Murray Energy v. Dale Steager, State Tax Comm'r
Murray Energy v. Dale Steager, State Tax Comm'r
Opinion of the Court
*421This is an appeal from the Circuit Court of Marshall County's order affirming the Board of Equalization and Review's determination that petitioners Murray Energy Corporation and Consolidation Coal Company's coal interests were properly valued and assessed by respondents Dale W. Steager, State Tax Commissioner of West Virginia, the County Commission of Marshall County, and Christopher J. Kessler, Assessor of Marshall County. The circuit court concluded that the method of valuing coal properties as prescribed in the Code of State of Rules violated neither the statutory requirement of assessment at "true and actual value" nor the constitutional equality requirements of Article X, Section 1 of the West Virginia Constitution and the Equal Protection provisions of the United States and West Virginia Constitutions.
Upon careful review of the briefs of the parties and amicus curiae,
I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
Petitioners Murray Energy Corporation and Consolidation Coal Company (hereinafter "petitioners") are owners of coal interests in Marshall County. These coal interests are appraised for ad valorem tax purposes by respondent Dale Steager, State Tax Commissioner of West Virginia (hereinafter "Tax Department") and assessed by the respondents County Commission of Marshall County through its Assessor, Christopher J. Kessler. The Tax Department utilizes a "statewide mass appraisal system" for valuation of active and reserve coal properties, as described in West Virginia Code of State Rules § 110-1I-1 et seq. (2006).
THE MASS APPRAISAL SYSTEM AND LEGISLATIVE RULES
The mass appraisal system utilized by the Tax Department for valuation of coal property values the coal inside the mine, rather than the mine itself; it uses the income approach to value, which assumes that property is worth its future income, discounted to present value. The Tax Department similarly *422uses mass appraisal systems for the valuation of oil and gas, timber, and residential properties. The Tax Department explains that a mass appraisal system is utilized because the Tax Department does not have the resources to annually reassess each individual property inasmuch as there are more than 240,000 coal parcels requiring appraisal. The methodology for valuation of coal interests, as outlined in the Code of State Rules, was developed through the legislative rule-making process.
As indicated, the appraisal system uses averages for certain values necessary to calculate the value of the minerals, rather than individualized data. The two averages being challenged herein-the statewide Steam Coal Price Per Ton average ("SCPPT") and the seam thickness average-are calculated by using the sources and formulas prescribed by regulation. These averages are then filed with the West Virginia Secretary of State as "natural resource valuation variables" and made available for public comment annually.
According to the Tax Department, the SCPPT average for any particular year is calculated by using 1) confidential data
In this case, the 2016 tax year SCPPT is being challenged, which was calculated by using the variables provided in tax years 2012 through 2014-the three years preceding the assessment date of July 1, 2015-for the 2016 tax year. On June 30, 2015, the Tax Department filed the variables for the 2016 tax year and declared the SCPPT to be $ 60.35/ton. This figure was left open for public comment until August 15, 2015. Petitioners did not provide comment.
As for the coal seam thickness average, seams of coal vary in thickness and density, which obviously determines the amount of coal at any particular location. The Legislature determined that use of an average to estimate the seam thickness at any given location based on acreage was appropriate; the formula provided by legislative rule calculates the average seam thickness to be approximately 1,800 tons per acre foot, which figure is published by the United States Geologic Survey.
On January 22, 2016, petitioners protested the Tax Department's valuation of their Marshall *423County coal interests for the 2016 tax year to the Marshall County Commission sitting as the Board of Equalization and Review (the "Board"). Petitioners challenged the Tax Department's use of the coal seam thickness average and rolling three-year average to determine the average steam coal price per ton rather than the "spot price" of coal as of the July 1, 2015, assessment date. Petitioners argued that these methodologies and averages did not reflect the "true and actual" value of their coal properties, causing them to be over-valued for ad valorem taxation purposes.
Before the Board, John L. Weiss, a mineral extraction consultant, testified on behalf of petitioners. He stated that the average price per ton for petitioners' coal reserves as of the assessment date of July 1, 2015 was actually $ 41.08/ton, which figure was derived from well-recognized industry publications. He further testified that this amount was consistent with his industry knowledge and experience and that the $ 60.35/ton price set by the Tax Commissioner for the 2016 tax year was inflated. Even utilizing the three-year rolling average, but including only publicly-available rather than confidential data, Mr. Weiss testified that the average price per ton was $ 51.50, rather than $ 60.35/ton.
Jeffrey Kern, a mineral appraisal expert who helped design the State's mass appraisal system during its legislative development, testified on behalf of the Tax Department. Mr. Kern explained that the coal property mass appraisal system was designed to eliminate "peaks and valleys" in the price of coal and allow for greater predictability of tax burdens and revenues by the taxpayer and the State, respectively. Mr. Kern further explained that this method was carefully constructed through the legislative rule-making process and extensively involved stakeholders like petitioners' predecessor in interest, Consolidation Coal Company. He testified that this averaging system-utilizing the rolling three-year historical average-resulted in the $ 60.35/ton price upon which petitioners were taxed for the 2016 tax year. He explained that use of a mass appraisal system is necessary because the State "can't, on an annual basis, have assessors go out and reassess every individual property as though you were hiring a real estate agent[.]"
Mr. Kern further testified that the average seam thickness figure-calculated pursuant to regulation to equate to precisely 1,793.97 tons per foot per acre-is "rounded up" to 1,800 by legislative rule because it is a "published piece of information ... [and] [t]here was no sense in reinventing the wheel there."
Critically, Mr. Kern admitted that the $ 60.35/ton is in fact higher than what the average price per ton was as of the assessment date of July 1, 2015, by design and was the result of using the three-year rolling average. He explained that using an historical rolling average serves to even out highs and lows in the price of coal and that the "inflated" $ 60.35/ton price was an effort to even out the "valley" currently occupied by coal prices. Mr. Kern explained, "[W]e're doing a mass appraisal system. Some places are getting less tax than they could, and some places are getting a little more tax than they could ." (emphasis added). Mr. Kern conceded that the information provided by the PSC, FERC, and published data by Platts , Coal *424Week , and S & L
Upon consideration of the foregoing testimony,
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
Generally, "there is a presumption that valuations for taxation purposes fixed by an assessor are correct. ... The burden is on the taxpayer challenging the assessment to demonstrate by clear and convincing evidence that the tax assessment is erroneous." Syl. Pt. 2, in part, Western Pocahontas Props., Ltd. v. County Comm'n of Wetzel Cty ,
[i]n a case involving the assessment of property for taxation purposes, which does not involve the violation of a statute governing the assessment of property, or a violation of a constitutional provision, or in which a question of the constitutionality of a statute is not involved, this Court will not set aside or disturb an assessment made by an assessor or the county court, acting as a board of equalization and review, where the assessment is supported by substantial evidence.
Syl. Pt. 2, In re Tax Assessments Against the South Land Co .,
Rather, "[i]nterpreting a statute or an administrative rule or regulation presents a purely legal question subject to de novo review." Syl. Pt. 1, Appalachian PowerCo. v. State Tax Dep't ,
III. DISCUSSION
Petitioners make three arguments in support of their position that the Tax Department's valuation must be set aside: 1) that the mass appraisal methodology utilized by the Tax Department as prescribed by regulation violates statutory authority requiring tax assessments to be based on "true and actual" value; 2) that the methodology violates the West Virginia Constitution's "equal and uniform" taxation requirement; and 3)
*425that the methodology is similarly violative of the Equal Protection provisions of the United States and West Virginia Constitutions. Petitioners emphasize that the monetary significance of the purported over-valuation rendered by use of the methodology is substantial. Petitioners assert that as a result of the "rounded up" 1,800 seam thickness average, they are taxed on approximately 1.1 million tons of coal they do not actually own. Combined with the allegedly inflated figure of $ 60.35/ton, petitioners assert this results in a $ 65 million over-valuation of their coal properties.
The Tax Department responds primarily that the Constitution expressly delegates development of the valuation methodology to the Legislature and that it has no authority to deviate from the methodology delineated in the legislatively-approved regulations. The Tax Department stresses that petitioners do not suggest that it failed to properly apply the regulations; rather, they take issue with the legislatively-developed methodology mandated therein. In that regard, the Tax Department does little to argue in support of the validity of the regulations; rather, it largely defaults to its obligation to faithfully apply the regulations as written. Insofar as the alleged constitutional violations, the Tax Department argues that the regulations are applied uniformly for all similarly-situated taxpayers and therefore no equality violation is present. We will examine each of these arguments in greater detail.
A. STATUTORY VIOLATION AND VALIDITY OF THE REGULATIONS
We begin with petitioners' assertion that the regulations setting forth the mass appraisal methodology for valuation of their coal properties is in violation of West Virginia's statutory taxation mandates. Petitioners argue that by taxing its coal reserves at average seam thickness amounts
The Legislature hereby finds and declares that all property in this state should be fairly and equitably valued wherever it is situated so that all citizens will be treated fairly and no individual species or class of property will be overvalued or undervalued in relation to all other similar property within each county and throughout the state.
The Tax Department counters that per the language of the Constitution itself, value is to be ascertained "as directed by law": "[T]axation shall be equal and uniform throughout the state, and all property, both real and personal, shall be taxed in proportion to its value to be ascertained as directed by law." W. Va. Const., art. X, § 1. As previously indicated, the Tax Department underscores that petitioners do not accuse them of misapplying the methodology, not evenly applying the methodology to all coal property taxpayers, or violating the regulations in any way. Therefore, they argue, by correctly applying this methodology to all coal properties, both observance of the statutory requirements and equal and uniform taxation "as directed by law" are effectuated.
Petitioners are quick to reply that the Tax Department's blind adherence to proper application of the regulation fails to squarely address whether the Constitution's "as directed by law" language enables the Tax Department to devise, by legislative rule, a methodology that admittedly fails to provide a value that is reflective of coal prices as of *426the assessment date. We agree that the Tax Department's position herein is relatively unedifying as to the propriety of the regulations as pertains to West Virginia Code § 11-6K-1(a) 's "true and actual" requirement. Instead, the Tax Department focuses on its strict compliance with the regulations.
The West Virginia Constitution article ten, section one provides that "taxation shall be equal and uniform throughout the state" and that all property is to be taxed "in proportion to its value to be ascertained as directed by law ." (emphasis added). To that end, West Virginia Code § 11-6K-1 provides that natural resources property shall be assessed "at sixty percent of its true and actual value ."
Critically, West Virginia Code § 11-1C-10(e) directs that "[t]he Tax Commissioner shall develop a plan for the ... valuation of natural resources property." The statute further requires the Tax Department to "maintain accurate values for all such property."
While "[i]t is fundamental law that the Legislature may delegate to an administrative agency the power to make rules and regulations to implement the statute under which the agency functions," it is equally well-established that "[i]n exercising that power [ ] an administrative agency may not issue a regulation which is inconsistent with, or which alters or limits its statutory authority." Syl. Pt. 3, Rowe v. W. Va. Dep't of Corr.
This Court has held that "[i]n deciding whether an administrative agency's position should be sustained, a reviewing court applies the standards set out by the United States Supreme Court in Chevron U.S.A., Inc. v. Natural Resources Defense Council, Inc .,
[t]he court first18 must ask whether the Legislature has directly spoken to the precise question at issue. If the intention of the Legislature is clear, that is the end of the matter, and the agency's position only can be upheld if it conforms to the Legislature's intent. No deference is due the agency's interpretation at this stage.
Id . (footnote added). However,
[i]f legislative intent is not clear, a reviewing court may not simply impose its own construction of the statute in reviewing a legislative rule. Rather, if the statute is silent or ambiguous with respect to the specific issue, the question for the court is whether the agency's answer is based on a permissible construction of the statute. A valid legislative rule is entitled to substantial deference by the reviewing court.
Syl. Pt. 4, in part, id .
A nearly identical challenge to a tax regulation was launched in 1995, the Court's examination of which demonstrates the proper application of the Chevron analysis. In Appalachian Power , appellant challenged a regulation that dealt with a tax imposed on the "net generation of electricity available for sale." Id . at 579-80,
The Appalachian Power Court noted generally that "a legislative rule should be ignored only if the agency has exceeded its constitutional or statutory authority or it is arbitrary or capricious." Id . at 585,
However, to whatever extent a statute does not reveal "an unmistakably clear expression of legislative intent," the Court must "examine the agency's interpretation to see how it relates to the statute." Id . at 587-88,
The Appalachian Power Court provided numerous instructive statements relative to examining tax regulations, all of which unmistakably signal that the agency has significant leeway in crafting taxation methodologies: "[T]he Tax Commissioner need not write a rule that serves the statute in the best or most logical manner; he need only write a rule that flows rationally from the statute." Id . at 588,
Significantly, the Court stated that
"[i]n the absence of ... [legislative] direction as to what elements are to be considered in promulgating ... [a] rule, the presumption is that ... [the Legislature] is entrusting the decision as to what to consider in the hands of the agency in deference to agency expertise."
Id . at 589,
Under this analysis, it is clear that the "true and actual" language of West Virginia Code § 11-6K-1(a) is fairly broad and non-specific as to its implementation inasmuch as it does not prescribe a methodology for determining "true and actual" value. More pointedly, West Virginia Code § 11-1C-10(e) expressly directs the Tax Department to "develop a plan for the ... valuation of natural resources property." Accordingly, our taxation scheme for natural resources property does not contain merely an implicit "gap" in its directives, but an express gap, which it directs the Tax Department to close by developing valuation methodologies:
If Congress has explicitly left a gap for the agency to fill, there is an express delegation of authority to the agency to elucidate a specific provision of the statute by regulation. Such legislative regulations are given controlling weight unless they are arbitrary, capricious, or manifestly contrary to the statute.
Chevron ,
This brings our analysis to the second stage of Chevron , which is whether the agency's interpretation rationally flows from the enabling statute. As previously indicated, the agency need not employ the "best" or "most logical" methodology, but rather one which is rationally based on the enabling statute. We find that there is little question *429that the regulations here are a rational and necessary means to establish true and actual value.
The methodology for valuing coal properties contained in the extensively detailed and thoroughly described regulations bears all of the hallmarks of those regulations found by the Supreme Court to be rationally conceived, i.e. "the regulatory scheme is technical and complex, the agency considered the matter in a detailed and reasoned fashion, and the decision involves reconciling conflicting policies." Chevron ,
In fact, it is the "trailing" or "rolling" aspect of the methodology which distinguishes it from the "frozen" years-old values struck down in Arkansas Public Service Commission v. Pulaski County Board of Equalization ,
We are particularly given to this conclusion by virtue of the unrebutted evidence presented below indicating that petitioner Consolidation Coal Company (predecessor-in-interest to petitioner Murray Energy) was extensively involved in the rulemaking process that it now challenges. Furthermore, petitioners' failure to provide public comment to the 2016 tax year variables or provide "Table F" information regarding their actual sales is problematic. As the Appalachian Power Court observed, "[d]eference to the [agency's] interpretation 'is especially appropriate where the rule was adopted only after all interest [sic ] persons were given notice and opportunity to comment[.]' " Id . at 592,
As Justice Cleckley emphatically observed, "[a]s a matter of law and policy, this is a paradigm example of a complex economic and taxation inquiry that our Legislature has wisely left to resolution by the State's taxing authority pursuant to its statutory mandate." Id . at 592,
[t]he arguments over policy that are advanced in the parties' briefs create the impression that respondents are now waging in a judicial forum a specific policy battle which they ultimately lost in the *430agency ... but one which was never waged in the Congress. Such policy arguments are more properly addressed to legislators or administrators, not to judges.
Chevron,
Like the agency action in Chevron , we find that the methodology set forth in West Virginia Code of State Rules § 110-1I-1 et seq. insofar as the calculation of the SCPPT and seam thickness average reflects "a reasonable accommodation of manifestly competing interests." Chevron ,
B. CONSTITUTIONAL CHALLENGES: "EQUAL AND UNIFORM" AND EQUAL PROTECTION
Notwithstanding the foregoing conclusion that the methodology prescribed by regulation does not violate the statutory mandate of "true and actual" valuation, we must determine if the methodology nonetheless creates an unconstitutional inequality. Petitioners argue that by taxing its coal properties in tonnage amounts and at prices that do not reflect their actual natural resources property or the actual market value as of the assessment date and year, they are being taxed in violation of both the "equal and uniform" and equal protection provisions of the West Virginia and United States Constitutions. Petitioners argue that by over-taxing coal properties, even the uniform application of the mass appraisal methodology creates inequality. Petitioners rely on this language from the United States Supreme Court to explain the conceptual disparity: "Applying the same ratio to the same assigned values, when the actual values differ, creates the same disparity in effect as applying a different ratio to actual values when the latter are the same." Cumberland Coal Co. v. Bd. of Rev. of Tax Assessments ,
The Tax Department's counter-argument is simply that its methodology is equally applied to all coal properties and therefore does not treat petitioners differently or unequally as compared to other coal property taxpayers. As for the conceptual inequality described in Cumberland Coal , the Tax Department argues merely that the case has been called into question because it pre-dates the "rational basis" equal protection analysis that has developed in modern jurisprudence.
"The right to equal protection of the laws is, of course, found in the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States." Payne v. Gundy ,
" 'Where economic rights are concerned, we look to see whether the classification is a rational one based on social, economic, historic or geographic factors, whether it bears a reasonable relationship to a proper governmental purpose, and whether all persons within the class are treated equally. Where such classification is rational and bears the requisite reasonable relationship, the statute does not violate Section 10 of Article III of the West Virginia Constitution, which is our equal protection clause.' Syllabus Point 7, [as modified,] Atchinson v. Erwin , [172] W.Va. [8],302 S.E.2d 78 (1983)." Syllabus Point 4, as modified, Hartsock-Flesher Candy Co. v. Wheeling Wholesale Grocery Co .,174 W.Va. 538 ,328 S.E.2d 144 (1984).
Syl. Pt. 4, Gibson v. W. Va. Dep't of Highways ,
Insofar as the "Equal and Uniform" Clause is concerned, this Court has treated such a challenge collectively with equal protection challenges, warning that
[w]e must exercise considerable caution in using our equality provisions to scrutinize underinclusive challenges to tax legislation-those cases in which the taxpayer objects to his tax because some other group, even if similar, has escaped the levy. ... Courts should venture into that thicket only with utmost trepidation and only for a very good reason.
Appalachian Power Co .,
In support of this argument, petitioners rely heavily on Killen v. Logan County Commission,
The Killen Court broadly enunciated the position asserted by petitioners herein-that by rendering an inaccurate base valuation, taxpayer properties are not treated equally and therefore constitutionally required "equal and uniform" taxation cannot be obtained: "Valuation, the determination of value, constitutes realization of the tax base. Without an accurate determination of the tax base, equal and uniform taxation cannot be achieved." Id . at 613,
[Appellants] interpret ["equal and uniform"] to require only uniformity of methodology in determining value within a county. As already demonstrated, the existing 'uniformity' of methodology has not, and cannot result in uniform taxation, either within a county or within this state. Since article 10, section 1 of the West Virginia Constitution requires equal and uniform taxation in all areas of the state, both the method and the result of taxation are essential to compliance with the constitution .
Killen,
We agree conceptually with Killen's observations regarding the importance of reaching accurate base valuations and that even the uniform use of a formula against indiscriminately valued properties may create equality issues. However, we believe that Killen requires a more nuanced reading against the backdrop of alleged valuation inequalities which necessarily result from carefully crafted, stakeholder-involved, and legislatively-approved systems which make no facially arbitrary classifications nor allow for use of indiscriminate applications. We observe, importantly, that Killen makes no mention or use of the rational relationship test. Like the United States Supreme Court's reluctance to vouch for Cumberland Coal 's current vitality for the same reason, the absence of a rational relationship analysis alone makes Killen's rigid application untenable.
More importantly, Killen involved a variable fractional assessment, which created wildly fluctuating assessments of like properties, due to the fact that the statute at issue permitted each individual county's assessor to "vary assessments up to 50 percent of the appraised value both within and among classes of property." Id . at 618,
In the instant case, petitioners do not allege that the Tax Department is utilizing a methodology to determine their coal property's value that differs from that being used for other taxpayers or applying it in an inconsistent manner property to property. Rather, petitioners bemoan the use of seam thickness and SCPPT averages due to the purported disparity those averages reflect with their individual coal properties and market prices as of a date certain. However, to whatever extent petitioners perceive their property is being over-valued by purportedly "inflated" prices per ton and/or the seam thickness average, all other taxpayers are equally subjected to the same price per ton and seam thickness average. Compare Matter of U. S. Steel Corp .,
Petitioners hinge their argument precariously on the isolated statement of Mr. Kern, who, in explaining the use of averages in the mass appraisal system, conceded that, as a result, "[s]ome places are getting less tax than they could, and some places are getting a little more tax than they could." However, Mr. Kern's testimony was hardly the bombshell petitioners would suggest. Mr. Kern's testimony, in context, was not an admission to an arbitrary, discriminatory, or ad hoc taxation scheme. Rather, he was explaining the obvious: averages-by definition-both under- and over-represent certain of those numbers which they reflect. Accordingly, the use of a mass appraisal system that applies these averages across the board mathematically under- and over-represents certain of the values which comprise the average. This alone does not create a taxation equality problem for which the Constitution demands a remedy.
Instead, we reiterate the United States Supreme Court's observation that the equal protection clause "imposes no iron rule of equality, prohibiting the flexibility and variety that are appropriate to reasonable schemes of state taxation." Allied Stores ,
In the instant case, it is clear that to whatever extent inequalities are created by the mass appraisal methodology, any such inequality passes rational relationship muster. The classifications result from a well-recognized mass appraisal methodology that is employed to ensure tax payment and revenue predictability for both the State and taxpayer and alleviate the unattainable administrative burden of annual reappraisal. See Appalachian Power Co. ,
Moreover, the methodology's design seeks to even out the extreme ends of the coal pricing curve and functions to provide commensurate benefit to the taxpayer insofar as peak market pricing occurs.
This Court has approved of the principle articulated by the Supreme Court of Ohio that
"[t]he system of taxation unfortunately will always have some inequality and nonuniformity attendant with such governmental function. It seems that perfect equality in taxation would be utopian, but yet, as a practicality, unattainable. We must satisfy ourselves with a principle of reason that practical equality is the standard to be applied in these matters, and this standard is satisfied when the tax system is free of systematic and intentional departures from this principle."
Kline v. McCloud ,
IV. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the December 7, 2017, order of the Circuit Court of Marshall County, West Virginia.
Affirmed.
JUSTICE JENKINS dissents and reserves the right to file a separate opinion.
Respondent County Commission of Marshall County submitted a summary response in support of the circuit court's order. Amicus curiae Steven L. Paine, West Virginia State Superintendent of Schools, likewise submitted a brief in support of the circuit court's order. The Court acknowledges and expresses its appreciation for the amicus curiae's submission.
Mass appraisal has been aptly described as " 'the process of valuing a universe of properties as of a given date utilizing standard methodology, employing common data, and allowing for statistical testing[.]' " In re Johnson Cty. Appraiser/Privitera Realty Holdings ,
See W.V.C.S.R. § 11-1I-4.10 ("Confidentiality -- All information provided by or on behalf of a natural resources property owner or by or on behalf of an owner of an interest in natural resources property to any state or county representative for use in the valuation or assessment of natural resources property or for use in the development or maintenance of a legislatively funded mineral mapping or geologic information system is confidential. The information is exempt from disclosure under provisions of West Virginia Code § 29B-1-4, and shall be kept, held, and maintained confidential except to the extent the information is needed by the State Tax Commissioner to defend an appraisal challenged by the owner or lessee of the natural resources property subject to the appraisal ....")
See W.V.C.S.R. § 110-1I-4 ("Valuation Methods"), generally.
See W.V.C.S.R. § 110-1I-3.12 (" 'Average coal price' for purposes of the reserve coal valuation model, means the arithmetic mean of the sum of the last three calendar years of total FOB-source (point of sale, no transportation) values of steam coal mined in West Virginia and sold on the spot market as reported on FERC Form 423 to the United States Department of Energy (USDOE) and to the West Virginia Public Service Commission (WVPSC) ....").
The regulations define "1800 tons per acre foot" as "the weight, in tons, of a relatively clean coal bed one (1) foot in thickness (Thk) and covering one (1) acre, that has an assumed specific gravity of 1.32. The formula for calculating '1800 tons per acre foot' is set forth in Appendix A, Formula 2 of this rule." W.V.C.S.R. § 110-1I.3.61.
Mr. Kern indicated that other entities use this figure including the United States Geologic Survey, the Kansas Geologic Survey, the Pennsylvania Geologic Survey, "2 or 3 mineral economics courses," and the State of Kentucky. We note that West Virginia Code § 11-1C-10(d)(2) (1994) provides that "[f]ormulas for natural resources valuation may contain differing variables based upon known geological or other common factors."
Neither Mr. Kern (nor the Tax Department in its briefing) indicated how this information would be utilized if provided; in fact, Mr. Kern cautioned against considering this information because it cannot be verified.
These are well-known industry publications. Mr. Kern indicated that these publications are "consulted" in developing the SCPPT average.
The testimony in this case occurred over the course of two hearings before the Board. On February 18, 2016, two witnesses on behalf of petitioners testified at an unnoticed hearing; no one testified on behalf of the Tax Department. Regardless, the Board denied the protest. On March 17, 2016, petitioners appealed that decision to the circuit court and the circuit court remanded the matter back to the Board to take the above testimony from the Tax Department's expert, which again resulted in the Board's denial of the protest.
Because the Constitution's "equal and uniform" taxation provision invokes equality, it is similar in complexion to the petitioners' equal protection argument and is therefore collectively discussed more fully infra.
While petitioners challenged the use of the coal seam thickness average below and before this Court, the bulk of their legal analysis is dedicated to the SCPPT average.
"Of course, an agency must follow and apply its rules and regulations in existence at the time of agency action." Appalachian Power Co .,
In their briefs, the parties engage in an initial debate about which taxation statute applies here: the "general" taxation statute contained in West Virginia Code § 11-3-1 (2014) or the more specific "natural resources" taxation statute located at West Virginia Code § 11-6K-1. West Virginia Code § 11-3-1(a) states:
All property, except public service businesses assessed pursuant to article six [§§ 11-6-1 et seq.] of this chapter, shall be assessed annually as of July 1 at sixty percent of its true and actual value , that is to say, at the price for which the property would sell if voluntarily offered for sale by the owner thereof ....
(emphasis added). Petitioners argue that this general taxation statute is applicable and is significant because it "defines" true and actual value as the "market value," which must necessarily be the market value as of the assessment date of July 1. The Tax Department counters that the more specific natural resources taxation statute contained in West Virginia Code § 11-6K-1 -which provides no definition for "true and actual value"-is applicable.
Where two statutes "govern a particular scenario, one being specific and one being general, the specific provision prevails." Bowers v. Wurzburg ,
See 2006 W. Va. Reg. Text 16090 ("Valuation of Active and Reserve Coal Property for Ad Valorem Property Tax Purposes[.] The above rule has been authorized by the West Virginia Legislature.")
The Tax Department correctly notes that the present iteration of West Virginia Code § 11-6K-1 was passed in 2010 and that the regulations were adopted in 2006. It therefore argues that had the Legislature intended to displace this methodology, it could have done so in the statute and that the statute is a de facto "reaffirmance" of the methodology. However, the Legislature's imprimatur, without placing it into the proper legal context, adds little to the analysis.
Chevron U.S.A., Inc. v. Nat. Res. Def. Council, Inc.,
Chevron requires, as a threshold inquiry, a determination as to whether the legislative rule is valid:
A legislative rule is valid if (1) it is submitted to the legislative rule-making review committee for approval, as required by W. Va. Code § 29A-3-9, et seq ., or (2) the Legislature expressly exempts it from such legislative rule-making review and approval pursuant to W. Va. Code § 29A-1-3(d) (1990) (Repl. Vol. 2002).
Syl. Pt. 13, Simpson v. W. Va. Office of Ins. Comm'r ,
Cf. Syl. Pt. 5, in part, In re Tax Assessment Against Am. Bituminous Power Partners, L.P .,
In fact, Mr. Kern testified that "up until 2012, the statewide average was actually less than the PSC. So that, in essence, it's been argued in various places that the State was giving all the taxpayers a discount because we were using trailing averages, and trailing averages were below the rise in price over time."
To that end, while the Court recognizes that other methods of calculating the taxable interest in coal resources exist, it is not the role of the Court to substitute its method of determining such methodology for that promulgated by the Tax Department and approved by the Legislature. Nonetheless, the Court encourages ongoing evaluation of these methodologies by the Tax Department, Legislature, and stakeholders in a manner sufficiently collaborative to ensure lawful processes which are consistent with the precepts outlined herein.
While this is true, this omission affects only the potential resolution of a similar challenge, i.e . if the Cumberland Court had applied a rational relationship test, would the classification have passed constitutional muster? Regardless, however, the inequality described in Cumberland Coal is still a well-articulated description of how even a uniformly-applied system can potentially create an equality problem.
See n.20 supra .
Dissenting Opinion
Pursuant to the Constitution of this State, all property is to be taxed in accordance with its value: "taxation shall be equal and uniform throughout the State, and all property, both real and personal, shall be taxed in proportion to its value to be ascertained as directed by law ." W. Va. Const. art. X, § 1 (emphasis added). The Legislature has further interpreted this command as requiring property to be assessed at its "true and actual value," both with respect to real property, generally,
*434(LexisNexis 2013 & Supp. 2018), and with regard to the specific type of real property at issue herein: natural resources. See
It is within this precise context that the challenged taxing methodology of a "three-year rolling average" must be considered and its accuracy in taxing the subject property at its "true and actual" value must be measured. While an efficient and expedient valuation method with statewide application is not inherently problematic, when the methodology selected and employed assigns valuations to property that do not reflect the property's "true and actual" value, the methodology is untenably invalid and financially detrimental to the taxpayer whose property is valued in accordance therewith. Because the Tax Commissioner's use of a "three-year rolling average" to value coal interests for ad valorem property tax purposes does not accurately value the subject property at its "true and actual" value, the majority should have invalidated the legislative rule authorizing the application of this methodology and required the implementation of a more accurate valuation method. Instead, however, the majority has condoned the adoption and use of this methodology, essentially ignoring the erroneous property valuations that have resulted from its application. Because I disagree with the majority's resolution of this matter, I respectfully must dissent.
Neither the parties nor the majority dispute that the Taxpayer's coal interests herein are statutorily required to be taxed at their "true and actual value" in accordance with
the price for which the property would sell if voluntarily offered for sale by the owner thereof, upon the terms as the property, the value of which is sought to be ascertained, is usually sold, and not the price which might be realized if the property were sold at a forced sale.
Pursuant to the rules of statutory construction, because both
In recognition of this correlation between a property's sales price and its "true and actual value," the Tax Commissioner has promulgated a legislative rule, which the Legislature has approved, by which to calculate such price. The resulting methodology, also known as the "three-year rolling average," provides as follows:
"Average coal price" for purposes of the reserve coal valuation model, means the arithmetic mean of the sum of the last three calendar years of total FOB-source (point of sale, no transportation) values of steam coal mined in West Virginia and sold on the spot market as reported on FERC Form 423 to the United States Department of Energy (USDOE) and to the West Virginia Public Service Commission (WVPSC), divided by annual production, expressed in dollars/ton. Average coal price can also be expressed in dollars per million BTU and is determined by dividing the arithmetic mean of the sum of coal sales, by the sum of all steam coal BTU mined in West Virginia and sold on the "spot" market as reported on FERC Form 423 to the United States Department Of Energy and to the West Virginia Public Service Commission for the three most recent calendar years preceding the July 1st assessment date, calculated for the entire state as well as by coal bed and by location.
W. Va. C.S.R. § 110-1I-3.12 (2006) (emphasis in original). In adopting this methodology, the Tax Commissioner argues that application of this "three-year rolling average" more accurately values coal interests because it accounts for market fluctuations in the sales price of coal.
However, the record evidence in this case tells a different story. According to the evidence presented below, application of the Tax Commissioner's "three-year rolling average" to determine the sales price of the subject coal interests, as required by the West Virginia Code of State Rules, does not accurately value the Taxpayer's coal-based natural resources interests at either their "true" or their "actual" value as required by both the Constitution and statutory law of this State. See W. Va. Const. art. X, § 1 ;
I simply cannot agree to such a blatant departure from the constitutional and statutory commands that property be taxed at its "true and actual" value. Accordingly, I respectfully dissent.
See Maj. op. at Syl. pt. 1 (" 'As a general rule, there is a presumption that valuations for taxation purposes fixed by an assessor are correct. Thus, a tax assessment of coal property will be presumed to be correct when the assessor, in assessing the coal property: (1) relies upon the legislative rules prescribing the methods by which property is to be assessed; and (2) uses, as a guide, information furnished by the tax department, such as a list of comparable sales of similar property. The burden is on the taxpayer challenging the assessment to demonstrate by clear and convincing evidence that the tax assessment is erroneous. ' Syl. Pt. 2, W. Pocahontas Properties, Ltd. v. Cty. Comm'n of Wetzel Cty. ,
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.