Valero Refining-Texas, L.P. v. Galveston Central Appraisal District

519 S.W.3d 66, 60 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 505, 2017 WL 727276, 2017 Tex. LEXIS 214
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 24, 2017
DocketNO. 15-0492
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 519 S.W.3d 66 (Valero Refining-Texas, L.P. v. Galveston Central Appraisal District) 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.

Bluebook
Valero Refining-Texas, L.P. v. Galveston Central Appraisal District, 519 S.W.3d 66, 60 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 505, 2017 WL 727276, 2017 Tex. LEXIS 214 (Tex. 2017).

Opinion

Chief Justice Hecht

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The Texas Constitution guarantees that “[tjaxation shall be equal and uniform.”1 By statute, “a property is appraised unequally if [its] appraised value ... exceeds the median appraised value of a reasonable number of comparable properties appropriately adjusted.”2 In appraising real property, an appraisal district may choose to divide a single tract into multiple accounts for various reasons, such as the complexity of improvements. The issue before us is whether an owner’s complaint of unequal taxation may be directed to only some of those accounts and not the valuation of the whole tract. The court of appeals concluded that the issue is one of fact.3 We hold, as a matter of law, that appraisals of individual accounts may be challenged as unequal. We reverse the judgment of the court of appeals and remand the case to that court for further proceedings.

I

An oil refinery is typically a sprawling, complex facility with many different components. Processing units of varying types convert crude oil into different petroleum products including gasoline, diesel, kerosene, lubricating oil, liquified petroleum gas, asphalt, and petroleum coke. Tanks store crude and product inventories. Support buildings house operations and administration. The plant incorporates pollution control equipment required by the State. The facility contains personal property, including inventories, furniture, fixtures, equipment, and supplies. There are intangible assets. And the whole thing sits on land.

Some refineries are more complex than others and can extract more products from crude. A “heavy-conversion” or “deep-conversion” refinery can operate on heavier [69]*69and more sour crude oil and uses a coker unit that leaves nothing of the crude but petroleum coke, a carbon powder that can be burned or used to make anodes for use in aluminum smelting. A “medium-conversion” refinery uses lighter crude oil and extracts fewer products. A well-recognized metric of refinery complexity is the Nelson Complexity Index,4 published annually in the Oil and Gas Journal, a widely read petroleum industry weekly publication with worldwide coverage.5 Refineries also have different production capacities depending on their size.

Galveston County has three oil refineries, all in Texas City. Petitioner Valero Refining-Texas L.P. (“Valero”) and BP Products (NA), Inc. (“BP”) both own heavy-conversion refineries, and Marathon Petroleum Co. (“Marathon”) owns a medium-conversion refinery. BP’s refinery is the largest and most complex, while Marathon’s is the smallest and least complex. Marathon’s refinery, unlike the other two, cannot remove sulfur from its products. Because of this, Marathon sends its finished products to other refineries for further treatment before sale in the United States.

In other respects, the three facilities are typical of refineries generally. Each sits on land, processes crude oil to produce petrochemical products, and has storage facilities and access to utilities. Each also has support facilities such as warehouses and administration buildings. And each has pollution control equipment (“PCE”). PCE is not part of the refining process but is required to operate the refinery, and its value would be included in determining the refinery’s market value. PCE is largely, but not entirely, tax-exempt. ,

Generally, a tract of land and its improvements are appraised together and assigned a single value. But appraisal districts are permitted to divide a tract and its improvements into separate components, each with its own tax account number, and appraise them individually. A district is required to give the owner “notice of what property was included in each tax account (and thus some assurance that it was not included twice)”.6 For 2011, respondent Galveston Central Appraisal District (“the District”) appraised the Valero, BP, and Marathon refineries using separate tax accounts. It is unclear from the record how many accounts the District used.

.Valero protested some, but not all,7 of the account appraisals to the Galveston County Appraisal Review Board, claiming that the appraised values exceeded market values and were not equal and uniform compared to BP’s and Marathon’s appraised values. In separate orders for each account, the Board reduced the values of several accounts and rejected Valero’s claims of inequality. Valero appealed to the district court from the Board’s orders on only five of its accounts—three relating to [70]*70processing operations, one for PCE, and one for personal property and inventory. Valero initially asserted both of the claims it made before the Board but eventually dropped its market value claim. On the first day of trial, Valero requested leave to amend its pleadings to drop its claim relating to the two accounts for PCE and personal property and inventory, narrowing the dispute to the three accounts related to processing operations. The District did not object to the amendment in substance but argued that an equal-and-uniform challenge can be determined only if made to the appraised value of the entire tract, not just to some of the component tax accounts, and moved to dismiss for want of jurisdiction. The trial court rejected the District’s argument, denied its motion, and proceeded to trial.

Valero contends that for determining unequal taxation, the two other Galveston County refineries are “a reasonable number of comparable properties” under section 42.26(a)(3) of the Tax Code.8 According to Valero’s trial experts, the three refineries’ respective capacities and Nelson Complexity indices are:

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The District’s expert testified that these differences are so great that the three refineries are not comparable, and that three properties are not enough to determine whether Valero’s appraisals were equal and uniform.

But if comparison is to be made, all the experts agreed that values for the refineries must be adjusted for differences in capacity and complexity by calculating Equivalent Distillation Capacity (“EDC”), which is the product of the two figures.

The experts calculated values per EDC, found the mean between BP’s and Marathon’s, and used it to calculate Valero’s adjusted account appraisals. The experts also made these calculations both including and excluding the refineries’ PCE accounts, although Valero had dropped its challenge to that account.

Including or excluding the refineries’ PCE accounts greatly impacts the comparative values of the three refineries. The experts’ testimony is summarized as follows:

[71]*71[[Image here]]

[72]*72With PCE excluded, the BP refinery’s value-per-EDC is higher than Marathon’s as might be expected, but including PCE, their positions reverse. This is in part because for BP, PCE is only 29% of the total appraisal for all four accounts, but for Marathon, it is 67%. Valero suggests that this discrepancy is due to the District’s careless appraisals of the largely tax-exempt PCE. Valero presented evidence at trial indicating that replacement cost, economic life, and depreciation had not been considered in calculating the value of the PCE.

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519 S.W.3d 66, 60 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 505, 2017 WL 727276, 2017 Tex. LEXIS 214, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/valero-refining-texas-lp-v-galveston-central-appraisal-district-tex-2017.