OPINION
I. INTRODUCTION
The Lake and Peninsula Borough (Borough) enacted and levied a license tax on guides and lodges. Several affected guides and lodges challenged the tax on a variety of constitutional grounds. The superior court granted summary judgment to the Borough. We affirm.
II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
The Lake and Peninsula Borough was inсorporated as a home rule borough in April 1989. In August 1990 the Borough Assembly enacted an ordinance which imposed an annual permit fee of $750 on lodge operators and $250 on professional guides. 1 In March 1992 the Borough Assembly amended the lodge and guide tax so that it varied with the size of the businesses being taxed. Under the amended tax, each lodge operator paid $50 per guest room with a $750 maximum, and each guide paid $1 per visitor day with a $250 maximum. The amendment also exempted from the tax air taxi operations which do no guiding.
Some of the lodge .owners protested the tax by refusing to pay it. In response the Borough filed a declaratory action seeking to have the tax declared valid and enforceable. The Borough also sought a monetary award of the unpaid assessments, interest, penalties and attorney’s fees. Most of the defendants settled оr had default judgments entered against them.
Ken Owsichek d/b/a Fishing Unlimited, Inc., Katmailand, Inc., Larry Todd d/b/a Todd’s Igiugig Lodge, and Alaska’s Enchanted Lake Lodge (Katmailand) moved for summary judgment. 2 Katmailand argued that the lodge and guide tax was impermissible because it violated the Equal Protection Clause of both the United States Constitution and the Alaska State Constitution, and exceeded the taxing powers of the Borough’s charter. The Borough responded with a cross motion for summary judgment. It sought a declaration that the tax was valid and enforceable. Following oral argument the superior court denied Katmailand’s motion for summary judgment and granted the Borough’s cross motion for summary judgment. The court concluded that the Borough had the authority to levy an occupational license tax on lodge operators and guides, and that this tax did not deny lodge operators and guides equal protection under the law. This appeal followed.
III. DISCUSSION
Katmailand claims that there are four issues on appeal: (1) whether the guide and lodge tax violates the Equal Protection
A. Standard of Review
This court reviews the superior court’s grant of summary judgment
de novo. See Tongass Sport Fishing Ass’n v. State,
B. The Guide and Lodge Tax Does Not Violate the Equal Protection Clause of Either the United States Constitution or the Alaska State Constitution
Katmailand argues that the lodge and guide tax violates the Equal Protection Clause of both the United States Constitution and the Constitution of the State of Alaska because the tax is imposed only on a select group, ie., lodge owners and guides. We disagree. The tax is valid under both state and federal equal protection case law.
Because the lodge and guide tax does not affect a fundamental interest or utilize a suspeсt classification, it need only survive review under the rational basis test to pass muster under a federal equal protection analysis.
See Exxon Corp. v. Eagerton,
Taxes are rarely found to be without a rational basis. This court and the United States Supreme Cоurt have held that review of taxes under the rational basis test is especially lenient. This court has noted that “[t]he rational basis standard is particularly easy to meet in the area of taxation.”
Atlantic Richfield Co.,
Katmailand contends that the tax fails the rational basis test because no evidence was presented that the purposes for which the tax were imposed were carried out. However, the Borough is not required to make such a showing; rather, Katmailand bears the burden of proof.
“[T]he presumption of constitutionality can be overcome only by the most explicit demonstration that a classification is a hostile and oppressive discrimination against particular persons and classes. The burden is on the one attacking the legislative arrangement to negative every conceivable basis which might support it.”
Regan,
The tax satisfies the rational basis test because the assessment of the guide and lodge tax is rationally related to a legitimate governmental interest. The Borough articulated a number of reasons in support of its decision to levy this tax: to encourage new business; to reсtify perceived taxation inequities by spreading the charges to businesses which burden services provided by the Borough; and to raise revenues. The Borough explains that in enacting this tax it was seeking to equalize the tax burden, which at the time was borne solely by the commercial fishing industry, but could not impose a broader based tax which might discourage new industries. The Borough rationally could conclude that this industry-specific tax serves the purpose of raising revenues, while encouraging development of desirable industries. 5
• Similarly, this tax passes muster under an Alaskan equal protection anаlysis. Encouraging new industry and balancing out the tax burden imposed on commercial fishing, which would not be accomplished by a broader based tax, are governmental interests significant enough to justify this tax under Alaska’s sliding scale of scrutiny. 6 In an analogous situation we have held that a similar rationale could justify an industry-specific tax exemption. We have opined:
It has repeatedly been held in other jurisdictions that a statute which secures the location within the state of immediate and useful industries by exempting them, though no others, from its taxes is not arbitrary and does not violate the Equal Protection Clause_
K & L Distrib., Inc. v. Murkowski,
C. The Guide and Lodge Tax Does Not Violate the Appellants’ Rights to Due Process as Guaranteed by the Federal Constitution
Katmailand claims that the guide and lodge tax violates the substantive due process rights guaranteed by the United States Constitution. Its entire argument consists of the unsupported assertion that outside of raising revenue, “there is no indication of a policy, rational or otherwise, to impose a tax on lodge owners and guides.”
The substantive due process requirement dictates that legislation must be at least minimally rational.
Gonzales v. Safeway Stores, Inc.,
“The constitutional guarantee of substantive due process assures that а legislative body’s decision is not arbitrary but instead based on some rational policy. Concerned Citizens of S. Kenai Peninsula v. Kenai Peninsula Borough,527 P.2d 447 , 452 (Alaska 1974). If any conceivable, legitimate public policy for the enactment is either apparent or offered by those defending the еnactment, the party challenging it must disprove the factual basis for the justification.”
Gonzales,
IV. CONCLUSION
The Lake and Peninsula Borough’s guide and lodge tax does not violate the Equal
Notes
. The guide and lodge tax is not the Borough's chief source of revenue. During fiscal year 1991, the Borough's fish tax resulted in collections of $438,397. For that same year the Borough only collеcted $14,250 under the lodge and guide tax. For fiscal year 1992 the fish tax produced $1,201,975 in revenues and the guide and lodge tax only yielded $32,364 in revenues.
. The names of some of the appellants differ from the parties listed on the summary judgment motion from which this appeal arises. The Appellants are listed as follows: Katmailand, Inc., Lorane Owsichek d/b/a Fishing Unlimited, Inc., Larry Todd d/b/a Todd's Igiugig Lodge, and Richard Matthews d/b/a Enchanted Lake Lodge.
. The United States Constitution provides:
No state shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any state deprive any person of lifе, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.
U.S. Const, amend. XIV, § 1, cl. 2.
The Alaska Constitution provides:
This constitution is dedicated to the principles that all persons have a natural right to life, liberty, the pursuit of happiness, and the enjoyment of the rewards of their оwn industry; that all persons are equal and entitled to equal rights, opportunities, and protection under the law; and that all persons have corresponding obligations to the people and to the State.
Alaska Const, art. I, § 1.
. Katmailand claims that the enactment of this tax exceeds the Borough's authоrity, because the Borough does not have the authority to levy unconstitutional taxes. This assertion is nothing more than a claim that this tax is unconstitution- . al. Similarly, the contention that the superior court erred in granting summary judgment is nothing more than a claim that the Borough did not meet its burden of proof on the сonstitutional issues.
.
See, e.g., Exxon Corp. v. Eagerton,
. Alaska utilizes a sliding scаle to determine the appropriate level of review for equal protection challenges.
State v. Ostrosky,
The interests involved in taxation challenges he at the low end of the continuum of interests protected, and thus are reviewed under a relaxed scrutiny.
Id.
With this relaxed scrutiny "less important governmental objectives will suffice and a greater degree of over/or underinclusiveness in the means-to-end fit will be tolerated.”
Ostrosky,
that the legislation be based on a legitimate public purpose and that the classification “be reasonable, not arbitrary, and ... rest upon some ground of difference having a fair and substantial relation to the object of the legislation.”
Id.
(quoting
Isakson v. Rickey,
. Katmailand spends a page of its brief discussing the fact that it is unclear what percentage of those against whom these taxes are assessed are constituents of the Borough. However, it does not develop any argument from this discussion of the residency status of those taxed. It cites no law which would require that those upon whom this kind of tax is assessed be constituents. If there is a Privileges and Immunities Clause or procedural due process argument latent in this discussion, we deem such argument waived. This court has frequently held that “where a point is given only a cursory statement in the argument portion of a brief, thе point will not be considered on appeal.”
Adamson v. University of Alaska,
Additionally, in its reply brief Katmailand claims that the central issue in this appeal is whether the enactment of the guide and lodge tax violated the procedural due process rights of the lodge ownеrs and guides. Katmailand’s procedural due process argument in essence contends that the amendments to the guide and lodge tax, which varied the rate of taxation by the number of beds and days of visitors, turned the tax into a sales tax. Katmailand further alleges that the Borough's failure to comply with the notice requirements of AS 29.45.660 in implementing this sales tax, denied it an opportunity to be heard.
Although Katmailand claims this is the issue upon which this appeal turns, it did not raise this issue in its opening brief or in the summary judgment motion from which this appeal arises. Katmailand has waived this argument by raising it first in its reply brief. Alaska Rule of Appellate Procedure 212(c)(3) mandates that the reply brief "may raise no contentionsjiot previously raised in either the appellant's or appellee’s briefs." Alaska R.App.P. 212(c)(3);
see also Conam Alaska v. Bell Lavalin, Inc.,
