Judges: JOHN W. SUTHERS, Attorney General
Filed Date: 7/6/2007
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 7/5/2016
1. Must the Department of Revenue increase the coal tax rate pursuant to section
2. If the Department must enforce the increases in the coal tax rate, must the rate be adjusted to the 1978 index of producers' prices, or does the Department have discretion to raise the tax by a smaller increment? *Page 2
Furthermore, the Department has no discretion in calculating the current tax rate. The Department must apply the plain language of the statute and calculate the current coal tax rate using the increase or decrease in the index of producers' prices based on the level of that index on January, 1978.
The bill also tied the coal severance tax rate to the wholesale price index and required adjustments to the rate whenever the index changed by three points:
(5) For every three point change in the index of wholesale prices for all commodities prepared by the bureau of labor statistics of the United States Department of Labor, the tax rate provided in subsection (1) of this section shall be increased or decreased one percent. . . . The executive director shall determine such adjustments to the rate of tax based upon changes in the wholesale price index from the level of such index as of January, 1978, to the level of such index as of the last month of the quarter immediately preceding the quarter for which any taxes are due.
Id. at 1847. *Page 3
In 1988, subsection (5) was amended to provide that the tax rate be increased or decreased one percent for each one and one-half percent change in the "index of producers' prices for all commodities prepared by the bureau of labor statistics of the United States department of labor," rather than for each three point change in the wholesale price index. Colo. Sess. Laws 1988, Ch.
On November 3, 1992, the voters approved TABOR, effective November 4, 1992. Colo. Const. art.
From January 1, 1978 to December 1992, the Department adjusted the formula as required by the statute. Immediately following the passage of TABOR, however, the Department's Office of Tax Analysis issued a one-page memorandum dated April 7, 1993, which begins, "The Colorado coal severance tax rates have not been released since late December, 1992, pending the Department of Revenue's resolution of the applicability of [TABOR] to changes in these tax rates." The memorandum goes on to state:
*Page 4Beginning with the tax rate for November 1992, no further increases or upward revisions to tax rates will be made. Rates will be adjusted downward should appropriate index of producers' prices declines occur (as in December 1992). Until further notice the severance tax rate on coal for fiscal quarters beginning on or after December 1, 1992 will be 54.0 cents per ton.
The memorandum offers no explanation for the Department's decision to suspend increases on the coal severance tax rate other than to say that the suspension was pending "resolution of the applicability of [TABOR] to changes in these tax rates."
It is clear from the plain language of section
In the Bolt decision, the plaintiffs challenged an additional mill levy imposed by the Arapahoe County Board of Education as violating the vote requirement of TABOR. Bolt,
Likewise, former Colorado Attorney General Gale Norton came to the same conclusion in two formal opinions analyzing similar situations. In Formal Opinion 93-3, the Attorney General was asked whether increases in employment tax rates computed under the Colorado Employment Security Act required voter approval because the tax rate applicable to an individual employee was dependent on a variety of statutory factors and could fluctuate from year to year. The opinion concluded that because the statutory tax rate schedules were in place prior to TABOR's passage, and necessarily contemplated fluctuations in the tax rate, the tax scheme was not a new tax or tax rate increase under TABOR. The opinion found that the rate changes were based on "objectively measured figures that change yearly. Therefore, surcharge taxes paid will fluctuate from year to year, although the method of the computation of the tax willremain constant." AGO 93-3, pp. 2-3 (emphasis in original). Further, the opinion concludes that while a particular employer's "rates and taxes may fluctuate from year to year, . . . this is solely a function of the established criteria set forth in the statute, and not as a result of a change or increase in the tax rate schedule." Id. at 3.
Likewise, in AGO 95-2, the Attorney General was asked whether theautomatic repeal of a tax exemption on sales of precious metal bullion and coins, which occurred post-TABOR, was a tax policy change requiring voter approval. The opinion concluded, consistent with AGO 93-3, that the repeal was not a tax policy change. The Attorney General found:
Because the present tax structure was enacted in 1990, and . . . was in place before TABOR . . . , the elimination of the exemption which occurs by operation of this scheme is not a tax policy change or other event within the meaning of TABOR's subsection (4). Therefore, imposition of the tax is not a tax policy change requiring voter approval.
AGO 95-2, p. 2. Thus, because the tax change occurred under a "previously set design" and not as a result of a change in tax policy, voter approval was not required. Id. at 3.
Here, the coal tax rate is similar to these taxing schemes in all relevant respects. The coal tax policy had been set prior to TABOR's effective date and requires adjustments to the tax rate according to pre-set, objective, statutory criteria capable of independent verification. The coal severance tax rate is adjusted as a matter of pre-existing law, and the tax policy has not changed since TABOR's passage, other than to make the thirty-six cent base *Page 6
rate permanent in 1994. Thus, Revenue is obligated to follow the General Assembly's mandatory directive to adjust the rate according to law. This is analogous to the statutory tax credits which automatically expire, thereby increasing the burden on taxpayers that previously took advantage of such credits. See, e.g., §
This analysis is supported by a memorandum from the Office of Legislative Legal Services, dated January 15, 1996, which offers a general method of determining what a tax policy change is under TABOR. It describes a two-part test, the first step of which is to "determine if any tax law is being changed in a manner that modifies or affects tax policy." The question asks:
Is a statute relating to the imposition of a pecuniary charge for the purpose of defraying general governmental expenses of the state or of any local government being created, repealed, or amended in a manner that results in a modification of the standards or rules governing the imposition of the charge?
Here, the statutory formula has not been amended, and the fact that the rate fluctuates with the producer's price index does not cause a tax rate increase under TABOR.
Likewise, the fact that the Department has erroneously failed to increase the coal severance tax is irrelevant. In Colorado Department ofRevenue v. Woodmen of the World,
In 1989, however, the Department determined that the sales tax code did not exempt sales to fraternal benefit societies. Therefore, the Department notified Woodmen that it was no longer entitled to make purchases that are exempt from Colorado sales tax. Woodmen,
In sum, the current tax rate has been in effect since 1988, and adjustments have never been discretionary with the Department. The applicable rate is fixed by statute with a mandatory directive to adjust the rate according to changes in the index of producers' prices. To require a vote each time the statutory formula requires an upward adjustment would be to render the statute a nullity.
Thus, the Department does not create "tax policy" by following a statute, and the Department does not change tax policy when it properly follows a statutorily required formula that it previously failed to enforce. The fact that the Department erroneously failed to implement the statutory mandate of section
Accordingly, future implementation of section
By statute, the base tax rate for coal severance is $.36 per ton. The applicable rate is then calculated according the prescribed statutory formula:
For every full one and one-half percent change in the index of producers' prices for all commodities prepared by the bureau of labor statistics of the United States department of labor, the tax rate provided in subsection *Page 9 (1) of this section shall be increased or decreased one percent. The executive director shall determine such adjustments to the rate of tax based upon changes in the index of producers' prices from the level of such index as of January, 1978, to the level of such index as of the last month of the quarter immediately preceding the quarter for which any taxes are due.
§
The unambiguous language of the statute indicates that the adjustments are (1) mandatory, and (2) must be based upon the difference in percentage between the January, 1978 index of producers' prices and that rate at the end of the last quarter immediately preceding the quarter for which taxes are due. Because such adjustments have not been made since 1993, it is likely that a proper application of the tax in 2007 will result in a dramatic increase in the tax obligation of coal producers. Nonetheless, proper application of the statutory formula today results in the same tax rate that would exist had the formula been properly applied each year since 1993, and therefore cannot be characterized as retroactive or an attempt to "catch up" to the required rate.
Moreover, there is no legal authority for allowing the Department to deviate from its statutory duty to adjust the tax rate as required by law. Indeed, the caselaw is to the contrary. See, e.g. American BondingCo. of Baltimore v. People,
Issued this 6th day of July, 2007
_______________________________
JOHN W. SUTHERS,
Colorado Attorney General