OPINION
Hotels.com, L.P. and various other online travel companies (OTCs) engage in a business practice whereby they agree to pay lodging establishments a contractually agreed room rate if the OTCs find customers to rent the available rooms. Customers pay to rent the rooms at a higher “retail” rate charged by the OTCs, which then remit the original negotiated price to the lodging establishments along with any taxes applicable to the negotiated “wholesale” price.
Asserting that the OTCs are violating local tax ordinances by failing to pay a transient room tax on the difference between the two rates, the Louisville/Jefferson County Metro Government (LJCMG) and the Lexington-Fayette Urban County Government (LFUCG) sued the OTCs in federal court. The district court granted the OTCs’ motion to dismiss, reasoning that because the OTCs lack ownership and physical control over the rooms rented, they do not constitute “like or similar accommodations businesses” within the purview of the ordinances in question. As a result of this decision, the counties are not collecting transient room taxes on the difference between the two rates. For the reasons set forth below, we AFFIRM the judgment of the district court.
I. BACKGROUND
A. Factual background
The Kentucky Enabling Acts authorize counties to impose a transient room tax on “the rent for every occupancy of a suite, room, or rooms, charged by all persons, companies, corporations, or other like or similar persons, groups or organizations doing business as motor courts, motels, hotels, inns or like or similar accommodations businesses.” Ky.Rev.Stat. Ann. § 91A.390(1). Money collected from the tax is used to establish convention and tourist commissions “for the purpose of promoting convention and tourist activity.” Ky.Rev.Stat. Ann. § 91A.350(1). Pursuant to this authority, the two counties in question enacted ordinances imposing a transient room tax and adopted the language of the Enabling Acts to describe the category of businesses to be taxed. See Louisville/Jefferson County, Ky., Code of Ordinances § 121.01(A); Lexington-Fayette Urban County, Ky., Charter of Code of Code of Ordinances § 2~172(a).
According to the counties’ allegations, the OTCs contract with hotels for rooms at a discounted “wholesale” price. The OTCs then offer the rooms for rent at a “retail” price that is higher than the negotiated wholesale rate and purport to include “tax recovery charges and fees.” When a cus *384 tomer books a room using an OTC, the company remits to the appropriate hotel both the negotiated wholesale price and the taxes due on that lesser amount. The counties contend that this arrangement deprives them of the taxes owed on the difference between the retail price and the wholesale price.
B. Procedural background
In September 2006, LJCMG sued the OTCs in federal district court for the alleged violation of its transient room tax ordinance, seeking declaratory relief and damages. Jurisdiction was based on diversity of citizenship under 28 U.S.C. § 1332(a). LFUCG filed an intervenor complaint approximately one-and-a-half years later, asserting the same cause of action and seeking similar relief.
The OTCs twice moved to dismiss the claim brought against them. They first filed a motion to dismiss LJCMG’s complaint prior to the addition of LFUCG to the lawsuit, asserting that they were not “motor courts, motels, hotels, inns or like or similar accommodations businesses” for the purposes of LJCMG’s ordinance, and that LJCMG’s proposed construction of the ordinance converted the enactment into an impermissible excise tax under the Kentucky Constitution. In denying the motion, the district court reasoned that LJCMG’s allegation that the OTCs leased rooms at a marked-up retail price was sufficient at the pleading stage to qualify the companies as “like or similar accommodations businesses” under the ordinance. Shortly thereafter, the OTCs filed a motion for reconsideration and, while this motion was pending, LFUCG filed its intervenor complaint.
The district court granted the OTCs’ second motion and reversed its earlier holding. It determined that the OTCs are not “like or similar” to “motor courts, motels, hotels, or inns” because they “have neither ownership, nor physical control, of the rooms they offer for rent.” Because the OTCs did not exist at the time the ordinances were written, the court remarked that the Kentucky Enabling Acts “have simply failed to keep up with the times.” The court therefore concluded that the OTCs were not subject to the ordinances and that the counties’ claims should be dismissed. This timely appeal followed.
II. ANALYSIS
A. Standard of review
A motion under Rule 12(b)(6) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure seeks to have the complaint dismissed based upon the plaintiffs failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted. The court must “accept all the ... factual allegations as true and construe the complaint in the light most favorable to the Plaintiff! ].”
Gunasekera v. Irwin,
B. Overview
The counties’ primary contention is that the OTCs constitute “like or similar accommodations businesses” under the ordinances. In addition, LJCMG argues that the district court lacked a proper basis to grant the OTCs’ motion for reconsideration and that the court impermissibly made factual findings in ruling on the motion. We will address each issue in turn.
C. “Like or similar accommodations businesses”
To determine whether the OTCs fall under the purview of the ordinances, we begin by analyzing the statutory language.
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We must conduct this analysis utilizing Kentucky law because jurisdiction in this case is based on diversity of citizenship.
See Erie R.R. Co. v. Tompkins,
Under that framework, “[t]he essence of statutory construction is to ascertain and give effect to the intent of the legislature.”
Hale v. Combs,
1. Plain meaning
Our initial consideration, therefore, is to determine whether the words of the ordinances reveal the legislature’s intent to include the OTCs in the category of “like or similar accommodations businesses.” The counties make three arguments as to why the plain meaning of the ordinances discloses such an intent. They first contend that, to avoid rendering the phrase “like or similar accommodations businesses” meaningless, it cannot be limited to brick-and-mortar establishments and must include companies such as the OTCs that have only an online presence. But the phrase still has meaning even if it is construed to exclude online businesses. Bed and breakfasts, hostels, and rooming houses, for example, are not motor courts, motels, hotels, or inns, yet they presumably would fall into the “like or similar accommodations businesses” category.
Second, the counties argue that the phrase “like or similar” indicates a legislative intent to broaden the category. That observation is surely correct, but it provides little guidance as to how broadly to construe the category and whether the OTCs should be included.
Finally, the counties emphasize the statutory language directing that the tax be levied on “the rent for every occupancy” of a room charged by accommodations businesses, and they contend that the full retail price constitutes the rent paid to occupy a room. The counties’ focus on the amount paid by the ultimate customer is not conclusive, however, because the tax is not assessed on the occupant of a room, but rather on the entities doing business as hotels and the like. Accordingly, none of the counties’ arguments regarding the plain meaning of the ordinances is persuasive.
Nor does the expressed purpose of the Enabling Acts provision authorizing the imposition of the transient room tax provide clarification. According to the statute, a portion of the money collected from the transient room tax “may be used to finance the cost of acquisition, construction, operation, and maintenance of facilities useful in the attraction and promotion of tourist and convention business.” Ky. Rev.Stat. Ann. § 91A.390(3). The remainder of the funds is to be used to “establish tourist and convention commissions for the purpose of promoting convention and tourist activity.” Ky.Rev.Stat. Ann. § 91A.350(1).
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As described by the Kentucky Court of Appeals (the highest court in the state until 1976), the statute “did two things: (1) it authorized the creation of an administrative agency to promote convention and tourist activity in the county, and (2) it provided for the financing of this activity by the imposition of a room tax upon hotels, motels and the like.”
Second Street Props., Inc. v. Fiscal Court of Jefferson County,
This ruling is the basis for the counties’ argument that the OTCs will likewise reap the benefits of increased tourism in Louisville and Lexington. Because the OTCs lack any physical presence in these locations, however, they do not “specially” benefit from increased tourism in those cities any more than they would from an increase in tourism in any other part of the country. We thus find unpersuasive the counties’ argument that the purpose of the Enabling Acts supports subjecting the OTCs to the transient room tax.
The OTCs, on the other hand, attempt to bolster the decision of the district court by noting that in 2009 the Kentucky General Assembly rejected a proposed bill that would have extended the category of entities subject to the transient room tax to include “other entities that may broker or facilitate the transaction.” H.B. 482, 2009 Gen. Assem., Reg. Sess. (Ky.2009). This proposed amendment is not conclusively in the OTCs’ favor, however, because the legislature might have simply been trying to make explicit what it thought was clear from the statute as presently worded— that OTCs are “like or similar accommodations businesses.” More likely, though, is the legislature’s recognition that the express language of the statute as it is written does not reach the OTCs.
Elsewhere in the Enabling Acts, the Kentucky legislature defined “hotel” to mean “any hotel, motel, inn, or other establishment which offers overnight accommodations to the public for hire.” Ky.Rev. Stat. Ann. § 243.055(l)(a). This definition is limited, however, to a separate section of the Acts regulating licenses for hotels to sell alcohol as part of their in-room service. See Ky.Rev.Stat. Ann. § 243.055(l)(a). We therefore find the definition unhelpful in resolving the instant dispute. Perhaps, as the counties suggest, the legislature did not intend to restrict the transient room tax to brick-and-mortar businesses as it did with alcohol licenses and therefore deliberately omitted the word “establishment” from the taxing provisions. But given that the legislature defined “hotel” in a section completely separate from that granting the counties their taxing authority, this observation is not persuasive as to the meaning of the statutory language in question.
Kentucky caselaw provides a modicum of guidance as to the proper interpretation of the statute. Specifically, three Kentucky appellate cases have analyzed the transient room tax at issue. In
Second Street,
the Kentucky Court of Appeals upheld the constitutionality of the JLCMG ordinance, concluding that the avowed purpose of the Enabling Acts provision — promoting convention and tourist activities— was “sufficiently definite to circumscribe the permitted proper functions of the administrative agency.”
Two years later, the Kentucky Court of Appeals addressed a constitutional challenge to a transient room tax imposed by the City of Lexington. The Court held that there was no reasonable basis for singling out hotels and motels to pay the tax and rejected the city’s justification for this categorization — that hotels and motels use city services to a greater degree than other businesses — as unpersuasive.
City of Lexington v. Motel Developers, Inc.,
Lexington Relocation Services, LLC v. Lexington-Fayette Urban County Government, No.2
003-CA-001593-MR,
Unlike LRS, the OTCs in the present case do not physically control or furnish the rooms they advertise. The OTCs also do not “supply” or “provide” rooms to visitors in the same manner that LRS does because they take no part in making the room physically available. Thus, the Kentucky Court of Appeals’s interpretation in Lexington Relocation Services provides the most support, by way of contrast, for the OTCs’ argument that they are not subject to the transient room tax.
Overall, the wording of the ordinances, based on the language used and what legislative intent is discernable, is inconclusive as to whether the OTCs constitute “like or similar business accommodations.” Kentucky appellate caselaw, however, suggests that they do not fall into this category.
2. Further interpretation
Where legislation lacks plain meaning, Kentucky courts are instructed to “resort to the canons or rules of construction.”
King Drugs, Inc. v. Commonwealth,
where, in a statute, general words follow or precede a designation of particular subjects or classes of persons, the meaning of the general words ordinarily will be presumed to be restricted by the particular designation, and to include only things or persons of the same kind, class, or nature as those specifically enu *388 merated, unless there is a clear manifestation of a contrary purpose.
Steinfeld v. Jefferson County Fiscal Court,
Applying this principle, the district court determined that the phrase “like or similar accommodations businesses” should be restricted by the four types of businesses listed immediately prior to this phrase — i.e., motor courts, motels, hotels, and inns.
See Garcia v. Commonwealth,
When faced with the same issue, the United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit similarly interpreted a county ordinance in North Carolina as excluding OTCs from the transient room tax. There, the ordinance at issue applied to “[ojperators of hotels, motels, tourist homes, tourist camps, and similar type businesses.”
Pitt County v. Hotels.com, L.P.,
The counties assert that this interpretation of the statute leads to the “absurd result” that a county would receive less tax money if a customer books a hotel room through an OTC than if the room is booked directly through a lodging establishment. This potential loophole has been recognized by several district courts in other circuits.
See, e.g., City of Charleston v. Hotels.com, L.P.,
We reject the counties’ “absurdity” argument, however, in part because the Kentucky General Assembly, not the court, is the proper entity to close any such potential loophole.
See Camera Ctr., Inc. v. Revenue Cabinet,
Moreover, the recent decision of the Georgia Supreme Court in
Expedia, Inc. v. City of Columbus,
Finally, any doubt as to whether the OTCs are “like or similar accommodations businesses” must be resolved in favor of the OTCs under Kentucky law. Kentucky’s highest court has stated that
[t]axing laws should be plain and precise, for they impose a burden upon the people. That imposition should be explicitly and distinctly revealed. If the Legislature fails so to express its intention and meaning, it is the function of the judiciary to construe the statute strictly and resolve doubts and ambiguities in favor of the taxpayer and against the taxing powers.
George v. Scent,
D. District court’s grant of the OTCs’ motion for reconsideration
In addition to appealing the determination that the OTCs are not “like or similar accommodations businesses,” LJCMG asserts that the district court had no proper basis for granting the OTCs’ motion for reconsideration. But “courts will find justification for reconsidering interlocutory orders whe[re] there is (1) an intervening change of controlling law; (2) new evidence available; or (3) a need to correct a clear error or prevent manifest injustice.”
Rodriguez v. Tenn. Laborers Health & Welfare,
LJCMG also contends that the district court erred by making a factual finding that the OTCs do not exercise physical control over the rooms they rent. By doing so, LJCMG asserts, the court failed to resolve all factual disputes in LJCMG’s favor on a motion to dismiss.
See Great Lakes Steel, Div. of Nat’l Steel Corp. v. Deggendorf,
III. CONCLUSION
For all of the reasons set forth above, we AFFIRM the judgment of the district court.
