Lead Opinion
delivered the opinion of the Court,
The Commerce Clause of the United States Constitution limits a state’s power to tax interstate commerce. But this limit is not all-encompassing, and states may tax some property despite its interstate character. This case requires us to determine whether those constitutional limits bar property taxes levied on natural gas stored
We are not the first to address' this question. The Oklahoma and Kansas Supreme Courts found taxation of stored gas constitutional under similar circumstances. See In re Assessment of Personal Prop. Taxes Against Mo. Gas Energy, a Div. of S. Union Co. for Tax Years 1998, 1999, and 2000,
I. Background
ETC Marketing, Ltd. buys and sells natural gas. ETC purchases gas at the Katy marketing hub, which is located in Texas. And ETC immediately entrusts that gas to its affiliate, Houston Pipe Line Company (HPL), a pipeline operator authorized by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) to transport gas. HPL’s pipeline system does not extend beyond the borders of Texas but does connect to several other interstate pipelines. This interstate connection allows ETC to market and sell gas across the country.
Once injected into the pipeline, ETC’s gas commingles with other gas, making tracking the exact location of certain gas molecules impossible. To overcome this dilemma, ETC and HPL allocate ownership of stored gas on paper. When ETC orders HPL to ship a certain volume of gas downstream, the volume of gas shipped is subtracted from ETC’s total allocated amount.
Central to this dispute is the storage of ETC’s gas. HPL stores ETC’s gas at the Bammel facility in Harris County. The Bammel facility, which HPL owns and operates, connects to HPL’s pipeline system and is located atop the Bammel reservoir. That reservoir lies under several thousand acres and holds a vast amount of natural gas. In order to create the pressure necessary to pump gas in and out of the reservoir, HPL maintains a permanent supply of “cushion gas” in the facility. HPL pays ad valorem taxes on that cushion gas and on the Bammel facility itself. But HPL does not pay taxes on stored gas owned by marketers like ETC.
ETC purchased a dedicated storage capacity in the Bammel reservoir from HPL. The resulting storage agreement between 'the two parties is authorized by Section 311 of the Natural Gas Policy Act. Pursuant to the agreement, HPL pumps ETC’s excess gas (gas that exceeds the pipeline’s capacity) into the reservoir. There, the gas remains while it awaits orders from ETC to ship certain volumes to downstream consumers. This storage capacity allows
This taxing saga began in September 2009
After the Review Board denied ETC’s challenge, ETC appealed to the district court. There, both ETC and HCAD filed motions for summary judgment. ETC relied again on the protections of the Commerce Clause. HCAD countered that the stored gas was not in the stream of interstate commerce, and even if it was, the tax was valid under all four prongs of the Supreme Court’s holding in Complete Auto Transit, Inc. v. Brady, which supplies the test for determining the constitutionality of state taxation of interstate commerce.
II. The Texas Tax Code
The centerpiece of this dispute is the Commerce Clause. But there is another issue at play—whether the Texas Tax Code provides an independent shield against taxation. Two provisions of the Code are of particular importance.
ETC cautions that we must address these issues of Texas law first under
In its motion for summary judgment, ETC listed the following two grounds for recovery:
1) the property is exempt from taxation as it is in the stream of interstate commerce; and
2) Harris County Appraisal District does not have jurisdiction to appraise the property since the taxing units served by the Appraisal District are without jurisdiction to tax the property.
ETC argues that the second of these grounds preserved its temporary-period argument. HCAD counters that ETC’s motion did not mention “temporary period,” cite the relevant statutory provisions, or discuss anything other than the applicability of the Commerce Clause.
To presei-ve error a party must present “the grounds for the ruling that the complaining party sought from the trial court with sufficient specificity to make the trial court aware of the complaint, unless the specific grounds were apparent from the context.” Tex. R. App. P. 33.1(a)(1)(A). And to obtain summary judgment, a movant must “state the specific grounds” entitling it to summary judgment. Tex. R. Civ. P. 166a(c). Undergirding these rules is the principle that the trial court should have the chance to rule on issues that become the subject of the appeal.
The only sentence from ETC’s motion that could possibly preserve its temporary-period argument is the statement outlining ground two: “Harris County Appraisal District does not have jurisdiction to appraise the property since the taxing units served by the Appraisal District are without jurisdiction to tax the property.”
Which of the many meanings did ETC use as the basis for its motion? The answer is in the motion itself, where ETC provided a decidedly federal explanation for the term:
[I]f Federal law makes a thing exempt from taxation, any inconsistent state law, or one which ‘impedes’ the free movement of commerce among the several states just yield, thus depriving the State (and any of its various political subdivisions, such as [the appraisal district] ) of jurisdiction to tax or attempt to tax that which Federal law deems non-taxable by the States.
This passage—which contains the only other mention of jurisdiction in the motion— clears up all ambiguity about ETC’s use of the term. ETC articulated that federal law (the Commerce Clause), not the Texas Tax Code, deprived HCAD of jurisdiction. To hold otherwise would require us to assume the trial judge ignored the movant’s own explanation of the term. ETC cannot devote an entire motion to one federal argument and seek to argue a distinct state-law position on appeal by relying on a term that is ambiguous in isolation. Context matters. And in the context of this motion there is no question that ETC failed to present the temporary-period ground at all, let alone specifically. Accordingly, ETC waived any complaint on appeal involving Sections 11.01(c) and 22.01(a) of the Tax Code. See D.R. Horton-Tex., Ltd. v. Market Intern. Ins. Co., Ltd.,
III. The Commerce Clause
The Commerce Clause gives Congress authority to “regulate Commerce ... among the several States.” U.S. Const, art. I, § 8, cl. 3. Though written as an affirmative grant of authority, the clause also limits the power of states to interfere with interstate commerce. See Okla. Tax Comm’n v. Jefferson Lines, Inc.,
Complete Auto provides the most recent test for determining whether a state tax violates the Commerce Clause. D.H. Holmes Co. v. McNamara,
Another issue that remains unclear is to what extent the Complete Auto test supplanted the traditional method for determining whether state taxation was proper: the “in transit” test. The test was simple. If property was in transit, it was not taxable because it was in interstate commerce. Minnesota v. Blasius,
A synthesis of the frameworks may be proper. See Diamond Shamrock Ref. & Mktg. Co. v. Nueces Cty. Appraisal Dist.,
A. Is the Gas in Interstate Commerce?
The court of appeals assumed without deciding that the stored gas at the Bammel facility was in interstate commerce.
Though HCAD’s one-step approach (no transit equals no interstate commerce) may have been proper under the Supreme Court’s old methodology, the Court’s new approach casts doubt on that assumption. Under Complete Auto, we must effectively conduct two distinct inquiries: (1) whether the tax implicates interstate commercial activity and, if so, (2) whether the tax satisfies all four prongs. See Jefferson Lines,
In Maryland, the Court addressed whether a Louisiana first-use tax on natural gas violated the Commerce Clause. Id. at 728,
[I]t is clear to us that the flow of gas from ... wells, through processing plants in Louisiana, and through interstate pipelines to the ultimate consumers in over 80 states constitutes interstate commerce. ... But although Louisiana “uses” may possess a sufficient local nexus to support otherwise valid taxation, we do not agree that the flow of gas from the wellhead to the consumer, even though interrupted by certain events, is anything but a continual flow of gas in interstate commerce. Gas crossing a state line at any stage of its movement to the ultimate consumer is in interstate commerce during the entire journey.
Id. at 754-55. This passage settles the threshold debate. When making the initial interstate-commerce determination, the Court did not analyze whether the gas was “in transit” by looking to the character of the interruptions. Instead, the Court saw gas placed in an interstate pipeline system and summarily found interstate commerce. Id. To the extent the Court’s holding in Maryland is at odds with statements from older in-transit cases, we heed the Court’s advice for dealing with a possible inconsistency: “If a precedent of this Court has direct application in a case, yet appears to rest on reasons rejected in some other line of decisions, [the lower court] should follow the case which directly controls, leaving to this Court the prerogative of overruling its own decisions.” Quijas v. Shearson/Am. Express, Inc.,
ETC places its gas (some of which comes -from out of state) in the HPL system, an intrastate pipeline that is connected to an interstate pipeline network. HPL eventually conveys a majority of the gas through those-pipelines to ETC’s out-of-state customers downstream. As a result, ETC’s gas enters interstate commerce. See Maryland,
B. The Complete Auto Test
Having found the gas in interstate commerce, we turn now to the four prongs of Complete Auto.
1. Substantial Nexus
The first prong of the test requires us to determine whether ETC’s gas has a substantial nexus with the taxing state. McNamara,
In coming to different conclusions on the first prong, the court of appeals in this case and the court in Peoples both gave special significance to the physical presence of the taxpayer in the state. See
The Supreme Court has instituted a physical-presence test for Commerce Clause challenges only in the realm of sales and use taxes, but it has refused to do so in other cases. See, e.g., Quill Corp.,
Though a municipality collects ad valo-rem taxes from the coffers of the taxpaying business, the tax is levied on property located in the jurisdiction. It is, after all, a property tax. See Tex. Tax Code § 11.01(c) (explaining that the state generally has “jurisdiction to tax tangible personal property”). So long as the property qualifies, the ad valorem tax does not care whether a taxpayer is located in the taxing unit, the state, or the country for that matter. Nor does the Commerce Clause. When dealing with ad valorem taxation, therefore, the link between the property and the state is the relevant consideration. Allied-Signal, Inc.,
Having determined the proper scope of the inquiry, we turn now to whether the gas here bears a satisfactory connection to Texas. We reiterate the importance of injecting the in-transit test at this juncture. The Kansas and Oklahoma Supreme Courts, when tasked with applying the first prong of Complete Auto to a similar set of facts, did not find application of the in-transit test to be dispositive but concluded instead that the gas bore a substantial nexus to the respective states based on the objective fact that the gas was stored in the state for a substantial period of time. See Kan. Gas,
Though the mere presence of gas in the taxing jurisdiction is surely the starting point for the substantial-nexus inquiry, it is not the end of the road. Indeed, a presence-based rule, standing alone, would allow a state to tax gas “merely passing through” the state on the taxing day—an outcome the Commerce Clause does not tolerate. Mo. Gas,
So, with the in-transit line of cases in mind, we summarize the relevant law and apply it to ETC’s stored gas. We pay special attention to cases establishing a framework for dealing with property that stops in a state amidst an otherwise interstate journey. On one side of the spectrum are cases involving a clearly transitory stop. See, e.g., Champlain Realty Co. v. Town of Brattleboro,
HCAD argues cases on the other end of the spectrum are more analogous. These cases invariably contain a stoppage for some other (usually business-centric) purpose. See, e.g., id. at 12,
Where property has come to rest within a state, being held there at the pleasure of the owner, for disposal or use, so that*382 he may dispose of it either within the state, or for shipment elsewhere, as his interest dictates, it' is deemed to- be a part of the general mass of property within the state and is thus subject to its taxing power.
Blasius,
Starting with the cases finding continuity of transit, Carson Petroleum bears perhaps the closest resemblance to the current scenario; both cases involve oil or gas that is stopped awaiting transport to a final destination.
No such transport dilemma exists here. Natural-gas transportation does not involve the disjointed, moving pieces found in Carson Petroleum. Quite the opposite; HPL’s storage facility and pipeline are, at all times, connected to an interstate pipeline system. But ETC does not utilize this fixed means of transportation for months at a time, choosing instead to entrust massive quantities of gas to HPL for extended storage and eventual transportation. Thus, ETC’s gas, unlike the oil in Carson Petroleum, is not paused in anticipation of the return of its only means, of transportation.
Rather, the gas storage here mirrors stoppages in cases finding a lack of continuity. Again, those cases stress that property shall not be considered in transit when it “has come to rest within a state, being held there at the pleasure of the owner, for disposal or use, so that he may dispose of it either within the state, or for shipment elsewhere, as his interest dictates.” Blasius,
This case bears a close resemblance to the scenario in Federal Compress & Warehouse Co. v. McLean,
It is clear that by all accepted tests the cotton, while in [the] warehouse, has not begun to move in interstate commerce, and hence is not a subject of interstate commerce immune from local taxation. When it comes to rest there, its intrastate journey, whether by truck or by rail, comes to an end, and, although in the ordinary course of business the cotton would ultimately reach points outside the state, its journey interstate does not begin, and so it does not become exempt from local tax until its shipment to points of destination outside the state. Before shipping orders are given, it has no ascertainable destination without the state, and in‘the meantime, until surrender of the warehouse receipts, it is subject to the exclusive control of the owner. Property thus withdrawn from transportation, whether intrastate or interstate, until restored to a transportation movement interstate, has often been held to be subject to local taxation.
Id. at 21,
McLean serves another important function in this case; it belies ETC’s argument that HPL’s physical control of the gas means ETC cannot possess a business purpose with respect to storage. Specifically, ETC argues it is HPL (if anyone) who derives a business purpose from the storage. But McLean—which identified the stored cotton as not in transit—dealt with this exact same entrustment scenario and made no such distinction. See id. at 19,
ETC’s control-versus-ownership distinction is weakened further when we examine its business arrangement with HPL. HPL
ETC argues further that excessive reliance on its profit-based motive threatens to render the substantial-nexus inquiry a nullity. After all, ETC says, what for-profit taxpayer does not serve a business purpose with every choice it makes? But if ETC’s fears were justified (they are not), the many decisions of the Supreme Court would reflect a business-purpose finding in every case involving a for-profit taxpayer (they do not). Alas, ETC cites case after case in which the Supreme Court found continuity of transit despite the taxpayer deriving some economic benefit from completing the journey. See, e.g., Kelley,
The foregoing discussion tips the scale toward a finding that the stored gas is not in transit and thus has a substantial nexus with Texas.
But we are not done. ETC, the aligned amici, and the dissent offer several more arguments invoking allegedly unique characteristics of natural-gas transportation. These characteristics, they say, make storage a necessary component of the natural-gas transportation scheme such that ETC’s storage does not break continuity of transit. First, ETC explains that storage is necessary to preserve an adequate supply of gas as demands rise and fall throughout the year. But this argument is self-defeating because it points to a reason we have already recognized as being a business, not transportation, purpose: creation of a surplus to meet fluctuating consumer demands. See Calvert v. Zanes-Ewalt Warehouse, Inc.,
Also invalid is ETC’s second reason: natural-gas storage is necessary because when demand is low, excess gas must be removed from the pipeline so as to control pipeline pressure and maintain structural integrity. This storage, urges ETC, functions to ensure safe, convenient transpor
Instead, ETC’s argument is that its storage allows the pipeline itself to remain open for gas to flow freely. For this proposition, ETC cites Schneidewind v. ANR Pipeline Co.—a case dealing with the scope of FERC’s regulatory authority. See
There is a good reason why the cited cases zero in on interruptions that facilitate transportation of the stopped goods and not transportation generally: removal of property from a channel of interstate commerce always has the coordinate effect of clearing the channel for other property to travel. If that coordinate effect were enough to render a stoppage transitory, it would call into question the taxability of a host of circumstances we thought to be
So let us once again focus on the journey of ETC’s taxed gas. Put in practical terms, ETC’s claimed purpose for its extended storage is due to a mechanical constraint on the transportation system—HPL’s limited pipeline capacity. But that constraint does not require the gas to remain sedentary for months at a time. Even if the pipeline’s diameter was miles wide and could accommodate all of the reservoir’s gas at once, ETC would continue to store its gas until the profitable winter season. ETC’s need for extended storage is thus divorced from HPL’s mechanical limitations: it is due to ETC’s practice of injecting gas that lacks a known destination and that exceeds consumer demand. To be sure, there is nothing untoward about that purpose—it is no doubt expected in the natural-gas industry to conduct business as ETC does. But from the Commerce Clause’s perspective, the circumstances of a stoppage matter. Succinctly, ETC does not store gas to facilitate a continuous journey; ETC stores gas to avoid transportation for the time being—the antithesis of continuity.
Finally, ETC points to FERC regulations to make its case that its gas storage is inextricably intertwined with transportation. In particular, ETC relies on a definitional provision: “Transportation includes storage.” 18 C.F.R. § 284.1. Because FERC groups the terms together, ETC argues, storage is inherent to transportation such that ETC’s stored gas is still in transit. Ultimately, the regulation’s context casts doubt on that inference.
In examining the meaning and the purpose of Section 284.1, “a page of history is worth a volume of logic.” N.Y. Tr. Co. v. Eisner,
This history is instructive. It is plain that FERC’s choice to expand the definition of transportation is not a proclamation on the transitory nature of all gas placed in storage. Nor does FERC’s definition provide insight into the propriety of state taxation in the case at hand. FERC simply chose to broaden the scope of its anti-discrimination regulations. And the fact that property is subject to the regulatory power of Congress (or here, an administrative agency) is immaterial to the separate question of whether the state can levy a constitutional, nondiscriminatory tax. See Blasius,
Having exhausted ETC’s arguments to the contrary, we conclude that ETC’s storage here broke continuity of transit. Therefore, we find the gas bore a substantial nexus to the state such that the first prong of Complete Auto is satisfied. To the extent the court of appeals in Peoples found otherwise for similarly situated gas, we disapprove of that analysis. We now take the remaining Complete Auto prongs in turn.
2. Fair Apportionment
To survive Commerce Clause scrutiny, a tax must also be fairly' apportioned to activities occurring within the state. The purpose of this prong is to “ensure that each State taxes only its fair share of an interstate transaction.” Goldberg v. Sweet,
ETC warns that if Texas’s tax were to stand, it would subject ETC to the risk of multiple taxation across other jurisdictions. In doing so, ETC confuses both the specific nature of the inquiry and the scope of Texas’s ad valorem tax. First, the test does not ask whether an array of varying tax schemes could double tax property traveling across state lines; it asks whether an identical tax, imposed elsewhere, would impose a greater tax burden on traveling property than on property that remains within the state. See id. This distinction is vital considering the boundaries of the ad valorem tax. In relevant part, Texas’s tax
The import of Texas’s widely-adopted taxing scheme, from a Commerce Clause perspective, is that the tax recognizes a simple truth: property can only be in one place at one time. By placing both a geographic and a temporal limit on the state’s taxing power, the ad valorem tax and its hypothetical counterparts effectively negate the possibility of multiple taxation across jurisdictions—the scheme ensures that each piece of property is taxed only once per year.
3. Discrimination Against Interstate Commerce
Under the third prong of Complete Auto, we ask whether the ad valorem tax discriminates against interstate commerce. Specifically, we examine whether the tax provides “differential treatment of in-state and out-of-state economic interests that benefits the former and burdens the latter.” Or. Waste Sys., Inc. v. Dep’t of Env’tl Quality of Or.,
ETC and aligned amici argue the tax here creates a “financial barrier” around Harris County, discriminating against interstate transporters by forcing those transporters to avoid the jurisdiction and the accompanying tax. That argument is incorrect for several reasons. First, all taxes burden commerce—that much is inescapable. Yet a tax is discriminatory only when it burdens commerce because of the commerce’s interstate character. See id. Of course, no differential treatment is at play here. The ad valorem tax targets all qualifying personal property; it pays no attention to the property’s intended destination. We recognized as much in Diamond Shamrock, relegating the discussion to a footnote and explaining “[t]here is no possible question that this nondiscriminatory ad valorem tax fails the third prong of the
Second, and more fundamentally, ETC’s financial-barrier argument implicitly equates every tax with a discriminatory burden. That the imposition of a tax will cause ETC and others to avoid Harris County is not evidence of discrimination but rather the consequence of a business reality; businesses will travel to jurisdictions where the cost of doing business is the cheapest. In fact, purely intrastate transporters of gas would be equally inclined to avoid Texas and head for greener (more tax friendly) pastures. The Supreme Court recognized this simple truth in saying, “[i]t was not the purpose of the commerce clause to relieve those engaged in interstate commerce from their just share of state tax burden even though it increases the cost of doing the business.” W. Live Stock v. Bureau of Revenue,
4. Reasonable Relationship to Services
To conclude our Commerce Clause analysis, Complete Auto requires us to determine whether the tax at issue is reasonably related to the services provided by the state. This fourth prong “requires no detailed accounting of the services provided to the taxpayer on account of the activity being taxed.” Jefferson Lines,
ETC does not argue that the degree of the tax is disproportionate to the amount of services provided but rather that the stored gas is not the beneficiary of any services worthy of a state tax. ETC advances this position by again distinguishing its stored gas from HPL’s pipeline facility.
Though ETC cites Peoples as support for the distinction between the facility and stored gas, the chain of authority goes no further.
Furthermore, the approach advanced by ETC threatens to provide—quite literally—tax shelters to dealers in interstate goods. Indeed, those dealers could avoid state taxation altogether, by storing their goods in a warehouse, so long as the warehouse is owned by someone else.-At bottom, ETC willfully contracted for and benefits from the activity of gas storage. So long as ETC enjoys the “opportunities and protections which the state has afforded in connection with” storage (it most certainly does), the mere fact of an entrustment relationship should not relieve ETC of a nondiscriminatory tax burden. Commonwealth Edison,
IV. Conclusion
Having met all the prongs of Complete Auto, the tax levied in this case withstands constitutional scrutiny. And because the tax does not violate the Commerce Clause, neither does it violate Section 11.12 of the Texas Tax Code, which provides a state-law exemption for taxes that would otherwise violate federal law. Tex, Tax Code § 11.12.
To be clear, our holding, does not constitute blanket approval of any taxation of stored natural gas. As is the case with all property, there may be circumstances in which taxation of gas runs afoul of the
The judgment of the court of appeals is affirmed.
Justice Brown filed a concurring opinion, in which Justice Willett joined.
Notes
. See Cardoni v. Prosperity Bank,
. The default appraisal date for ad valorem taxes is January 1 of the tax year. Tex. Tax. Code § 23,01. But the Tax Code also gives most owners of inventory the option to use September 1 from the preceding year as an alternative appraisal date. Id. § 23.12(f). ETC chose a September appraisal.
. ETC relies also on Section 11.12, which ensures that "(plroperty exempt from ad valo-rem taxation by federal law is exempt from taxation," Tex. Tax Code § 11.12. Our conclusion on the constitutional question will necessarily control our conclusion on this Tax Code .exemption.
. There is no dispute that ETC’s reliance on Section 11.12 (the state-law exemption for taxes prohibited by federal law) is preserved. ETC referenced this exemption numerous times. In fact, the exemption was the only Tax Code provision cited in ETC’s motion,
. ETC argues alternatively that by citing Midland Central Appraisal District v. BP American Production Co.,
, Of course, there may be some (if not many) cases in which property is outside the stream of interstate commerce and would likewise not be in transit (were a court to reach that issue). We conclude simply that a finding of the latter does not guarantee the former.
. In Missouri Gas, the court did not have to engage in any line drawing because a certain amount of the gas was held at the facility "at all times during the tax years in question.”
. We recognize again that a lack of transit used to mean a lack of interstate commerce. As such, we give weight to the Court’s in-transit analysis, not its conclusion about the existence of interstate commerce in the first instance.
, For instance, if facilitating transportation in general was sufficient to deem a stoppage transitory, would not the always-present cushion gas (something both parties agree is taxable) be immune because it provides the requisite pressure to create transit? And if ETC stored its gas for not months, not years, but decades, would that gas not also be immune from taxes by "facilitating transportation” all the while? These are but a few of the potential consequences of adopting ETC’s theory.
. In fact, the procedural history of Missouri Gas indicates that FERC itself seems to agree with this conclusion. There the Oklahoma Supreme Court likewise concluded that FERC regulations were immaterial to the substantial-nexus question. Mo. Gas,
. As explained earlier, most owners of inventory are free to elect a September 1 appraisal as an alternative. Tex. Tax Code § 23.12(f).
. In reality, every state that borders Texas appraises property as of January 1, meaning the "hypothetical identical tax” is not so hypothetical after all. See N.M. STAT. ANN. § 7-38-7 ("All property subject to valuation for property taxation purposes shall be valued as of January 1 of each tax year .... ”); 68 Okla. Stat. Ann. § 2831(a) (assessing ad valo-rem taxes as of “the first day of January of each year”); Ark. Code Ann. § 26-26-1201 ("All property in this state shall be assessed by the authorized authorities according to its value on January 1.”); La. Stat. Ann. 47:1952 § 1952 (assessing taxes on the "first day of January”).
.For example, envision 20 cubic feet of gas. Assume further that all the gas resides initially in Texas and is taxed on January 1 of year one. Then, 10 cubic feet of gas travels to Oklahoma. In year two—pursuant to the hypothetically identical Oklahoma tax—the Oklahoma gas is taxed on January 1. Yet the 10 cubic feet of gas remaining in Texas is also taxed on January 1 of year two, i.e., an identical tax burden on all of the gas despite the existence of interstate travel.
. ETC's additional citation to American River Transportation Co. v. Bower, 351 Ill.App.3d
, The court’s reasoning in Peoples may have followed from its earlier reliance on the taxpayer’s physical presence. See 270 S,W.3d at 219. Just as we rejected that logic in discussing the substantial-nexus prong, we do so here as well. In a case involving ad valorem taxation, it is the property that must bear a substantial nexus, and it is the property that must receive services—not the taxpayer.
Concurrence Opinion
joined by Justice Willett, concurring.
The “dormant Commerce Clause” of the United States Constitution is an implication—a “judge-invented rule”
As it must, the Court subjects ETC’s contention to Complete Auto Transit, Inc. v. Brady’s
The Supremacy Clause obliges us to apply Complete Auto and do our best to reconcile it with other U.S. Supreme Court precedent.
The Commerce Clause, like so much of the Constitution, is not complicated: “The Congress shall have Power ... to regulate Commerce with foreign Nations, and among the several States, and with the Indian Tribes.”
The Founders wrote the Commerce Clause as a positive grant of power to Congress. But the Supreme Court has read into it “a further, negative command”
But enforcing the dormant Commerce Clause’s negative command does not require the courts “to perform a conventional judicial function, like interpreting a legal text, discerning a legal tradition, or even applying a stable body of precedents.”
Once the U.S. Supreme Court assumed for courts the duty to enforce the dormant Commerce Clause, it created methods for fulfilling that duty. The Complete Auto test is one such method—a means to evaluate whether a local tax touches on the concerns implicated by the dormant Commerce Clause; that is, whether a local tax impermissibly discriminates against interstate commerce. But courts are not obliged to approach that question solely through the laborious and mechanical application of
Nothing in this case hints that Harris County discriminates between intrastate and interstate natural gas. Or that it favors locally produced or marketed gas over out-of-state gas. Nothing about the tax works to the advantage of Harris County over other jurisdictions. And nothing indicates Harris County wouldn’t tax similar gas the same way regardless of who owned it, where it came from, or where it would eventually be sold. The “object” of this tax is not “economic protectionism”; it is not a tax that will “excite those jealousies and retaliatory measures the Constitution was designed to prevent.”
The Court reaches the same answer by applying the Complete Auto test. Again, I do not begrudge the Court’s work; had I written the majority opinion, I would be obliged to do the same. We should take care, however, to ensure that applying Complete Auto, and other judicially created constitutional tests, serves to elucidate rather than obscure the Constitution. With the rationale of the dormant Commerce Clause in mind, we must view the “substantial nexus” prong of the Complete Auto test as merely a means to clarify when a taxing entity has acted in a protectionist or discriminatory fashion.
It is hard to imagine how a “substantial nexus” could not exist between Harris County and 33 billion cubic feet of natural gas underneath its ground.
Indeed, the U.S. Supreme Court certainly has held that, in some cases, temporary storage—when necessary to a product’s
ETC times the market by buying natural gas when price and demand are low, waiting an indefinite period of time, and selling when demand and price are higher. As it stockpiles inventory, ETC does not know when it will sell or who or where its customers will be. In the meantime, ETC’s gas “has come to rest within a state, being held there at the pleasure of the owner, for disposal or use, so that [ETC] may dispose of it either within the state, or for shipment elsewhere, as [its] interest dictates.”
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The tedious application of a vexing, mul-ti-factored, judicial test is not tantamount to constitutional analysis. The Supremacy Clause obliges us to apply Complete Auto; the Court dutifully has done so. But a judicial test is merely a means to an end. And the end is sound interpretation of the Constitution’s plain words and original meaning. The dormant Commerce Clause itself is already enough of a deviation from the Constitution’s text. We need not compound the sin by relying exclusively on an imprecise, fabricated test to implement a made-up doctrine. We can objectively answer the question of constitutionality without resorting to such “interpretive jiggery-pokery.”
. Comptroller of the Treasury of Maryland v. Wynne, — U.S. —,
. Id. at 1811.
.
. Ante at 371; see also Diamond Shamrock Refining and Mktg. Co. v. Nueces Cty. Appraisal Dist.,
. Wynne,
. See Okla. Tax Comm’n v. Jefferson Lines, Inc.,
. U.S. Const. Art. VI, cl. 2; see also DIRECTV, Inc. v. Imburgia, — U.S. —,
. Graves v. New York,
. See Morrison v. Olson,
. U.S. Const. Art. I, Sec. 8, cl. 3.
. Hughes v. Oklahoma,
. Jefferson Lines,
. Wynne,
. C & A Carbone, Inc. v. Town of Clarkstown,
. Jefferson Lines,
. Wynne,
. Id.
. Id.
. Jefferson Lines,
. See Clarkstown,
. “[0]ur negative Commerce Clause jurisprudence has taken us well beyond the invalidation of obviously discriminatory taxes on interstate commerce. We have us.ed the Clause to make policy-laden judgments that we are ill equipped and arguably unauthorized to make. In so doing, we have developed multifactor tests in order to assess the perceived 'effect' any particular state tax or regulation has on interstate commerce. And in an unabashedly legislative manner, we have balanced that 'effect' against the perceived interests of the taxing or regulating State .,. Camps Newfound/Owatonna, Inc. v. Town of Harrison,
.See In re Assessment of Personal Prop. Taxes Against Mo. Gas Energy,
. See, e.g., Carson Petroleum Co. v. Vial,
. Minnesota v. Blasius, 290 U.S. 1, 10,
. King v. Burwell, - U.S. -,
. Boston Stock Exchange,
