Qwest Corp. v. City of Portland

365 P.3d 1157, 275 Or. App. 874, 2015 Ore. App. LEXIS 1610
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedDecember 30, 2015
Docket121216632; A154769
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 365 P.3d 1157 (Qwest Corp. v. City of Portland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Qwest Corp. v. City of Portland, 365 P.3d 1157, 275 Or. App. 874, 2015 Ore. App. LEXIS 1610 (Or. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

NAKAMOTO, J.

Plaintiff Qwest Corporation1 appeals from the trial court’s judgment granting defendant City of Portland declaratory relief. Qwest assigns error to the trial court’s declaratory ruling that the “utility license fee” (ULF), a tax imposed by the city, does not violate a state law capping the amount municipalities may charge telecommunications carriers for the use of municipal rights-of-way. Qwest argues that the ULF is preempted in that it is actually a privilege tax governed by ORS 221.515(1) and the ULF exceeds the cap on such taxes set out in that statute. The city acknowledges that the statute caps the rate at which it can collect privilege taxes from telecommunications carriers for the use of its rights-of-way, but it argues that the statute does not preclude it from imposing other taxes and fees, such as a tax on utilities for the privilege of doing business within the city, and it claims that that is what the ULF is. We agree with the city and therefore affirm.

I. BACKGROUND

For context, we begin with an overview of ORS 221.515, the statute on which Qwest relies, and provisions of the city code that permit the city to obtain revenues from Qwest’s operations within the city. The statute,2 [877]*877which became effective in 1990, Or Laws 1989, ch 484, § 9, pertains only to “telecommunications carriers” as defined in ORS 133.721. ORS 221.515(4). Under ORS 221.515(1), Oregon municipalities “may levy and collect from every telecommunications carrier operating within the municipality and actually using the streets, alleys or highways,” except for travel, “a privilege tax for the use of those streets, alleys or highways * * * in an amount which may not exceed seven percent of the gross revenues of the telecommunications carrier currently earned within the boundaries of the municipality.” The privilege tax is calculated on a portion of the telecommunications carrier’s revenue “derived from exchange access service[.]” ORS 221.515(2). Exchange access service, defined by ORS 403.105(10), is local telephone service, and does not include other services such as long-distance service. Under ORS 221.515(3), a telecommunications carrier that pays the privilege tax authorized under the statute is not required to pay other taxes or fees to the municipality “for its use of public streets, alleys, or highways, or all of them, and shall not be required to pay any additional tax or fee on the gross revenues that are the measure of the privilege tax.”

As relevant to this case, the city imposes both a utility “privilege tax” and the ULF on various utilities that operate within its borders. The city imposes a privilege tax on certain utilities that use or occupy the city’s rights-of-way, “for the use and occupancy of’ those rights-of-way. Portland City Code (PCC) 7.12.060. In accordance with ORS [878]*878221.515, that tax is seven percent for a “telecommunications utility,” calculated on its exchange access service revenue earned within the city. PCC 7.12.060(C). A crediting provision allows a utility operating under a revocable permit “for using the streets” to deduct from its privilege tax obligation any amount paid under the permit.3 PCC 7.12.110.

At the same time, the city requires anyone operating a “utility” within the city to obtain a license from the city, for which it charges a tax — the ULF. PCC 7.14.020, PCC 7.14.060. For such license purposes, a “utility” is defined, in part, as “the business of supplying * * * telecommunications.” PCC 7.14.040(1). In turn, “telecommunications” is defined, in part and with some exceptions, as “the providing or offering * * * of the transmittal of voice, data, image * * * or any other information between or among points by wire, cable, fiber optics, laser, microwave, radio, or similar facilities [.]” PCC 7.14.040(H). The ULF requires designated utilities, including telecommunications utilities, to pay a five percent tax calculated on their gross revenues earned within the city.4 PCC 7.14.060(A).

However, a crediting provision in the city’s code allows utilities subject to the ULF to deduct from their ULF obligations payments they make under the terms of permits and franchises. PCC 7.14.070. In addition, if all of a utility’s revenues “earned from operations as a utility otherwise meet the criteria for deduction under” that crediting provision, it [879]*879“is not required to apply for or obtain a utility license * * * ” PCC 7.14.050(B).

It is undisputed that Qwest is a telecommunications carrier for purposes of ORS 221.515 and that it falls within the city’s definitions of a utility subject to both the ULF and the city’s privilege tax. That is because it is a utility doing business in the city and providing telecommunication services via wires, cables, and other networked equipment in the city’s rights-of-way, both above and beneath city roadways.

Qwest has a temporary revocable permit from the city under which Qwest pays the city the equivalent of the privilege tax, consisting of seven percent of its exchange access service revenue, for its use of the city’s rights-of-way. See PCC 7.12.110 (providing that “[a]ny amount which any utility [pays] *** under the terms of any revocable permit * * * for using the streets shall be credited against the amount” owed for the privilege tax). As a utility, Qwest is also subject to the ULF, subject to the credit in PCC 7.14.070.

Because the history of the ULF forms the basis for part of Qwest’s argument, we briefly review the most relevant changes to that law. In 1946, the city amended its license and business code to create the ULF. Portland Ordinance 82958 (June 27, 1946) (1946 ULF). The city already had a privilege tax, which was enacted in 1932, Portland Ordinance 62282 (Mar 16, 1932), and it already used permits and franchises to regulate and charge utilities for their use of the city’s rights-of-way.

To “more equitab[ly] distributee] the costs of local government,” the city created the ULF as a business license tax that applied to specified utilities operating within the city. 1946 ULF, Section 1. The tax for the required license was a percentage of a covered utility’s gross revenues earned within the city, with certain adjustments, and utilities that made payments under licenses and franchises could deduct those payments from the fee. 1946 ULF, Section 1, Article 75, §§ 20-7502, 20-7504, 20-7505.

The current version of the ULF remains very similar to the 1946 version. Compare 1946 ULF, with PCC [880]*8807.14.005 - 7.14.130.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
365 P.3d 1157, 275 Or. App. 874, 2015 Ore. App. LEXIS 1610, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/qwest-corp-v-city-of-portland-orctapp-2015.