Farmers Co-op v. State
296 Neb. 347
Neb.2017Background
- Farmers Cooperative and Frontier Cooperative sought refunds of Nebraska sales/use taxes paid on repairs and parts for agricultural machinery under Neb. Rev. Stat. § 77-2708.01 (refund for “depreciable repairs or parts”).
- The Department of Revenue’s Information Guide defined “depreciable repairs or parts” by reference to the IRS Farmer’s Tax Guide: items that appreciably prolong life, arrest deterioration, or increase value/usefulness and are capital expenditures depreciated for tax purposes.
- The Department partially denied the Cooperatives’ refund claims for many line items (e.g., alternators, bolts, gaskets, sensors, hoses, Terragator air conditioner) as nondepreciable; the Cooperatives appealed to district court without requesting a departmental hearing or submitting personal property tax returns/depreciation schedules.
- The district court found the statutory phrase ambiguous, accepted the Department’s IRS-based interpretation in the Information Guide, and affirmed the partial denials, finding the Cooperatives failed to prove the items were depreciated/personal-property-taxed.
- The Cooperatives appealed to the Nebraska Supreme Court, which consolidated the appeals and affirmed the district court.
Issues
| Issue | Plaintiff's Argument | Defendant's Argument | Held |
|---|---|---|---|
| Proper meaning of “depreciable repairs or parts” in § 77-2708.01 | Term should be read consistently with § 77-119/§ 77-2704.36: any parts/repairs with a determinable life >1 year (depreciable tangible personal property) | Ambiguous term should be defined per Department’s Information Guide/IRS Farmer’s Tax Guide: items that appreciably prolong life, arrest deterioration, or increase value/usefulness and are capital expenditures depreciated for tax | Ambiguous; legislative history and purpose support Department’s IRS-based definition (capital expense/depreciable when it appreciably prolongs life, increases value/usefulness, or arrests deterioration) |
| Burden and proof for refund eligibility | Cooperatives: statute does not require production of personal property tax returns to claim refund | Department: claimant must prove personal property taxation/depreciation to avoid double taxation; documentation supports refund eligibility | Claimants bear burden to establish entitlement; Cooperatives failed to submit required evidence (property tax returns/depreciation schedules), so denials upheld |
Key Cases Cited
- Stewart v. Nebraska Dept. of Rev., 294 Neb. 1010, 885 N.W.2d 723 (cites standard of review for administrative appeals)
- Archer Daniels Midland Co. v. State, 290 Neb. 780, 861 N.W.2d 733 (statutory interpretation principles)
- Project Extra Mile v. Nebraska Liquor Control Comm., 283 Neb. 379, 810 N.W.2d 149 (statutory ambiguity/interpretation)
- Trumble v. Sarpy County Board, 283 Neb. 486, 810 N.W.2d 732 (when legislature provides a specific definition, it controls)
- Dean v. State, 288 Neb. 530, 849 N.W.2d 138 (use of legislative history when statute ambiguous)
- State v. Duncan, 294 Neb. 162, 882 N.W.2d 650 (statutory construction objectives)
- Bridgeport Ethanol v. Nebraska Dept. of Rev., 284 Neb. 291, 818 N.W.2d 600 (tax exemptions construed narrowly)
- Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. v. State, 275 Neb. 594, 748 N.W.2d 42 (analogy: tax exemption and refund burdens)
