Sirius Xm Radio, Inc. v. Glenn Hegar, Comptroller of Public Accounts and Ken Paxton, Attorney General of the State of Texas

CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 25, 2022
Docket20-0462
StatusPublished

This text of Sirius Xm Radio, Inc. v. Glenn Hegar, Comptroller of Public Accounts and Ken Paxton, Attorney General of the State of Texas (Sirius Xm Radio, Inc. v. Glenn Hegar, Comptroller of Public Accounts and Ken Paxton, Attorney General of the State of Texas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Sirius Xm Radio, Inc. v. Glenn Hegar, Comptroller of Public Accounts and Ken Paxton, Attorney General of the State of Texas, (Tex. 2022).

Opinion

Supreme Court of Texas ══════════ No. 20-0462 ══════════

Sirius XM Radio, Inc., Petitioner,

v.

Glenn Hegar, Comptroller of Public Accounts and Ken Paxton, Attorney General of the State of Texas, Respondents

═══════════════════════════════════════ On Petition for Review from the Court of Appeals for the Third District of Texas ═══════════════════════════════════════

Argued November 30, 2021

JUSTICE BLACKLOCK delivered the opinion of the Court.

Sirius XM Radio produces radio programming, which it transmits using satellites. Subscribers pay monthly fees to access Sirius’s programming. To calculate the franchise tax it owes to the State of Texas, Sirius must first calculate its “receipts from . . . each service performed in this state.” TEX. TAX CODE § 171.103(a). The principal question before this Court is whether Sirius’s monthly subscription fees from Texas users are receipts from a “service performed in this state.” Sirius argues that the service it performs for its Texas subscribers is the production of radio shows and the transmission of a radio signal, nearly all of which takes place outside Texas. According to Sirius, a service is “performed in this state” if the people or equipment performing the service are physically located in Texas. The Comptroller disagrees. It argues that the service Sirius performs for its Texas subscribers is the provision of access to its encrypted radio signal, which takes place on each subscriber’s radio in Texas. The Comptroller reads the Tax Code to allocate services to Texas if the “receipt-producing, end-product act” takes place in this state. Here, the Comptroller contends, the “receipt- producing, end-product act” is the enabling of each subscriber’s radio to receive Sirius’s signal. As explained below, we agree with Sirius. We therefore reverse the judgment of the court of appeals and remand the case to that court for consideration of the parties’ remaining arguments. I A Texas’s franchise tax is calculated by multiplying the taxable entity’s “taxable margin” by the tax rate. TEX. TAX CODE § 171.002. Determining an entity’s “taxable margin” requires three steps: margin calculation, apportionment, and deductions. Id. § 171.101(a). Entities first calculate their “margin,” which is generally a percentage of their total revenue. Id. § 171.101(a)(1). The next step is “apportioning the taxable entity’s margin to this state as provided by Section 171.106.” Id. § 171.101(a)(2). This step yields the “apportioned margin.” Id. The apportioned margin is calculated by multiplying the margin by a

2 fraction, whose “numerator . . . is the taxable entity’s gross receipts from business done in this state” and whose “denominator . . . is the taxable entity’s gross receipts from its entire business.” Id. § 171.106(a). Finally, subtracting allowable deductions from the apportioned margin yields the entity’s “taxable margin,” to which the tax rate is applied. Id. § 171.101(a)(3). Only the second step—apportionment to Texas—is at issue here. Determining the apportioned margin requires calculating what percentage of the entity’s gross receipts are “from business done in this state.” Id. § 171.106(a). Section 171.103 describes the required calculation. The only element of the calculation in dispute is “the taxable entity’s receipts from . . . each service performed in this state.” Id. § 171.103(a)(2). The parties’ principal disagreement is whether Sirius’s receipts from subscriber fees paid by Texas customers are “from . . . service performed in this state.” Id. The Tax Code authorizes the Comptroller to adopt lawful rules for “the collection of taxes and other revenues under this title,” which includes Chapter 171. Id. § 111.002. The administrative rules applicable to this case provided that receipts from services “are apportioned to the location where the service is performed,” and if services are performed in more than one state, then the value apportioned to Texas is the “fair value of the services that are rendered in Texas.” 32 Tex. Reg. 10044, 10047 (2007), amended in part by 46 Tex. Reg. 460 (2021) [hereinafter former 34 TEX. ADMIN. CODE § 3.591(e)(26)].

3 B Sirius broadcasts more than 150 satellite-radio channels, over 70% of which run exclusively original content produced by Sirius. The content is produced in studios mainly located in New York City and Washington, D.C., although Sirius ran a small radio show in Texas for a time. Content is broadcast by transmitting it to satellites from uplink facilities in New Jersey, D.C., and Georgia. The satellites are launched from Kazakhstan. Sirius has ten satellites orbiting 22,000 miles above the earth. They transmit the signals they receive back down to Earth, where they either reach radio sets or, in densely populated areas, one of Sirius’s seven hundred terrestrial repeaters (twenty-two of which are in Texas) that supplement its satellite coverage. The satellites are controlled by Sirius’s facilities in Panama, Ecuador, and Georgia.1 Once the signal reaches a customer’s radio, a “chip set”—that is, a pair of integrated circuits—decrypts the radio signal, allowing the listener to hear the programming. Customers can access Sirius’s content by purchasing one of Sirius’s radio sets and paying a subscription fee. Sirius has agreements with auto makers to ensure that new vehicles have Sirius-enabled radios installed. Subscribers typically purchase or lease vehicles with the radios installed rather than purchasing and installing their own. Each subscription is tied to one radio set. When a customer pays a subscription fee, Sirius sends a signal from New York or D.C. that activates the chip set in the satellite radio, which permits the chip set to

1 The state, not the country.

4 decrypt radio signals. In many cases, new automobiles come with an active Sirius radio set, so Sirius sends a signal to deactivate and thereby encrypt the radio signal only if the purchaser fails to renew the subscription after his trial period ends. Subscription fees are the primary source of Sirius’s revenue. The chip set, which is equipped with technology to receive the activation signal and decrypt radio signals, is located in the radio set, but—save for a small number of terrestrial repeaters servicing a limited area— none of the equipment or personnel used to send activation signals to initiate decryption is located in Texas. Sirius creates content in various states, but very little of it is made in Texas.2 It has many subscribers in Texas. In 2009 and 2010, Sirius paid franchise taxes in Texas. Those tax years are at issue here. In calculating its margin, Sirius was permitted to deduct from its revenue the “cost of goods sold” (COGS). TEX. TAX CODE § 171.1012. Sirius included in that deduction certain revenue-sharing payments and subsidies it paid to automobile manufacturers to have its radios installed in vehicles. Sirius then apportioned its reported subscription receipts for each year based on the locations where it produced its programming and on the relative costs of those activities in Texas and elsewhere. The Comptroller’s Office audited Sirius. It determined that Sirius should apportion based on the location of its subscribers, not based on the location where its programs are produced. The Comptroller

2Sirius produced a channel called “Willie’s Place” in Hillsboro, Texas. Taxation of that production is not at issue.

5 claimed Sirius underpaid by $878,364.39 for the 2010 tax year and $1,674,907.38 for the 2011 tax year. According to the Comptroller, the “service performed in this state” by Sirius was the service of “unscrambling” the radio signal. The Comptroller reached this conclusion based on its position that services must be apportioned to the state in which the “receipt-producing, end-product act” takes place.

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Sirius Xm Radio, Inc. v. Glenn Hegar, Comptroller of Public Accounts and Ken Paxton, Attorney General of the State of Texas, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sirius-xm-radio-inc-v-glenn-hegar-comptroller-of-public-accounts-and-tex-2022.