N.C. Dep't of Revenue v. Fsc II, LLC

2023 NCBC 9
CourtNorth Carolina Business Court
DecidedJanuary 30, 2023
Docket22-CVS-5410
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2023 NCBC 9 (N.C. Dep't of Revenue v. Fsc II, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Carolina Business Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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N.C. Dep't of Revenue v. Fsc II, LLC, 2023 NCBC 9 (N.C. Super. Ct. 2023).

Opinion

N.C. Dep’t of Revenue v. FSC II, LLC, 2023 NCBC 9.

STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE SUPERIOR COURT DIVISION WAKE COUNTY 22 CVS 5410

NORTH CAROLINA DEPARTMENT OF REVENUE,

Petitioner, ORDER AND OPINION ON PETITION v. FOR JUDICIAL REVIEW FSC II, LLC,

Respondent.

THIS MATTER comes before the Court on Petitioner North Carolina

Department of Revenue’s Petition for Judicial Review (the “Petition,” ECF No. 3)

seeking reversal of the Office of Administrative Hearings’ Final Decision (the “Final

Decision”) entering summary judgment in favor of Respondent FSC II, LLC.

After considering the Petition, the administrative record, the parties’ briefs,

the arguments of counsel, and all other appropriate matters of record, THE COURT,

for the reasons set forth below, hereby AFFIRMS the Final Decision.

North Carolina Department of Justice, by Special Deputy Attorney Generals Ashley Hodges Morgan and Tania X. Laporte-Reveron, for Petitioner North Carolina Department of Revenue.

K&L Gates, LLP, by A. Lee Hogewood III, Robert B. Womble, and Zachary S. Buckheit, for Respondent FSC II, LLC.

Davis, Judge.

INTRODUCTION

1. To be a manufacturer or not to be a manufacturer? That is the question

in this tax appeal. A former North Carolina statute provided an exemption to the

North Carolina Sales and Use Tax Act that applied to “[a] manufacturing industry or plant that purchases mill machinery . . . parts or accessories for storage, use, or

consumption in this State.” 1 The taxpayer company in this case—FSC II, LLC

(“FSC”)—existed primarily as a contractor. In the course of its normal work, FSC

regularly purchased raw materials that it then used to create hot mix asphalt

(“HMA”). FSC primarily used this HMA in fulfilling its existing construction

contracts but sold the remaining amounts of its HMA to third parties. Based on these

facts, FSC contends that it qualified as a manufacturer for purposes of the Mill

Machinery Exemption and was therefore liable only for a lower privilege tax on the

raw materials it purchased rather than the higher sales or use tax. 2 The North

Carolina Department of Revenue (the “Department”) disagrees. In resolving the

parties’ dispute, the Court must determine what it means to be a manufacturer for

purposes of the Mill Machinery Exemption and how that classification applies under

the circumstances of this case.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

2. The material facts of this matter are not in dispute. 3

3. The Department is the North Carolina agency tasked with

administering state tax laws and regulations, including the North Carolina Sales and

1Throughout this opinion, the Court refers to this exemption as the “Mill Machinery Exemption.”

2 The present appeal solely concerns FSC’s out-of-state purchases of these raw materials.

3 Indeed, the parties submitted a Joint Stipulation of Facts in the proceedings before the

Office of Administrative Hearings, which are quoted in relevant part herein. Use Tax Act (hereinafter the “Sales and Use Tax Act” or the “Act”). See N.C.G.S. §§

143B-218, 105-164.1, et seq. (2021).

4. In their Joint Stipulation of Facts, the parties stipulated, in pertinent

part, as follows:

[a.] From January 1, 2012 to December 31, 2014 (“Period at Issue”), [FSC] primarily engaged in public infrastructure construction and commercial sitework construction. Additionally, during the Period at Issue, [FSC] owned and operated four facilities in Wake County, North Carolina that produced hot mix asphalt (“HMA”). While the parties stipulate that the process of converting raw materials to HMA primarily for resale constitutes “manufacturing,” [FSC] contends that it is a manufacturer operating a manufacturing plant within the meaning of the statute and regulations at issue and the [Department] disagrees. The parties stipulate that this disagreement may be resolved as a matter of law and not as a matter of fact.

[b.] For tax years 2012 to 2014, [FSC]’s parent company, which files income tax returns reflecting [FSC]’s business operations, identified itself as being in the “Highway, Street, and Road Construction” industry under the North American Industry Classification System on the parent’s North Carolina income tax returns.

[c.] During tax year 2012, [FSC] used 85.46% of the HMA it produced at its HMA facilities for various construction projects upon which it served as a contractor or subcontractor and sold the remaining HMA in FOB sales to North Carolina customers.

[d.] During tax year 2013, [FSC] used 79.73% of the HMA it produced at its HMA facilities for various construction projects upon which it served as a contractor or subcontractor and sold the remaining HMA in FOB sales to North Carolina customers.

[e.] During tax year 2014, [FSC] used 81.10% of the HMA it produced at its HMA facilities for various construction projects upon which it served as a contractor or subcontractor and sold the remaining HMA in FOB sales to North Carolina customers. [f.] During the Period at Issue, [FSC] paid North Carolina sales tax at the full applicable rates for tangible personal property (“TPP”) that it purchased in North Carolina, including tools, parts, and equipment that it used in producing HMA in state. During the Period at Issue, [FSC] did not pay sales tax or accrue and remit use tax for certain TPP that it purchased out of state, including tools, parts, and equipment that it used in producing HMA in state. It is [FSC]’s position that the law did not require [FSC] to pay sales or use tax for TPP that [FSC] used in producing HMA in state, to the extent such TPP constitutes “mill machinery or mill machinery parts or accessories” within the meaning of N.C.G.S. [§] 105-187.51 as in effect at the applicable times.

[g.] [FSC] did not pay the North Carolina privilege tax under former N.C.G.S. § 105-187.51, which was in effect during the Period at Issue, on [FSC]’s out-of-state purchases of tools, parts, and equipment that it used to produce HMA in North Carolina.

[h.] During the Period at Issue, [FSC] charged and remitted the correct sales tax due on its North Carolina sales of HMA.

(R., ECF No. 12, at RP_0070–71.)

5. In October 2014, FSC received a notice from the Department of a sales

and use tax examination scheduled to commence on 4 November 2014. (R., at

RP_0072.)

6. On 9 December 2015, as a result of that examination, the Department

issued a “Notice of Sales & Use Tax Assessment,” proposing the assessment against

FSC of additional state and county sales and use taxes during the Period at Issue in

the principal amount of $118,999.78, plus a 10% negligence penalty and interest with

respect thereto (the “Proposed Assessment”). (R., at RP_0073.) In calculating the

Proposed Assessment, the Department reviewed FSC’s 2014 invoices for FSC’s out-

of-state TPP purchases, including FSC’s purchases of tools, parts, and equipment for

HMA production in state, but not the invoices for the same types of purchases from 2012 and 2013. Instead, for years 2012 and 2013, the Department used a formula to

project FSC’s sales and use tax liability. However, FSC disputed whether the

Department was legally permitted to use such projections, in lieu of actually

reviewing the relevant invoices. (R., at RP_0073.)

7. As a result of this dispute over the appropriate methodology, FSC timely

requested that the Department review the Proposed Assessment. (R., at RP_0073.)

On 19 June 2018, after reviewing FSC’s 2012 and 2013 invoices, the Department

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2023 NCBC 9, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nc-dept-of-revenue-v-fsc-ii-llc-ncbizct-2023.