ALINE BAE TANNING, INC., A NEBRASKA CORPORATION, ET AL., APPELLANTS AND CROSS-APPELLEES, V. NEBRASKA DEPARTMENT OF REVENUE, AN AGENCY OF THE STATE OF NEBRASKA, AND KIMBERLY K. CONROY, TAX COMMISSIONER, APPELLEES AND CROSS-APPELLANTS. JB & ASSOCIATES, INC., DOING BUSINESS AS SUNTAN CITY, A NEBRASKA CORPORATION, APPELLANT, V. NEBRASKA DEPARTMENT OF REVENUE, AN AGENCY OF THE STATE OF NEBRASKA, AND KIMBERLY K. CONROY, TAX COMMISSIONER, APPELLEE.
Nos. S-15-643, S-15-644
Supreme Court of Nebraska
May 20, 2016
293 Neb. 623
1.
2. Administrative Law: Statutes: Appeal and Error. On review, an appellate court determines the meaning of a statute independеntly of the determination made by an administrative agency.
3. Administrative Law: Parties: Standing: Appeal and Error. Under the Administrative Procedure Act, only an aggrieved party may seek judicial review of an agency action; an appellate court addresses the aggrieved party in terms of standing.
4. Parties: Standing: Jurisdiction. A party must have standing before a court cаn exercise jurisdiction, and either a party or the court can raise a question of standing at any time during the proceeding.
5. Standing: Words and Phrases. Standing involves a real interest in the cause of action, meaning some legal or equitable right, title, or interest in the subject matter of the controversy.
6. Taxation: Standing. The consumer is the taxpayer of an admissions tax, and thus, only the consumer has standing to claim a refund.
7. Taxation: Proof. The legal incidence of a tax depends upon who the law declares has the ultimate burden of the tax.
Appeals from the District Court for Lancaster County: ANDREW R. JACOBSEN, Judge. Affirmed.
Steve Grasz and Henry L. Wiedrich, of Husch Blackwеll, L.L.P., for appellants.
Douglas J. Peterson, Attorney General, and L. Jay Bartel for appellees.
HEAVICAN, C.J., WRIGHT, CONNOLLY, MILLER-LERMAN, CASSEL, and KELCH, JJ., and IRWIN, Judge.
HEAVICAN, C.J.
NATURE OF CASE
Several indoor tanning salon businesses appeal from the district court‘s decision affirming the denial of tax refund claims by the Tax Commissioner (Commissioner). The salons assert that the Nebraskа Department of Revenue (Department) improperly collected more than $1.7 million in admissions taxes from the salons. The Commissioner reasoned that the salons were not the taxpayers and, therefore, found that the salons lacked standing to claim refunds. The district court affirmed the Commissioner‘s decision. The salons appealed, and we granted their petition to bypass. The Department and Commissioner
BACKGROUND
In May 2013, Aline Bae Tanning, Inc.; Ashley Lynn‘s, Inc.; Maple 110 Tanning, L.L.C.; RSB LLC; Tanning Horizons, L.L.C.; and Wilson-Bonn, L.L.C. (collectively Ashley Lynn‘s) filed a total of 15 claims for tax refunds with the Department. The Ashley Lynn‘s salons claimed refunds of admissions taxes on gross receipts totaling more than $1 million. In December 2013, JB & Associates, Inc., doing business as Suntan City (JB), filed a claim with the Department for a refund of over $600,000 in admissions tax.
Though not entirely clear, it appears that in November 2012, the Attorney General‘s office had issued an opinion that
The Commissioner disallowed the Ashley Lynn‘s salons’ claims on October 7, 2013, аnd disallowed JB‘s claims on December 31. The Commissioner sent all of the salons nearly identical letters separately denying each claim. The letters explained that “[a] refund of a tax improperly or erroneously collected can only be issued by the State directly to the purchaser who paid the tax.” (Emphasis in original.)
The salons sought judicial review in both cases, naming both the Department and the Commissioner as defendants. In November 2013, the Ashley Lynn‘s salons filed one petition for all 15 of the Commissioner‘s disallowances. Each of the 15 disallowance notice letters were attached to the petition. JB filed a petition for judicial rеview in January 2014. The district court consolidated the two cases and heard arguments in January 2015.
The salons jointly appealed and petitioned for bypass, which this court granted. The Department and Commissioner cross-appealed. We affirm because the salons lack standing.
ASSIGNMENTS OF ERROR
The salons assign, restated, that the district court erred by (1) finding the salons had no standing to claim refunds and (2) failing to reach the merits and find that the salons were entitled to refunds.
The Department and Commissioner cross-appeal, assigning that the district court erred in finding it had subject matter
STANDARD OF REVIEW
[1] A judgment or final order rendered by a district court in a judiciаl review pursuant to the Administrative Procedure Act (APA) may be reversed, vacated, or modified by an appellate court for errors appearing on the record. When reviewing an order of a district court under the APA for errors appearing on the record, the inquiry is whether the decisiоn conforms to the law, is supported by competent evidence, and is not arbitrary, capricious, or unreasonable.4
[2] On review, an appellate court determines the meaning of a statute independently of the determination made by an administrative agency.5
ANALYSIS
Standing.
In the salons’ first assignment of error, they argue that the district court erred by affirming the Commissioner‘s conclusion that the salons lacked standing to claim refunds. Both the Commissioner and the district court found that the salons’ customers, and not the salons themselves, were the proper parties to bring claims for refunds. We affirm the district court‘s determination, because the salons were not the taxpayers.
[3-5] Under the APA, only an “aggrieved party” may seek judicial review of an agency action.6 We have addressed the “aggrieved party” in terms of standing.7 A party must have standing before a court can exercise jurisdiction, and either a party or the court can raise a question of standing at any time during the proceeding.8 Standing involves a real interest in the cause of action, meaning some legal or equitable right, title, or interest in the subject matter of the controversy.9 Section
[6] We have previously addressed whether businesses that remit admissions taxes to the Deрartment have standing to claim refunds. In Ak-Sar-Ben, we held that operators of a horseracing track did not have standing to claim refunds of admissions taxes.10 Instead, we determined that the consumer is the taxpayer and that thus, only the consumer has standing to claim a refund of admissions tax.
As we explained in Ak-Sar-Ben,
The salons argue that Ak-Sar-Ben is either inapplicable or incorrect. They assert that the legal incidence of the admissions tax falls upon the salons and that therefore, they are the persons who made the overpayments and who have standing.
[7] In Anthony, Inc., we used the legal incidence test to determine whether a municipal tax on restaurants in Omaha, Nebraska, was a sales tax or an occupation tax.11 As a municipality, Omaha was without the authority to impose a sales tax, but could establish an occupation tax. The primary difference between a sales tax and an occupation tax, we held, is who bears the legal incidence, or “who the law declares has the ultimate burden of the tax.”12 The legal incidence of a true sales tax falls upon the purchaser, whereаs the legal incidence of an occupation tax is on the seller for the privilege of operating a particular type of business. Neither the name given to a
tax, nor the fact that a tax is assessed from gross receipts, are dispositive of where the legal incidence fаlls.13
In Anthony, Inc., we distinguished Ak-Sar-Ben, noting that
The salons argue that Ak-Sar-Ben is not binding in this case because it is inconsistent with the test set forth in Anthony, Inc. In Anthony, Inc., we stated:
If the customer refuses to pаy the occupation tax when itemized on his or her bill, action by the City will be taken against the restaurant, not against the consumer. Because the legal incidence of the tax falls on the business and not the customer, the Restaurant Tax is an occupation tax, not a sales tax.14
The salons argue that this passage supports the contention that legal incidence falls upon them, because taxes under
Though the above language from Anthony, Inc. could appear to support the salons’ contention, when read in context, it does not. In Anthony, Inc., we clearly stated that the
legal incidence of a tax depends upon “who the law declares has the ultimate burden of the tax.”16 That a party acting as a tax collector is subject to penalties for failing to perform its statutory duties is irrelevant. Rather, as we did in Anthony, Inc. and Ak-Sar-Ben, we
While
The salons argue that by looking backward in this manner, we are confusing legal incidence with economic incidence. To prove this point, the salons cite an array of case law from other jurisdictions. We have reviewed these cases and find that they are distinguishable; none of the cases interpret a statute that imposes liability upon the consumer in the same
manner as does
The salоns also allege due process violations. This argument fails because, as discussed above, the consumers are the taxpayers. As
Finally, the salons assert that because
the $2
As discussed in Ak-Sar-Ben and above, the customers were the taxpayers of the admissions tax. We will not rewrite the law and completely overhaul the refund scheme put in place by the Legislature because of a hypothetical argument the salons attempt to make on their customers’ behalf.
For these reasons, we find that the salons do not have standing to claim a refund and their first assignment of error has no merit.
Merits.
Because we find that the salons did not have standing, we do not address whethеr the tanning salons’ gross receipts should have been subject to the admissions tax. Therefore, we do not reach the salons’ second assignment of error.
Subject Matter Jurisdiction.
On cross-appeal, the Department and Commissioner assign that the district court erred by finding it had subject matter jurisdiction over the 15 claims filed jоintly by the Ashley Lynn‘s salons. We have already held that the Ashley Lynn‘s salons lacked standing; therefore, the district court lacked jurisdiction over the claims. Thus, we do not reach the assigned error on cross-appeal.
CONCLUSION
The decision of the district court is affirmed.
AFFIRMED.
IRWIN, Judge, not participating in the decision.
STACY, J., not participating.
