Virginia Department of Taxation v. R.J. Reynolds Tobacco

CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedFebruary 10, 2022
Docket201263
StatusPublished

This text of Virginia Department of Taxation v. R.J. Reynolds Tobacco (Virginia Department of Taxation v. R.J. Reynolds Tobacco) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Virginia Department of Taxation v. R.J. Reynolds Tobacco, (Va. 2022).

Opinion

PRESENT: All the Justices 1

VIRGINIA DEPARTMENT OF TAXATION OPINION BY v. Record No. 201263 CHIEF JUSTICE S. BERNARD GOODWYN February 10, 2022 R.J. REYNOLDS TOBACCO CO.

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE CITY OF DANVILLE Joseph W. Milam, Jr., Judge

In this appeal, we consider whether the calculation of the apportionment of a multistate

corporation’s Virginia taxable income should include the value of raw materials that age while

being stored in Virginia, when those materials are processed and used in manufacturing in

another state.

BACKGROUND

Lorillard Tobacco Company (Lorillard) is a Delaware corporation with its principal place

of business in North Carolina.2 Lorillard is a multistate business that manufactures cigarettes in

North Carolina and sells those cigarettes throughout the United States. It engages in business

activities within Virginia and maintains warehouses and facilities in Danville, Virginia (the

Danville Facilities).

Lorillard purchases leaf tobacco from third-party suppliers and receives the leaf tobacco

at its Danville Facilities. The leaf tobacco is stored in the Danville Facilities for an aging period

of 13 to 23 months, depending on the type and grade of the leaf tobacco. The aging is a natural

1 Chief Justice Lemons presided and participated in the hearing and decision of this case prior to the effective date of his retirement as Chief Justice on December 31, 2021. Justice Goodwyn was sworn in as Chief Justice effective January 1, 2022. 2 Sometime after Lorillard filed suit in the circuit court, Lorillard was acquired by and merged into R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Company, and the suit in the circuit court proceeded in the name of R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Company (R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Company is hereinafter referred to as Lorillard, the name of the entity whose tax assessments are at issue). process that occurs without human intervention or specialized equipment. Once Lorillard’s

production and manufacturing team in North Carolina determines that the leaf tobacco has

reached the target drying age, it instructs the Danville Facilities to ship the leaf tobacco to North

Carolina for processing and manufacturing into cigarettes.

As a multistate corporation, Lorillard earns income from business activities taxable

within and without Virginia. The Virginia Department of Taxation (the Department) requires

multistate businesses to apportion their income to determine the amount of their income which is

taxable in Virginia. The apportionment of a multistate corporation’s income requires

multiplying the multistate corporation’s overall income by a fraction which attempts to capture

the percentage of that income produced in Virginia. Multistate corporations, such as Lorillard,

must calculate their Virginia taxable income using the Virginia apportionment methodology.3

Code §§ 58.1-408–409.

For all tax years relevant to this appeal, on its original Virginia corporation income tax

returns, Lorillard included the value of its entire leaf tobacco inventory which was aging in its

Danville Facilities, in calculating its Virginia property factor. Doing so increased Lorillard’s

purported Virginia tax liability.

3 The apportionment involves multiplying the multistate corporation’s total income by a fraction, “the numerator of which is the property factor plus the payroll factor, plus twice the sales factor, and the denominator of which is four.” Code § 58.1-408. The factor relevant in this case is the property factor. The property factor is composed of a numerator, which is the average value of a corporation’s real and tangible personal property “owned and used . . . in the Commonwealth during the taxable year,” and a denominator, the average value of a corporation’s real and tangible personal property “owned and used . . . during the taxable year and located everywhere, to the extent that such property is used to produce Virginia taxable income.” Code § 58.1-409.

2 In 2011, for the tax years ending in June 2008,4 December 2008, and December 2009

(collectively, the First Assessments), Lorillard filed a request with the Department to recalculate

the apportionments used in the First Assessments. Lorillard claimed that including the value of

its stored leaf tobacco in the property factor resulted in apportionments that overstated the

amount of Lorillard’s business in Virginia, because the calculation improperly included the value

of the leaf tobacco which was stored, but not used in Virginia.

The Department denied Lorillard’s request. Lorillard sought reconsideration of the

Department’s decision. Lorillard also timely filed amended tax returns for the First

Assessments, removing the value of all stored leaf tobacco from the property factor;

correspondingly, Lorillard requested a refund of $4,632,117. The Department denied Lorillard’s

motion for reconsideration and refused Lorillard’s amended tax returns and refund claims.

Consequently, on September 25, 2013, Lorillard filed an “Application for Correction of

Erroneous Assessment of Corporation Income Taxes” in the Circuit Court of the City of

Danville, challenging the denial of its refund claims. Lorillard sought an order declaring that it is

not required to include leaf tobacco, merely stored in Virginia, in its property factor; that the

Department’s denial of its refund claim was erroneous; and that it is entitled to a refund in the

amount of $4,632,117, plus interest.

In its application, Lorillard asserted that Code § 58.1-409 does not require it to include

the leaf tobacco in its property factor because the stored leaf tobacco is not “used” by Lorillard

during the taxable year. Lorillard also asserted that its leaf tobacco is analogous to property

under construction and to mineral rights, both of which are specific types of property that a

4 In June 2008, Lorillard’s parent company was spun off from its parent consolidated group, causing Lorillard to have a short tax year for income tax purposes and requiring Lorillard to file two short-period tax returns for 2008.

3 Department regulation, 23 VAC § 10-120-160(A)(4) (the Regulation), deems as property that is

not being “used.” 5

While Lorillard’s application concerning the First Assessments was pending before the

circuit court, Lorillard filed amended tax returns and refund claims regarding the Department’s

tax assessments for the tax years ending in December 2010, December 2011, and December

2012 (collectively, the Second Assessments). In its amended tax returns, Lorillard removed the

value of the leaf tobacco stored at its Danville Facilities from the property factors used to

determine its income tax liability. Lorillard requested a refund of $6,389,390, based upon the

amended Second Assessments tax returns. The Department did not timely respond to Lorillard’s

filing of the refund claims. Thus, by operation of Code § 58.1-1823, the Second Assessments

refund claims were deemed denied.

On August 31, 2017, Lorillard filed a second “Application for Correction of Erroneous

Assessment of Corporation Income Taxes” in the Circuit Court of the City of Danville,

challenging the denial of its refund claims for the Second Assessments. Lorillard’s second

5 In the Regulation, the Department provides guidance on the definition of “used” by giving examples of what constitutes “use” of property in various specific situations:

b. Property under construction during the taxable year (except inventoriable goods in process) shall be excluded from the factor until such property is actually used.

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Virginia Department of Taxation v. R.J. Reynolds Tobacco, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/virginia-department-of-taxation-v-rj-reynolds-tobacco-va-2022.