Alabama Department of Revenue v. Cellular Express, Inc. ( 2023 )


Menu:
  • Rel: May 12, 2023
    Notice: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication in the advance sheets of Southern Reporter.
    Readers are requested to notify the Reporter of Decisions, Alabama Appellate Courts, 300 Dexter Avenue,
    Montgomery, Alabama 36104-3741 ((334) 229-0650), of any typographical or other errors, in order that corrections
    may be made before the opinion is published in Southern Reporter.
    ALABAMA COURT OF CIVIL APPEALS
    OCTOBER TERM, 2022-2023
    _________________________
    CL-2022-0701
    _________________________
    Alabama Department of Revenue
    v.
    Cellular Express, Inc.
    Appeal from Jefferson Circuit Court
    (CV-21-900658)
    PER CURIAM.
    The Alabama Department of Revenue ("the Department") appeals
    from a judgment entered by the Jefferson Circuit Court ("the trial court")
    entered in an appeal from a decision of the Alabama Tax Tribunal ("the
    CL-2022-0701
    Tax Tribunal"). 1 The Tax Tribunal had determined that Cellular
    Express, Inc. ("Cellular"), owed sales taxes on funds it had received from
    customers of Boost Mobile ("Boost") as prepayments for Boost's wireless
    service. The trial court determined that Cellular did not owe sales taxes
    on those funds. We affirm the trial court's judgment.
    Background
    From April 2009 through March 2012, the period pertinent to this
    appeal, Cellular was an authorized dealer for Boost, a provider of prepaid
    wireless service, and operated three stores in the Birmingham area.
    Cellular sold cellular telephones, sold cellular-telephone accessories, and
    offered several different Boost prepaid wireless-service plans. To obtain
    Boost's wireless service pursuant to one of those plans, a customer had to
    prepay for the wireless service in thirty-day increments. Boost required
    Cellular to accept prepayments for the plans from Boost's customers. To
    1In  2014, the legislature created the Tax Tribunal to adjudicate
    disputes between taxpayers and the Department that had formerly been
    adjudicated by the Department's Administrative Law Division. See § 40-
    2B-1, Ala. Code 1975. Section 40-2B-2(a), Ala. Code 1975, designates the
    Tax Tribunal as an "independent agency" that is "within the executive
    branch of government." Section 40-2B-2(m), Ala. Code 1975, provides
    that appeals from decisions of the Tax Tribunal lie in the appropriate
    circuit court.
    2
    CL-2022-0701
    facilitate the customers' prepayments for the plans, Cellular's stores
    housed kiosks where customers could make prepayments for their Boost
    wireless-service plans on computer terminals. Boost provided the
    hardware and software for the computer terminals in the kiosks and
    required Cellular to grant Boost access to Cellular's bank account. After
    a customer prepaid for his or her wireless-service plan on one of the
    computer terminals in the kiosks, the payment went to Cellular's bank
    account, Boost electronically added thirty days to the customer's
    wireless-service plans without any involvement by Cellular, and the
    computer terminal in the kiosk provided the customer with a paper
    receipt bearing a transaction number. Suhail Assad, Cellular's principal
    shareholder, testified that the purpose of the transaction number was to
    enable Boost to trace the transaction in case a customer contacted Boost
    regarding a problem with the transaction or the wireless service. Assad
    testified that Cellular did not provide the customer with a physical
    telephone card or a pin number. After a prepayment a Boost's wireless
    service went into Cellular's bank account, Boost withdrew the
    prepayment, minus Cellular's five-percent commission.
    3
    CL-2022-0701
    Cellular's sales-tax returns from April 2009 through March 2012
    reported its receipts from the sale of cellular telephones, its receipts from
    the sale of cellular-telephone accessories, and the amounts that
    customers had prepaid for Boost's wireless service using the computer
    terminals in the kiosks in Cellular's stores. The returns showed a
    deduction equal to the total amount of the prepayments made by
    customers for Boost's wireless service during that period and showed
    Cellular's payment of sales taxes on the total receipts from the sale of
    cellular telephones and accessories during that period.
    Section 40-23-2(1), Ala. Code 1975, levies a sales tax on those
    persons or entities who are engaged in selling at retail any tangible
    personal property in Alabama. In 1997, the legislature enacted Act No.
    97-867, Ala. Acts 1997 ("the 1997 Act"), which added paragraph (13) to §
    40-23-1(a).   That   paragraph     provided:   "PREPAID      TELEPHONE
    CALLING CARD. A sale of a prepaid telephone calling card or a prepaid
    authorization number, or both, shall be deemed the sale of tangible
    personal property subject to the tax imposed on the sale of tangible
    personal property pursuant to this chapter." William Jamar, Jr., the
    Department's district coordinator for Jefferson and Shelby Counties,
    4
    CL-2022-0701
    conceded at the trial in the trial court that prepaid wireless service of the
    kind provided by Boost from April 2009 through March 2012 did not exist
    in 1997 when the legislature enacted the 1997 Act.
    In 2012, the Department audited Cellular's sales-tax returns from
    April 2009 through March 2012. In conducting its audit, the Department
    took the position that, pursuant to § 40-23-1(a)(13), Cellular was liable
    for sales taxes on prepayments for Boost's wireless service made on
    computer terminals in the kiosks in Cellular's stores and assessed
    Cellular $363,416.16 in state sales tax and $181,654.98 in local sales tax.
    Cellular timely appealed to the Tax Tribunal. The Department
    asked the Tax Tribunal to hold Cellular's appeal in abeyance pending the
    resolution of a similar case involving Beauty & More, LLC, in the
    Montgomery Circuit Court, and the Tax Tribunal did so.2 Subsequently,
    however, the legislature amended § 40-23-1(a) in Act No. 2014-336, Ala.
    Acts 2014 ("the 2014 Act"). The 2014 Act added a new final sentence to
    2In  the case involving Beauty & More, LLC, the Tax Tribunal had
    held that, when the legislature enacted the 1997 Act, prepaid wireless
    service, as opposed to prepaid calling cards and authorization numbers,
    was not available in Alabama and that, therefore, the legislature had not
    intended to tax prepaid wireless service when it enacted the 1997 Act.
    The Department appealed from that decision to the Montgomery Circuit
    Court; however, in October 2014, the Department dismissed that appeal.
    5
    CL-2022-0701
    paragraph (13) of § 40-23-1(a). That new final sentence stated: "For
    purposes of this subdivision (13), the sale of prepaid wireless service that
    is evidenced by a physical card constitutes the sale of a prepaid telephone
    calling card, and the sale of prepaid wireless service that is not evidenced
    by a physical card constitutes the sale of a prepaid authorization
    number." The 2014 Act also added a new paragraph (14) to § 40-23-1(a),
    which provided:
    "(14) PREPAID WIRELESS SERVICE. The right to use
    mobile telecommunications service, which must be paid for in
    advance and that is sold in predetermined units or dollars of
    which the number declines with use in a known amount, and
    which may include rights to use non-telecommunications
    services or to download digital products or digital content. For
    purposes of this subdivision (14), 'mobile telecommunications
    service' has the meaning ascribed by Section 40-21-120 [, Ala.
    Code 1975]."
    In addition, the 2014 Act contained the following provision:
    "Section 6. For transactions that occurred prior to the
    effective date of this act in which the consumer did not receive
    from the retailer either an authorization number or a physical
    card, neither the Department of Revenue nor local tax officials
    may seek payment for sales tax not collected. This limitation
    on the authority of the department or local officials shall not
    apply to audits that began or assessments that were entered
    prior to the effective date of this act. With regard to such
    transactions in which sales tax was collected and remitted,
    neither the taxpayer nor the entity remitting sales tax shall
    have the right to seek refund of such tax."
    6
    CL-2022-0701
    (Emphasis added.)
    After the legislature enacted the 2014 Act, the Department
    amended its answer in the Tax Tribunal to assert that the 2014 Act
    resolved the dispute between the Department and Cellular in the
    Department's favor and that, therefore, there was no reason to hold
    Cellular's appeal in abeyance pending the resolution of the Department's
    appeal in the case involving Beauty & More, LLC.
    In response to the legislature's enactment of the 2014 Act, Cellular
    asserted that the 2014 Act was unconstitutional because, Cellular said,
    it violated Cellular's right to due process. The Tax Tribunal then held
    Cellular's appeal in abeyance while two other cases, one involving Atheer
    Wireless, LLC ("Atheer"), and the other involving Patrick Lee Downing,
    were adjudicated. After this court had adjudicated those cases in Atheer
    Wireless, LLC v. State Department of Revenue, 
    228 So. 3d 464
     (Ala. Civ.
    App. 2017), and Alabama Department of Revenue v. Downing, 
    272 So. 3d 184
     (Ala. Civ. App. 2018), respectively, the Tax Tribunal held a hearing
    in 2019. On January 21, 2021, the Tax Tribunal issued a final order in
    which it held that the 2014 Act made Cellular liable for sales taxes on
    the prepayments for Boost's wireless service that Cellular had received,
    7
    CL-2022-0701
    that the Tax Tribunal did not have jurisdiction to consider Cellular's
    constitutional challenge to the 2014 Act, and that the constitutional
    challenge was preserved for appeal to the trial court. Cellular timely
    appealed to the trial court.
    The trial court held a trial de novo on March 8, 2022.3 On April 27,
    2022, the trial court entered a judgment determining that the
    prepayments for Boost's wireless service that Cellular had received from
    April 2009 through March 2012 were not subject to sales taxes pursuant
    to § 40-23-1(a)(13) as it existed before the enactment of the 2014 Act. In
    its judgment, the trial court found "that cell phones and/or wireless
    services were not generally available to consumers in Alabama in 1997"
    and, therefore, determined that the 1997 Act "clearly covered only
    instances where an Alabama consumer purchased a prepaid long
    distance telephone calling card and/or a pin number to use with land line
    3In   pertinent part, § 40-2B-2(m)(4), Ala. Code 1975, provides:
    "The appeal to circuit court from a final or other appealable
    order issued by the Alabama Tax Tribunal shall be a trial de
    novo, except that the order shall be presumed prima facie
    correct and the burden shall be on the appealing party to
    prove otherwise. The circuit court shall hear the case by its
    own rules and shall decide all questions of fact and law."
    8
    CL-2022-0701
    telephones." The trial court specifically found that Cellular's receipt of
    prepayments for Boost's wireless service did not constitute the sale of
    prepaid authorization numbers under the 1997 Act. The trial court
    further determined that Section 6 of the 2014 Act was unconstitutional
    as applied to Cellular insofar as it made the 2014 Act applicable
    retroactively to taxpayers as to whom the Department had begun a sales-
    tax audit or had entered a sales-tax assessment before the effective date
    of the 2014 Act but provided that the 2014 Act was not applicable
    retroactively to other taxpayers. Accordingly, the trial court determined
    that the prepayments for Boost's wireless service that Cellular had
    received from April 2009 through March 2012 were not subject to sales
    taxes pursuant to the 2014 Act. The Department timely appealed to this
    court.
    Appellate Jurisdiction
    Because the Department's decision to assess sales taxes against
    Cellular prompted the chain of appeals that now brings the Department's
    appeal to this court, this court has jurisdiction over the Department's
    appeal pursuant to § 12-3-10, Ala. Code 1975, which, among other things,
    provides that this court has exclusive appellate jurisdiction over all
    9
    CL-2022-0701
    appeals from administrative agencies other than the Alabama Public
    Service Commission.
    Analysis
    The Department first argues that § 40-23-1(a)(13), as it existed
    after the enactment of the 1997 Act and before the enactment of the 2014
    Act, made Cellular liable for sales taxes on the prepayments for Boost's
    wireless service that it received from April 2009 through March 2012.
    Specifically, the Department asserts that the prepayments for wireless
    service that Cellular received from April 2009 through March 2012
    constituted the sale of a "prepaid authorization number" under § 40-23-
    1(a)(13) as it existed after the enactment of the 1997 Act and before the
    enactment of the 2014 Act. We disagree.
    The legislature did not define the phrase "prepaid authorization
    number" in the 1997 Act. Moreover, during the period pertinent to this
    appeal, the Department did not adopt rule defining that phrase.
    Consequently, the issue whether Cellular's receipt of a prepayment for
    Boost's wireless service constituted the sale of a "prepaid authorization
    number" under the 1997 Act depends on the construction of the
    legislature's language in that act. "Words used in a statute must be given
    10
    CL-2022-0701
    their natural, plain, ordinary, and commonly understood meaning, and
    where plain language is used a court is bound to interpret that language
    to mean exactly what it says." IMED Corp. v. Systems Eng'g Assocs.
    Corp., 
    602 So. 2d 344
    , 346 (Ala. 1992). The undisputed evidence indicated
    that Cellular did not issue either a physical calling card or an
    authorization number that had to be entered before a customer could
    access Boost's wireless service. The transaction number printed on a
    paper receipt evidencing the transaction when a Boost customer prepaid
    for wireless service was not a "prepaid authorization number" because
    the customer did not have to use it to access Boost's wireless service.
    Moreover, the Department has not explained how anything issued by
    Cellular could constitute either a physical calling card or an
    authorization number. Based on the plain language of the 1997 Act, we
    conclude that Cellular's receipt of a prepayment for Boost's wireless
    service did not constitute "[a] sale of a prepaid telephone calling card or
    a prepaid authorization number, or both," under the 1997 Act because
    Cellular did not issue either a physical prepaid calling card or a prepaid
    authorization number. Therefore, we find no merit in the Department's
    first argument.
    11
    CL-2022-0701
    The Department next argues that this court held in Atheer and
    Downing that sales of prepaid wireless service were subject to sales taxes
    pursuant to § 43-23-1(a)(13) as it existed after the enactment of the 1997
    Act and before the enactment of the 2014 Act. Again, we disagree.
    In Atheer, the Department had assessed sales taxes against Atheer
    for its sale of prepaid wireless service from September 2009 through
    August 2012. Atheer appealed to the Tax Tribunal. While Atheer's appeal
    was pending in the Tax Tribunal, the legislature enacted the 2014 Act.
    The Department amended its answer to Atheer's appeal in the Tax
    Tribunal to assert that the 2014 Act clarified § 40-23-1(a) by indicating
    that sales of prepaid wireless service were subject to sales taxes. In
    response, Atheer asserted that the 2014 Act was unconstitutional. After
    a hearing, the Tax Tribunal entered an order finding that " '[the]
    Department [had] correctly assessed [Atheer] pursuant to § 40-23-
    1(a)(13), as amended by [the 2014 Act].' " 
    228 So. 3d at 466
    . Atheer
    appealed to the Montgomery Circuit Court and again asserted that the
    2014 Act was unconstitutional. Atheer and the Department both filed
    motions for a summary judgment. In its motion, the Department asserted
    that the Montgomery Circuit Court did not have jurisdiction to consider
    12
    CL-2022-0701
    Atheer's appeal because, the Department said, Atheer had not served the
    attorney   general   with    notice    of   the   appeal   challenging   the
    constitutionality of the 2014 Act. The Department's motion also asserted
    that the 2014 Act was constitutional. The Montgomery Circuit Court held
    a hearing and denied Atheer's motion but did not rule on the
    Department's motion. The Department then filed a second motion for a
    summary judgment in which it reiterated more throughly its argument
    that the 2014 Act was constitutional. Thereafter, the Montgomery Circuit
    Court entered a summary judgment in favor of the Department without
    specifying its reasons for doing so.
    Atheer then appealed to this court. This court affirmed the
    judgment of the Montgomery Circuit Court, and Atheer applied for a
    rehearing. In its application for a rehearing, Atheer asserted for the first
    time that it had served the attorney general with notice of its appeal
    challenging the constitutionality of the 2014 Act by serving a copy of its
    appeal on the assistant attorneys general representing the Department.
    This court granted Atheer's application for a rehearing but held that it
    could not consider Atheer's argument that it had served the attorney
    general with notice of its constitutional challenge by serving the assistant
    13
    CL-2022-0701
    attorneys general because of the well-settled legal principle that an
    appellate court cannot consider an argument raised for the first time in
    an application for a rehearing. This court affirmed the summary
    judgment in favor of the Department by applying the following principle
    of law:
    "When a trial court enters a summary judgment without
    specifying the bases for its ruling, the appellant must set forth
    an argument in its principal brief as to the invalidity of each
    and every ground asserted in the motion, or motions, for a
    summary judgment; if not, the appellant waives any
    argument as to the omitted ground, resulting in the automatic
    affirmance of the summary judgment."
    
    228 So. 3d at 468
    . This court automatically affirmed the summary
    judgment in favor of the Department because (1) the Montgomery Circuit
    Court had entered the summary judgment without specifying the bases
    for its ruling; (2) the Department had asserted as one of the grounds of
    its summary-judgment motion that Atheer could not challenge the
    constitutionality of the 2014 Act because, the Department said, Atheer
    had not served the attorney general with notice of that challenge; and (3)
    Atheer had not asserted in its principal brief an argument that that
    ground of the Department's motion was invalid. This court did not hold
    that § 40-23-1(a)(13) as it existed after the enactment of the 1997 Act and
    14
    CL-2022-0701
    before the enactment of the 2014 Act subjected prepayments for wireless
    service to sales taxes. Moreover, we did not address the merits of Atheer's
    argument that the 2014 Act was unconstitutional.
    In Downing, the Department "appeal[ed] from a judgment of the
    Elmore Circuit Court … finding that sales of prepaid authorization
    numbers for wireless services on cellular telephones were not subject to
    the sales tax at the time the sales were made [between September 1,
    2008, and June 30, 2011,] and ordering the Department to refund the
    amount of taxes paid." 272 So. 3d at 186 (emphasis added). In Downing,
    this court stated: "Patrick Lee Downing was the sole member of Downing
    Enterprises, LLC ('the LLC'), a business that sold, among other products,
    prepaid authorization numbers allowing access to wireless services on
    cellular telephones." Id. (emphasis added). This court also stated:
    "Downing testified that the LLC sold prepaid authorization numbers for
    wireless services on cellular telephones." 272 So. 3d at 193 (emphasis
    added). In Downing, the Elmore Circuit Court's judgment "found that the
    sales of prepaid authorization numbers were not subject to the sales tax
    at the time that those sales were made." 272 So. 3d at 187 (emphasis
    added). This court disagreed, and, in reversing the Elmore Circuit Court's
    15
    CL-2022-0701
    judgment, held that "the LLC's sales of prepaid authorization numbers
    were subject to taxation pursuant to § 40-23-1(a)(13), as that provision
    existed at the time the applicable sales occurred." 272 So. 3d at 193
    (emphasis added).
    Downing is distinguishable from the present case because the
    record in the present case contains no evidence indicating that Cellular
    sold "prepaid authorization numbers allowing access" to wireless service.
    272 So. 3d at 186. To the contrary, the undisputed evidence indicates that
    Cellular did not issue a prepaid authorization number allowing access to
    Boost's wireless service when Boost's customers prepaid for Boost's
    wireless service. Downing did not hold that sales of prepaid wireless
    service were ipso facto subject to § 40-23-1(a)(13) as it existed after the
    enactment of the 1997 Act and before the enactment of the 2014 Act. It
    held only that sales of prepaid authorization numbers allowing access to
    wireless service on cellular telephones were subject to sales taxes under
    that version of § 40-23-1(a)(13).
    Accordingly, we find no merit in the Department's argument that
    this court held in Atheer and Downing that sales of prepaid wireless
    service were subject to sales taxes pursuant to § 43-23-1(a)(13) as it
    16
    CL-2022-0701
    existed after the enactment of the 1997 Act and before the enactment of
    the 2014 Act.
    The Department next argues that the trial court erred in
    determining that Section 6 of the 2014 Act was unconstitutional insofar
    as it made the 2014 Act applicable retroactively to Cellular. We disagree.
    Section 6 of the 2014 Act provided that the 2014 Act would not apply
    retroactively to any transactions in which the consumer did not receive
    from the retailer either an authorization number or a physical card if the
    Department had not collected sales taxes as a result of those
    transactions; however, it exempted from this limitation on retroactive
    application taxpayers as to whom the Department had begun sales-tax
    audits or had entered sales-tax assessments before the 2014 Act became
    effective. Thus, Section 6 exempted some taxpayers from the retroactive
    application of the 2014 Act while subjecting others, such as Cellular, to
    its retroactive application because the Department had begun a sales-tax
    audit or had entered a sales-tax assessment as to them before the
    effective date of the 2014 Act.
    " 'When a court is called on to consider whether retroactive
    legislation is constitutional, its focus is on whether the
    retroactivity of the legislation denies due process. [Monroe v.
    Valhalla Cemetery Co., 
    749 So. 2d 470
    , 473-74 (Ala. Civ. App.
    17
    CL-2022-0701
    1999), overruled on other grounds, Patterson v. Gladwin
    Corp., 
    835 So. 2d 137
    , 153 (Ala. 2002)] (quoting United States
    v. Carlton, 
    512 U.S. 26
    , 30-31, 
    114 S. Ct. 2018
    , 
    129 L. Ed. 2d 22
     (1994)). In Carlton, "the [United States Supreme] Court set
    forth the test to determine whether retroactive tax legislation
    denies due process: first, the legislation must be 'supported by
    a legislative purpose furthered by rational means,' and
    second, the period of retroactivity must be 'modest.' " Valhalla
    Cemetery Co., 
    749 So. 2d at 474
     (quoting Carlton, 
    512 U.S. at 31
    , 
    114 S. Ct. 2018
    ).' "
    Jefferson Cnty. Comm'n v. Edwards, 
    49 So. 3d 685
    , 691 (Ala. 2010)
    (quoting IEC Arab Alabama, Inc. v. City of Arab, 
    7 So. 3d 370
    , 374 (Ala.
    Civ. App. 2008)).
    In its judgment, the trial court explained its rationale for
    concluding that Section 6 of the 2014 Act was unconstitutional as applied
    to Cellular:
    "Walking this case through the two-part test set forth in
    [United States v.] Carlton, [
    512 U.S. 26
     (1994),] the Court
    finds:
    "(1) that the retroactive aspects of the 2014 [Act] as
    applied to Cellular Express are not 'supported by a
    legislative purpose furthered by rational means,'
    because the law singles out only those few taxpayers
    who had audits that began or assessments that were
    entered prior to the effective date of the [2014 Act].
    "(2) by reaching five years back in time -- from the 2014
    enactment of the [2014 Act] to [Cellular's] 2009 tax year
    -- the retroactivity period of [the 2014 Act] is not
    'modest.'
    18
    CL-2022-0701
    "After completing its Carlton analysis, this Court finds
    and holds that the following portion of Section 6 of [the 2014
    Act] is unconstitutional as applied to Cellular Express under
    the particular facts of this case:
    " 'This limitation on the authority of the
    department or local officials shall not apply to
    audits that began or assessments that were
    entered prior to the effective date of this act.'
    "The Court has ruled in this way because, by
    legislatively deciding Cellular Express's tax appeal in favor of
    the Department of Revenue in 2014 regarding tax years
    reaching as far back as 2009, the State of Alabama violated
    Cellular Express's right to due process. More specifically, the
    Court finds and holds that the State violated Cellular
    Express's due process rights by arbitrarily subjecting it (and
    the few others who had tax appeals pending on this issue
    when the 2014 [Act] was passed) to taxes that others were not
    retroactively required to pay. See Carlton, 
    512 U.S. at 30
    (noting the Constitutional prohibition on 'arbitrary and
    irrational legislation').
    "For the above-outlined reasons, this Court disallows
    the retroactive application of this sales tax to this particular
    taxpayer under these particular circumstances. Nothing in
    this ruling affects any other aspect of [the 2014 Act]. Rather,
    in all other respects as to all other taxpayers, the [2014] Act
    remains in full force and effect."
    The Department argues that the trial court erroneously determined
    that Section 6 of the 2014 Act was unconstitutional as applied to Cellular.
    This is so, according to the Department, because, it says, (1) the
    legislative purpose of the 2014 Act was to clarify § 40-23-1(a) rather than
    19
    CL-2022-0701
    to create a new tax, (2) the clarification of § 40-23-1(a) by means of the
    2014 Act was rational, and (3) the retroactive period of five years was
    modest. However, it was not the clarification of § 40-23-1(a) that the trial
    court determined was not supported by a legislative purpose furthered
    by rational means; it was Section 6's retroactive application of the 2014
    Act to a small number of taxpayers that included Cellular while
    exempting other taxpayers from the retroactive application of the 2014
    Act that the trial court determined was not supported by a legislative
    purpose furthered by rational means. The Department has not
    persuasively argued that subjecting a small number of taxpayers as to
    whom the Department had begun sales-tax audits or had entered sales-
    tax assessments before the effective date of the 2014 Act, while
    exempting other taxpayers who would owe sales taxes if the 2014 Act
    were applied retroactively to them, is a rational means of clarifying § 40-
    23-1(a). Therefore, we will not reverse the trial court's judgment insofar
    as it determined that Section 6 of the 2014 Act was unconstitutional as
    applied to Cellular.
    Citing this court's decision in IEC Arab Alabama, Inc. v. City of
    Arab, 
    7 So. 3d 370
     (Ala. Civ. App. 2008), the Department also argues that
    20
    CL-2022-0701
    the five-year retroactivity period of the 2014 Act applicable to Cellular is
    modest and, therefore, does not violate Cellular's due-process rights.
    However, because the Department has failed to persuasively argue that
    applying the 2014 Act retroactively to Cellular because the Department
    had entered an assessment against it before the effective date of the 2014
    Act, while exempting other taxpayers who would owe sales taxes if the
    2014 Act were applied retroactively to them, is a rational means of
    clarifying § 40-23-1(a), we need not reach the issue whether the five-year
    retroactivity period is modest.
    Accordingly, for the reasons discussed above, we affirm the
    judgment of the trial court.
    AFFIRMED.
    Thompson, P.J., and Moore, Hanson, and Fridy, JJ., concur.
    Edwards, J., recuses herself.
    21