General Motors Corp. v. Com. of PA ( 2019 )


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  •            IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
    General Motors Corporation,                      :
    :
    Petitioner         :
    :
    v.                               : No. 869 F.R. 2012
    : Argued: September 10, 2019
    Commonwealth of Pennsylvania,                    :
    :
    Respondent         :
    BEFORE:       HONORABLE P. KEVIN BROBSON, Judge
    HONORABLE MICHAEL H. WOJCIK, Judge
    HONORABLE BONNIE BRIGANCE LEADBETTER, Senior Judge
    OPINION BY JUDGE WOJCIK                                        FILED: November 21, 2019
    General Motors Corporation (GM) petitions for review of the order of
    the Board of Finance and Revenue (F&R) sustaining a decision of the
    Commonwealth of Pennsylvania (Commonwealth) Department of Revenue’s
    (Department) Board of Appeals that denied GM’s petition for a refund of corporate
    net income tax in the amount of $738,760 for the tax year ended December 31,
    2001 (2001 Tax Year). At issue is the “net loss carryover” (NLC) provision
    contained in Section 401(3)4.(c)(1)(A)(I) of the Tax Reform Code of 1971 (Tax
    Code),1 for the 2001 Tax Year, which imposed a $2,000,000 cap on the amount of
    1
    Act of March 4, 1971, P.L. 6, as amended, 72 P.S. §7401(3)4.(c)(1)(A)(I). This section
    provides:
    (c)(1) The net loss deduction shall be the lesser of:
    (A)(I) For taxable years beginning before January 1, 2007, two
    million dollars ($2,000,000); . . . .
    (Footnote continued on next page…)
    loss a corporation could carry over from prior years as a deduction against its 2001
    taxable income. This statutory cap created a non-uniform classification based
    solely on whether the taxpayer’s income exceeded $2,000,000; taxpayers whose
    income exceeded $2,000,000 paid the tax, while taxpayers whose income did not
    exceed $2,000,000 did not. The parties agree that the cap violates the Uniformity
    Clause of Article 8, Section 1 of the Pennsylvania Constitution.              See Nextel
    Communications of the Mid-Atlantic, Inc. v. Commonwealth, 
    171 A.3d 682
     (Pa.
    2017), cert. denied, 
    138 S. Ct. 2635
     (2018) (holding that a $3,000,000 flat-dollar
    cap of the NLC provision violated the Uniformity Clause of the Pennsylvania
    Constitution). However, they disagree regarding the appropriate remedy. To wit:
    in order to cure the constitutional infirmity, either the $2,000,000 flat-dollar
    deduction or the entire NLC provision must be severed from the Tax Code. Upon
    review, we conclude that only the flat-dollar deduction must be severed from the
    Tax Code, and we reverse F&R’s order and remand to F&R for recalculation and
    the issuance of a refund.
    I. Background
    This matter involves GM’s petition for refund of Pennsylvania
    corporate net income tax in the amount of $738,760 for the 2001 Tax Year.
    According to the parties’ Stipulation of Facts, GM is a Delaware corporation,
    engaged in the production and sale of motor vehicles throughout the United States,
    (continued…)
    72 P.S. §7401(3)4.(c)(1)(A)(I).   In 2001, this provision was formerly codified at 72 P.S.
    §7401(3)4.(c)(1).
    2
    including Pennsylvania. GM carried into the 2001 Tax Year net losses, as defined
    under Section 401(3)4.(b) of the Tax Code, 72 P.S. §7401(3)4.(b), apportioned to
    Pennsylvania in the amount of $202,276,343, which had accumulated since the tax
    year ended December 31, 1995. For the 2001 Tax Year, GM’s taxable income
    apportioned to Pennsylvania before accounting for any net loss deduction was
    $9,394,999. Although GM carried losses into the 2001 Tax Year ($202,000,000)
    that vastly exceeded its 2001 income ($9,300,000), GM took a net loss deduction
    of only $2,000,000, which was the statutory cap on net loss deductions. After
    accounting for the net loss deduction, GM reported taxable income apportioned to
    Pennsylvania of $7,394,999, which resulted in a corporate net income tax liability
    of $738,760, which GM paid in full. The Department accepted GM’s Tax Report
    as filed and did not issue an assessment. Stipulation of Facts (S.F.), 12/14/18, Nos.
    2-10.
    In February 2012, GM filed a petition for refund of Pennsylvania
    corporate net income tax paid for the 2001 Tax Year with the Board of Appeals
    claiming entitlement to a full refund based on its contention that the flat-dollar net
    loss cap violated the Uniformity Clause of the Pennsylvania Constitution. GM
    argued that, had the deduction not been limited to $2,000,000, it could have
    deducted net losses equal to its taxable income, thereby reducing its taxable
    income from $7,394,999 to $0, like the favored taxpayers. The Board of Appeals
    denied the petition. GM timely appealed to F&R raising the same issues.
    F&R recited the applicable provisions of the Tax Code: “A net loss
    for a taxable year is the negative amount for said taxable year determined under
    subclause 1 or, if applicable, subclause 2. Negative amounts under subclause 1
    shall be allocated and apportioned in the same manner as positive amounts.”
    3
    Section 401(3)4.(b) of the Tax Code, 72 P.S. §7401(3)4.(b). Under subclause 1,
    “The net loss deduction shall be the lesser of: (A)(I) For taxable years beginning
    before          January       1,    2007,       two      million      dollars         ($2,000,000).”
    72 P.S. §7401(3)4.(c)(1).
    F&R denied GM’s request for relief because the Tax Code set the
    limit on net loss deductions for the 2001 Tax Year at $2,000,000. As to GM’s
    challenge to the validity and/or constitutionality of the statutory cap, F&R stated
    that, as an administrative tribunal, it can only apply the current state of
    Pennsylvania law and cannot pass upon the validity or constitutionality of that law.
    See Parsowith v. Department of Revenue, 
    723 A.2d 659
    , 662 (Pa. 1999) (F&R is
    not a competent tribunal to pass upon a challenge of a statute’s validity or
    constitutionality); Philadelphia Life Insurance Co. v. Commonwealth, 
    190 A.2d 111
    , 116 (Pa. 1963) (same). Thus, on November 6, 2012,2 F&R affirmed the
    decision of the Board of Appeals and denied GM’s petition for review of refund.
    GM’s timely-filed petition for review to this Court followed.3, 4
    2
    F&R reached its decision prior to the Supreme Court’s Nextel decision.
    3
    This Court’s review in this matter is “de novo in nature, with no record being certified
    by [F&R].” Pa. R.A.P. 1571; Andrews v. Commonwealth, 
    196 A.3d 1090
    , 1096 (Pa. Cmwlth.
    2018). “Although the Court hears these cases under its appellate jurisdiction, the Court functions
    essentially as a trial court.” Andrews, 196 A.3d at 1096 (citation omitted). Our decision is based
    on either a record created before this Court or, as in this case, stipulated facts. Graham
    Packaging Co., LP v. Commonwealth, 
    882 A.2d 1076
    , 1077 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2005).
    4
    Because the issue involved in this case was similar to the issue involved in Nextel,
    which was then pending before this Court, the parties asked the Court to hold the matter in
    abeyance pending disposition of Nextel.
    4
    II. Issues
    In this appeal, GM argues that, as a matter of statutory construction,
    Nextel requires that the $2,000,000 cap be stricken from the statute, leaving no cap
    on the net loss deduction for the 2001 Tax Year, not the entire NLC provision.
    Further, considering that some taxpayers have actually paid tax for 2001, while
    others have not, GM contends the Due Process and Equal Protection Clauses of the
    United States Constitution and the Remedies Clause of the Pennsylvania
    Constitution require an actual (as opposed to hypothetical) equalization of the
    relative tax positions of the taxpayers for 2001. See U.S. Const. amend. XIV, §1;
    Pa. Const. art. VIII, §1. We must also determine whether the remedy in this case
    should apply retroactively or prospectively.
    III. Discussion
    A. Nextel & the Uniformity Clause
    1. Contentions
    GM asserts that, in the 2001 Tax Year, GM and 133 corporations had
    their loss deductions limited because their income exceeded $2,000,000; if the
    deductions had not been limited, those corporations could have applied their
    carryover net losses to reduce their taxable income to zero. S.F. No. 15. By
    contrast, over 15,000 other corporate taxpayers did not have their loss deductions
    limited because their income fell below the $2,000,000 threshold; they were able to
    deduct their total losses and reduce their taxable income to zero; and they paid no
    tax. S.F. No. 14. GM maintains that the Uniformity Clause prohibits classification
    by income and has done so for over 100 years. While GM’s appeal was pending,
    the Supreme Court held in Nextel that a flat-dollar limitation on the loss deduction
    5
    for the 2007 tax year violated the Uniformity Clause because it created two classes
    of “taxpayers solely on the basis of their income.” 171 A.3d at 699-700. The
    Court severed the unconstitutional flat-dollar limitation from the statute. Id. In
    accordance with Nextel, GM seeks the same relief here.
    The Commonwealth responds that legislative intent is paramount in
    this case of statutory severance. Whether the severance is limited to the flat-dollar
    deduction or extended to the entire NLC provision requires ascertaining the
    legislature’s intent in enacting the NLC provision.             According to the
    Commonwealth, the legislative history, as analyzed by the Supreme Court in
    Nextel, confirms that the General Assembly never intended an unlimited NLC
    deduction, which would be the result if the flat-dollar deduction is severed.
    Rather, the primary legislative intent is to protect the Commonwealth’s fiscal
    health, which is served by severing the entire NLC provision. If the entire NLC
    provision is severed, GM will not have overpaid its tax and will not be entitled to a
    refund.
    2. Analysis
    The Uniformity Clause provides:
    All taxes shall be uniform, upon the same class of
    subjects, within the territorial limits of the authority
    levying the tax, and shall be levied and collected under
    general laws.
    Pa. Const. art. VIII, §1. The test of uniformity is whether there is a reasonable
    distinction and difference between the classes of taxpayers sufficient to justify
    different tax treatment.    Allegheny County v. Monzo, 
    500 A.2d 1096
    , 1106
    (Pa. 1985).
    6
    In Nextel, the Supreme Court examined whether the NLC provision
    for the 2007 tax year, which restricted the amount of loss a corporation could carry
    over from prior years as a deduction against its 2007 taxable income to whichever
    is greater: 12.5% of the corporation’s 2007 taxable income or $3,000,000, violated
    the Uniformity Clause. See 72 P.S. §7401(3)4.(c)(1)(A)(II).
    The Court opined that the Uniformity Clause prohibits classifying
    taxpayers, including corporations, based on the amount of their income. Nextel.
    “[C]lassifications based solely upon the quantity or value of the property being
    taxed are arbitrary and unreasonable, and, hence, forbidden.” Nextel, 171 A.3d at
    696.
    In determining whether the NLC provision violated the Uniformity
    Clause, the Court did not “look at its language in a vacuum”; rather, it examined
    how the statute “functions when applied to establish a corporation’s net income tax
    liability.” Nextel, 171 A.3d at 698. The Court examined the long history of the
    NLC deduction and the legislative intent behind the deduction.
    The General Assembly first introduced the deduction in 1980 to spur
    business investment in Pennsylvania.      Nextel, 171 A.3d at 703.     However, a
    recession that “severely impacted the state’s budgetary health” led to the
    suspension of the deduction from 1991 through 1994. Id. at 704. In 1994, the
    General Assembly reinstated the deduction, which included a flat-dollar cap for the
    first time. The Court determined that “the overall structure of the NLC reflects the
    legislature’s intent to balance the twin policy objectives of encouraging investment
    (by allowing corporations to deduct some of the losses they sustain when making
    such investments against their future revenues), and ensuring that the
    7
    Commonwealth’s financial health is maintained (through the capping of the
    amount of this deduction).” Id. at 704.
    The Court then examined the NLC provision for the 2007 tax year:
    Under its terms, the NLC allows any corporation with
    taxable income of $3 million or less in 2007 to fully
    deduct all net losses carried over from prior years up to
    the entire amount of its taxable income. As a result, such
    corporations pay no corporate net income taxes, given
    that the statutory tax rate of 9.9% is ultimately applied
    only to a corporation’s net income. [Section 402 of the
    Tax Code,] 72 P.S. § 7402(b). Thus, the NLC gives
    corporations with $3 million or less in taxable income,
    and carryover losses equaling or exceeding their taxable
    income, a de facto total exemption from paying the
    corporate net income tax. By contrast, corporations with
    taxable income over $3 million are not permitted to
    exempt their entire income from taxes, even if, like [the
    taxpayer], they have sufficient net losses from prior years
    to offset it. Instead, such corporations are limited in the
    amount of prior net losses they can claim to the greater of
    12.5% of their taxable income or $3 million, thereby
    requiring them to pay the corporate net income tax of
    9.9% on the remaining portion of their taxable income.
    Nextel, 171 A.3d at 698-99. The Court determined that “the NLC, by allowing
    corporations to take a flat $3 million [NLC] deduction against their taxable
    income, has effectively created two classes of taxpayers among corporations which
    have [NLC] deductions equal to or exceeding their taxable income.” Id. at 699.
    Such a classification creates an exemption from taxation solely on the basis of
    income, which runs afoul of the Uniformity Clause. Id. Thus, the Court concluded
    that the NLC provision was unconstitutional as applied to the taxpayer based on its
    inclusion of the $3,000,000 flat deduction. Id. at 701.
    8
    The Court then conducted a severability analysis. Nextel, 171 A.3d at
    701; see Section 1925 of the Statutory Construction Act of 1972 (Statutory
    Construction Act), 1 Pa. C.S. §1925 (requiring courts, in the event that “any
    provision of any statute or the application thereof to any person or circumstance is
    held invalid” to determine if the void provision may be severed from the remaining
    valid portions of the statute). Section 1925 creates a general presumption of
    severability for every statute, subject to two exceptions:
    (1) if the valid provisions are so essentially and
    inseparably connected with, and so depend upon, the
    void provision or application, that it cannot be presumed
    the General Assembly would have enacted the remaining
    valid provisions without the void one, or (2) if the
    remaining valid provisions, standing alone, are
    incomplete and incapable of being executed in
    accordance with the legislative intent.
    Nextel, 171 A.3d at 703 (citation omitted).
    “In determining whether either of these two exceptions are applicable
    to a particular statute, legislative intent is our Court’s guiding consideration.” Id.;
    see also Saulsbury v. Bethlehem Steel Co., 
    196 A.2d 664
    , 666 (Pa. 1964) (“In
    determining the severability of a statute . . . the legislative intent is of primary
    significance.”). “The ‘touchstone’ for determining legislative intent in this regard
    is to answer the question of whether, after severing the unconstitutional provisions
    of a statute, ‘the legislature [would] have preferred what is left of its statute to no
    statute at all.’” Nextel, 171 A.3d at 703 (quoting D.P. v. G.J.P., 
    146 A.3d 204
    , 216
    (Pa. 2016)).
    The Supreme Court then considered the following three options:
    (1) sever the flat $3 million deduction from the remainder
    of the NLC; (2) sever both the $3 million and 12.5%
    deduction caps and allow corporations to claim an
    9
    unlimited net loss—the remedy chosen by the
    Commonwealth Court majority; or (3) strike down the
    entire NLC and, thus, disallow any [NLC].
    
    Id. at 703
    . The Court determined that the first option of severing the $3,000,000
    flat deduction from the remainder of the statute while preserving the percentage
    cap5 was the most consistent with legislative intent because it furthered the
    legislature’s twin policy objectives. 
    Id. at 704
    . The Court explained:
    By striking this provision, all corporations for the tax
    year 2007 would be limited to taking a [NLC] deduction
    of 12.5% of their taxable income for that year. Thus,
    each corporation will be entitled to avail itself of a [NLC]
    deduction, as the legislature intended, but such deduction
    will be equally available to all corporations during that
    year, no matter what their taxable income. This fulfills
    the central tenet of the Uniformity Clause that the tax
    burden be borne equally by the class of taxpayers subject
    to paying it, inasmuch as it assures that all corporations
    will equally share in the obligation to pay corporate net
    income tax for tax year 2007.
    
    Id. at 704-05
    . In the process, it explained that striking all caps in the NLC
    provision (option (2)) contravened the legislature’s intent to limit this deduction to
    protect the Commonwealth’s fiscal health by allowing unlimited net loss
    deductions. 
    Id. at 705
    . Alternatively, the Court reasoned that striking the entire
    NLC provision (option (3)) would leave the taxpayer owing more corporate taxes
    than it paid and contravened the legislature’s “intent to promote investment by
    allowing every corporation doing business in Pennsylvania an opportunity to
    benefit from this deduction.” 
    Id. at 705
    .
    5
    For the tax years between 2007 and 2017, the NLC deduction included both a flat-dollar
    cap and a percentage cap. See 72 P.S. §7401(3)4.(c)(1)(A)(II)-(VII). For the tax years between
    1994 and 2006, the NLC deduction included only a flat-dollar cap.                See 72 P.S.
    §7401(3)4.(c)(1)(A)(I).
    10
    In this case, we are dealing with the 2001 Tax Year, in which the
    NLC’s dollar cap stood at $2,000,000. This limitation is the operational equivalent
    of the cap the Supreme Court severed in Nextel. The parties agree the $2,000,000
    flat deduction runs afoul of the Uniformity Clause based on Nextel. Consequently,
    we must engage in a severability analysis.
    However, unlike the NLC provision at issue in Nextel, the NLC
    provision here does not contain a percentage cap option. As a result, there are only
    two severability options available:
    (1) sever the flat $2,000,000 deduction from the
    remainder of the NLC and allow corporations to claim an
    unlimited net loss; or
    (2) strike down the entire NLC and, thus, disallow any
    [NLC].
    The Supreme Court determined neither one of these options satisfied both of the
    General Assembly’s policy goals of promoting business investment while
    maintaining the Commonwealth’s fiscal health.               Nextel, 171 A.3d at 704-05.
    Unfortunately, the Supreme Court did not determine which of these divergent
    goals would better serve the General Assembly’s intent. See id.
    While Nextel was pending before the Supreme Court, this Court faced
    a similar predicament in RB Alden Corp. v. Commonwealth, 
    142 A.3d 169
    (Pa. Cmwlth. 2016) (Alden I).6 In Alden I, as here, the NLC provision for the 2006
    tax year contained a $2,000,000 flat cap, but no percentage cap. Alden I, 142 A.3d
    at 185.    Upon determining that the $2,000,000 cap was unconstitutional, we
    eliminated the cap from the NLC provision and remanded the matter to F&R to
    6
    Alden I also involved application of the tax benefit rule, which this Court declined to
    adopt. 142 A.3d at 183-84. The tax benefit rule is not an issue here.
    11
    calculate the taxpayer’s corporate net income tax without a cap. Id. at 186. This
    enabled the taxpayer to claim an unlimited NLC deduction for the 2006 tax year.7
    See id. Having decided the matter without the benefit of the Supreme Court’s
    analysis in Nextel, this Court did not examine legislative intent when fashioning a
    remedy to cure the constitutional infirmity. See id. On appeal, the Supreme Court,
    by per curiam order, vacated this Court’s final order and remanded the matter “for
    reconsideration in light of” Nextel. RB Alden Corp. v. Commonwealth, 
    194 A.3d 125
     (Pa. 2018) (Alden III).8
    Nextel directs that legislative intent is paramount in a case of statutory
    severance. 171 A.3d at 703. Given the divergent goals presented here, and the
    absence of a third option that would satisfy both goals that was present in Nextel,
    we must determine the General Assembly’s paramount intention. Commonwealth
    v. Neiman, 
    84 A.3d 603
    , 614 (Pa. 2013). We start by examining the “‘main’
    purpose” for the legislation. Neiman, 84 A.3d at 614.
    The General Assembly enacted the NLC provision to promote
    business development in Pennsylvania. Nextel, 171 A.3d at 705. In the words of
    its proponents, the purpose of the NLC provision was to:                  “assist new ‘high
    technology’ businesses that were focused on the rapid development of new
    products, as well as to assist existing construction and farming enterprises which
    7
    The Commonwealth and the taxpayer both filed timely exceptions. This Court
    overruled the Commonwealth’s exceptions and dismissed the taxpayer’s exceptions as moot.
    See RB Alden Corp. v. Commonwealth, 
    169 A.3d 727
     (Pa. Cmwlth. 2017) (en banc) (Alden II).
    8
    Because the issue on remand in RB Alden Corp. v. Commonwealth (Pa. Cmwlth., No.
    73 F.R. 2011, filed November 21, 2019) (Alden IV), is virtually identical to the issue presented
    here, these matters were argued seriately before this Court on September 10, 2019.
    12
    had been harmed by a recent recession.” 
    Id. at 703-04
     (quoting House Legislative
    Journal, at 2579, Remarks by Representative Pott (November 18, 1980)).
    As the Supreme Court in Nextel recognized, the NLC provision has
    been around in one form or another since 1981. 
    Id. at 704
    . For the first ten years,
    the NLC deduction was unlimited. 
    Id.
     During a recession, the General Assembly
    suspended the NLC provision for four years and, since 1994, has steadfastly
    maintained a cap in various forms ever since to maintain the state’s fiscal health.
    
    Id.
    The legislative enactments to suspend or limit the NLC deduction
    clearly demonstrate the General Assembly’s “intent to limit this deduction” to
    promote the Commonwealth’s fiscal health. Nextel, 171 A.3d at 705. But, is fiscal
    health the primary objective of the NLC provision?
    Recently, in Safe Auto Insurance Company v. Oriental-Guillermo,
    
    214 A.3d 1257
    , 1268 (Pa. 2019), our Supreme Court examined “divergent policy
    concerns” in the context of determining the enforceability of an unlisted resident
    driver exclusion (URDE) in a personal automobile insurance policy. At issue was
    whether the URDE contravened the Motor Vehicle Financial Responsibility Law
    (MVFRL)9 and its underlying “competing public policy concerns of remedial
    coverage and cost containment.” Id. at 1268. Although cost containment is clearly
    one of the policy concerns to be considered, the Court determined it was not “the
    dominant public policy underlying the MVFRL.” Id. (emphasis added). Rather,
    the dominant policy was the remedial purpose of the MVFRL, which was retained
    from the prior regulatory scheme. Id.
    9
    75 Pa. C.S. §§1701-1799.7.
    13
    The same reasoning applies here. Although fiscal health is clearly one
    of the policy concerns to be considered, and an important one at that, it is not the
    dominant public policy underlying the NLC provision. In other words, it is not the
    “main purpose” for the legislation. See Neiman. The main purpose of the NLC
    provision, its raison d’être (reason for being), is to promote business investment in
    the Commonwealth. The flat-dollar limitation serves as a public purse safeguard
    that is ancillary to the overarching purpose of business promotion.
    Furthermore, the General Assembly has demonstrated an intent to
    keep the NLC provision since its enactment, even during periods of economic
    recession. Although the General Assembly suspended the deduction or placed a
    cap on it, it never actually repealed the NLC provision. Cf. PPG Industries, Inc. v.
    Board of Finance and Revenue, 
    790 A.2d 261
    , 269 (Pa. 2001) (in a case severing
    the unconstitutional manufacturing exemption from the capital stock/franchise tax,
    the Supreme Court observed that the General Assembly had first added the
    exemption 45 years after the original statute was passed and then repealed and
    reenacted it twice).
    Finally, Section 1925 of the Statutory Construction Act instructs:
    The provisions of every statute shall be severable. If any
    provision of any statute or the application thereof to any
    person or circumstance is held invalid, the remainder of
    the statute, and the application of such provision to other
    persons or circumstances, shall not be affected thereby,
    unless the court finds that the valid provisions of the
    statute are so essentially and inseparably connected with,
    and so depend upon, the void provision or application,
    that it cannot be presumed the General Assembly would
    have enacted the remaining valid provisions without the
    void one; or unless the court finds that the remaining
    valid provisions, standing alone, are incomplete and are
    14
    incapable of being executed in accordance with the
    legislative intent.
    1 Pa. C.S. §1925. Indeed, “if the provisions are distinct and not so interwoven as
    to be inseparable, . . . the courts should sustain the valid portions.” Saulsbury,
    196 A.2d at 666. “[P]ublic policy . . . favors severability.” Nextel, 171 A.3d at
    702 (quoting PPG Industries, 790 A.2d at 267).
    In this regard, the flat-dollar limitation is fully capable of separation
    from the NLC provision. Only the flat-dollar limitation fails the uniformity test,
    not the entire NLC provision. See Nextel, 171 A.3d at 703. The valid NLC
    provisions are not “inseparably connected with” or “depend[ent] upon” the void
    flat-dollar provision. See id. The valid NLC provisions, standing alone, are
    complete and capable of execution. See Nextel, 171 A.3d at 703. As the history of
    the NLC provision shows, this legislation has previously existed without a cap. By
    excising only the flat-dollar limitation from the statute, the NLC provision serves
    the General Assembly’s primary intent of promoting business investment in the
    Commonwealth.
    Considering the intent and history of the NLC provision as well as a
    public policy that favors severability, we believe that the General Assembly would
    prefer “what is left of its statute to no statute at all.” Nextel, 171 A.3d at 703. For
    these reasons, we find that the General Assembly’s intent is better served by
    severing the offending portion (the flat-dollar $2,000,000 cap) as opposed to
    striking the entire NLC provision.
    Notwithstanding, even if this Court was to determine that the General
    Assembly would favor striking the entire NLC provision, the following
    constitutional analysis leads us to the same conclusion that severing the flat-dollar
    15
    provision is the only remedy that cures the constitutional infirmity in a meaningful
    and adequate way.
    B. Due Process, Equal Protection and the Remedies Clause
    1. Contentions
    GM maintains that severing the flat-dollar limitation is the only
    remedy that actually satisfies due process, equal protection and the Remedies
    Clause.    Conversely, striking the entire NLC provision produces a mere
    “hypothetical” equalization of the relative tax position of taxpayers in 2001, but in
    actuality leaves intact the illegal non-uniform tax positions of the two classes based
    solely on income: (1) GM and 133 other corporations that paid tax because their
    net income exceeded the $2,000,000 cap (disfavored taxpayers); and (2) 15,000
    others taxpayers that paid no tax because their net income did not (favored
    taxpayers). Because the statute of limitations has closed, the Department cannot
    go back and assess the favored taxpayers to disallow the net loss deductions that
    they have already taken. GM maintains that due process, equal protection and the
    Remedies Clause require “meaningful backward-looking relief” so that the actual
    relative position of GM (and the other disfavored taxpayers) is “equival[ent] to the
    position actually occupied by . . . [the] favored taxpayers.” McKesson Corp. v.
    Division of Alcoholic Beverages and Tobacco, Department of Business Regulation
    of Florida, 
    496 U.S. 18
    , 31, 42 (1990). These constitutional issues were not
    addressed by the Supreme Court in Nextel. According to GM, the only way to
    actually equalize the tax positions between disfavored and favored taxpayers in this
    case is to sever the cap and issue GM a full refund of all taxes paid under the
    16
    unconstitutional statute.      Such relief would actually put GM on par with the
    favored taxpayers that paid no tax.
    The Commonwealth counters that prospective relief in this case is not
    foreclosed by due process, equal protection or the Remedies Clause. It claims that
    GM’s reliance on McKesson and progeny is misplaced. McKesson involved a state
    tax law that was held invalid under the Commerce Clause (U.S. Const. art. I, §8).
    The Commerce Clause is not involved here, nor is there any question of federal
    law in this case. Contrary to GM’s assertions, the due process, equal protection
    and McKesson arguments were fully briefed, argued and given due consideration
    by the Supreme Court in Nextel and should not be reconsidered in this appeal.10
    Although GM’s Remedies Clause argument is new, this constitutional provision is
    currently being satisfied as GM is pursuing an equalization remedy through the
    open courts. However, that remedy does not necessarily entitle GM to a refund.
    2. Analysis
    a. Due Process
    The Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the U.S.
    Constitution provides that no state may “deprive any person of life, liberty, or
    property, without due process of law.” U.S. Const. amend. XIV, §1. The maxim
    of “where there is a legal right, there is also a legal remedy,” is the “essence of
    10
    The attorneys that represent GM in this matter also represented the taxpayer in Nextel.
    GM concedes that the taxpayer in Nextel raised these constitutional arguments in its
    supplemental appellee’s brief. Petitioner’s Reply Brief at 14. However, the Supreme Court did
    not decide or address GM’s due process and equal protection arguments or cite McKesson in its
    decision. See Nextel. In Pennsylvania, only a question that has been “conclusively decided” is
    precedential. See William Penn School District v. Pennsylvania Department of Education, 
    170 A.3d 414
    , 462 (Pa. 2017).
    17
    civil liberty.” Marbury v. Madison, 
    5 U.S. 137
    , 163 (1803). Every injury requires
    “proper redress.” 
    Id. at 147
    .
    In McKesson, the U.S. Supreme Court examined the requirements of
    due process in a tax discrimination case. There, the state court properly struck
    down a liquor tax as unconstitutional because it discriminated against interstate
    commerce by giving preference for liquor made from state-grown crops. 
    496 U.S. at 22
    .    Despite declaring the law unconstitutional, the state court applied
    prospective relief and declined to provide a refund for any other form of post-
    payment relief. 
    Id.
    On appeal, the U.S. Supreme Court, in a unanimous decision, reversed
    the state court’s failure to provide the taxpayer meaningful relief for its payment of
    an unlawful tax. McKesson, 
    496 U.S. at 52
    . The Court opined that:
    The question before us is whether prospective relief, by
    itself, exhausts the requirements of federal law. The
    answer is no: If a State places a taxpayer under duress
    promptly to pay a tax when due and relegates him to a
    postpayment refund action in which he can challenge the
    tax’s legality, the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth
    Amendment obligates the State to provide meaningful
    backward-looking relief to rectify any unconstitutional
    deprivation.
    
    Id. at 31
     (footnotes omitted).
    The U.S. Supreme Court ruled that “a State found to have imposed an
    impermissibly discriminatory tax retains flexibility in responding to this
    determination” so long as that remedy is meaningful. 
    Id. at 39-40
    . Where a state
    “offers a meaningful opportunity for taxpayers to withhold contested tax
    assessments and to challenge their validity in a predeprivation hearing,” the
    “availability of a predeprivation hearing constitutes a procedural safeguard . . .
    18
    sufficient by itself to satisfy the Due Process Clause.” 
    Id.
     at 38 n.21. If no such
    predeprivation remedy exists, “the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth
    Amendment obligates the State to provide meaningful backward-looking relief to
    rectify any unconstitutional deprivation.”      
    Id. at 31
     (footnote omitted).      In
    providing such relief, a state may award a full tax refund to the taxpayer or some
    other order that “create[s] in hindsight a nondiscriminatory scheme.” 
    Id. at 40
    .
    The U.S. Supreme Court explained that due process is satisfied only if
    the “position” that the taxpayer occupies at the end of the day is “equivalen[t] to
    the position actually occupied by the [taxpayer’s] favored competitors.”
    McKesson, 
    496 U.S. at 42
    . It is insufficient to merely “place [a taxpayer] in the
    same tax position that [the taxpayer] would have been placed by . . . a
    hypothetical” reformation of a discriminatory statute. 
    Id. at 41
    .
    As the Pennsylvania Supreme Court explained:
    The [McKesson] Court did not bind the state’s hands in
    choosing what type of backward[-]looking remedy it
    would employ. Rather, the Court held that State could
    cure the invalidity by: (1) refunding the difference
    between the tax paid and the tax that would have been
    assessed had the taxpayer been granted the unlawful
    exemption; (2) assessing and collecting back taxes, to the
    extent consistent with other constitutional restrictions,
    from those who benefited from the unlawful exemption
    during the contested tax period, calibrating the
    retroactive assessment to create in hindsight a
    nondiscriminatory scheme; or (3) applying a combination
    of a partial refund and a partial retroactive assessment, so
    long as the resultant tax actually assessed during the
    contested tax period reflects a scheme that does not
    discriminate against interstate commerce.
    19
    Annenberg v. Commonwealth, 
    757 A.2d 338
    , 349-50 (Pa. 2000), cert. denied sub
    nom. Annenberg v. Board of Commissioners of Montgomery County, 
    531 U.S. 959
    ,
    (2000) (footnote omitted).
    The Commonwealth argues that McKesson does not apply here
    because the present case does not involve a violation of the Commerce Clause or a
    question of federal law. However, the Commonwealth cites no authority and
    offers no persuasive reason to apply the analysis in McKesson so narrowly.
    To the contrary, the Courts of this Commonwealth have previously
    recognized that McKesson dictates that some retroactive remedy is necessary to
    remedy an unconstitutional tax statute, whatever the root of the constitutional
    infirmity may be. See PPG Industries, 790 A.2d at 270 (McKesson “dictates that
    some retroactive remedy” is necessary to rectify “prior unconstitutional
    discrimination”);11 Automobile Trade Association of Greater Philadelphia v. City
    of Philadelphia, 
    596 A.2d 794
     (Pa. 1991) (recognizing that McKesson’s due
    process principles are relevant to vindicate a taxpayer’s rights under the
    Uniformity Clause, but remanding for a determination as to whether the challenged
    mercantile license tax was unconstitutional); Z & R Cab, LLC v. Philadelphia
    Parking Authority, 
    187 A.3d 1025
     (Pa. Cmwlth. 2018) (applying McKesson’s
    analysis in determining that the taxicab licensees could be entitled to recover a
    portion of their fees and assessments paid under an unconstitutional state statute
    that violated their due process rights); Lebanon Valley Farmers Bank v.
    Commonwealth, 
    27 A.3d 288
     (Pa. Cmwlth. 2011), rev’d on other grounds, 
    83 A.3d 107
     (Pa. 2013) (upon determining that a share tax was unconstitutional because it
    11
    The challenged tax in PPG Industries discriminated against interstate commerce and
    violated the Commerce Clause.
    20
    violated the Uniformity Clause, this Court relied on McKesson in holding that
    meaningful retrospective relief was warranted); Dunn v. Board of Property
    Assessment, Appeals and Review of Allegheny County, 
    877 A.2d 504
    , 516-17 (Pa.
    Cmwlth. 2005), aff’d, 
    936 A.2d 487
     (Pa. 2007) (determining that the statutory
    scheme under which aggrieved taxpayers could obtain a refund of purportedly
    unlawful property taxes satisfied the Due Process Clause as contemplated by
    McKesson); Fidelity Bank, N.A. v. Commonwealth By and Through Department of
    Revenue, 
    645 A.2d 452
    , 456 (Pa. Cmwlth. 1994) (stating that “[i]n general, under
    McKe[s]son, the relief given must be equivalent to the monetary interest lost by
    the banks [(that paid improper single excise taxes)] because of the requirement to
    pay the . . . taxes prior to challenging the tax scheme” and holding that relief in the
    form of credits, as opposed to cash refunds, “fit[] within the concept of
    ‘meaningful backward-looking relief’ required under the constitution”).
    Here, Pennsylvania relegates taxpayers to postpayment refund actions
    in which they may challenge the accuracy and legal validity of their tax obligation.
    Section 3003.2(a)(1) of the Tax Code12 provides every corporation subject to the
    corporate net income tax “shall make payments of estimated corporate net income
    tax.” Sections 3003.5 and 3003.6 of the Tax Code13 set forth the procedure for
    seeking a postpayment refund. Pennsylvania penalizes taxpayers for failing to
    remit taxes in a timely fashion. See Section 3003.7 of the Tax Code14 (a person
    that fails to make a payment is subject to penalties and interest).                  Therefore,
    12
    Added by the Act of July 1, 1985, P.L. 29, as amended, 72 P.S. §10003.2(a)(1).
    13
    Added by the Act of June 16, 1994, P.L. 279, as amended, 72 P.S. §§10003.5, 10003.6.
    14
    Added by the Act of June 16, 1994, P.L. 279, 72 P.S. §10003.7.
    (Footnote continued on next page…)
    21
    McKesson requires us to consider the due process requirement of providing
    taxpayers with a meaningful retrospective remedy.
    Applying McKesson to the matter at hand, we reexamine the available
    remedies: severing the entire NLC provision or severing the cap. Severing the
    entire NLC provision would theoretically equalize tax positions by eliminating any
    deduction and require all taxpayers to pay tax by removing the deduction
    completely. Under this approach, GM correctly paid the tax. Hypothetically, the
    nonpaying taxpayers would now owe tax. However, in actuality, because the
    three-year statute of limitations has passed, those taxpayers that previously did not
    owe or pay the tax would not be subject to assessment for the 2001 Tax Year. See
    Section 407.3(a) of the Tax Code15 (“Tax may be assessed within three years after
    the date the report is filed.”).         Consequently, the actual disparity of the tax
    positions between the classes would remain: those that paid tax (unfavored) and
    those that did not (favored) for the 2001 Tax Year. Under McKesson, restoring
    GM to a “‘hypothetical’ nondiscriminatory scheme does not in hindsight avoid the
    unlawful deprivation.” 
    496 U.S. at 43
    . It still, in fact, treats GM worse than the
    favored taxpayers that paid no tax, thereby perpetuating the Uniformity Clause
    violation during the contested tax period. See 
    id.
    Conversely, if the $2,000,000 cap is severed from the NLC provision,
    GM would be entitled to a full refund of the taxes paid for the 2001 Tax Year.
    This would place GM in the same tax position as the favored taxpayers that paid no
    (continued…)
    15
    Added by the Act of October 18, 2006, P.L. 1149, 72 P.S. §7407.3(a).
    22
    tax for the 2001 Tax Year.       Under McKesson, severance of the flat-dollar
    deduction is the only way to satisfy due process and provide GM a meaningful
    remedy for unlawful tax collection. Any lesser remedy would have a chilling
    effect on taxpayers that wish to make such challenges.
    b. Equal Protection
    Next, the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to
    the U.S. Constitution provides that no state may “deny to any person . . . the equal
    protection of the laws.” U.S. Const. amend. XIV, §1. “The Equal Protection
    Clause applies only to taxation which in fact bears unequally on persons or
    property of the same class.” Allegheny Pittsburgh Coal Co. v. County Commission
    of Webster County, West Virginia, 
    488 U.S. 336
    , 343 (1989) (citation and internal
    quotation omitted). “The [E]qual [P]rotection [C]lause . . . protects the individual
    from state action which selects him out for discriminatory treatment by subjecting
    him to taxes not imposed on others of the same class.” 
    Id. at 345
    .
    A state law that does not target a protected class is subject to rational
    basis review. Armour v. City of Indianapolis, Indiana, 
    566 U.S. 673
    , 680 (2012).
    This means that “if there is a rational relationship between the disparity of
    treatment and some legitimate governmental purpose,” the law will meet the
    standard.   
    Id.
       In creating classifications and distinctions in tax statutes,
    “[l]egislatures have especially broad latitude.”     
    Id.
     (citation omitted); accord
    Allegheny Pittsburgh Coal, 
    488 U.S. at 344
    . “If the selection or classification is
    neither capricious nor arbitrary, and rests upon some reasonable consideration of
    difference or policy, there is no denial of the equal protection of the law.”
    Allegheny Pittsburgh Coal, 
    488 U.S. at 344
    .
    23
    Although the rational basis standard is relatively lax, when a tax
    classification violates a state’s own law, it cannot meet the standard.         See
    Allegheny Pittsburgh Coal, 
    488 U.S. at 345
    . For example, in Allegheny Pittsburgh
    Coal, the U.S. Supreme Court examined a local taxing scheme, which valued some
    properties based on recent purchase prices. The Supreme Court determined that
    the tax scheme ran afoul of the state’s (West Virginia) constitution, which provided
    that all property shall be taxed in proportion to its value.          The relative
    undervaluation of comparable property in the county denied the taxpayers of equal
    protection of the law. 
    488 U.S. at 346
    . As for the remedy, the Court ruled that “[a]
    taxpayer in this situation may not be remitted by the State to the remedy of seeking
    to have the assessments of the undervalued property raised.” 
    Id.
     “The [Equal
    Protection Clause] is not satisfied if a State does not itself remove the
    discrimination, but imposes on him against whom the discrimination has been
    directed the burden of seeking an upward revision of the taxes of other members of
    the class.” 
    Id.
    Here, as in Allegheny Pittsburgh Coal, the Pennsylvania Constitution
    requires uniform state taxation.     Pa. Const. art. VIII, §1.      In Nextel, the
    Pennsylvania Supreme Court determined that the NLC’s flat-dollar deduction
    limitation created a non-uniform classification in violation of the Pennsylvania
    Constitution.     Equal protection requires the Commonwealth to remove the
    discrimination. See Allegheny Pittsburgh Coal. Both of the severability options
    remove the discrimination, thereby satisfying equal protection.
    c. Remedies Clause
    The Remedies Clause of the Pennsylvania Constitution provides: “All
    courts shall be open; and every man for an injury done him in his lands, goods,
    24
    person or reputation shall have remedy by due course of law.” Pa. Const. art. VIII,
    §1. Our Supreme Court has said: “the right to sue the Commonwealth for the
    recovery of money or taxes alleged to have been erroneously paid to it exists only
    by the grace of the Legislature.” Land Holding Corp. v. Board of Finance and
    Revenue, 
    130 A.2d 700
    , 703 (Pa. 1957). “Where a State through its Legislature
    consents to be sued, the modes, terms and conditions of the statute conferring such
    privilege and authorizing refunds must be strictly construed and followed.” 
    Id.
    Here, GM is exercising its right to pursue a tax refund consistent with
    the rights granted to it by the General Assembly. The “due course of law” includes
    the statutorily prescribed administrative review before F&R and the judicial review
    process. The court is “open” to GM and is considering GM’s claims. In this
    regard, GM’s rights under the Remedies Clause are being met. While GM is
    entitled to a remedy in this matter, it is not necessarily entitled to a refund under
    the Remedies Clause.
    C. Retroactivity of Nextel
    1. Contentions
    Lastly, we must address whether the remedy in this matter is applied
    prospectively or retroactively.      The Commonwealth argues that, where the
    Pennsylvania Supreme Court invalidates a tax statute under the state constitution,
    as it did in Nextel, the decision takes effect as of the date of the decision and is not
    applied retroactively. Oz Gas, Ltd. v. Warren Area School District, 
    938 A.2d 274
    ,
    278 (Pa. 2007); American Trucking Associations, Inc. v. McNulty, 
    596 A.2d 784
    ,
    787 (Pa. 1991). The Commonwealth argues that any remedy in this case should be
    fashioned under this principle. Relying on Chevron Oil Company v. Huson, 
    404 U.S. 97
     (1971) (plurality), the Commonwealth contends that if a court changes the
    25
    law and announces an entirely new principle of law, that court may continue to
    apply the old principle of law to events occurring before the change.            The
    Commonwealth maintains that a retroactive application of the law is inapplicable
    here because Nextel announced a new principle of law.           Prior to Nextel, the
    Pennsylvania courts have consistently held that the Uniformity Clause was
    satisfied in the corporate net income tax context where the same statutory rate was
    applied to the same tax base.       The dollar limitations that were imposed in
    calculating the tax base had not been held to violate uniformity until the Nextel
    decision. The NLC’s flat-dollar deduction limitation was unconstitutional because
    it resulted in varying effective tax rates. The Supreme Court established new law
    in holding for the first time that a flat-dollar limitation was unconstitutional, thus
    warranting prospective application. Under a prospective application of Nextel to
    the present case, GM is not entitled to a refund.
    GM responds that the only way to achieve “meaningful backward-
    looking relief” as required by McKesson is by a retroactive application of Nextel.
    GM argues that the Commonwealth cannot defend prospective-only application
    under Chevron and its progeny, Oz Gas and McNulty. GM argues that Nextel did
    not establish a new principle of law. Rather, the Supreme Court in Nextel applied a
    straightforward reading of the Uniformity Clause, consistent with over 100 years
    of precedent, that the Uniformity Clause is satisfied when the same tax rate is
    applied and is not satisfied when the rate is not uniform. In Nextel, the Court held
    that the flat-dollar limitation on the NLC deduction produced a non-uniform
    statutory rate contrary to the Uniformity Clause. According to GM, this is not a
    new pronouncement of the law. Furthermore, the Commonwealth did not carry its
    burden on the other prongs of the Chevron test.
    26
    2. Analysis
    In Chevron, the U.S. Supreme Court fashioned a three-factor test for
    determining when the relief should apply retroactively or prospectively. 
    404 U.S. at 106-07
    . Those three factors examine: (1) whether the decision establishes a new
    principle of law; (2) whether retroactive application of the decision will further the
    operation of the decision; and (3) the relevant equities. 
    Id.
     In short, the Court held
    that if there is a change in law, due process may still be satisfied by the continued
    application of the old, long-standing principle of law up through the date of the
    change. 
    Id.
     However, if there has been no change in law, a litigant is entitled, as a
    matter of due process of that law, to have the long-standing law applied to it. 
    Id.
    In Oz Gas and McNulty, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court applied the
    three-factor test from Chevron. In Oz Gas, Pennsylvania taxpayers had “for nearly
    100 years . . . paid ad valorem taxes on oil and gas interests” in reliance on past
    precedent, which held that oil and gas was taxable as real estate. 938 A.2d at 279.
    The Pennsylvania Supreme Court’s holding in Independent Oil and Gas
    Association v. Board of Assessment Appeals of Fayette County, 
    814 A.2d 180
     (Pa.
    2002) (IOGA), precluded counties from collecting taxes on oil and gas reserves
    that remain in the ground. Oz Gas, 938 A.2d at 276. With regard to whether
    IOGA should apply retroactively to past taxes, the Court determined that IOGA
    represented a departure from decades of taxation of oil and gas interest, upon
    which the taxing authorities had relied. Oz Gas, 938 A.2d at 283. “The decision in
    IOGA established a new principle of law in that, prior to the decision, these sorts of
    taxes were deemed collectible pursuant to statute and precedent.” Id. The Court
    determined that the other two Chevron factors also supported a prospective-only
    holding. Id. “Applying IOGA retroactively would not forward the operation of the
    27
    decision because the decision speaks for itself and clearly establishes that the taxes
    are uncollectible going forward. And, finally, the equities weigh heavily in favor
    of prospective-only application.”     Id.        The Court explained that requiring a
    refunding of the taxes would cause substantial financial hardship to the
    communities involved and the taxpayers would receive substantial relief from a
    prospective-only application.
    Similarly, in McNulty the Pennsylvania Supreme Court determined
    that any relief due was prospective only. 596 A.2d at 789. There, a trucking
    association challenged Pennsylvania’s axle tax and marker fees, which were
    assessed against common carriers. Id. at 784. The U.S. Supreme Court ruled that
    such taxes and fees, when charged to carriers engaged in interstate commerce,
    violated the Commerce Clause of the U.S. Constitution.             American Trucking
    Associations, Inc. v. Scheiner, 
    483 U.S. 266
     (1987).
    In McNulty, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court was charged with
    determining whether the Scheiner decision entitled the trucking association to a
    refund of taxes previously paid.      While the McNulty matter was pending on
    remand, the U.S. Supreme Court determined that Scheiner applied prospectively
    only.   American Trucking Associations, Inc. v. Smith, 
    496 U.S. 167
     (1990)
    (plurality opinion).    Applying the Chevron test, the U.S. Supreme Court
    determined that: (1) the decision in Scheiner clearly established a new principle of
    law by declaring the highway taxes unconstitutional pursuant to the Commerce
    Clause; (2) retroactive application of the Scheiner decision would not forward the
    operation of the decision; and (3) the relevant equities dictated prospective
    application because the legislature did not believe the taxes to be unconstitutional,
    the taxing authorities collected taxes that the authorities reasonably believed were
    28
    valid, and refunding the taxes could deplete the state treasury. 
    Id. at 179-82
    . In
    McNulty, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court embraced the logic employed in Smith
    and determined that the Scheiner decision applied prospectively only. 596 A.2d at
    787.
    Applying the foregoing here, with regard to the first prong, in Nextel,
    the Pennsylvania Supreme Court made it clear that, in finding that the net loss cap
    violated uniformity, it merely needed to apply existing case law to which it had
    “steadfastly adhered” for “over a century.” Nextel, 171 A.3d at 696-97. The
    Supreme Court cited years of precedent for the principle that it has “consistently
    viewed as unconstitutional tax laws which . . . wholly exempt some of those
    taxpayers from paying tax.” Id. at 697; see, e.g., Saulsbury (holding that the
    Uniformity Clause proscribes the unequal treatment of certain individuals based
    upon their income); Kelley v. Kalodner, 
    181 A. 598
     (Pa. 1935) (holding that a
    graduated-rate income tax violated the Uniformity Clause); In re Cope’s Estate,
    
    43 A. 79
     (Pa. 1899) (holding that a flat $5,000 property exemption applicable to all
    estates for purposes of the Pennsylvania Inheritance Tax violated the Uniformity
    Clause as it resulted in the unjust, arbitrary and illegal classification of similarly
    situated taxpayers based solely on a difference in the amount of property in the
    estate). Unlike in Oz Gas and McNulty, the Nextel Court did not overrule prior
    precedent.   Consequently, the Supreme Court in Nextel did not apply a new
    principle of law, but rather applied the long-standing principle that tax uniformity
    prohibits classification based on quantity of income. 
    Id.
    As for the second prong, the Commonwealth argues that a retroactive
    application would not forward the operation of the decision. It maintains that if the
    entire NLC provision is severed, a retroactive application would result in a higher
    29
    tax burden for GM because it would lose the benefit of the statutory net loss
    deduction of $2,000,000. The Commonwealth explains:
    [D]isallowing the NLC deduction entirely on a
    retroactive basis would not forward the operation of the
    decision because the decision could not be enforced
    retroactively. GM received the benefit of the statutory net
    loss deduction of $2,000,000 in calculating its tax
    liability. Disallowing the deduction entirely would
    actually result in a higher tax burden for GM. However,
    the Commonwealth recognizes that the three-year statute
    of limitations to issue an assessment has closed with
    respect to the present 2001 Tax Year.
    Respondent’s Brief at 19 (citations omitted).                Conversely, if only the cap is
    severed, retroactive application would serve to equalize the tax positions of the two
    classes by reducing GM’s tax liability to zero, which is the same tax position of the
    favored taxpayers. Equalizing the tax positions furthers the Nextel decision.
    With regard to the third prong, even if Nextel had announced a new
    principle of law, the Commonwealth has not met its burden to show that it would
    be inequitable to apply that new principle retroactively.                   The Commonwealth
    argues that if the dollar cap is severed and the remedy is retroactively applied, it
    will face significant refund claims from similarly situated taxpayers seeking an
    unlimited NLC deduction.16             The Commonwealth claims that this significant
    financial exposure favors prospective-only application. Indeed, it is difficult to
    16
    The Commonwealth asserts that its total tax exposure would be $37,000,000. As GM
    points out, this figure is not part of the record developed before this Court. The only amounts in
    the record are the $738,760 tax paid by GM and $0 tax paid by the 15,395 other taxpayers. See
    S.F. Nos. 9, 14, 15. This matter is limited to GM and the 2001 Tax Year. “The applicability of a
    judicial pronouncement to other litigants or potential litigants is a matter of judicial discretion to
    be resolved on a case-by-case basis.” First National Bank of Fredericksburg v. Commonwealth,
    
    553 A.2d 937
    , 941 (Pa. 1989).
    30
    imagine any scenario involving a substantial tax question that would not have a
    multi-million dollar impact.17        However, the Commonwealth did not present
    evidence regarding this tax burden beyond the refund it would owe GM. It has not
    shown that the Commonwealth’s financial health will be impaired. Thus, it did not
    carry its burden of showing the inequities present here. We, therefore, conclude
    that Chevron does not prohibit retroactive application of a remedy in this case.
    17
    Although we recognize that the Commonwealth may face significant refund claims
    from similarly situated taxpayers, we also recognize that the Commonwealth may see a
    tremendous increase in revenue from corporate net income tax. In response to the Nextel
    decision, the General Assembly amended the NLC provision for taxable year 2018 and onwards
    to include only a percentage cap. See Section 401(3)4.(c)(1)(A)(VII), (VIII) of the Tax Code, 72
    P.S. §7401(3)4.(c)(1)(A)(VII), (VIII) (capping the deduction at 30 percent of taxable income for
    tax years beginning after December 31, 2017, and 35 percent for tax years beginning after
    December 31, 2018). This means that corporations that paid no corporate net income tax in
    previous years will now be paying tax.
    Moreover, there are “a number of procedural protections a state could adopt to allow for
    sound fiscal planning while maintaining the ability to provide relief for taxes unlawfully
    collected.” Automobile Trade Association, 596 A.2d at 796 (citing McKesson, 
    496 U.S. at 44
    ).
    To wit:
    [I]n the future, States may avail themselves of a variety of
    procedural protections against any disruptive effects of a tax
    scheme’s invalidation, such as providing by statute that refunds
    will be available to only those taxpayers paying under protest, or
    enforcing relatively short statutes of limitation applicable to refund
    actions. [(“[T]he State might, for example, provide by statute that
    refunds will be available only to those taxpayers paying under
    protest or providing some other timely notice of complaint . . . .”)].
    Such procedural measures would sufficiently protect States’ fiscal
    security when weighed against their obligation to provide
    meaningful relief for their unconstitutional taxation.
    Dunn, 
    877 A.2d at 517
     (quoting McKesson, 
    496 U.S. at 50
    ) (citation omitted).
    31
    IV. Conclusion
    Upon review, we find that the General Assembly’s intent is better
    served by severing the offending portion – the flat-dollar $2,000,000 cap – as
    opposed to striking the entire NLC provision. This remedy satisfies due process by
    providing “meaningful backward-looking relief,” where striking the entire NLC
    does not. See McKesson, 
    496 U.S. 18
    , 42. Retroactive application is not precluded
    under Chevron. For these reasons, we reverse F&R’s order and remand the matter
    to F&R to recalculate GM’s corporate net income tax without capping the amount
    that it can take on its NLC and issue a refund for the 2001 Tax Year.
    MICHAEL H. WOJCIK, Judge
    Judge Fizzano Cannon did not participate in the decision of this case.
    32
    IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
    General Motors Corporation,                      :
    :
    Petitioner       :
    :
    v.                            : No. 869 F.R. 2012
    :
    Commonwealth of Pennsylvania,                    :
    :
    Respondent       :
    ORDER
    AND NOW, this 21st day of November, 2019, the order of the
    Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, Board of Finance and Revenue (F&R) dated
    November 6, 2012, is REVERSED, and this matter is REMANDED to F&R to
    recalculate General Motors Corporation’s (Petitioner) corporate net income tax
    without capping the amount that it can take on its net loss carryover deduction and
    issue a refund for the tax year ended December 31, 2001. Unless exceptions are
    filed within thirty (30) days pursuant to Pa. R.A.P. 1571(i), this Order shall
    become final.1
    __________________________________
    MICHAEL H. WOJCIK, Judge
    1
    Petitioner’s Application for Summary Relief, filed February 19, 2018, is dismissed as
    moot.
    IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
    General Motors Corporation,                  :
    Petitioner           :
    :
    v.                          :    No. 869 F.R. 2012
    :    Argued: September 10, 2019
    Commonwealth of Pennsylvania,                :
    Respondent              :
    BEFORE: HONORABLE P. KEVIN BROBSON, Judge
    HONORABLE MICHAEL H. WOJCIK, Judge
    HONORABLE BONNIE BRIGANCE LEADBETTER, Senior Judge
    CONCURRING AND DISSENTING
    OPINION BY JUDGE BROBSON                          FILED: November 21, 2019
    I agree with the majority’s analysis and conclusion with respect to the
    constitutionality of the net loss carryover (NLC) deduction provision for the tax year
    ending December 31, 2001 (2001 Tax Year), which caps the deduction at
    $2 million.1 The cap discriminates against taxpayers based solely on the amount of
    income and, therefore, violates the Uniformity Clause of the Pennsylvania
    Constitution.2 Nextel Commc’ns of the Mid-Atlantic, Inc. v. Dep’t of Revenue,
    
    171 A.3d 682
    , 696 (Pa. 2017) (Nextel II), cert. denied, 
    138 S. Ct. 2635
     (2018).
    I, therefore, concur with this portion of the majority’s analysis and disposition.
    As much as I would like to agree with the majority’s severance analysis
    and its decision to award General Motors Corporation (GM) an unlimited NLC
    1
    Section 401(3)4.(c)(1)(A)(I) of the Act of March 4, 1971, P.L. 6, as amended, 72 P.S.
    § 7401(3)4.(c)(1)(A)(I).
    2
    Pa. Const. art. VIII, § 1.
    deduction for the 2001 Tax Year, I must respectfully dissent as to this portion of the
    majority’s decision. For the reasons set forth below, I believe that the Pennsylvania
    Supreme Court’s decision in Nextel II precludes this Court from granting this relief
    to GM.
    In Nextel Communications of Mid-Atlantic, Inc. v. Commonwealth,
    
    129 A.3d 1
     (Pa. Cmwlth. 2015) (en banc) (Nextel I), this Court addressed a
    Uniformity Clause challenge to the NLC deduction provision for the tax year ending
    December 31, 2007 (2007 Tax Year), found in Section 401(3)4.(c)(1)(A)(II) of the
    Tax Reform Code of 1971 (Tax Reform Code).3 The taxpayer in that case, Nextel,
    claimed that the two statutory caps on the NLC deduction for that year—the greater
    of (1) 12.5% of taxable income or (2) $3 million—worked in tandem to allow
    taxpayers with taxable income below $3 million the opportunity to fully offset their
    corporate net income tax liability for 2007 through the NLC deduction, while larger
    taxpayers (taxable incomes above $3 million), like Nextel, could not. This inequity,
    Nextel claimed, created separate classes of taxpayers based solely on income level
    in violation of the Uniformity Clause.
    In Nextel I, this Court held that the NLC deduction provision for
    the 2007 Tax Year violated the Uniformity Clause, at least with respect to Nextel.
    Nextel I, 129 A.3d at 8-11. Rather than look to how to modify the statutory provision
    to remove the constitutional infirmity, by striking or severing the offending
    provision from the statute, the Court focused instead on how to remedy the wrong
    to Nextel. Indeed, on the separate question of modifying the statutory provision, we
    observed:
    [S]triking the $3 million cap . . . would only serve to
    highlight the fact that while Nextel paid what it was
    3
    Act of March 4, 1971, P.L. 6, as amended, 72 P.S. § 7401(3)4.(c)(1)(A)(II).
    PKB-2
    supposed to pay, many corporate net income taxpayers in
    the 2007 Tax Year benefitted from the discriminatory cap
    and thus underpaid their corporate net income taxes—i.e.,
    they benefitted from the unconstitutional provision.
    Without more, then, an order declaring the $3 million cap
    unconstitutional and striking it from the statute does not
    remedy the constitutional violation.
    Nextel I, 129 A.3d at 13 (emphasis in original).
    On the question of remedy, we first noted the general similarities
    between Uniformity Clause challenges and challenges under the Equal Protection
    Clause to the United States Constitution.4 Relying on precedent from the United
    States Supreme Court, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court, and this Court,5 we opined
    that Nextel was entitled to some form of affirmative relief to address the
    constitutional harm that it suffered. The only appropriate way to address the
    inequitable treatment “was to place the discriminated taxpayer in the same position
    as the benefitted taxpayers.” Id. Because the unconstitutional $3 million cap
    benefitted small taxpayers by allowing them to reduce their tax liability to $0 in
    2007, but prevented larger taxpayers from doing the same, we held that Nextel must
    be allowed to also reduce its tax liability for the 2007 Tax Year to $0, reasoning:
    Under Molycorp, Iowa–Des Moines National Bank,
    and Tredyffrin-Easttown School District, the unequal
    treatment suffered by Nextel must be remedied, and it can
    only be remedied in one of two ways—the favored
    taxpayers pay more or Nextel pays less. The latter is the
    only practical solution. Nextel seeks a refund of corporate
    net income tax paid in 2007. This is an appropriate
    remedy. Like similarly-situated taxpayers with $3 million
    or less taxable income in the 2007 Tax Year, Nextel should
    4
    U.S. Const. amend. XIV, § 1.
    5
    Iowa-Des Moines Nat’l Bank v. Bennett, 
    284 U.S. 239
     (1931); Cmwlth. v. Molycorp, Inc.,
    
    392 A.2d 321
     (Pa. 1978) (citing Iowa-Des Moines Nat’l Bank with approval); Tredyffrin-Easttown
    Sch. Dist. v. Valley Forge Music Fair, Inc., 
    627 A.2d 814
     (Pa. Cmwlth.), appeal denied, 
    647 A.2d 513
     (Pa. 1993).
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    be permitted under the NLC deduction provision to reduce
    its taxable income to $0 by virtue of its positive net
    operating loss position that tax year.
    
    Id.
    In Nextel II, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court affirmed in part and
    reversed in part. In doing so, the Supreme Court issued three distinct holdings. First,
    it agreed with this Court that the NLC deduction provision for the 2007 Tax Year,
    particularly the $3 million cap on the allowed deduction, violated the Uniformity
    Clause. Nextel II, 171 A.3d at 698-701. Second, it engaged in a severability
    analysis, citing Section 1925 of the Statutory Construction Act of 1972 (Statutory
    Construction Act), 1 Pa. C.S. § 1925.6 Id. at 701-05.
    Upon reviewing the legislative history surrounding the various
    iterations of the NLC deduction in Pennsylvania, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court
    opined:
    This legislative history establishes that the General
    Assembly first granted the deduction without any cap at
    all, but abandoned this approach based on its
    determination that such an uncapped deduction had
    significant    deleterious     consequences       for   our
    Commonwealth’s fiscal health. However, our legislature
    perceived that the deduction provided some public benefit
    by encouraging investment in the development of new
    6
    Section 1925 of the Statutory Construction Act provides:
    The provisions of every statute shall be severable. If any provision of any
    statute or the application thereof to any person or circumstance is held invalid, the
    remainder of the statute, and the application of such provision to other persons or
    circumstances, shall not be affected thereby, unless the court finds that the valid
    provisions of the statute are so essentially and inseparably connected with, and so
    depend upon, the void provision or application, that it cannot be presumed the
    General Assembly would have enacted the remaining valid provisions without the
    void one; or unless the court finds that the remaining valid provisions, standing
    alone, are incomplete and are incapable of being executed in accordance with the
    legislative intent.
    PKB-4
    technologies, as well as the acquisition of the physical
    infrastructure necessary to implement those technologies.
    Thus, the legislature reintroduced the deduction in 1994,
    but attempted to avert the excessive drain on the public
    fisc the prior unlimited deduction had caused by imposing
    a cap on the amount of this deduction which a corporation
    could take in a given tax year, and the legislature has
    steadfastly maintained this cap in various forms for the
    last 23 years. Thus, the overall structure of the NLC
    reflects the legislature’s intent to balance the twin policy
    objectives of encouraging investment (by allowing
    corporations to deduct some of the losses they sustain
    when making such investments against their future
    revenues), and ensuring that the Commonwealth’s
    financial health is maintained (through the capping of the
    amount of this deduction).
    Id. at 704 (emphasis added) (citation omitted). In short, the Pennsylvania Supreme
    Court held that the intent of the General Assembly since reintroducing the NLC
    deduction has been to allow the deduction but with limits. In accordance with this
    legislative intent, the Supreme Court severed the $3 million cap on the deduction for
    the 2007 Tax Year, leaving in place the provision that would limit the deduction
    to 12.5% of taxable income: “Thus, each corporation will be entitled to avail itself
    of a [NLC] deduction, as the legislature intended, but such deduction will be equally
    available to all corporations during that year, no matter what their taxable income.”
    Id.
    As a result of its severability analysis, the Supreme Court held that the
    remedy awarded by this Court in Nextel I, allowing Nextel to take an unlimited NLC
    deduction for the 2007 Tax Year, “contravene[d] the legislature’s intent to limit this
    deduction.” Id. at 705. The Court reasoned:
    In order to avoid a repeat of the budgetary damage caused
    by the unlimited net loss deduction which was in effect
    from 1980-1991, the legislature has, since the
    reinstatement of this deduction in 1994, consistently
    required that it be capped. To remove all caps and allow
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    unlimited net loss deductions would be clearly contrary to
    the wishes of the General Assembly.
    Id. (emphasis added).
    Third, and finally, the Supreme Court rejected this Court’s remedy
    analysis, which was grounded in equal protection concerns.                     Essentially, the
    Pennsylvania Supreme Court held that, as a result of its severance analysis, the
    Commonwealth did not owe Nextel a refund because, under the NLC deduction
    provision as revised by the Supreme Court for the 2007 Tax Year, “[Nextel] is
    subject to the same tax liability for tax year 2007 as previously assessed by the
    Department.” Id. Stated otherwise, “[h]ere, under the NLC [deduction provision],
    as severed, there was no overpayment of corporate taxes by Nextel, as it owes
    exactly what the Revenue Department previously assessed.”7 Id. (emphasis added).
    Based on the Pennsylvania Supreme Court’s decision in Nextel II, and
    using the words of the Supreme Court, I am constrained to conclude that the
    majority’s decision to afford GM an unlimited NLC deduction for the 2001 Tax Year
    by striking the only limit that the General Assembly placed on that deduction—i.e.,
    the $2 million cap, “contravenes the legislature’s intent to limit this deduction.” Id.
    The Pennsylvania Supreme Court was very clear in its severance and remedy
    analysis in Nextel II. Because the General Assembly did not intend to grant an
    7
    I respectfully disagree with the Supreme Court’s focus on Nextel’s tax liability
    pre-severance and post-severance for purposes of determining whether Nextel was entitled to any
    affirmative relief. Nextel never benefitted from the severed cap; rather, it was the smaller
    taxpayers that benefitted in the 2007 Tax Year from the unconstitutional cap. It is this inequity,
    that being the inequity between those that benefitted from the unconstitutional scheme (the smaller
    taxpayers) and those that suffered from it (larger taxpayers like Nextel), that courts must remedy
    when dealing with successful Uniformity Clause/equal protection challenges. Although it
    provided some form of “prospective” relief by revising the NLC deduction provision for the 2007
    Tax Year, the Supreme Court’s decision in Nextel II did nothing to remedy the inequitable
    treatment suffered by Nextel.
    PKB-6
    unlimited NLC deduction in any version of the provision since its reintroduction
    in 1994, the courts cannot grant an unlimited deduction without violating legislative
    intent.
    The majority deftly attempts to escape the grip of the Pennsylvania
    Supreme Court’s decision in Nextel II by contending that striking the cap for
    the 2001 Tax Year at least furthers the General Assembly’s “dominant” intent to
    promote business investment in the Commonwealth.               (Maj. Op. at 13-14.)
    Essentially, the majority holds that for Tax Year 2001, given a choice between an
    unlimited NLC deduction or no deduction at all, the General Assembly would
    choose an unlimited deduction.         The legislative history recounted by the
    Pennsylvania Supreme Court in Nextel II, and the Supreme Court’s holdings in
    Nextel II on the question of legislative intent, however, do not support the majority’s
    hypothesis. Indeed, as recounted above, Pennsylvania used to have an unlimited
    NLC deduction, but the General Assembly scrapped it out of concern for the fiscal
    health of the Commonwealth. When the General Assembly brought the deduction
    back in 1994, it put a cap on the deduction. Every iteration of the deduction since
    has had some form of cap on it. For this reason, in Nextel II, the Supreme Court
    expressly held that an unlimited cap is “clearly contrary to the wishes of the General
    Assembly.” Nextel II, 171 A.3d at 705.
    The bottom line here is that, as much as I prefer the majority’s
    disposition on the question of remedy, we are constrained by Nextel II. Under that
    precedent, we cannot sever the $2 million cap from the NLC deduction provision
    and allow GM to take an unlimited NLC deduction for the 2001 Tax Year. To the
    extent we may take any action with respect to modifying the language of the
    deduction under Section 1925 of the Statutory Construction Act, our only option, in
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    keeping with the General Assembly’s intent to allow only limited NLC deductions,
    is to strike the deduction in its entirety for the 2001 Tax Year. As for remedying the
    harm to GM, again the Supreme Court’s decision in Nextel II constrains the Court.
    We cannot compel the Commonwealth to refund anything to GM, because, as in
    Nextel II, striking the entirety of the NLC deduction provision for the 2001 Tax Year
    means that GM did not overpay its corporate net income tax for the 2001 Tax Year.
    P. KEVIN BROBSON, Judge
    PKB-8