This сase requires us to examine the role federal courts should play in settling challenges to state tax schemes. For the reasons that follow, we affirm the district court’s well-written opinion declining to exercise jurisdiction оver plaintiffs’ challenge to a New York state tax scheme that exempted New York City residents from a tax levied on parking services rendered in Manhattan. Pursuant to
Levin v. Commerce Energy, Inc.,
— U.S. -,
Background
New York State imposes, or authorizes New York City to impose, taxes of 18.375% on parking lots and garages in Manhattan. These taxes include various statewide, citywide, and mass-transit-funding taxes. Alsо included in that rate is a city-implemented 8% surtax on parking services rendered in Manhattan. N.Y. Tax Law § 1212-A. In 1985, the state legislature amended the tax law to provide an exemption from the 8% surtax for Manhattan residents for one parking space leased for one month or longer. N.Y. Tax Law § 1212-A (a)(1). Appellants include a group of commuters from New Jersey and New York outside of Manhattan, and a
The exemption is narrow. It exempts Manhattan residents frоm the -8% surtax only at their primary parking location and only where the resident can demonstrate: (1) that Manhattan is their primary residence; (2) that they pay for parking services rendered on a monthly or longer-term basis; (3) that the vehicle is not used to carry on any trade, business, or commercial activity; and (4) that the vehicle is registered to the individual’s primary residence in Manhattan. N.Y. Tax Law § 1212 — A.(a)(1)(i)(B); N.Y.C. Admin. Code § 11 — 2051(d). Appellees filed a motion to dismiss, arguing, amоng other things, that comity barred the federal courts from hearing plaintiffs’ challenge to the state law; the district court granted the motion. The district court held that comity concerns, explained by the Supreme Court in
Levin v. Commerce Energy, Inc.,
— U.S. -,
Discussion 1
I. The Comity Doctrine
Federal courts generally abstain from cases that challenge state taxation schemes on the basis that those claims are more appropriately resolved in state court.
See Nat’l Private Truck Council, Inc. v. Oklahoma Tax Comm’n,
The Supreme Court hаs interpreted the TIA as prohibiting only those challenges to state tax schemes that would inhibit state collection of taxes, as opposed to those that would- increase taxes a state could colleсt.
Hibbs v. Winn,
In Levin, the plaintiffs (natural gas companies) challenged tax exemptions granted to some of their competitors. Like Appellants here, the Levin plaintiffs сhallenged a state tax scheme; their challenge, if successful, would have increased the flow of taxes to the state. The Court rejected their claim, holding that even if the TIA did not bar the suit (because striking the exemptiоn would not decrease the state’s tax revenues), comity counseled against “the exercise of original federal-court jurisdiction.” Id. at 2332-33. In rejecting the propriety of federal adjudication of plaintiffs’ claims, Levin explained that “[cjomity’s constraint has particular force when lower federal courts are asked to pass on the constitutionality of state taxation of commercial activity.” Id. at 2330.
The Court differentiated Hibbs on its facts. It held that Hibbs was appropriately heard in federal court because it was not a “run-of-the-mine tax case” and was “not rationally distinguishable from a procession of pathmarking civil-rights controversies in which federal courts had entertained challenges to state tax credits without conceiving of the TIA as a jurisdictional barrier.” Id. at 2335, 2332 (internal quotation marks omitted). Levin, on the other hand, was distinguishable from Hibbs based on three factors present in Hibbs, but absent in Levin, that counseled in favor of federal court adjudication despite the general rule of comity: (1) the legislation at issue “employ[ed] classifications subject to heightened scrutiny or impinge[d] on fundamental rights”; (2) the plaintiffs were true “ ‘third parties’ whose own tax liability was not a relevant factor”; and (3) both federal and state courts had access to identical remedies because the claim concerned tax credits and thus was not subject to the constraints of the TIA. Id. at 2333-35.
II. Applying Levin v. Commerce Energy, Inc.
Here, dismissal of Appellants’ complaint was proper.
Hibbs,
unlike
Levin,
involved a right that was unquestionably fundamental, concerning the establishment of religion. At the time
Hibbs
was decided, moreover, the Supreme Court had accorded special deference to that right.
See Flast v. Cohen,
There is, moreover, no authority that the right to park one’s vehicle at a particular rate relative to others is sufficiently fundamental to trigger protection under the Privileges and Immunities Clause.
See United Bldg. & Constr. Trades Council of Camden Cnty. v. City of Camden,
Appellants are not true third parties to the tax measure in question. They argue that their challenge is restricted to the exemption and the exemption impacts Manhattan residents’ tax liability, rather than their own.
Levin
foreclosed that argument. The
Levin
plaintiffs also objected to an exemption awarded to anоther tax
Lastly, because the TIA prevents federal courts from eliminating a source of tax revenue, federal courts are limited in the remedies they may grant when deciding a challenge to a state taxation scheme. For this reason, Levin held that where the state court has more flexibility to determine and choose a remedy, and where an adequate, speedy, and efficient remedy exists in state court, the federal courts should abstain from hearing the case. Id. at 2328, 2339. 3
Appellants assert that the New York courts are unable to grant any remedy that differs from that available in federal court. But Appellants misinterpret New York law. Apрellants rely on
Tennessee Gas Pipeline v. Urbach,
because it requirеs the Court to define the parameters of the credit and the manner in which it will be implemented. This violates fundamental separation of powers principles. The savings provision would require us to rewrite the statute and create quasi-judicial tax regulations. We are not well suited as an institution for such a task.
Id. That the court did not feel it should (or could) rewrite a statute does not mean that New York courts cannot prevent enforcemеnt of tax provisions if the result would decrease a state’s revenue.
New York courts can, and do, enjoin the enforcement of tax provisions.
See Day
Because New York state courts have the ability to implement a remedy that the federal court cannot,
Levin
counsels in favor of dismissing thе complaint pursuant to comity because “limitations on the remedial competence of lower federal courts counsel that they refrain from taking up cases of this genre, so long as state courts arе equipped fairly to adjudicate them.”
Levin,
We have considered the plaintiffs’ remaining arguments, including their argument under the Dormant Commerce Clause, and find them unavailing. Because none of the Hibbs factors are present here, the district court wisely recognized that Levin counseled it to dismiss Appellants’ complaint on comity grounds. The district court’s decision to do so is affirmed.
Conclusion
The district court’s order that dismissed Apрellants’ Complaint without prejudice is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. We typically review a district court's decision to dismiss a complaint on jurisdictional grounds
de novo. See Rivers v. McLeod, 252
F.3d 99, 101 (2d Cir.2001). But, where, as here, a district court dismisses the action based on comity, we review the decision for abuse of discretion.
AEP Energy Servs. Gas Holding Co. v. Bank of America, N.A.,
.
One of the plaintiffs, Bruce Schwartz, is not in
Levins
terms a competitor and therefore this aspect of the
Levin
decision does not apply to him. There are serious questions as to whether Schwartz would have standing.
See Arizona Christian Sck. Tuition Org. v. Winn,
- U.S. -,
. The
Levin
court noted that, in state tax cases on review from state high courts, the Supreme Court, for reasons of "federal-state comity,” will remand the case to the state court to formulate an interim solution if the tax scheme suffers from a constitutional defect.
If lower federal courts were to give audience to the merits of suits alleging uneven state tax burdens, however, recourse to state court for the interim remedial determination would be unavailable. That is so beсause federal tribunals lack authority to remand to the state court system an action initiated in federal court. Federal judges, moreover, are bound by the TIA; absent certain exceptions the Act precludes relief that would diminish state revenues, even if such relief is the remedy least disruptive of the state legislature’s design.
Levin,
