This appeal arises at a first-impression intersection between our State's franchise-tax law and the federal laws that restrict the export of military articles from the United States to foreign nations. The pivotal issue concerns the proper "sourcing," for Texas franchise-tax-apportionment purposes, of receipts from Lockheed Martin Corporation's sales of fighter aircraft through "Foreign Military Sales" (FMS) transactions. FMS transactions, simply described, and as relevant here, entail the United States government's procurement from a domestic contractor of defense articles for resale to, and ultimate use by, the *857military forces of a foreign government. The Comptroller insists that Lockheed Martin's revenues from these FMS transactions are Texas receipts (and, therefore, serve ultimately to increase the company's Texas franchise-tax liability) because of certain U.S. government actions that occurred here. Lockheed Martin urges that the receipts are instead properly sourced to the respective foreign nations of the aircraft's ultimate users. The district court agreed with the Comptroller, and hence this appeal by Lockheed Martin. We will affirm the district court's judgment.
THE FMS TRANSACTIONS
The federal legal landscape that forms the context of the parties' Texas tax dispute begins with the Arms Export Control Act (AECA), which restricts sales of U.S.-made military goods and services to foreign nations so as to ensure consistency with U.S. foreign-policy and strategic interests.
Although these government-to-government FMS transactions can include sales from existing U.S. government stocks,
Federal courts have recognized that the legal implications for "this dual-contract structure" include "preclud[ing] the foreign sovereign from directly suing the U.S. contractor for its performance on an FMS contract,"
As compared to direct sales, the foreign government cedes "significant control" to the U.S. government in FMS transactions regarding the terms of the procurement being made on the foreign government's behalf, including the price of the articles being acquired.
Some defense articles may be purchased only through the FMS Program. Participation in the FMS Program may also present political advantages to the foreign government and help[ ] to build strong relationships between the United States military and its foreign counterpart. Additional benefits to foreign governments include shorter procurement delays, lower prices through economies of scale achieved by the [DoD], and the opportunity to benefit from the DoD's familiarity with the U.S. defense procurement system.16
The FMS transactions at issue here specifically involved the U.S. government's purchase of F-16 fighter jets from Lockheed Martin for resale to the governments of Chile, Greece, Israel, Oman, or Poland. The material features of these transactions were stipulated or otherwise undisputed by the parties, and were consistent with the basic outline of FMS transactions just described. The U.S. government executed an LOA with each foreign government and in turn executed procurement contracts with Lockheed Martin. The procurement contracts were sole-source agreements with Lockheed Martin that incorporated some aircraft specifications originating with the foreign governments. However, a representative copy of the contracts between the U.S. government and Lockheed Martin reflects that the aircraft purchases were a type that the U.S. government had authorized only through the FMS process and not direct sales.
Lockheed Martin manufactured each of the jets at the large facility it owns and operates in Fort Worth. At that location, *860an authorized U.S. government representative (specifically, a representative of the Defense Contract Management Agency, a DoD arm) signed a "Material Inspection and Receiving Report" (termed a "DD250" form) signifying the U.S. government's final acceptance of each jet as meeting the requirements of its contract with Lockheed Martin. That event, the parties further stipulated, also represented the passage of title to each jet from Lockheed Martin to the U.S. government, upon which Lockheed Martin was entitled to request payment from the U.S. government. The U.S. government paid Lockheed Martin for the aircraft from funds the end-user foreign government had on deposit with the U.S. government or for which the U.S. government had extended credit to the foreign government based upon a "dependable undertaking."
The title transfer to the U.S. government served in part to facilitate its ultimate delivery of each jet to the foreign government end user in its respective territory.
THE FRANCHISE-TAX DISPUTE
The Texas franchise tax "is a tax on the privilege of doing business in Texas."
When initially calculating and paying its Texas franchise taxes for the three years in question, Lockheed Martin treated its revenues from the FMS transactions as Texas receipts. In 2011, however, Lockheed Martin filed amended reports and later a refund claim predicated on the assertion that these receipts should have been sourced instead to the respective foreign nations of the aircraft's end users. The corresponding adjustment-removing the FMS receipts from the numerator of the apportionment factor-would yield a reduction in Lockheed Martin's franchise-tax liability for the refund period that the parties later stipulated to be approximately $2.5 million. The Comptroller ultimately denied the refund claim. After exhausting its remaining administrative remedies, Lockheed Martin pursued its refund claim through a de novo action in district court.
At each level of the litigation, the parties' dispute has centered principally on construction and application of the Tax Code provision that at relevant times guided determination of a taxpayer's "gross receipts from business done in this state." That provision, a now-former Section 171.1032, prescribed that this all-important numerator in the apportionment factor included the taxpayer's receipts from:
each sale of tangible personal property if the property is delivered or shipped to a buyer in this state regardless of the FOB point or another condition of the sale....26
There is no question that the aircraft at issue are "tangible personal property" and that Lockheed Martin made some form of a "sale" of each and earned receipts. The parties have likewise seemed to agree that "delivered" as used in Former Section 171.1032 denoted the concept of "delivery," i.e., the transfer of possession or control over each jet.
*862point
The Comptroller
The Comptroller views this singular focus on the location at which delivery occurred-which it terms "the place-of-delivery test"-as a settled principle of Texas franchise-tax-apportionment jurisprudence. The Comptroller derives that notion chiefly from this Court's 1981 decision in Bullock v. Enserch Exploration, Inc .
It is self-evident from the facts ... that [the taxpayer corporations] are not sellers of natural gas to out-of-state buyers. These transactions begin and end in Texas. [The predecessor statute] clearly provides that "when the property is delivered or shipped to a purchaser within this State," a sale of such property constitutes gross receipts from business done in Texas "regardless of the F.O.B. point or other conditions of the sale ...." It makes no difference that the gas eventually moves in interstate commerce. For the purposes of this tax, its status is simply determined by whether such property, when sold, is delivered or shipped to a purchaser within Texas.34
The Comptroller further emphasizes that the Texas Supreme Court later cited Enserch in discussing the meaning of "business done in Texas" and opined, regarding the same sourcing language at issue in Enserch and here, that "it is apparent that the Legislature sought to collect franchise tax from corporations that deliver or ship personal property to purchasers within Texas."
The Comptroller also relies on a since-repealed rule applicable to this case (Former Rule 3.557) in which his office had implemented the "place-of-delivery test."
the sale of tangible personal property which is delivered in Texas to a purchaser. Delivery is complete upon transfer of possession or control of the property to the purchaser, an employee of the purchaser, or to transportation vehicles leased or owned by the purchaser. F.O.B. point, location of title passage, or other conditions of the sale are not relevant to the determination of Texas gross receipts.37
As the italicized language emphasizes, the Comptroller construed Former Section 171.1032's reference to "property ... delivered or shipped to a buyer in this state" to denote delivery in Texas, regardless where the buyer might otherwise be considered to be located. Other components of Former Rule 3.557 similarly prescribed that Texas receipts also included sales of goods delivered in Texas "to an employee or transportation agent of an out-of-state purchaser" (including a carrier that "is *864under the supervision and control of the purchaser with respect to the manner in which goods are transported"), the "sale and delivery in Texas of [goods] that are loaded into a barge, truck, airplane, vessel, tanker, or any other means of conveyance leased and controlled or owned by the purchaser of the [goods]," and "the sale of tangible personal property which is delivered to and stored in a warehouse or other storage facility in Texas at the purchaser's request," as opposed to a necessary delay in transit, even though the property is subsequently shipped outside Texas.
Lockheed Martin decries the Comptroller's construction of Former Section 171.1032 as elevating "form over substance" and ignoring the "economic realities" underlying its FMS transactions, contrary to the admonishments of both the Texas Supreme Court and this Court.
To the extent its "purchasing agent" theory would potentially imply that the foreign governments took delivery of the jets in Texas through the U.S. government acting on their behalf, Lockheed Martin makes a broader challenge to the Comptroller's "place-of-delivery test" as misreading Enserch and the underlying statutory language. The determining factor under Former Section 171.1032 and provisions like it, Lockheed Martin urges, is not whether delivery occurred in Texas, but whether the buyer was in Texas. While the location of the buyer and that of delivery may coincide when a buyer in this state also takes delivery in this state (and Lockheed Martin posits that Enserch was addressed to that situation), the distinction takes on greater practical significance when the buyer is located out of state. In that situation, the effect of Lockheed Martin's proposed construction differs from that of the Comptroller's "place-of-delivery rule" by excluding receipts generated by out-of-state buyers who merely take delivery of goods in Texas and immediately transport them elsewhere.
The competing constructions of Lockheed Martin and the Comptroller represent opposing sides in a larger nationwide divergence over the proper construction of language analogous to Former Section 171.1032. That language tracks a model act, the Uniform Division of Income for Tax Purposes Act (UDITPA),
Because the ultimate destinations of the jets were the respective foreign nations, Lockheed Martin reasons, those governments were not "buyer[s] in this state" and the resultant sourcing of the receipts to Texas was improper under Former Section 171.1032. And to the extent Former Rule 3.557 would compel a contrary result, Lockheed Martin adds, the rule contradicts Former Section 171.1032 and is therefore invalid. In fact, Lockheed Martin complains, the rule inverts Former Section 171.1032's language, which focuses on whether property is "delivered or shipped to a buyer in [Texas]," to look instead to whether property "is delivered in Texas to a purchaser."
The district court, as noted previously, rendered judgment that Lockheed Martin take nothing on its refund claim. It subsequently made findings of fact and conclusions of law that were generally consistent with the Comptroller's arguments and contrary *867to Lockheed Martin's theories. These findings and conclusions were to the effect that Lockheed Martin's receipts from its FMS transactions were properly sourced to Texas under Former Section 171.1032 because the company's sales that generated the receipts were made to the U.S. government as the "buyer," those sales were completed in Texas, and the jets were delivered to the U.S. government in Texas.
ANALYSIS
A tax-refund suit is a form of de novo judicial review on which the claimant (here, Lockheed Martin) has the burden of proof by a preponderance of the evidence.
The threshold question we must consider under Former Section 171.1032 is the identity of the relevant "buyer" or "buyers" to which Lockheed Martin made its "sales" of the aircraft
Lockheed Martin is correct that we cannot "disregard the economic realities underlying the transactions at issue" when construing and applying tax statutes like Former Section 171.1032.
Nor are the foreign governments Lockheed Martin's "buyers," to the exclusion of the U.S. government, even in substantive effect. As we acknowledged in our introductory explanation of FMS transactions, the U.S. government to some extent does act "on behalf of" a foreign government or akin to a hired purchaser when conducting FMS procurements. But that review also illustrates that any such effects or implications occur within a statutory and transactional framework that exists for the dominant purpose of advancing the U.S. government's own national-security and foreign-policy interests, and to which ends the U.S. government concomitantly possesses ultimate power and control over the transactions relative to the foreign nations' respective interests.
For example, United States ex rel. Campbell v. Lockheed Martin Corp. concerned FMS transactions in which the U.S. government had contracted with Lockheed Martin to provide navigational equipment that the U.S. government would resell to various foreign nations.
The [U.S.] Government is an independent actor and not a true "fiduciary" or "agent" of a foreign government in the Foreign Military Sales program. Under the AECA, the President (and by designation, the Department of Defense) may sell defense articles and services from two sources.... Regardless of whether the sales are stock sales or procured item sales, it is the United States who is selling the items to the foreign governments.
In this arrangement there is no privity of contract between Lockheed and the foreign countries. Instead, Lockheed was obligated to deliver [the navigational equipment] to the United States and the United States was obligated to pay Lockheed for the [goods]; the Government's obligation to pay was not contingent on receipt of funds from a foreign government. The foreign nations have no obligation to pay Lockheed, and the United States government actually takes title to the [goods] upon delivery from Lockheed, and title then passes from the United States to the foreign government. The United States is benefitting its own foreign policy interests when it undertakes the sale of military equipment under the FMS program, and the United States has the option of refusing to resell to the foreign government even if an LOA exists.70
And as previously observed, the U.S. government's decision to require use of the FMS acquisition method in lieu of direct sales, as there was evidence here,
The logic of these federal decisions, which we find persuasive, counsels us similarly to hold that the U.S. government was the "buyer" in Lockheed Martin's aircraft sales for purposes of Former Section 171.1032. It follows that Lockheed Martin's receipts from the FMS transactions are properly sourced to Texas. This is so regardless of whether we apply the Comptroller's place-of-delivery test or instead adopt the ultimate-destination analysis urged by Lockheed Martin. Under the former approach, it would be decisive that delivery of the jets to the U.S. government *871occurred at Lockheed Martin's facility in Fort Worth. As for the latter, Lockheed Martin does not appear to contest that the U.S. government or military, which has personnel at the Fort Worth facility, would be considered a Texas buyer. Under either view, as in Enserch , the critical consideration is that the Lockheed Martin-U.S. government sales transactions would "begin and end in Texas."
CONCLUSION
We affirm the district court's judgment.
Affirmed
Notes
See generally
See
See
See
See Heroth v. Kingdom of Saudi Arabia ,
BAE Sys. Tech. Sol. & Servs. v. Republic of Korea's Def. Acquisition Program Admin. ,
Heroth ,
BAE Sys. Tech. Sol. ,
See United States ex rel. Campbell v. Lockheed Martin Corp. ,
See
See General Elec. Corp. ,
See BAE Sys. Tech. Sol. ,
See Trimble Navigation Ltd. ,
Heroth ,
The parties stipulated to the admission of a redacted copy of the contract between the U.S. government and Lockheed Martin for production of aircraft for use by Israel and further agreed that this agreement was "illustrative of the kind and type of documents deadline with each sale of foreign F-16s at issue." The face of this contract indicates, "FMS REQUIREMENT IAW [i.e., in accordance with] THE ARMS EXPORT CONTROL ACT."
See
Trimble Navigation Ltd. ,
See SAMM table 701-11 ("Additional Terms and Conditions").
TGS-NOPEC Geophysical Co. v. Combs ,
See Act of May 30, 1997, 75th Leg., R.S., ch. 1185, § 7,
Former Section 171.106(b); cf. Tex. Tax Code § 171.106(a) (providing that generally "a taxable entity's margin is apportioned to this state to determine the amount of tax imposed under Section 171.002 by multiplying the margin by a fraction, the numerator of which is the taxable entity's gross receipts from business done in this state, as determined under Section 171.103, and the denominator of which is the taxable entity's gross receipts from its entire business, as determined under Section 171.105").
Anderson-Clayton Bros. Funeral Home, Inc. v. Strayhorn ,
See Tex. Tax Code § 112.151.
Former Section 171.1032(a)(1); cf. Tex. Tax Code § 171.103(a)(1) (generally prescribing that "in apportioning margin, the gross receipts of a taxable entity from its business done in the state is the sum of the taxable entity's receipts from: ... each sale of tangible personal property if the property is delivered or shipped to a buyer in this state regardless of the FOB point or another condition of the sale").
See delivery , Black's Law Dictionary (10th ed. 2014) ("the formal act of voluntarily transferring something; esp., the act of bringing goods, letters, etc. to a particular person or place").
I.e., the location to which the seller bears the expense and risk of transporting the tangible personal property being sold. See Tex. Bus. & Com. Code § 2.319(a) (under Texas Uniform Commercial Code, "[u]nless otherwise agreed the term F.O.B. (which means "free on board") at a named place, even though used only in connection with the stated price, is a delivery term under which (1) when the term is F.O.B. the place of shipment, the seller must at that place ship the goods in the manner provided in this chapter (Section 2.504) and bear the expense and risk of putting them into the possession of the carrier; or (2) when the term is F.O.B. the place of destination, the seller must at his own expense and risk transport the goods to that place and there tender delivery of them in the manner provided in this chapter (Section 2.503); (3) when under either Subdivision (1) or (2) the term is also F.O.B. vessel, car or other vehicle, the seller must in addition at his own expense and risk load the goods on board. If the term is F.O.B. vessel the buyer must name the vessel and in an appropriate case the seller must comply with the provisions of this chapter on the form of bill of lading (Section 2.323)").
See, e.g. , Comptroller of Pub. Accounts, Docket No. 17,594 (1982) (final order) ("It seems clear from the language of [Former Section 171.1032's predecessor] that FOB point or other conditions of a sale relating to acceptance of the property, passage of title, or risk of loss are not controlling for purposes of determining whether the receipts from a particular sale are Texas receipts." (citing Comptroller of Pub. Accounts, Docket No. 11,083 (1984) ) ).
We use "Comptroller" to refer both to that office and the Attorney General in the context of the trial- and appellate-level litigation, as their interests are aligned. See Tex. Tax Code § 112.151(b) ("The suit must be brought against both the comptroller and the attorney general.").
Id. at 216.
See id. at 216-17 ("Appellees, Enserch and Continental, sell the gas they produce to interstate transmission companies which transport the gas to ultimate destinations located outside of Texas. Appellee, South Texas, purchases natural gas from producers and gathers, transports and sells this gas to interstate transmission companies in Texas which transport the gas to destinations in states other than Texas. There is a continuous and uninterrupted movement of the gas sold through the connecting pipeline of appellee South Texas and its purchasers from the time the gas is acquired by South Texas until it reaches its ultimate destination in another state.").
Id. at 217 (emphasis in original).
Sharp v. House of Lloyd, Inc. ,
See
See Combs v. Roark Amusement & Vending, L.P. ,
See Former Section 171.1032 ("... regardless of the FOB point or another condition of the sale").
See, e.g. , In reProcurements Involving Military Sales ,
Lockheed Martin has requested both this Court and the district court to take judicial notice of a commonly cited reference source in this arena, the Green Book. See generally Def. Sec. Cooperation Agency, Def. Institute of Sec. Cooperation Studies, The Management of Security Cooperation (37.1 ed. May 2017) [herein after Green Book ], http://disam.osd.mil/pubs/DR/greenbook.htm. "The Green Book is a textbook published by the Defense Institute of Security Management, the agency responsible for providing research support to advance U.S. foreign policy through security assistance." Trimble Navigation Ltd. ,
As a very broad generalization, the traditional FMS process can be characterized as a foreign purchaser, by means of the LOA, employing the DoD to conduct a defense procurement on its behalf. As such, the foreign purchaser entrusts the DoD to make decisions and take actions on its behalf. The foreign purchaser relies on the good faith commitment that DoD makes to conduct FMS procurement business in essentially the same manner that it conducts procurement business for itself. In this relationship of trust, there is no need for direct participation of the foreign purchaser in the procurement. DoD will execute the procurement based on the content of the LOA.
Green Book , at 15-9.
See Heroth ,
Unif. Division of Income for Tax Purposes Act § 16(a), 7A U.L.A. 147 (1957) ("Sales of tangible personal property are in this state if: (a) the property is delivered or shipped to a purchaser ... within this state regardless of the f.o.b. point or other conditions of the sale...."); see also Jerome R. Hellerstein, Walter Hellerstein, & John A. Swain, 1 State Taxation: Constitutional Limitations and Corporate Income and Franchise Taxes ¶ 9.18[1][a], at 9-251 (3d ed. 1988) [hereinafter Hellerstein] (describing this provision as "UDITPA's general destination rule for sales of tangible personal property").
See Hellerstein ¶ 9.18[1], at 9-251 ("The destination rule for attributing receipts from sales of tangible personal property ... is now in use, in one way or another, in every one of the forty-five states (and the District of Columbia) that employs a sales or receipts factor in the apportionment formulas of their corporate income taxes.").
See, e.g. , Hellerstein ¶ 9.18[1][a], at 9-255 (terming this construction "the ultimate-destination rule" and contrasting it with "the place-of-delivery rule").
See, e.g. , Sullivan v. Abraham ,
Hellerstein ¶ 9.18[1][a], at 9-256.
See id. ¶ 9.18[1][a], at 9-255 (while questioning that construction, acknowledging that "most courts that have considered the issue have adopted the ultimate-destination rule rather than the place-of-delivery rule" and terming these holdings "the overwhelming majority" view).
See Hellerstein ¶ 9.18[1][a], at 9-252 ("UDITPA, at least as construed by the Multistate Tax Commission (MTC), attributes sales to the state in which they are 'delivered ... to a purchaser,' whether or not that is the ultimate destination of the goods ... [t]hus, under UDITPA, as construed by the MTC regulations, it appears that if goods are sold to the buyer in State A and it sends its trucks to the terminal in State A to pick up the goods and transport them to its branches in other states, the good would be treated as having been 'delivered or shipped to a purchaser' in State A." (citing MTC Reg. IV 16(a)(3) ) ); see also Hercules, Inc. v. Utah State Tax Comm'n ,
See Hellerstein ¶ 9.18[1][a], at 9-255 (opining that ultimate-destination approach "introduce[s] time-consuming and burdensome complexities that require vendors to inquire into the course of a product's journey after it is turned over to the customer").
In conclusions of law 2 and 3, the district court held that Lockheed Martin was not entitled to its claimed refund because"[t]he receipts from the sale of the F-16s at issue are gross receipts of Lockheed Martin from business done in Texas" for purposes of apportionment under Former Section 171.1032 and Former Rule 3.557, and also made what was styled as a parallel ultimate finding (18) that "[t]he receipts from the sale of the F-16s at issue by Lockheed Martin to the USG are Texas receipts for Lockheed Martin." In support of these ultimate findings or conclusions, the district court made underlying findings or conclusions that included, in addition to those discussed in text, that "[t]he sales of the F-16s at issue were completed within Texas" (designated as finding of fact no. 17), that "[t]he [U.S. government] purchased the F-16s at issue in Fort Worth, Texas" (finding of fact no. 11), that "[t]he [U.S. government] took possession and control of the F-16s at issue in Fort Worth, Texas" (finding of fact no. 12), and that "Lockheed Martin delivered the F-16s at issue to the USG in Fort Worth, Texas" (finding of fact no. 14).
The district court also included a finding or conclusion, designated as finding of fact no. 19, that "[t]he F-16s at issue were not subject to taxes in any other state and are not subject to double taxation." This finding corresponds somewhat to a so-called "throwback" component of Former Section 171.1032, which deemed receipts from sales of personal property to be Texas receipts when "shipped from this state to a purchaser in another state in which the seller is not subject to any tax on, or measured by, net income, without regard to whether the tax is imposed." Former Section 171.1032(a)(1). However, the Comptroller has not purported to rely on this throwback provision as support for the district court's judgment, so we do not consider that possibility.
To be precise, the findings and conclusions cite a different rule, but the parties agree that this was a typographical error and was intended to refer to Former Rule 3.557(e)(37)(A).
See Allstate Ins. Co. v. Hegar ,
See Allstate Ins. Co. ,
Allstate Ins. Co. ,
See
See Former Section 171.1032(a)(1) (referencing "... each sale of tangible personal property if the property is delivered or shipped to a buyer in this state ...").
See sale , Black's Law Dictionary (10th ed. 2014) ("the transfer of property or title for a price"); sale , Webster's Third New International Dictionary Unabridged 2003 (Phillip Gove ed. 2002) ("the act of selling: a contract transferring the absolute or general ownership of property from one person or corporate body to another for a price; ... [the] transfer of such ownership of and title"); cf. Tex. Tax Code § 151.005 (defining "sale" or "purchase" for purposes of sales tax to include "a transfer of title or possession of tangible personal property" for consideration).
Roark Amusement & Vending, L.P. ,
See Combs v. Health Care Servs. Corp. ,
See Enserch ,
See
Seesupra pp. 857-59.
See
See
The False Claims Act, as analyzed by the Campbell court, created liability for any person who "knowingly presents, or causes to be presented, to an officer or an employee of the United States Government or a member of the Armed Forces a false or fraudulent claim for payment or approval; [or] ... knowingly makes, uses, or causes to be made or used, a false record or statement to get a false or fraudulent claim paid or approved by the Government."
Campbell ,
We acknowledge that Lockheed Martin presented witness testimony suggesting that, at least as a general proposition, the foreign nations had the option of choosing between FMS and the direct-sale method as a means of purchasing U.S.-made military articles. But the contract documents before the district court indicated otherwise, and it was the district court's province as factfinder to resolve such conflicts regarding credibility and weight. See City of Keller ,
Trimble Navigation Ltd. ,
See
Enserch ,
See Tex. R. App. P. 47.1.
