Saudi Refining, Inc. v. Director of Revenue

715 A.2d 89, 1998 Del. Super. LEXIS 241, 1998 WL 413975
CourtSuperior Court of Delaware
DecidedJanuary 21, 1998
DocketC.A. No. 97C-01-092 SCD
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 715 A.2d 89 (Saudi Refining, Inc. v. Director of Revenue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Saudi Refining, Inc. v. Director of Revenue, 715 A.2d 89, 1998 Del. Super. LEXIS 241, 1998 WL 413975 (Del. Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

OPINION

DEL PESCO, Judge.

Introduction

The parties have petitioned the Court to determine whether Delaware’s Wholesaler Gross Receipts Tax1 is unconstitutional as applied by the Delaware Director of Revenue (“Director”) to Saudi Refining, Inc. (“SRI”) for the assessed years of 1989 through 1995.2 In particular, SRI argues that the gross receipts tax violates both the Import-Export Clause and the Commerce Clause of the [91]*91United States Constitution. With respect to the Import-Export Clause, the principal issue revolves around whether Delaware’s gross receipts tax is an impermissible duty or impost on imported goods as enunciated by the United States Supreme Court in Michelin Tire Corp. v. Wages.3 With respect to the Commerce Clause, the parties’ dispute centers on whether the tax satisfies the requirements announced by the Supreme Court in Japan Line, Ltd. v. County of Los Angeles,4 which includes the four-prong test established by Complete Auto Transit, Inc. v. Brady.5 Of particular importance in this regard is whether a sufficient nexus existed between SRI’s business activities and the State of Delaware that would bring SRI within the purview of the gross receipts tax.6

The Court finds that the gross receipts tax does not violate the Import-Export Clause because it is a nondiscriminatory tax that is not directed at imported goods still in transit. Because the Court finds that there is a sufficient nexus between SRI’s business activities and the State, that the gross receipts tax is fairly apportioned, nondiscriminatory, and related to services provided by the State, and that the tax does not create the risk of international multiple taxation nor impair the federal government’s ability to speak with one voice in the regulation of foreign commerce, Delaware’s gross receipts tax does not violate the Commerce Clause. In light of these findings, the Court need not address the Director’s argument that SRI’s claims for refunds for the years 1989 through 1991 are barred by the statute of limitations.7

Procedural Background

On March 28, 1991, pursuant to 30 Del. C. § 2902, the Division of Revenue assessed SRI taxes and interest due for wholesaler gross receipts on crude oil it sold and delivered to Star Enterprise’s refinery in Delaware City. SRI disputed the assessment but agreed to pay the tax and interest on or about May 2, 1991 in exchange for the Division’s waiver of penalty. In December 1995, SRI filed claims with the Division for full refunds of the taxes paid in the years 1989 through 1995. In May of 1996, the Division issued a notice of disallowance. SRI filed a protest with the Division that was later denied. SRI then appealed the disallowance to the Delaware Tax Appeal Board. That appeal was removed to Superior Court for the present proceedings. The parties have stipulated to all material facts relating to the issues in dispute, agree that summary judgment is appropriate, and have filed cross-motions for summary judgment.

Factual Background

SRI, a Delaware corporation, is a wholly owned subsidiary of another Delaware corporation, Aramco Services Company (“ASC”). ASC is, in turn, wholly owned by the Saudi Arabian Oil Company (“Saudi Aramco”), a business enterprise of the Saudi Arabian government. SRI’s principal place of business is in Houston, Texas. SRI has no offices or employees located in Delaware. SRI is in the business of buying and selling crude oil that it purchases from Saudi Aramco. SRI is also a 50% partner, along with Texaco Refining and Marketing East, Inc. (“TRMI-East”), a Delaware corporation, in Star Enterprises (“Star”), a partnership formed under the laws of New York in December 1988. TRMI-East is a wholly owned subsidiary of Texaco Refining and Marketing, Inc. (“TRMI”), a Delaware corporation. SRI participates in the management of the busi[92]*92ness of the partnership with TRMI-East by appointing three representatives to a six-member management committee that is charged with the overall management and control of the business affairs of Star.

Star is in the business of refining crude oil and in wholesaling and retailing petroleum products. Star owns three refineries, one of which is located in Delaware City. Pursuant to “Crude Oil Contract # 1” between Star, SRI and TRMI, SRI and TRMI are each required to sell and supply Star with the lesser of 50% of the crude oil to be refined at Star refineries or 300,000 barrels of crude oil per calendar day (300,000 MBPCD). On those occasions when Star requires less than 600,000 MBPCD, SRI ends up supplying less, oil to Star than TRMI. Contract # 1 provides that custody, transfer, risk of loss, and title to the crude oil sold by SRI passes to Star at the first flange at the Star refineries. The flange is the outer edge of the intake pipes at the refineries.

Under “Crude Oil Contract #3,” SRI is required to sell TRMI 300,000 MBPCD of crude oil which TRMI then resells to Star under another contract known as “Crude Oil Contract #2.” Between January 1989 and May 1993, title to the crude oil sold by SRI to TRMI passed at the first flange at Star’s Delaware City refinery.8 In June 1993, Crude Oil Contract # 3 was amended to provide that title to the oil sold by SRI to TRMI passes on the high seas before the transports ing vessel enters the 200-mile exclusive economic interest zone of the United States.

On average, SRI and TRMI provide the Delaware City refinery with 65,000 MBPCD of crude oil. SRI makes no sales in Delaware other than its sales of crude oil to Star. Undér the terms of Crude Oil Contracts # 1 and # 3, SRI has the right and obligation to transfer and deliver (including “lightering”) all crude oil that it sells to Star and to TRMI. Lightering is the process by which oil is pumped from a tanker into smaller barges to lighten the tanker’s load and thereby decrease its draft so that the ship can eventually move through a shallow channel. Under Crude Oil Contract #3, TRMI irrevocably appointed SRI as its agent, or attorney in fact, for exercising its rights and obligations under Crude Oil Contract # 2, which relates to TRMI’s resale of oil to Star.

SRI discharges its duty to transport and deliver the oil it sells directly to Star as well as the oil TRMI resells to Star by authorizing Saudi Petroleum International, Inc. (“SPII”), an affiliated Delaware corporation, with offices in New York, to act as SRI’s agent for purpose of chartering vessels to transport the oil. SPII arranges for delivery of -oil to the Delaware City refinery through the use of independent common carriers. Deliveries on behalf of SRI or TRMI occur on average about three times a month.'

Actual delivery of the oil to Delaware City is accomplished in the following manner. Oil tankers carrying between 400,000 and 900,-000 barrels of oil are chartered for SRI by SPII. The tankers are owned by independent common carriers. When a tanker enters Delaware Bay, the ship is boarded by a pilot from the Pilot’s Association for Bay and River Delaware, whose main office is located in Philadelphia. The pilot serves as an aid to the ship’s captain to ensure the vessel’s safe passage up the river to its destination.

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Bluebook (online)
715 A.2d 89, 1998 Del. Super. LEXIS 241, 1998 WL 413975, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/saudi-refining-inc-v-director-of-revenue-delsuperct-1998.