OKLAHOMA AUTOMOBILE DEALERS ASSOC. v. STATE ex rel. OKLAHOMA TAX COMM.

2017 OK 64
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedAugust 31, 2017
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 2017 OK 64 (OKLAHOMA AUTOMOBILE DEALERS ASSOC. v. STATE ex rel. OKLAHOMA TAX COMM.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
OKLAHOMA AUTOMOBILE DEALERS ASSOC. v. STATE ex rel. OKLAHOMA TAX COMM., 2017 OK 64 (Okla. 2017).

Opinion

OSCN Found Document:OKLAHOMA AUTOMOBILE DEALERS ASSOC. v. STATE ex rel. OKLAHOMA TAX COMM.

OKLAHOMA AUTOMOBILE DEALERS ASSOC. v. STATE ex rel. OKLAHOMA TAX COMM.
2017 OK 64
Case Number: 116143
Decided: 08/31/2017
THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF OKLAHOMA


Cite as: 2017 OK 64, __ P.3d __

NOTICE: THIS OPINION HAS NOT BEEN RELEASED FOR PUBLICATION. UNTIL RELEASED, IT IS SUBJECT TO REVISION OR WITHDRAWAL.


OKLAHOMA AUTOMOBILE DEALERS ASSOCIATION, an Oklahoma corporation, L AND J ACQUISITIONS, LLC d/b/a BATTISON HONDA, and CAITLIN CANNON, an individual, Petitioners,
v.
STATE OF OKLAHOMA, ex rel. OKLAHOMA TAX COMMISSION, Respondent.

APPLICATION TO ASSUME ORIGINAL JURISDICTION
AND PETITION FOR WRIT OF PROHIBITION

¶0 Petitioners, who are a not-for-profit trade association of automobile dealers, an automobile dealer, and a prospective consumer in Oklahoma, challenged House Bill 2433, alleging that it is a revenue bill enacted outside of the procedure mandated in Article V, Section 33 of the Oklahoma Constitution. The parties agree that the passage of HB 2433 did not comply with Article V, Section 33; so the case turns on whether HB 2433 is a "revenue bill" to which Article V, Section 33 applies. Applying the test we have utilized since 1908, we conclude that, HB 2433 "does not levy a tax in the strict sense" because it removes a tax exemption from an already levied tax rather than levying any new tax. As such, HB 2433 is not a revenue bill subject to Article V, Section 33's requirements.

ORIGINAL JURISDICTION ASSUMED.
PETITION FOR WRIT OF PROHIBITION DENIED.

Clyde A. Muchmore, Melanie Wilson Rughani, and Paige A. Masters, Crowe & Dunlevy, P.C., Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, for Petitioners.

Mithun S. Mansinghani, Abby Dillsaver, and Ethan Shaner, Office of the Attorney General, State of Oklahoma, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, for Respondent.

Wyrick, J.:

1 This is the second of several cases challenging various measures enacted by the Legislature this past session in response to the State's budget crisis. In the first of those cases we unanimously held that a measure imposing a new $1.50-per-pack assessment on cigarettes was a "revenue bill" subject to Article V, Section 33's requirements that revenue bills (1) originate in the House of Representatives, (2) be enacted prior to the final five days of the legislative session, and (3) be approved by either the people or by a three-fourths majority of each legislative chamber.1 This was so because the cigarette measure fit squarely within our century-old test for "revenue bills," in that it both had the primary purpose of raising revenue for the support of state government and it levied a new tax in the strict sense of the word.2

¶2 This case involves House Bill 2433,3 which was also enacted during the final five days of the session and did not receive three-fourths support in either legislative chamber.4 Like the first case, this case involves an Article V, Section 33 challenge, but the similarities end there because this case presents the much different question of whether a measure revoking an exemption from an already levied tax is a "revenue bill" subject to Article V, Section 33's requirements. Applying the two-part test we have applied for the last century, we conclude that HB 2433 is not a "revenue bill" because, despite its revenue-raising purpose, it does not levy a tax in the strict sense of the word.

¶3 We are compelled to reach this result for three primary reasons. First, our cases have long held that measures making "certain property . . . theretofore exempt from taxation . . . subject to taxation" are not "revenue bills" because removal of an exemption from an already levied tax is different from levying a tax in the first instance.5 Second, while that rule may seem superficially inconsistent with Article V, Section 33's taxpayer protections, it is actually deeply rooted in our Constitution's related policies that disfavor special exemptions from taxation and promote uniformity of taxation-policies that are also designed to protect the taxpayers. And third, because we have never before in our history held that a measure revoking a tax exemption is a "revenue bill," and because we have explicitly held that such measures are not "revenue bills," to hold otherwise would require us to break new ground and overrule well-established precedents. To do so would be to deprive the Legislature and the people of the legal predictability, uniformity, and clarity that it is our obligation to provide. Accordingly, we must deny Petitioners the relief they seek.

I.

¶4 To properly apply our Article V, Section 33 test, we must first determine the operation and effect of HB 2433.

¶5 In 1933, the Legislature levied a sales tax on all tangible personal property-including automobiles-and that sales tax has remained part of our tax code ever since.6 In 1935, however, the Legislature added an exemption for automobile sales in the sales-tax provisions, so that automobiles were subject to only an automobile excise tax from that point forward.7 HB 2433 revokes part of that sales tax exemption so that sales of automobiles are once again subject to the sales tax, but only a 1.25% sales tax.8 Sales of automobiles remain exempt from the remainder of the sales tax levy. HB 2433 does not, however, levy any new sales or excise tax, as the text of the measure and related provisions demonstrate.

¶6 For example, the sales tax levy can be found in 68 O.S. § 1354, imposing a tax upon "the gross receipts or gross proceeds of each sale" of tangible personal property and other specifically enumerated items.9 The last amendment increasing the sales tax levy was in 1989, when the rate was raised to 4.5%.10 Nothing in HB 2433 amends the sales tax levy contained in section 1354;11 the rate remains 4.5%.12 Likewise, the levy of the motor vehicle excise tax is found in 68 O.S. § 2103.13 That levy has not been increased since 1985,14

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