State Department of Assessments & Taxation v. Baltimore Gas & Electric Co.

63 A.3d 15, 430 Md. 672, 2013 WL 1164524, 2013 Md. LEXIS 146
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMarch 22, 2013
DocketNo. 14
StatusPublished

This text of 63 A.3d 15 (State Department of Assessments & Taxation v. Baltimore Gas & Electric Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Department of Assessments & Taxation v. Baltimore Gas & Electric Co., 63 A.3d 15, 430 Md. 672, 2013 WL 1164524, 2013 Md. LEXIS 146 (Md. 2013).

Opinion

Opinion by

McDONALD, J.

As a public utility holding a State-sanctioned monopoly on the distribution of electric power in its service area, Baltimore Gas & Electric Company (“BGE”) is subject to the State [674]*674franchise tax, a gross-receipts tax levied against revenue from that activity. BGE also supplies some of the electric power that it distributes — a sphere in which it once also enjoyed a monopoly but now faces competition as a result of relatively recent State legislation designed to introduce competition into the market for the supply of electric power. This effort to introduce competition into this segment of the electricity market, in the hope that competition will benefit consumers, is sometimes referred to as de-regulation legislation.

To facilitate the transition to a competitive market for the supply of electricity, the Legislature first temporarily capped BGE’s rates for the supply of electricity and later provided that consumers would receive certain credits over the period of a year to mitigate a large projected increase in those rates — credits that would be available regardless of the electricity supplier actually selected by the consumer, in order to preserve a level playing field in that market. The cost of the credits was financed by the issuance of bonds to be repaid through charges that are billed to customers over a 10-year period. The overall scheme involving credits, charges, and bond financing is known as the rate stabilization plan.

This case concerns whether, in establishing the rate stabilization plan for purposes of the transition to a competitive market for the supply of electricity, the Legislature either intentionally or inadvertently provided for the credits and charges to affect BGE’s franchise tax liability — the tax related to its monopoly delivery activities unaffected by the deregulation legislation. In our view, it did not.

Background

Public Utilities and the Franchise Tax

Public Service Companies

A public utility is a natural monopoly when it is “obviously uneconomical” to have more than one provider of a particular [675]*675service or commodity.1 The only question is who will operate that monopoly. In many instances, State and local governments make that choice by awarding a “franchise” to a particular company. The state-sanctioned monopolist is then subject to special government oversight and, in some cases, special taxes.

In Maryland, utilities are regulated under the rubric of “public service companies.” See Maryland Code, Public Utilities Article (“PU”), § l-101(x). Electric companies are one species of public service company and are closely regulated in certain respects by the Public Service Commission (“PSC”). PU § 1 — 101(h), (x); PU § 7-101 et seq. Respondent BGE, founded in 1816, is a Maryland corporation that provides gas and electric service to 1.8 million customers in the State and is subject to that regulatory regime.

Franchise Tax

Beginning with charter taxes on railroads in the 1830s,2 taxes on the gross receipts of public utilities were widely adopted across the country. Such a tax is often referred to as a “franchise tax” as it is viewed as compensation to the public for the legal and property rights that a utility enjoys as a result of its franchise.3 Franchise taxes have thus traditional[676]*676ly been related (in theory, at least) to the state-sanctioned monopolistic activities of a public utility.4

For well over a century, Maryland has imposed an annual franchise tax on public service companies. See Chapter 559, § 1, Laws of Maryland 1890, codified as subsequently amended at Maryland Code, Tax-General Article (“TG”), § 8-401 et seq. With respect to an electric utility, the franchise tax is calculated in part as a percentage (2%) of the gross receipts the electric company derives from business in Maryland.5 TG § 8-403. The franchise tax is administered by the State Department of Assessments and Taxation (“Department”), the Petitioner in this case. TG §§ 1-101(g), 8-408.

The Department has provided some direction in regulation for the computation of the tax. Taxable gross receipts for distribution are derived from “all revenues included in the operating revenue accounts as prescribed by the Federal Energy Regulation Commission [“FERC”].” COMAR 18.08.01.01B(5)(a). Amounts that utilities report to FERC are thus an important starting point in the computation of the tax. Those figures are to be adjusted if “otherwise specified by Maryland law or regulation.” Id. In addition, certain amounts are to be excluded from the figure for taxable gross receipts, as provided in the franchise tax law. COMAR 18.08.01.01B(5)(d).

Deregulation of the Supply of Electricity — 1999

The provision of electric power to a customer may be conceived of as the supply of a commodity — electric power— [677]*677and a service — the delivery of that power to the end user. BGE’s electricity rates include charges for both electricity supply, sometimes also referred to as the sale of electricity, and electricity distribution, which is the transmission of electricity through a power grid or other delivery infrastructure to the customer. Prior to 2000, both the sale and delivery of electricity were components of one regulated rate, set by the PSC and charged by BGE as the sole provider of electric power to customers in its service area.

Separating Supply from Distribution

In the 1970s and 1980s, there was a movement to restructure electric utilities inspired by “increased faith in the ability of markets to achieve efficient outcomes through competition and reduced faith in the ability of governments to achieve efficient outcomes through regulation or production of service.” Spence, Can Law Manage Competitive Energy Markets?, 93 Cornell L.Rev. 765, 770 (2008). “[E]conomists began to challenge the premise that the provision of energy service is a natural monopoly at all.... Delivery — transmission and distribution service — is a natural monopoly because the construction of duplicate delivery networks ... is often inefficient. The production (and sale) of energy, however, is not a natural monopoly. We can unbundle production (and sales) from distribution so that buyers ... can choose their energy supplier even if they must take delivery service from a monopoly provider.” Id. at 772. That view led to the restructuring of the market for electricity in Maryland in the late 1990s. Van Nostrand, Constitutional Limitations on the Ability of States to Rehabilitate Their Failed Electric Utility Restructuring Plans, 31 Seattle U.L.Rev. 593, 610-19 (2008) (describing restructuring of electricity industry in several states, including Maryland).

In 1999, the General Assembly enacted legislation to convert the market for the supply of electric power in the State from a regulated monopolistic market to a less regulated, competitive one. Chapter 3, Laws of Maryland 1999. Under the de-regulation scheme, there are multiple competing suppli[678]*678ers of electric power — the supply component.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
63 A.3d 15, 430 Md. 672, 2013 WL 1164524, 2013 Md. LEXIS 146, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-department-of-assessments-taxation-v-baltimore-gas-electric-co-md-2013.