Nelson Industrial Steam Co. v. Calcasieu Parish School Board,sales & Use Tax Dept.

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 24, 2015
DocketCA-0014-1253
StatusUnknown

This text of Nelson Industrial Steam Co. v. Calcasieu Parish School Board,sales & Use Tax Dept. (Nelson Industrial Steam Co. v. Calcasieu Parish School Board,sales & Use Tax Dept.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nelson Industrial Steam Co. v. Calcasieu Parish School Board,sales & Use Tax Dept., (La. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

STATE OF LOUISIANA COURT OF APPEAL, THIRD CIRCUIT

14-1253

NELSON INDUSTRIAL STEAM CO.

VERSUS

CALCASIEU PARISH SCHOOL SYSTEM SALES AND USE TAX DEPT., ET AL.

********** APPEAL FROM THE FOURTEENTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT PARISH OF CALCASIEU, NO. 2013-2661 HONORABLE RONALD F. WARE, DISTRICT JUDGE

**********

ULYSSES GENE THIBODEAUX CHIEF JUDGE

Court composed of Ulysses Gene Thibodeaux, Chief Judge, Billy Howard Ezell, and John E. Conery, Judges.

CONERY, J., dissents and assigns reasons.

AFFIRMED.

H. Alan McCall Stockwell, Sievert, Viccellio, Clements & Shaddock Post Office Box 2900 Lake Charles, Louisiana 70602 Telephone: (337) 436-9491 COUNSEL FOR: Defendant/Appellant - Nelson Industrial Steam Co.

Christopher J. Dicharry Linda S. Akchin Kean Miller LLP 400 Convention Street - Suite 700 Baton Rouge, Louisiana 70802 Telephone: (225) 387-0999 COUNSEL FOR: Defendant/Appellant - Nelson Industrial Steam Co. Russell J. Stutes, Jr. Stutes & Lavergne, LLC 600 Broad Street Lake Charles, Louisiana 70601 Telephone: (337) 433-0022 COUNSEL FOR: Plaintiffs/Appellees - Cynthia Bridges, Sec., Dept. of Rev., State of Louisiana; Calcasieu Parish School System Sales & Use Tax Dept., and John Collins, Tax Administrator

Cheryl M. Kornick Liskow & Lewis One Shell Square 701 Poydras Street - Suite 5000 New Orleans, Louisiana 70139-5009 Telephone: (504) 581-7979 BRIEF OF AMICUS CURIAE – Louisiana Chemical Association THIBODEAUX, Chief Judge.

For the reasons discussed in the consolidated case of Cynthia Bridges,

Sec., Dept. Of Rev., State Of Louisiana v. Nelson Industrial Steam Co., 14-1250

(La.App. 3 Cir. __/__/15), ___ So.3d ___, the judgment of the trial court is

affirmed. Costs of this appeal are assessed against NISCO.

AFFIRMED. No. 14-1250, (c/w) No. 14-1251, (c/w) No. 14-1252, (c/w) No. 14-1253

COURT OF APPEAL, THIRD CIRCUIT

STATE OF LOUISIANA

No. 14-1250; Cynthia Bridges, Sec. Dept. of Rev., State of Louisiana v. Nelson Industrial Steam Co.

(c/w)

No. 14-1251; Nelson Industrial Steam Co. v. Calcasieu Parish School System Sales and Use Tax Dept., et al.

No. 14-1252; Cynthia Bridges, Sec. Dept. of Rev., State of Louisiana v. Nelson Industrial Steam Co.

No. 14-1253; Nelson Industrial Steam Co. v. Calcasieu Parish School System Sales and Use Tax Dept., et al.

CONERY, J., dissenting.

The central issue in these four consolidated cases is whether NISCO’s

purchase of limestone used in its manufacture of electricity, steam, and ash should

be excluded from sales tax pursuant to La.R.S. 47:301(10)(c)(i)(aa), expressly

referred to by the supreme court as the “further processing exclusion.” Int’l Paper

Inc. v. Bridges, 07-1151 (La. 1/16/08), 972 So.2d 1121, 1128. The statute at issue

providing for the exclusion states, “The term ‘sale at retail’ does not include sale

of materials for further processing into articles of tangible personal property

for sale at retail.” La.R.S. 47:301(10)(c)(i)(aa) (emphasis added). Because a tax

exclusion is at issue, the statute must be liberally construed in favor of the taxpayer

and against the State (LDR) and Parish (CPSS), herein collectively referred

textually as “Tax Collectors.” Harrah’s Bossier City Inv. Co., LLC v. Bridges, 09- 1916 (La.5/11/10), 41 So.3d 438. The trial court and majority incorrectly

interpreted the law as though the exclusion in question was a tax exemption and

construed the “exemption” narrowly in favor of the Tax Collectors. I submit their

decisions were wrong as a matter of law and respectfully dissent.

For many years prior to the audits at issue, the Tax Collectors treated

limestone used in NISCO’s manufacturing process to reduce sulfur emissions in

the production of electricity, steam, and ash as a raw material subject to the further

processing exclusion, thus excluding NISCO’s purchase of limestone from sales

tax. The CFB technology employed by NISCO in its manufacture of electricity,

steam, and ash required the use of limestone and was contemplated by NISCO

from the inception of its April 28, 1988 partnership agreement for production of

those products. NISCO’s facility was converted from natural gas to the CFB

technology it now uses in 1992, as originally planned. That technology

incorporates the use of petcoke as opposed to natural gas as fuel for the boilers

used in the process. As correctly noted by the majority, limestone is required to

reduce the emissions of sulfur from the petcoke burned in the boilers as fuel, and in

the process, the limestone is simultaneously processed into an ash. The ash is the

result of a combination of the carbon and oxygen from the limestone and the sulfur

from the petcoke, which results in a mixture of calcium oxide and calcium sulfate

ash. There is a ready market for the ash, one of the products to be sold as planned

from the beginning. Neither the CFB technology, nor the law applicable to the

further processing exclusion, La.R.S. 47:301(10)(c)(i)(aa), has changed since 1992.

What did change was the decision by the Tax Collectors in this case to tax the

limestone used in the manufacturing process beginning with audits dating back to

the tax year 2005.

2 The trial court in its judgment, and cryptic reasons for ruling, affirmed by

the majority, found, “It is also undisputed that limestone in any form, or its

component parts, is not found in the steam and electricity produced” by NISCO.

The trial court further stated, “Just because the ash is an incidental byproduct of the

[CFB] process, its production, even in combination with the production of steam

and electricity, does not in and of itself permit NISCO to claim the benefit of the

further processing tax exclusion on its purchase of limestone.”

Respectfully, the trial court and majority misconstrued the law applicable to

a tax exclusion in this case. In affirming, the majority states, “Here, NISCO seeks

to be exempt from paying sales taxes on its $46 million purchase of sand and

limestone[.]” To the contrary, it is the Tax Collectors who are bringing this suit

and the Tax Collectors who must bear the burden of establishing that the raw

materials used in NISCO’s manufacturing process are not subject to the tax

exclusion provided by the legislative act in question. This case, essentially, is

about statutory construction.

The trial court and the majority have determined that since the ash, one of

the three products produced in the manufacturing process and sold by NISCO, is

not the primary product sold by NISCO, and is not as economically profitable as

electricity and steam, then the limestone purchased by NISCO and required to be

used in its process is not subject to the further processing exclusion and is subject

to sales tax. The undisputed record, however, supports NISCO’s argument that

NISCO always contemplated sale of the ash as one of the products produced for

resale, along with electricity and steam, and continued to develop its market for its

ash product. Since 1996 through today, NISCO has sold 100% of its ash output to

LA Ash. According to the record, it is estimated that NISCO sells approximately

3 600-800 pounds of ash daily and some 200,000 to 250,000 tons annually. Ash is

clearly more than just a “by product” of NISCO’s manufacturing process. It is

especially clear, and not subject to dispute, that ash is one of the products, plural,

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