpayer be given an opportunity to prove that the subject vehicles are not customarily used in the manner in which they have been classified by the IRS, pursuant to section 4481(a).

On October 22, 1979, and on October 29, 1979, the Internal Revenue Service Center, in Ogden, Utah, mailed to the plaintiff formal notices of disallowance of the plaintiffs claims for refund. In this action, the IRS has asserted that its denial of the plaintiff’s refund claims was based upon its belief that the “equipped for use” test, formulated by the IRS under section 4482(b), was the only test which need be applied in classifying a taxpayer’s vehicles for purposes of the federal highway use tax. In effect, the IRS alleges that the broad delegation of authority to devise a formula, contained in section 4482(b), allows it to define “customary use” in whatever manner it sees fit. Thus, the IRS argues that it has defined the “customary use” statutory language as being essentially synonymous with the “equipped for use” language. In adopting this position, however, the IRS is forced to distinguish almost twenty years of virtually unchanged treasury regulations, revenue rulings, and General Counsel Memoranda, all of which contained references to a determination of “customary use.” As will be seen, this Court refuses to equate the “customary use” test with the IRS’s “equipped for use” test and, as a result, adopts the above two-prong test advocated by the plaintiff.

Thereafter, on October 21, 1981, the plaintiff filed this action for refund. The defendant has now filed a motion for summary judgment. The plaintiff has filed a brief in opposition to the defendant’s motion for summary judgment, and the defendant has replied. Oral argument on defendant’s motion, along with oral argument on two companion cases—Kansas City Power & Light Co. v. United States, No. 230-82T, and L.E. Myers Co. v. United States, No. 362-79T — was held in Washington, D.C., on October 2, 1984.3

Discussion

In 1956, Congress enacted the Highway Revenue Act of 1956, seeking to raise, for the first time, additional revenue from the use of certain highway motor vehicles in order to finance federal aid for the construction of this nation’s interstate highways. Pub.L. No. 84-627, 84th Cong., 2d Sess (1956). Despite subsequent statutory modifications, the highway use tax has always been computed based upon the weight of the motor vehicle in question, plus the unloaded weight of any trailer customarily used with vehicles of the type in question and the weight of the load customarily carried on that type of vehicle and on any trailer customarily used with the vehicle.

Section 4481 imposes a tax “on the use of any highway motor vehicle which (together with the semitrailers and trailers customarily used in connection with highway motor vehicles of the same type as such highway motor vehicle) has a taxable gross weight of more than 26,000 pounds * * 26 U.S.C. § 4481(a) (1982) (emphasis supplied).4

The term “taxable gross weight” is defined as the sum of:

(1) the actual unloaded weight of—
(A) such highway motor vehicle fully equipped for service, and
(B) the semitrailers and trailers (fully equipped) for service customarily

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Related

Neptune Mutual Ass'n v. United States
13 Cl. Ct. 309 (Court of Claims, 1987)
Northern Illinois Gas Co. v. United States
12 Cl. Ct. 84 (Court of Claims, 1987)
L.E. Myers Co. v. United States
10 Cl. Ct. 617 (Court of Claims, 1986)
Minnesota Power and Light Company v. The United States
782 F.2d 167 (Federal Circuit, 1986)

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Bluebook (online)
6 Cl. Ct. 558, 55 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 1603, 1984 U.S. Claims LEXIS 1254, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/minnesota-power-light-co-v-united-states-cc-1984.