Fayetteville Express Pipeline, LLC v. Arkansas Public Service Commission , 2017 Ark. App. LEXIS 642 ( 2017 )


Menu:
  •                                   Cite as 
    2017 Ark. App. 557
    ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS
    DIVISIONS III & IV
    No. CV-16-815
    Opinion Delivered   October 25, 2017
    FAYETTEVILLE EXPRESS PIPELINE,                     APPEAL FROM THE PULASKI
    LLC                                                COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT,
    APPELLANT                     FIFTH DIVISION
    [NO. 60CV-15-2357]
    V.
    HONORABLE WENDELL GRIFFEN,
    ARKANSAS PUBLIC SERVICE                            JUDGE
    COMMISSION
    APPELLEE                     AFFIRMED
    LARRY D. VAUGHT, Judge
    This case involves an assessment of 2014 ad valorem taxes on properties of Fayetteville
    Express Pipeline, LLC (FEP or appellant), by the Tax Division of the Arkansas Public Service
    Commission (Commission). FEP filed a formal petition asking the Commission for review.
    An administrative law judge (ALJ), sitting by designation of the Commission, conducted a
    public hearing and affirmed the Tax Division’s assessment. The assessment was reaffirmed by
    the Commission. FEP subsequently appealed to the Pulaski County Circuit Court. The circuit
    court found that the Commission’s decision to affirm the assessment of FEP’s property was
    supported by substantial evidence in the record. On appeal, FEP argues six points. We affirm.
    I. Background
    FEP owns a 185-mile natural gas pipeline that originates in Conway County, Arkansas,
    and terminates by connecting with another pipeline in Mississippi. FEP entered into long-term
    contracts with four gas producers in the Fayetteville Shale region reserving 92.5 percent of the
    Cite as 
    2017 Ark. App. 557
    pipeline’s capacity. These contracts expire in 2020 and 2021 and pay FEP roughly $55 million
    a year regardless of the amount of gas carried through the pipeline. The pipeline went into
    operation in 2012.
    On March 27, 2014, FEP filed its 2014 ad valorem tax report for the year ending
    December 31, 2013. Based on the information provided by FEP, the Tax Division prepared
    FEP’s 2014 ad valorem tax assessment, showing a total unit value of $886,387,572, resulting
    in an Arkansas-assessed value of $149,580,000.
    FEP filed a petition for review with the Commission challenging the assessment. In its
    petition, FEP argued that the Tax Division had failed to consider certain conditions, such as
    that the market for natural gas had substantially declined, causing FEP’s pipeline to be
    underutilized. FEP also argued that the Tax Division had failed to consider economic
    obsolescence. FEP noted that the Federal Energy Regulatory Authority (FERC) had allowed
    some 770 miles of mainline transmission pipeline to be abandoned, including 725 miles that
    FEP described as being essential to the original purpose of constructing FEP’s pipeline. FEP
    further argued that the Tax Division applied an improper capitalization rate. FEP also asserted
    that the assessment was arbitrary, not supported by substantial evidence, manifestly excessive,
    clearly erroneous, and confiscatory. The Tax Division filed a response asking that FEP’s
    petition for review be denied.
    A hearing was held before the ALJ, who eventually affirmed the Tax Division’s
    assessment of FEP’s property in Order No. 9. In doing so, the ALJ found that FEP had failed
    to present sufficient evidence to show that the Tax Division’s treatment of obsolescence in its
    cost approach resulted in a manifestly excessive, clearly erroneous, or confiscatory assessment.
    2
    Cite as 
    2017 Ark. App. 557
    The ALJ further found that the Tax Division had the discretion to consider economic or
    functional obsolescence in valuing taxable property and that FEP had failed to meet its burden
    of demonstrating that the Tax Division abused its discretion or that its failure to consider
    functional or economic obsolescence rendered the assessment incorrect in measuring the fair
    market value of FEP’s property. The ALJ next addressed the Tax Division’s consideration of
    FEP’s future income, noting that Arkansas Code Annotated section 26-26-1607 (Supp. 2015)
    neither specifies how far into the future the Tax Division must consider future income nor
    requires the Tax Division to project the future income of a company. According to the ALJ,
    the statute only requires that the Tax Division consider a company’s future income stream and
    that it did so. Although noting that the Tax Division had a preference for company-specific
    capitalization rates where possible, the ALJ found that FEP failed to submit information for
    the Tax Division to calculate a company-specific capitalization rate for FEP and that FEP’s
    calculation of an individualized capitalization rate was based on comparison companies
    dissimilar to FEP. The ALJ found that FEP had failed to prove that the Tax Division’s
    assessment was incorrect in measuring the fair market value of FEP, and FEP had not met its
    burden to overturn the assessment. The ALJ concluded that the assessment was proper,
    reasonable, and in the public interest.
    FEP filed its “Petition for Rehearing” from Order No. 9 with the Commission, arguing
    that the Tax Division should have considered economic obsolescence; should have developed
    a specific, individualized capitalization rate; and should have used an average of FEP’s income
    over a three-year period instead of a two-year average.
    3
    Cite as 
    2017 Ark. App. 557
    In its response, the Tax Division argued, among other things, that FEP was insulated
    from the market conditions of the Fayetteville Shale by having guaranteed contracts through
    2020 and 2021. It further argued that the methods FEP used to show economic
    obsolescence—underutilization and the income shortfall methods—had previously been
    rejected by the Commission and by the Arkansas Supreme Court. The Tax Division also
    argued that it did not abuse its discretion by failing to make an adjustment for economic
    obsolescence.
    After the Commission had denied FEP’s petition for rehearing in Order No. 11, FEP
    sought review of that order in the circuit court. 1 FEP argued that Order No. 11 was unlawful
    for many of the same reasons stated in its petition seeking review of the assessment. These
    included that the Tax Division failed to consider FEP’s undisputed evidence as to the market
    conditions in the Fayetteville Shale, including that FEP is entirely dependent on production
    from the Fayetteville Shale and the underutilization of FEP’s pipeline. FEP further argued that
    the Tax Division failed to properly consider the imminent termination of contracts that
    provide over 90 percent of FEP’s revenue. According to FEP, the Tax Division misapplied
    section 26-26-1607 by failing to properly consider economic obsolescence. The Tax Division
    answered, asking that the petition be denied.
    Following briefing and oral argument before the circuit court, the court ruled from the
    bench. The court affirmed the Commission’s assessment as supported by substantial evidence,
    1Inits Order No. 11 denying FEP’s petition for rehearing, the Commission did not
    make any factual findings or specifically adopt the ALJ’s Order No. 9. Rather, the Commission
    simply denied FEP’s petition for rehearing.
    4
    Cite as 
    2017 Ark. App. 557
    not clearly erroneous, and that the ad valorem assessment of the FEP natural-gas pipeline of
    $886,387,572 was not confiscatory or manifestly excessive. This appeal followed.
    II. Arguments on Appeal
    On appeal, FEP argues (1) that the Commission violated Ark. Code Ann. § 26-26-1607
    by failing to consider the undisputed market evidence that establishes economic obsolescence;
    (2) that the Commission erred by refusing to make findings based on evidence submitted by
    FEP and by giving preclusive effect to prior Commission orders where FEP was not a party;
    (3) that the Commission committed errors of law by rejecting generally accepted methods of
    calculating economic obsolescence; (4) that the Commission erred by concluding that
    depreciation always accounts for economic obsolescence; (5) that the Commission’s income
    approach was excessive by using too much income at too high of a capitalization rate; and (6)
    that the Commission erred by imposing additional requirements that are not prescribed in
    Arkansas Code Annotated section 26-26-1610.
    III. Standard of Review
    Our standard of review, mandated by the legislature, does not extend any further than
    to determine whether the Commission’s findings are supported by substantial evidence and
    whether the Commission has regularly pursued its authority. Ozark Gas Pipeline Corp. v. Ark.
    Pub. Serv. Comm’n, 
    342 Ark. 591
    , 
    29 S.W.3d 730
    (2000). Our supreme court has held that it is
    not within the province of the courts of this state to assess property, but only to review those
    assessments. 
    Id. The burden
    is on the party protesting the assessment to show that the
    assessment is manifestly excessive, clearly erroneous, or confiscatory. 
    Id. It is
    only in the most
    5
    Cite as 
    2017 Ark. App. 557
    exceptional cases that an appellate court will grant a reassessment. IBM Credit Corp. v. Pulaski
    Cty., 
    316 Ark. 580
    , 
    873 S.W.2d 161
    (1994).
    IV. Discussion
    The central issue in this appeal is whether the Tax Division and, ultimately, the
    Commission, properly considered FEP’s evidence purporting to show that the pipeline was
    economically obsolete when it reviewed the assessment of FEP’s property. Our supreme court
    has stated,
    Economic obsolescence, as used with respect to valuation of property for
    taxation, is “a loss of value brought about by conditions that environ a structure
    such as a declining location or down-grading of a neighborhood resulting in reduced
    business volume.” Black’s Law Dictionary (5th ed. 1979).
    Ark. Elec. Coop. Corp. v. Ark. Pub. Serv. Comm’n, 
    307 Ark. 171
    , 177, 
    818 S.W.2d 935
    , 938 (1991).
    In determining fair market value, Arkansas Code Annotated section 26-26-1607(b)(1)
    authorizes the Tax Division to use various cost approaches such as the original cost less
    depreciation and the replacement cost less depreciation. 2 The Tax Division is also allowed to
    consider functional or economic obsolescence as part of this approach. 
    Id. The decision
    in Arkansas Electric Cooperative is dispositive on these points and requires
    that we affirm the assessment. In that case, the supreme court noted that a 1980 amendment
    changed section 26-26-1607(b)(1) from mandatory (shall) to directory (may). The court held
    that the language of the statute vested the Tax Division with both the option and the discretion
    to consider economic and functional obsolescence in valuing taxable property. In that case, as
    in the present case, the Tax Division contended that it did consider obsolescence in valuing
    2Section 26-26-1607(b) also provides for consideration of other valuation approaches
    for the assessment of property. They are the stock-and-debt method and the income method.
    6
    Cite as 
    2017 Ark. App. 557
    the taxpayer’s property because an implicit component of the depreciation subtracted from
    the original cost is obsolescence.
    Although FEP cites Arkansas Electric Cooperative in its briefs, it does not discuss its
    holding that section 26-26-1607(b)(1) gives the Tax Division the option and discretion to
    consider economic obsolescence in its valuations. Instead, FEP argues that the Tax Division
    violated section 26-26-1607 by failing to consider what FEP characterizes as its undisputed
    evidence concerning negative economic conditions in the Fayetteville Shale field as part of its
    argument that there should be an adjustment for economic obsolescence. The supreme court’s
    holding in Arkansas Electric Cooperative that consideration of obsolescence is optional and
    discretionary means that the Tax Division can, but is not required to consider physical or
    economic obsolescence in valuing a company. Thus, FEP must show that the Tax Division
    abused its discretion in failing to consider FEP’s evidence of economic obsolescence.
    Here, the Commission found that the Tax Division did not abuse its discretion in not
    making an additional adjustment for obsolescence, because the Commission had held that
    depreciation implicitly takes into account factors such as the obsolescence of an asset. The
    Commission further found that FEP’s FERC forms do not show any obsolescence beyond
    the reported amount of depreciation. FEP does not argue that the Commission erred in these
    findings or that the Tax Division abused its discretion in not considering obsolescence. It is
    an appellant’s burden to demonstrate and explain reversible error. See Tri-Eagle Enters. v. Regions
    Bank, 
    2010 Ark. App. 64
    , 
    373 S.W.3d 399
    ; Parker v. Parker, 
    97 Ark. App. 298
    , 
    248 S.W.3d 523
    (2007). Here, the parties’ experts testified as to their methodologies; however, neither expert
    testified that the other’s methodology was wrong. To the contrary, both Mark Andrews (FEP’s
    7
    Cite as 
    2017 Ark. App. 557
    expert) and the Tax Division reached the same valuation figure using the cost approach before
    Andrews applied a discount for economic obsolescence.
    Contrary to FEP’s argument, Jim Paws, Inc. v. Equalization Board of Garland County, 
    289 Ark. 113
    , 
    710 S.W.2d 197
    (1986), does not require that an adjustment for economic obsolescence
    be made. Rather, that case stands for the proposition that an assessor cannot simply rely on
    one method to establish the fair market value of the property or company being assessed.
    Here, unlike the assessor in Jim Paws, the Tax Division considered both the replacement cost
    and income approaches to arrive at its assessment. 3
    There is no merit to FEP’s argument that because the Tax Division rejected FEP’s two
    proposed methods for calculating economic obsolescence (the income-shortfall and the
    underutilization or utility methods), it was required to provide some alternative method for
    calculating obsolescence. It did. Brent Eyre testified on behalf of the Tax Division that he
    tested for obsolescence by performing a market analysis to examine the market-to-book ratio
    of various companies. The resulting overall ratio was 1.91, which Eyre said indicates no
    obsolescence. Andrews testified that Eyre did not perform an appropriate test to determine
    economic obsolescence; however, he did not explain how or why Eyre’s test was not
    appropriate. It was FEP’s burden to do so. Tri-Eagle 
    Enters., supra
    .
    FEP’s main point in support of its argument that there is economic obsolescence is
    that its firm contracts, which reserve approximately 92 percent of its pipeline cap6acity, expire
    in 2020 or 2021; therefore, they need to be considered in making the current assessment.
    Section 26-26-1607(b)(3)(B) provides that the “utility operating income to be capitalized
    3Neither   FEP nor the Tax Division relied on the stock-and-debt method of valuation.
    8
    Cite as 
    2017 Ark. App. 557
    should be determined by reference to the company’s historical income stream, appropriately
    weighted, with consideration to the future income stream.” Both experts testified that they
    considered FEP’s contracts in arriving at their respective valuations. Neither of them could
    testify about FEP’s future income after the expiration of the contracts because it would be
    sheer speculation. Tax Division’s Sarah Bradshaw testified that seven years was too far into
    the future to make accurate predictions of future income. Section 26-26-1607 requires only
    consideration of the company’s future income stream. All three experts testified that they gave
    consideration to FEP’s future income stream.
    FEP attempts to distinguish the supreme court’s decision in Ozark Gas 
    Pipeline, supra
    ,
    from the present case on the basis that it was a known fact as of January 1, 2014, that FEP’s
    contracts would expire in 2020 or 2021. In Ozark Gas Pipeline, it was also known, however,
    that, as of the dates of the 1995 and 1996 assessments at issue, the capacity payments, like
    those in the present case, would expire in 
    1997. 342 Ark. at 594
    , 29 S.W.3d at 731. The supreme
    court held that the pipeline company had not shown that the Tax Division had not
    appropriately considered historical income and future income stream, as section 26-26-1607(b)
    requires, other than to disagree with the weight given to the income method. 
    Id. at 601-02,
    29
    S.W.3d at 735-36.
    The Tax Division’s use of only two years of FEP’s income, as well as its use of an
    industry-wide capitalization rate, was not error. Both are matters of skill and judgment on the
    part of the appraiser that go to the weight to be given to the valuation by the Commission. See
    Ozark Gas Pipeline 
    Corp., 342 Ark. at 601
    , 29 S.W.3d at 735.
    9
    Cite as 
    2017 Ark. App. 557
    As to the use of a two-year average for FEP’s income instead of a three-year average,
    the Commission found that FEP’s 2012 income did not accurately reflect FEP’s value because
    FEP was being paid for less than full capacity for the first year, and that would not reflect the
    remainder of FEP’s contracts. The Commission further found that FEP was guaranteed a
    stable level of income until the expiration of its contracts. FEP does not challenge these
    findings.
    The Commission also found that FEP failed to provide sufficient evidence to enable
    the Tax Division to calculate an individualized capitalization rate for FEP. Although Andrews
    testified that FEP provided the Tax Division with more information than in previous years,
    the Commission found that both he and FEP failed to identify this additional information.
    The Commission further found that the companies FEP used to determine its capitalization
    rate were not sufficiently similar to FEP to support their use in calculating the capitalization
    rate. We cannot say that these findings are clearly wrong.
    FEP argues that our holding in McDaniel v. Arkansas Public Service Commission, 2014 Ark.
    App. 529, 
    444 S.W.3d 380
    , requires reversal because the Commission did not make findings
    regarding FEP’s evidence concerning economic obsolescence. We disagree that McDaniel
    requires reversal. First, the statute at issue in the present case has been interpreted to give the
    Tax Division both the option and the discretion to consider economic obsolescence. The
    Commission found that FEP failed to show that the Tax Division had abused its discretion in
    failing to consider economic obsolescence. FEP does not argue that there was an abuse of
    discretion. In fact, FEP does not even acknowledge the Tax Division’s broad discretion.
    10
    Cite as 
    2017 Ark. App. 557
    Nor has preclusive effect been given to earlier Commission proceedings. Although the
    Commission relied on an earlier Commission ruling in determining that depreciation implicitly
    takes into consideration the obsolescence of an asset, it did not give preclusive effect to that
    ruling. Instead, the Commission relied on the fact that FEP’s FERC form showed no
    obsolescence beyond the reported depreciation. The Commission’s prior ruling that rejected
    the income-shortfall method could be seen as having preclusive effect, but the Commission
    noted that FEP offered no evidence to address the Commission’s concerns with that method.
    We cannot reach the merits of FEP’s argument that the Tax Division’s failure to
    consider economic obsolescence violated professional appraisal standards because its abstract
    does not demonstrate that the argument was raised below. The Tax Division argued that the
    issue was being raised for the first time on appeal. In its reply brief, FEP cites the transcript
    of the prefiled surrebuttal testimony of Mark Andrews. However, none of the references
    appear in Andrews’s abstracted testimony. It is fundamental that the record on appeal is
    confined to that which is abstracted, and we will not reach the merits of an issue when the
    documents or proceedings that are necessary for an understanding of the issue are not
    abstracted. Middleton v. Lockhart, 
    364 Ark. 32
    , 
    216 S.W.3d 98
    (2005); Boatmen’s Tr. Co. of Ark.
    v. Hous. Auth. of N. Little Rock, 
    346 Ark. 192
    , 
    57 S.W.3d 132
    (2001); Brown v. Tucker, 
    330 Ark. 435
    , 
    954 S.W.2d 262
    (1997).
    Moreover, we cannot find where either the Commission or the circuit court ruled on
    the issue. When the appellate court has no ruling on an issue from either the administrative
    agency or the circuit court, arguments pertaining to that issue are not preserved for our review.
    See Louisiana v. Joint Pipeline Grp., 
    2010 Ark. 374
    , 
    373 S.W.3d 292
    ; Seiz Co. v. Ark. State Highway
    11
    Cite as 
    2017 Ark. App. 557
    & Transp. Dep’t, 
    2009 Ark. 361
    , 
    324 S.W.3d 336
    ; Ark. Wildlife Fed’n v. Ark. Soil & Water
    Conservation Comm’n, 
    366 Ark. 50
    , 
    233 S.W.3d 615
    (2006).
    Affirmed. 4
    VIRDEN, HARRISON, KLAPPENBACH, GLOVER, and BROWN, JJ., agree.
    Corbitt Law Firm, PLLC, by: Chris P. Corbitt, for appellant.
    Justin A. Hinton and Dawn Kelliher Guthrie, for appellee.
    4We   cannot consider the Tax Division’s argument that the circuit court never acquired
    jurisdiction over FEP’s appeal to that court because FEP failed to exhaust its administrative
    remedies before the Commission by prematurely filing its petition for rehearing from the ALJ’s
    Order No. 9. The Tax Division failed to file a notice of cross-appeal. The failure to do so left
    the circuit court’s order denying the motion to dismiss unchallenged on appeal and not
    preserved for our review. Protect Fayetteville v. City of Fayetteville, 
    2017 Ark. 49
    , 
    510 S.W.3d 258
    ;
    Landers v. Stone, 
    2016 Ark. 272
    , 
    496 S.W.3d 370
    ; Gallas v. Alexander, 
    371 Ark. 106
    , 
    263 S.W.3d 494
    (2007).
    12