MEMORANDUM
In this сlass action for which the City of Goodlettsville, Tennessee (“City”), serves as the party plaintiff, the parties have filed cross-motions for summary judgment. The defendants filed a joint Motion for Summary Judgment (Docket No. 299), which the City opposed (Docket No. 347), and the defendants filed a joint Reply (Docket No. 366). The City also filed a Motion for Summary Judgment (Docket No. 302), which the defendants jointly opposed (Docket No. 351), and the City filed a Reply (Docket No. 369). For the reasons stated herein, the defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment will be granted and the City’s Motion for Summary Judgment will be denied.
BACKGROUND
I. Procedural History
The City and the other class members are political subdivisions of the state of Tennessee. The defendants (“Defendants”), which include Priceline.com, Inc., Travelocity.com, L.P., Expedia, Inc., and Orbitz Worldwide, Inc., as well as certain subsidiaries and corporate siblings of these entities, all do business as online travel companies (“OTCs”).
On June 2, 2008, the City filed a class action Complaint,
(A) The Merchant Model
OTCs generally offer services to hotels
By contrast, under the “Merchant Model,” which is the subject of this lawsuit, an OTC contracts with a hotel to pay a contractually agreed upon room rate to the hotel—a wholesale rate or “net rate”—for each room that customers ultimately book through the OTC. Contractually, the OTC is permitted to include information about the hotel on its website (positive or negative) and to allow consumers to reserve rooms through the website. The OTC does not purchase or take title to any rooms, nor is any payment made to the hotel before a booking is made. Thus, the OTC has neither possession nor control of the hotel rooms before a reservation is made.
The contracts between OTCs and hotels typically provide the hotel some discretion to change both the discounted rate it charges the OTC for any bookings and the number of reservations it will allow the OTC to book for a given night. However, this discretion is often subject to special limitations, such as a “base allocation” (e.g., 10 rooms per night minimum must be available for the OTC to book during a specified period), a “most favored nation” provision (if any company is selling rooms on behalf of the hotel, the OTC must be afforded the same right), and “last room availability” (any unbooked rooms must be made available for booking under certain circumstances). Furthermore, the contracts often provide for a minimum markup margin to the OTC relative to the hotel’s published rates. For example, a contract might provide that the net rate for a Merchant Model booking must be no more than X% below the hotel’s published rates for that day, therеby affording the OTC the ability to make at least that X%
The OTC markets the hotel’s rooms on the OTC’s website. The OTC sets the (higher) retail rate for the room by adding its markup to the discounted rate. Unless the contract with the hotel provides otherwise, the OTC may set the retail rate at its discretion. In any case, the built-in markup that an OTC adds to the net rate provides its profit margin on each Merchant Model transaction.
Once a consumer has identified a hotel room on an OTC’s website that the consumer intends to book, the consumer typically is presented with three line items: the room price, a combined charge for “taxes and service fees” (or roughly equivalent language), and the combined total price. The “taxes and fees” line item reflects a combination of (1) taxes assessed on the undisclosed net rate and (2) an embedded “service fee” that accrues to the OTC, which essentially constitutes a portion of the markup. The OTCs combine the service fee and taxes into one line item to preserve the opacity of the markup and the underlying net rate.
To make a reservation, the consumer must accept the OTC’s terms and conditions, which include a cancellation policy that typically incorporates the underlying hotel’s cancellation policies and, in some instances, may add additional cancellation provisions specific to the OTC. If the consumer accepts the reservation subject to these terms and conditions, the OTC charges the consumer’s credit card. Once the room is booked, the hotel is obligated to honor the consumer’s booking. The OTCs provide a room confirmation and room receipt to the consumer. The consumer does not receive a rental receipt from the hotel prior to checking in. The consumer does not need to pay any additional amount to the hotel for the right to stay at the hotel. If the сonsumer wishes to cancel the reservation, the consumer typically must contact the OTC in the first instance.
When the consumer arrives at the hotel, the hotel chooses which specific room to assign that consumer, arranges for payment of any incidentals, and provides room access. Around the time of check-in or soon after, the hotel then invoices the OTC for the consumer’s stay. That invoice typically includes line items for (1) the net rate for the booking; and (2) the applicable hotel occupancy taxes assessed relative to that net rate. Then, pursuant to its agreement with the hotel, the OTC remits payment to the hotel for the total of both of these charges. The hotel then remits the occupancy tax revenue (assessed against the net rate that it received for the booking) to the taxing authority. Ultimately, the OTC retains the full value of its markup—effectively, the retail rate less the discounted rate—which is not taxed. This mode of business is referred to as the “Merchant Model” because the OTC—nоt the hotel—serves as the merchant of record in the transaction with the consumer.
To illustrate the mechanics of these transactions with numbers, assume that an OTC agrees with a hotel on a net rate per room of $100 and that the applicable local hotel occupancy tax is 3%, as it is under the Tax Ordinance at issue here. If the OTC markets the room for a retail rate of
(B) Functions Not Performed by OTCs
The OTCs do not physically possess or take title to any hotels, hotel rooms, or other hotel-related physical structures within Tennessee; they do not perform any direct oversight of day-to-day hotel operations, such as housekeeping, maintenance of hotel grounds, room service, front desk operations, or building security; they do not physically provide possession of any hotel rooms to consumers; and they do not assign the particular room in which a consumer may stay for a given booking. All of these functions relate to the hotel itself, not an OTC. Thus, there is no dispute that OTCs perform no day-to-day “brick and mortar” hotel functions.
(C) The Applicable State and Local Laws
The Tennessee Legislature authorized political subdivisions to enact a “Tourist Accommоdation Tax” on hotel occupants. TenmCode Ann. §§ 7-4-101 to -112 (the “Enabling Act”). Pursuant to the Enabling Act, the City enacted a “Hotel-Motel Tax,” (hereinafter “Tax Ordinance”). See Goodlettsville City Code (“City Code”) §§ 5-501 to -510 (found at Docket No. 107).
5-502. Tax Levied. There is hereby levied, assessed and imposed, and shall be paid and collected, a privilege tax upon the privilege of occupancy in any hotel of each transient in an amount equal to three percent (3%) of the consideration charged by the operator. Such tax is a privilege tax upon the transient occupying such room and is to be collected as provided herein.
5-503. Collection; refund or credit. Such tax shall be added by each operator to each invoice prepared by the operator for the occupancy in his hotel to be given directly or transmitted to the transient and shall be collected by such operator from the transient and remitted to the City of Goodlettsville.
The Tax Ordinance also defines many of the terms referenced in the aforementioned provisions, as follows:
5-501. Definitions. As used in this chapter unless the context otherwise requires:
(1) “Consideration” means the consideration charged, whether or not received, for the occupancy in a hotel valued in money whether to be received in money, goods, labor or otherwise, including all receipts, cash, credits, property and services of any kind or nature without any deduction therefrom whatsoever....
(2) “Hotel” means any structure or any portion of any structures [sic] which is occupied or intended or designed for occupancy by transients for dwelling, lodging or sleeping purposes and includes any hotel, inn, tourist camp, tourist cabin, tourist court, motel, or any place in which rooms, lodgings or accommodations are furnished to transients for a consideration.
(3) “Occupancy” means the use or possession or the right to the use or possession of any room, lodging or accommodations in any hotel.
(4) “Operator” means the person operating the hotel whether as owner, lessee, or otherwise;
(5) “Person” means any individual, firm, partnership, joint venture, association, social club, fraternal organization, joint stock company, corporation, estate, trust, receiver, trustee, syndicate or any other group or combination acting as a unit.
(7) “Transient” means any person who exercises occupancy or is entitled to occupancy for any rooms, lodging or accommodations in a hotel for a period of less than ninety (90) continuous days.
These definitions are, in relevant part, identical to those set forth in the Enabling Act. See Tenn.Code Ann. § 7-^H01(a), at (1) (“Consideration”), (4) (“Hotel”), (5) (“Occupancy”), (6) (“Operator”), (7) (“Person”), and (11) (“Transient”). Because the City Code provisions are essentially identical to those set forth in the Enabling Act, it appears that the City exercised the full grant of taxing authority afforded it by the Legislature.
(D) The Parties’Arguments
The Defendants argue that the markup is not taxable under the Tax Ordinance, chiefly because OTCs are not “operators” of the hotels. The Defendants also аssert that, even if the markup is otherwise taxable under the Tax Ordinance, imposition of hotel occupancy taxes on the retail rate would violate the Commerce Clause, the Equal Protection Clause, and the Due Process Clause of the United States Constitution, as well as the Internet Tax Freedom Act (“ITFA”), Pub.L. 105-277, div. C. tit.
ANALYSIS
I. Summary Judgment Standard
Rule 56 requires the court to grant a motion for summary judgment if “the movant shows that there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(a) (2011). At the summary judgment stage, the moving party bears the initial burden of identifying those parts of the record that demonstrate the absence of any genuine issue of material fact. Moldowan v. City of Warren,
At this stage, “ ‘the judge’s function is not ... to weigh the evidence and determine the truth of the matter, but to determine whether there is a genuine issue for trial.’ ” Moldowan, 518 F.3d at 374 (quoting Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 477 U.S. 242, 249,
Under Tеnnessee law, the interpretation of a statute is a “question of law,” and where a case “involves a matter of law and there are no genuine issues of material fact, [it] is an appropriate case for summary judgment.” Home Builders Ass’n of Middle Tenn. v. Williamson Cnty.,
In construing a statute, a court’s duty is “to ascertain and give effect to the intention and purpose of the legislature.” Eastman Chem. Co. v. Johnson,
The court must “lean in favor of the construction which will render every word operative, rather than one which may make some idle or nugatory.” City of Oak Ridge v. Morgan,
Ultimately, the court is bound to effectuate the words of the statute, regardless of its policy judgments:
[Cjourts are not at liberty to depart from the words of the statute ... [I]f the words of the statute plainly mean one thing they cannot be given another meaning by judicial construction.... Finally, it is not for the courts to alter or amend a statute. Moreover, a court must not question the reasonableness of a statute or substitute its own policy judgments for those of the legislature. Instead, courts must presume that the legislature says in a statute what it means and means in a statute what it says there. Accordingly, courts must construe a statute as it is written.
Gleaves v. Checker Cab Transit Corp.,
Additional considerations apply to matters involving taxation. “[R]evenue acts [are not] to be interpreted so as to extend their provisions by implication beyond the clear import of the language used, or to enlarge their operations so as to embrace matters not specifically pointed out.” Gallagher v. Butler,
II. The Legal and Factual Record Now Before the Court
This court’s Memorandum on the Motion to Dismiss is the only decision addressing the application of the Enabling Act and Tax Ordinance to OTCs.
(A) Motion to Dismiss
Taking the City’s allegations as true аnd applying then-existing legal precedent, this court originally found that OTCs could constitute “operators” under the Tax Ordinance and that, therefore, the consideration received by the OTCs from consumers (ie., the retail rate) constituted the taxable “consideration charged by the operator.” Id. at 993-97. In reaching that decision, the court relied on the City’s allegation that each defendant OTC “purchases and takes title to inventories of hotel rooms,” using its own credit card, and then “re-sells the rooms to consumers.” (Docket No. 1 ¶28; Goodlettsville,
In interpreting the statutory language, this court distinguished Pitt Cnty. v. Hotels.com, L.P.,
(B) Factual Record
Contrary to the allegations set forth in the Complaint, the evidence demonstrates that OTCs do not purchase or take title to hotel rooms and do not pay the hotels before a booking is made. Instead, the evidence shows that OTCs contract for the right to market an allotment of rooms, in return for the hotel’s promise to reimburse the OTCs at the negotiated net rate for any rooms sold, with no payments made until after a booking occurs and with no penalty for unsold rooms. Although the agreements between the OTCs and the hotels plainly permit the OTCs to bind the hotels to honor OTCs’ transactions with consumers, the measure of “virtual control” exercised by the OTCs is appreciably more limited than the level of control alleged in the City’s Complaint. In particular, although the Complaint alleged that the Defendants maintained a possessory interest in the hotel rooms marketed through their websites—which interest the court found to be sufficiently equivalent to the interest of a hotel “owner” or “lessee” for purposes of the Tax Ordinance—discovery shows that not to be the case.
(C) Subsequent Legal Precedent
In addition, the legal landscape has changed since this court decided the Motion to Dismiss, in a manner that impacts the court’s analysis of the Tax Ordinance and its application to OTCs.
In Louisville/Jefferson Cnty. Metro Gov’t v. Hotels.com,
In support of its decision, the Sixth Circuit approvingly discussed the Fourth Circuit’s reasoning and ultimate holding in Pitt County. See Louisville/Jefferson II,
Furthermore, in Louisville/Jefferson II, the Sixth Circuit made several other important findings. First, it rejected the county’s argument that excluding the OTCs from hotel taxes would create an
Second, in the Louisville/Jefferson II decision, the Sixth Circuit cited to Expedia, Inc. v. City of Columbus,
Finally, the Sixth Circuit observed that, under Kentucky law, if the meaning of a tax-related provision is not “explicitly and distinctly revealed ... it is the function of the judiciary to construe the statute strictly and resolve doubts and ambiguities in favor of the taxpayer and against the taxing powers.” Id. (quoting George v. Scent,
(2) City of San Antonio and City of Houston Decisions
In City of San Antonio I, a federal district court had found that, as alleged by the city, there was at least a question of fact as to whether OTCs exercised “control” under a hotel occupancy tax applying to any entity “owning, operating, managing or controlling any hotel.”
More recently, on October 25, 2011, in City of Houston v. Hotels.com, L.P.,
(3) Impact of New Legal Precedent
The Louisville/Jefferson II decision and the City of Houston decision are particu
Although neither Louisville/Jefferson (Kentucky law), Pitt County (North Carolina law), or City of Houston (Texas law) are controlling here, they certainly call into question the persuasive weight that this court previously assigned to City of Charleston, City of Fairview Heights, San Antonio I, and other similarly reasoned cases. Furthermore, even if the court did not have the benefit of additional legal authority, including the persuasive Louisville/Jefferson II decision by the Sixth Circuit and the Pitt County decision that it endorsed, a fundamental allegation on which the court previously relied was not proven. In light of these considerations, the court must re-examine the language of the Tax Ordinance and its application to facts that differ in important ways from the Complaint allegations.
(D) Application
As this court previously found, and as the pаrties appear to acknowledge, neither the Legislature nor the City could have contemplated the OTC Merchant Model, because the laws at issue were enacted before the internet age and before OTCs existed. See Goodlettsville,
The Tax Ordinance imposes a three percent tax on “consideration charged by the operator.” City Code § 5-502. An operator is “the person operating the hotel whether as owner, lessee, or otherwise.”
Under the Tax Ordinance, an “operator” is a “person operating the hotel whether as owner, lessee, or otherwise.” City Code § 5-501(4). In other words, the operator is an entity that operates the hotel as its owner, as a lessee of the hotel property, or in some “otherwise” unspecified capacity. Under the doctrine of ejusdem generis, the court must apply the specific terms (“owner” and “lessee”) to determine the scope of the general term (“otherwise”). See Sal-lee,
In the absence of a precise internal statutory definition, it is appropriate for the court to look to the dictionary definition of a term. See Christenberry Trucking & Farm, Inc. v. F & M Mktg. Servs., Inc.,
When used as a transitive verb, “operate” means “to put or keep working in operation,” Random House Dictionary (2011), “to manage, direct, run, or pursue” and “to control the functioning of,” Collins English Dictionary (10th ed. 2009), or “to put or keep in operation.” Merriam-Webster Online Dictionary. As concerns hotels, those terms strongly suggest day-to-day management of the hotel property itself. The hotel management, whether it owns the hotel, leases it from its owner, or acts in some other capacity (as a licensee or franchisee, for instance), manages and directs the hotel’s day-to-day operations and controls the hotel’s physical structure at all times. With respect to the definition of “operation” as a form of “control,” this court previously acknowledged that, under aрpropriate circumstances, a third party could conceivably “control” a block of rooms, such as by purchasing and taking title to a section of the hotel. See Goodlettsville,
This interpretation is consistent with other provisions in the Tax Ordinance indicating that the “operator” necessarily has
The City argues that this interpretation would nullify the “otherwise” term within the definition of “operator.” That is plainly not the case. In addition to operаting a hotel as an owner or as a lessee, an entity could operate a hotel as a franchisee or as a licensee, for instance. Under either of those circumstances, the “otherwise” term would have a reasonable meaning that comports with, but reaches further than, the terms “owner” and “lessee.” The “otherwise” term would thus apply to the entity or entities actually running the hotel premises, which is certainly a plausible and understandable interpretation of what it means to “operate” a hotel.
Furthermore, this interpretation is consistent with § 5-502 of the Tax Ordinance, which specifies that only “consideration charged by the operator” is subject to the 3% occupancy tax. In a Merchant Model transaction, the operator of a given hotel— whether acting as owner, lessee, franchisee, licensee, or in some other equivalent capacity—in fact receives only the net rate as consideration for permitting a consumer to spend the night in a particular room. Accordingly, thе hotel remits taxes only on the consideration it actually received for the booking—that is, the consideration charged by the operator.
At best, the City’s interpretation that the OTC Merchant Model constitutes “operation” of Tennessee hotels is questionable. The court is bound to construe the tax revenue statutes strictly against the City and in favor of the OTCs. See Sanborn,
Although the City is correct that, under Tennessee law, the court should not adopt a statutory interpretation that renders a revenue statute a “virtual nullity,” see Wachovia,
Moreover, the OTCs and the hotels are independent entities that negotiate in arms-length transactions. In those transactions, the hotel has every incentive to keep the net rate as high as possible and to reserve for direct booking as many rooms as it believes it can sell directly to consumers, without sacrificing any potential revenue to the OTCs. Thus, with the benefit of a developed factual record before it, the court agrees with the Sixth Circuit and other courts that the “nightmare” “shell company” scenarios discussed in City of Charleston and City of Fairview Heights do not apply to the Merchant Model. Accordingly, the fact that the City and other political subdivisions receive less tax revenue for a Merchant Model booking than for a direct hotel booking has not and will not effectively nullify the hotel occupancy tax codes.
Finally, as the Sixth Circuit and many other courts have emphasized persuasively, it is ultimately the role of the state legislature to enact revenue statutes that clearly state the scope and application of the tax laws and, upon identifying any potential revenue shortfalls in their application, to address those perceived shortfalls by appropriate legislation. Louisville/Jefferson II,
CONCLUSIONS
For the reasons stated herein, the Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment will be granted and the City’s Motion for Summary Judgment, filed on behalf of itself and the certified class, will be dеnied.
An appropriate order will enter.
For the reasons expressed in the accompanying Memorandum, the defendants’ joint Motion for Summary Judgment (Docket No. 299) is GRANTED and the plaintiffs cross-Motion for Summary Judgment filed on behalf of itself and the certified class members (Docket No. 302) is DENIED. All claims by the plaintiff and the associated certified class members are hereby DISMISSED. Entry of this order constitutes judgment in the case.
It is so ordered.
Notes
. The City of Brentwood, Tennessee, originally joined the City of Goodlettsville as a party plaintiff in the Complaint. The parties then stipulated to the voluntary dismissal of the City of Brentwood. (Docket No. 59.)
. The court certified a class of municipalities and counties that includes “Plaintiff and all other political subdivisions within the State of Tennessee that impose a tax upon the privilege of occupancy in any hotel, tourist camp, tourist cabin, tourist court, motel, or any other place in which rooms, lodgings or accommodations are furnished to transients for a consideration.” (Docket No. 209.) The parties thereafter filed an agreed-upon list of class members, which includes 73 counties and 56 municipalities within Tennessee. (Docket No. 359, Ex. 2.)
. In support of the Defendants’ motion, the Defendants filed a supporting memorandum (Docket No. 339), a Statement of Undisputed Facts (Docket No. 325), copies of unpublished cases (Docket No. 340), and 18 exhibits (Docket Nos. 301, 305, 311, 313, 327, 333, 314, 316-318, 334, 319, 321-324, and 336-37). In opposition, the City filed a Memorandum of Law (Docket No. 347), a Response to Defendants’ Statement of Facts and Plaintiffs’ Statement of Additional Facts (Docket No. 348), and the Declaration of Andrew M. Volk (Docket No. 349), which attached 81 exhibits (Docket Nos. 349-350 and 352-355). The Defendants then filed a Reply (Docket No. 366), a Response to Plaintiff's Statement of Additional Facts and Reply in Support of Defendants' Statement of Undisputed Material Facts (Docket No. 365), and an appendix of eight exhibits (Docket No. 367). In support
, OTCs handle bookings for other forms of overnight lodging as well, such as motels or inns. For purposes of this Memorandum, the court will refer to these forms of lodging collectively as "hotels.”
. As discussed herein at pp. 14-16, the Complaint alleged that the OTCs "purchase and take title to hotel rooms” before re-letting them to consumers. The factual record demonstrates that not to be the case.
. For the sake of preserving the confidentiality of the OTCs’ pricing schemes, the court will utilize generalized or hypothetical figures that are not intended to reflect any actual pricing figures filed under seal with the court.
. If the tax charge were separately itemized, the public could determine the underlying (and otherwise confidential) net rate between the OTC and the hotel by simple arithmetic.
. The Enabling Act was passed in 1976 and originally applied only to certain political subdivisions. In 1988, the Legislature enacted a second Enabling Act authorizing "home rule” jurisdictions to enact hotel occupancy taxes under substantively identical limiting language. See Tenn. St. Ann. 67-4-1401 et seq.; 1988 Tenn. Pub. Acts c. 982, § 3. In March 1990, the Legislature then added § 7-4-102(c) to the original Enabling Act, thereby authorizing certain additional municipalities to levy hotel occupancy taxes. See 1990 Tenn. Pub. Acts c. 636, § 3. The Goodlettsville Tax Ordinance was passed in July 1990 in accordance with § 7-4-102(c). (Docket No. 10, Ex. B (certified copy of original ordinance).)
. Tennessee municipalities have only the power to tax granted by the State. Tenn. Small Sch. Sys. v. McWherter,
. Although the parties have cited myriad decisions by state courts, federal courts, and certain administrative bodies concerning the applicability of hotel occupancy taxes to OTCs, none of those decisions involves the precise statutory language at issue here, none involves the application of Tennessee law, and only a handful address what it means to "operate” a hotel. Although the reasoning behind some of these decisions is persuasive, none of them is controlling.
. Unless otherwise noted, references herein to the Goodlettsville matter relate to this court's opinion denying the Motion to Dismiss at
. The City argues that, notwithstanding the underlying contractual relationships, the OTCs and their officers previously made "binding admissions” concerning the nature of the Merchant Model that the OTCs now seek to avoid through litigation-driven changes to their nomenclature concerning that model. The City points out that, in certain public filings and other scattered statements, the OTCs or their representatives рreviously described the Merchant Model as “selling” an "inventory” of rooms (or roughly equivalent terms). Then, after localities sought to enforce hotel occupancy taxes on OTCs, the OTCs switched to using terms such as "facilitating bookings,” "acting as an intermediary” for hotels, and the like. Similarly, the City argues that, pre-litigation, the OTCs referred to the tax charges as "taxes,” then, post-litigation, began referring to them as "tax recovery charges.” The City suggests that these changes in nomenclature seek to disguise the true nature of the Merchant Model and, therefore, reflect an acknowledgment that the Merchant Model transactions are subject to taxation at the retail rate. For their part, the Defendants argue that the court should interpret the Merchant Model in accordance with their more recent nomenclature. The court is not persuaded by either line of argument. The contractual relationships among consumers, OTCs, and hotels— and the applicability of the Enabling Act and Tax Ordinance thereto—are what they are, regardless of the parties’ pre- and post-litigation characterizations. Thus, the reality of how OTCs conduct business will control. See City of Philadelphia v. City of Philadelphia Tax Review Bd.,
. Subsequent to Goodlettsville, Pitt Cnty., and LouisvilleUefferson II, other jurisdictions have also found that OTCs do not "operate” hotels under the applicable hotel occupancy tax statutes. See St. Louis Cnty. v. Prestige Travel, Inc.,
. The Fourth Circuit in Pitt County, whose logic the Sixth Circuit endorsed in Louisville/Jefferson II, reached a similar conclusion:
[I]t seems to us preferable to accept the statute as written, leaving to the legislature the function of closing loopholes (if they exist). The loophole identified in Fairview Heights, if indeed it is a real one, may simply indicate that the North Carolina General Assembly failed to consider the tax consequences of a situation where hotel rooms are rented first at wholesale and later re-let at retail rates to consumers. On the other hand, the statute’s language may be the result of the legislature's deliberate choice to limit the application of the sales tax to the actual operators of hotels and similar type businesses. In either case, we may not expand the statute’s reach beyond what its plain language will bear.
. As discussed above at pp. 905-06, Tennessee has a similar standard with respect to tax statutes. Several other jurisdictions have also applied similar standards in favor of the OTCs. See, e.g., Pitt Cnty.,
. The parties in that matter dispute whether the City of Houston decision is binding or otherwise merits reconsideration of the district court’s judgment.
. As this court has already found, the definition of "person” contemplates that, under appropriate circumstances, more than one entity can operate a hotel "in combination acting as a unit.” Goodlettsville,
. See also Louisville/Jefferson II,
. The Defendants also argue that various Tennessee statutes concerning health and safety requirements at hotels and other lodging establishments reflect an assumption by the Legislature that “operation” entails some form of control over the day-to-day operations of a hotel. See, e.g., Tenn.Code Ann. §§ 68-14-305(a) ("No person shall operate a hotel ... who does not hold a valid permit”). However, as the City points out, because the statutes have distinct purposes and the Enabling Act and Tax Ordinance contain their own definition of "operate” (whereas the health and safety statutes do not), there is no compelling reason to interpret the term “operate” in the health statutes in pari materia with the use of that defined term in the Tax Ordinance. See Wachovia,
. This interpretation also comports with other City Code provisions highlighted by the City. Section 5-503 specifies that the occupancy tax “shall be collected by such operator from the transient and remitted to the [City]." This provision does not require the operator to collect the tax directly from the consumer. Indeed, under the Merchant Model, the hotel collects the occupancy tax from the consumer indirectly: the OTC charges the customer for taxes due on the net rate, then remits that portion of the customer’s payment in full to the hotel upon invoicing. Similarly, § 5-504 requires the hotel occupancy tax to “be remitted by all operators who lease, rent or charge for occupancy within a hotel,” and requires the operator to "collect the tax from the transient at the time of the presentation of the invoice for such occupancy whether prior to occupancy or after occupancy as may be the custom of the operator .... ” (emphases added.) Here, the hotels do charge for occupancy of rooms, and they accordingly remit taxes on the consideration they actually receive for a given booking, whether at published rates (for direct bookings) or at net rates (for OTC Merchant Model bookings). Furthermore, the hotel collects the applicable taxes from the consumer indirectly after the hotel presents an invoice for that amount to the OTC, usually at or soon after the check-in date, in compliance with § 5-504.
. Because the court has found that the hotel occupancy taxes have appropriately been assessed on the net rate within Tennessee, the court does not reach the Defendants' separate argument that the imposition of hotel occupancy taxes on the OTCs’ markup, even if otherwise applicable, violates the U.S. Constitution and the ITFA.
