Pacific Coca-Cola Bottling Co. v. Department of Revenue

773 P.2d 1290, 307 Or. 667
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedMay 2, 1989
DocketOTC 1994, 1995; SC S34924
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 773 P.2d 1290 (Pacific Coca-Cola Bottling Co. v. Department of Revenue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pacific Coca-Cola Bottling Co. v. Department of Revenue, 773 P.2d 1290, 307 Or. 667 (Or. 1989).

Opinion

*669 FADELEY, J.

In this appeal from the Oregon Tax Court, taxpayer (the parent Coca-Cola Company and its wholly owned subsidiary Pacific Coca-Cola Bottling Company which is now known as “Ore-Cal Coca-Cola Bottling Co.”) 1 seeks a refund of $1,299,446.45 of corporate excise taxes paid to Oregon during the tax years 1967 through 1974. We affirm the Tax Court decision denying the refund.

In 1965, Oregon adopted the Uniform Division of Income for Tax Purposes Act (UDITPA), ORS 314.605 to 314.670. That act prescribes a method, not the tax. The method determines how much of the taxpayer’s combined worldwide 2 income was allocable to its Oregon business activities.

There are three steps in arriving at the amount of taxpayer’s combined income which is taxable by Oregon:

1. Determine what activities make up a unitary business;
2. Aggregate income from all components of the unitary business; and
3. Apportion the aggregate income among the states and countries where the business is taxable.

The third step — making the apportionment— produces a percentage that represents the portion of the unitary business activities conducted in Oregon. That percentage is applied to the total unitary income to determine the portion of that income which is subject to Oregon corporate excise tax. In 1967, this percentage was about 1 percent; in 1974, it was about one-half of 1 percent.

At issue between the Department of Revenue *670 (department) and taxpayer is whether the department determined the proper percentage of income which should be apportioned to Oregon. We affirm the Tax Court, which affirmed the percentage the department calculated to apportion income.

The department followed the three-factor formula in ORS 314.650 to determine that percentage. That statute provides:

“All business income shall be apportioned to this state by multiplying the income by a fraction, the numerator of which is the property factor plus the payroll factor plus the sales factor, and the denominator of which is three.”

The potential escape from the statutory formula, as it existed during the tax years involved, provided:

“If the allocation and apportionment provisions of ORS 314.610 to 314.665 do not fairly represent the extent of the taxpayer’s business activity in this state, the taxpayer may petition for and the department may permit, or the department may require, in respect to all or any part of the taxpayer’s activity, if reasonable:
“(1) Separate accounting;
“(2) The exclusion of any one or more of the factors;
“(3) The inclusion of one or more additional factors which will fairly represent the taxpayer’s business activity in this state; or
“(4) The employment of any other method to effectuate an equitable allocation and apportionment of the taxpayer’s income.” ORS 314.670 (amended by Or Laws 1984 (Special Session), ch 1, § 17).

Taxpayer contends that the prescribed statutory methods “do not fairly represent the extent of taxpayer’s business activity in this state.” The burden of proof is on the taxpayer seeking to use an alternative to the statutory formula. ORS 305.427; see also Twentieth Century-Fox Film v. Dept. of Rev., 299 Or 220, 225, 700 P2d 1035 (1985); Donald M. Drake Co. v. Dept. of Rev., 263 Or 26, 32, 500 P2d 1041 (1972).

Taxpayer makes no claim that its independently owned franchises should be declared to be a part of the unitary business for purposes of allocation of income to be taxed in I Oregon. Taxpayer does, however, argue that property ownedl *671 by and sales made by the independently owned franchises should be used to develop a substitute percentage different from the percentage produced when the sales and property of the independent franchises are not included in the statutory formula. 3

Taxpayer does not present any specific alternative formula but contends that failure to include sales and property values of the independently owned franchises makes the allocation of income unfair. Taxpayer relies on Twentieth Century-Fox Film v. Dept. of Rev., supra, wherein the department demonstrated and we held that the statutory formula did not fairly represent a film-maker’s business activity in Oregon. Our holding was based on the proposition that the taxpayer’s principal sources of sales income and its most valuable property assets were the master negatives of its films, located in another state, from which it printed copies for distribution to theaters in Oregon. 299 Or at 234. The court also implied that the department’s burden of showing that the factors of the statutory formula “do not fairly represent” instate business activity was more easily carried because the film maker was not a manufacturing or merchandising industry. 299 Or at 228.

The film-maker produced and stored its master negatives in another state. It had no payroll or significant property in Oregon. 299 Or at 234-35. The local sales factor would be its charges for film prints distributed to theaters in Oregon. Thus two of the statutory factors would have no application or weight. No such anomaly is presented in this case. The Twentieth Century-Fox Film exception, supporting an alternative formula, does not fit this case because film-making is not similar to taxpayer’s business. But legal principles decided there apply to this case.

*672 In Twentieth Century-Fox Film, this court held that a taxpayer challenging the statutory three-part formula had the burden of proving both (1) that the three-part formula does not fairly represent the extent of the taxpayer’s business activity in the state and (2) that the contesting party’s “alternative method of allocating income is ‘reasonable.’ ” 299 Or at 233. This court analyzed the second burden — reasonableness of the alternative method — by dividing “reasonableness” into three components. 299 Or at 233-34.

The bifurcating procedure employed by the department and the taxpayer in the trial of this case prevents us from deciding whether any undisclosed alternative method is reasonable.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
773 P.2d 1290, 307 Or. 667, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pacific-coca-cola-bottling-co-v-department-of-revenue-or-1989.