LOCKHEED MARTIN CORPORATION, PETITIONER, v. GLENN HEGAR, COMPTROLLER OF PUBLIC ACCOUNTS OF THE STATE OF TEXAS, AND KEN PAXTON, ATTORNEY GENERAL OF THE STATE OF TEXAS, RESPONDENTS
No. 18-0566
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF TEXAS
May 1, 2020
ON PETITION FOR REVIEW FROM THE COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE THIRD DISTRICT OF TEXAS
Argued January 30, 2020
JUSTICE
JUSTICE BOYD filed a dissenting opinion.
This case involves a franchise-tax dispute, but federal law regulating foreign military sales plays a significant role in the resolution of that dispute. Lockheed Martin
I. Background
Because the transactions giving rise to this tax dispute were structured to comply with federal arms-control laws, we begin with a discussion of that framework.
A. Regulation of Foreign Military Sales
To support U.S. foreign-policy and national-security objectives, the Arms Export Control Act restricts sales of U.S.-manufactured military goods to foreign governments. See
FMS transactions begin with a “Letter of Request” from a foreign government identifying the defense articles or services the government wishes to purchase. 2003 SAMM § C5.1.1. The foreign government and the U.S. government then enter into a formal “Letter of Offer and Acceptance” (LOA) that itemizes the defense articles or services the foreign government intends to procure and the terms and conditions of the sale. See id. §§ C4.1.1, C5.4.1. LOAs may be “implemented” in one of two ways. First, under certain circumstances the Department of Defense may fulfill the order from its existing stocks.
Under that pathway, a signed LOA identifies the foreign buyer, sets out the precise design specifications requested, and includes plans for delivery to the buyer. See 2003 SAMM fig.C5.F2. The price of the items is set at “the total cost” to the U.S. government of procuring the items, regardless of whether that cost exceeds the LOA’s estimate.3
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit describes the FMS program as “requir[ing] the intermediation of the United States and a back-to-back contract structure.” Secretary of State for Def. v. Trimble Navigation Ltd., 484 F.3d 700, 707 (4th Cir. 2007). The structure “rеflects the national security interests of the United States” and forecloses implying a direct contractual relationship between the domestic contractor and the foreign purchaser. See id.; see also BAE Sys. Tech., 884 F.3d at 467 (“The U.S. government ‘determines the contract type, selects the contract source, and negotiates prices and contract terms with individual contractors.’” (quoting DEF. INST. OF SEC. COOPERATION STUDIES, THE MANAGEMENT OF SECURITY COOPERATION (GREEN BOOK) 15-8 (37.1 ed. 2017))).6 Thus, a procurement purchaser claiming defective items, rather than complaining directly to the contractor, is directed to submit a “supply discrepancy report” to the U.S. government, which “may be able to resolve the problem by seeking resolution through the contractor under the provisions of the . . . procurement contract.” Trimble Navigation, 484 F.3d at 704 (quoting 37.1 GREEN BOOK 8-11).
B. The FMS Transactions at Issue
The facts of this case are largely stipulated. Lockheed Martin Corporation is a global security and aerospace company engaged in the research, design, development, manufacture, integration, and sustainment of advanced technological systems, products, and services. Lockheed
The contracts between Lockheed Mаrtin and the U.S. government identified the respective foreign buyers and called for the jets to be designed to the buyers’ specifications, including integrating certain equipment furnished by the foreign buyers. A Ferry Plan associated with each transaction “define[d] events, tasks, and personnel associated with the delivery of [the] aircraft from Lockheed Martin . . . to [the foreign buyer].” Transfer of legal title to each of the F-16s occurred at Lockheed Martin’s Fort Worth facility upon the execution of a Material Inspection and Receiving Report (DD250) by an authorized U.S. government representative. The executed DD250 signified the U.S. government’s “final acceptance of the aircraft . . . as meeting the applicable contractual requirements.” Lockheed Martin was then authorized to request payment, which was made by the U.S. government “out of funds the foreign buyer ha[d] on deposit . . . or based upon a ‘dependable undertaking’ by that foreign government.”
In the next step of the transaction, the U.S. government representative signed a Requisition and Invoice/Shipping Document (DD Form 1149) documenting transfer of possession and control of the aircraft to the U.S. government.7 Another form, the Aerospace Vehicle Delivery Receipt (AFTO 290), documented the transfer of possession and control of the aircraft to a U.S. government pilot responsible for transporting it to the purchasing foreign government. A representative of that government countersigned the AFTO 290 upon final delivery of the aircraft. Pursuant to the Ferry Plan, Lockheed Martin retained certain obligations throughout the delivery process, such as providing “technical assistance” at intermediate locations and additional “on-site assistance and liaison support” at such locations as “necessary to allow uninterrupted delivery.”
C. Procedural History
The current dispute began when Lockheed Martin filed a claim with the Comptroller for a refund of the portion of its franchise taxes for the tax years 2005 through 2007 attributable to the sales of the F-16 aircraft described above. Lockheed Martin claimed that the receipts from its sales of those aircraft did not qualify as “Texas gross receipts” for purposes of apportioning taxable earned surplus and requested a refund of $2,671,154.83, plus interest. The Comptroller denied the claim. After exhausting its administrative remedies, Lockheed Martin brought this suit.
The trial court held a bench trial and rendered judgment for the Comptroller. The trial court found that the sales of the
II. Analysis
A. Standard of Review
A tax-refund claimant who exhausts administrative remedies may sue the Comptroller and obtain de novo judicial review of the claim. See
That said, as the court of appeals and the parties recognize, the material facts are essentially undisputed, and the outcome of the case hinges on the proper interpretation of former section 171.1032 of the Texas Tax Code. Statutory interpretation is, of course, an issue of law that we review de novo. Sw. Royalties, Inc. v. Hegar, 500 S.W.3d 400, 404 (Tex. 2016).
B. Franchise Tax
We have described thе Texas franchise tax as a tax on the privilege of doing business in Texas. In re Nestle USA, Inc., 387 S.W.3d 610, 621–22 (Tex. 2012). For the tax years at issue, an entity was required to pay Texas franchise tax on its “earned surplus” apportioned to Texas. See Former
“gross receipts of a corporation from its business done in this state” include “each sale of tangible personal property if the property is delivered or shipped to a buyer in this state regardless of the FOB point12 or another condition of the sale.”
1. Identity of the Buyer
The parties’ dispute has largely focused on the identity of the relevant “buyer” for purposes of former section 171.1032. Lockheed Martin asserts that, in a cohesive FMS transaction involving the manufacture and sale of military goods to a foreign government, that foreign government is the “buyer,” and the sale therefore does not generate Texas receipts. The Comptroller responds that FMS transactions involving procurement consist of two distinct sales: the contractor’s sale of the military goods to the U.S. government, and the U.S. government’s resale of those goods to the foreign purchaser. Thus, the Comptroller contends that the U.S. government was the “buyer” and that Lockheed Martin’s sales of the aircraft to the U.S. government were completed within Texas, thereby generating Texas receipts. The parties further dispute whether former section 171.1032(a)’s applicability to sales in which “the property is delivered or shipped to a buyer in this state” denotes a “location of delivery” test or a “location of buyer” test; that is, does apportionment hinge on whether delivery occurred in Texas or whether the buyer was in Texas?
The court of appeals agreed with the Comptroller that the U.S. government is the relevant buyer, that Lockheed Martin’s salеs to the U.S. government were completed within Texas, and that the receipts from those sales were thus properly sourced to Texas. 550 S.W.3d at 868–71. Noting the absence of privity of contract between Lockheed Martin and the foreign countries, the court concluded that Lockheed Martin “inescapably ‘sold’ or made ‘sales’ of the aircraft in question to the U.S. government” and that “any subsequent or related transactions between the U.S. government and the foreign governments” do not alter the fact that those sales “begin and end in Texas.” Id. at 868–69 (internal quotations omitted).
Both the court of appeals and thе parties rely to some extent on the Third Court of Appeals’ decision in Bullock v. Enserch Exploration, Inc., 614 S.W.2d 215 (Tex. App.—Austin 1981, writ ref’d n.r.e.). In that case, taxable entities sold natural gas to interstate transmission companies in Texas and delivered the gas to those companies in Texas. Id. at 216. The transmission
The court of appeals in this case held that under Enserch, the U.S. government’s resales of the F-16s at issue to foreign governments did not “convert the identity of Lockheed Martin’s ‘buyer’” to those foreign governments. 550 S.W.3d at 869. The court further cited the federal case law discussed above regarding the absence of contractual privity between Lockheed Martin and the foreign governments, concluding that while 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,” the governing framework for those procurements serves the U.S. government’s national-security and policy interests and gives the government “ultimate power and control over the transactions relative to the foreign nations’ respective interests.” Id. at 869–70. The Comptroller defends the court of appeals’ analysis as properly reflecting the structure of the FMS program, which purposefully interposes the U.S. government between contractors and foreign customers in a “mandatory sale-for-resale transaction.”
Lockheed Martin disputes the characterization of an FMS procurement as a typical “sale for resale” akin to the transaction at issue in Enserch. Lоckheed Martin notes that (1) the defense articles being purchased never enter the U.S. government’s inventory, (2) FMS buyers specify up front what they wish to buy and remit payment or assurance of payment before the Defense Department approaches a contractor to manufacture the items, and (3) the U.S. government is statutorily forbidden from bearing any profit or loss from an FMS procurement sale. Lockheed Martin further emphasizes the fact that the foreign buyer supplies design specifications and directives to procure components from certain vendors, sometimes even requiring incorporation of buyer-supplied equipment. Noting that “[w]ithout a foreign buyer, there is no Foreign Military Sale,” Lockheed Martin characterizes an FMS procurement sale as a single transaction, “initiated by a foreign-government buyer and effectuated by two interrelated, interdependent contracts, with the United States overseeing the transaction, not as mere reseller, but as sovereign.” For the reasons discussed below, we agree with Lockheed Martin’s characterization of the transaction.
As an initial matter, we take no issue with Enserch’s general holding that a sale of goods to a Texas purchaser is not transformed into a sale to an out-of-state buyer merely because the Texas purchaser resells the goods to that out-of-state buyer. See 614 S.W.2d at 217. However, in the unique circumstances presented by the FMS transactions at issue, Lockheed Martin is correct that the pertinent “buyers” for Texas franchise-tax purposes are the foreign governments for whom the aircraft were manufactured and to whom they were ultimately delivered. Again, in apportioning business done in Texas, a corporation’s Texas receipts include “each sale of tаngible 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.” Former
Moreover, an FMS procurement transaction does not fit the “sale for resale” paradigm on which the court of appeals relied in Enserch. The Comptroller does not disрute that the F-16s at issue were “custom built” and “uniquely designed” to the foreign buyers’ specifications. Lockheed Martin was paid “out of funds the foreign buyer ha[d] on deposit with the [U.S. government] as part of the FMS program or based upon a ‘dependable undertaking’ by that foreign government based on which the [U.S. government] ha[d] extended to it credit for the funds.” The price of the items tracked the cost to the U.S. government, which neither profits from nor takes a loss on an FMS procurement transaction.14 See
Our holding is also consistent with Texas’s use of a single-factor franchise-tax apportionment method premised on sales. Gen. Dynamics Corp. v. Sharp, 919 S.W.2d 861, 864 (Tex. App.—Austin 1996, writ denied) (citing
Lockheed Martin argues that “whether a relationship exists between parties sufficient to assign contractual or tort duties and liabilities is irrelevant to identifying a buyer for Texas franchise-tax purposes.” Again, we agree. Our holding is premised on a state statute governing payment of state taxes. Recognizing the foreign government as the pertinent “buyer” for purposes of sourcing receipts from FMS transactions for state franchise-tax purposes comports with the plain language of the Tax Code and, importantly, does not affect the FMS program or the important national-security purposes it serves. Cf. Trimble, 484 F.3d at 702 (noting that affording an FMS purchaser third-party beneficiary status “is contrary to the structure and intent of the Foreign Military Sales program“).
In sum, we hold that Lockheed Martin’s “sale” of each F-16 at issue was to the respective foreign-government “buyer” for whom the aircraft was manufactured and to whom it was ultimately delivered. The U.S. government’s involvement in each transaction was a “condition of the sale” that has no bearing on whether to apportion the receipts from that sale to Texas.16
2. Were the F-16s at issue “delivered or shipped to a buyer in this state“?
The Comptroller argues that even if the foreign governments are the relevant buyers of the F-16s at issue, the aircraft were “delivered” in Texas and thus the receipts from the sales of those aircraft are properly sourced to Texas. See Former
We need not resolve this dispute. Because the foreign governments are the buyers for franchise-tax purposes, even under the Comptroller’s interpretation the sales are properly sourced to Texas only if the aircraft were delivered to the foreign
Those stipulations confirm that the F-16s at issue were delivered to the “buyers” outside of Texas. Accordingly, the receipts from the sales of those aircraft are not properly sourced to Texas under either party’s interpretation of the apportionment statute.
III. Conclusion
Both the trial court and the court of appеals erred in holding that Lockheed Martin’s receipts from the sales of the F-16s at issue qualify as “gross receipts from business done in this state.” We hold that Lockheed Martin conclusively demonstrated its entitlement to a refund of franchise taxes for the pertinent tax period. We reverse the court of appeals’ judgment and remand the case to the trial court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Debra H. Lehrmann
Justice
OPINION DELIVERED: May 1, 2020
