This is an ad valorem tax assessment case.
Appellee, Colonial Pipeline Company (Colonial), is a corporation duly organized under the laws of Delaware and is qualified to do business in the State of Alabama. Colonial is engaged in the interstate transportation of refined petroleum products by pipeline to and through Alabama as well as other points in a fourteen-state region. Colonial's property, subject to ad valorem taxes in Alabama, consists primarily of pipelines and operating tankage which are all dedicated to and used solely and exclusively in interstate commerce.
On June 4, 1982, the Alabama Department of Revenue (Department)1 issued notice to Colonial for the 1982 tax year of a tentative valuation for ad valorem tax purposes in the amount of $22,800,000 on Colonial's property located in Alabama. This assessment reflects the use of a thirty percent (30%) assessment factor applied by the Department to ninety percent (90%) of the market value of the property based on the characterization of such property as Class I property.
The Department scheduled a hearing and notified Colonial. Colonial filed a written protest against the tentative assessment proposed by the Department. The Department overruled the protest and entered a tax assessment of $725,000 based upon a property valuation of $22,800,000.
Colonial appealed to the Circuit Court of Montgomery County pursuant to §§
The trial court, in a twenty-two page order, found that §
In 1935 the legislature enacted the predecessor of what is presently §
Until 1972 central assessment was of no significance in determining a taxpayer's ad valorem tax liability, but rather was primarily a matter of convenience. In 1972 the passage of Alabama Constitutional amendment 325, amending § 217 of the Alabama Constitution, provided for the division of all taxable property into three classes for purposes of ad valorem taxation. The divisions for taxation were as follows: "Class I. All property of utilities used in the business of such utilities. Class II. All property not otherwise classified. Class III. All agricultural, forest and residential property." Different ratios of assessment apply to each class: "Class I. 30 per centum, Class II. 25 per centum, Class III. 15 per centum."
In 1973 the legislature amended §
In 1978 amendment 373 was ratified. This amendment superseded amendment 325 and further amended § 217. Amendment 373 created four classes of property for purposes of ad valorem taxation rather than three classes. The property of utilities remained classified under Class I at the highest assessment rate of thirty percent (30%). Section
The trial court held that Colonial's property could not be assessed as Class I property under the authority of amendment 373, unless Colonial is found to be a utility as defined by Alabama law. Both appellant and appellee in brief offer various definitions and criteria to determine what constitutes a utility; however, such is unnecessary, for we consider a constitutionally adequate definition is provided in §
Section
Colonial contends that it is not a public utility because it is not subject to the utility gross receipts tax. That contention loses its force upon an examination of the terms and definitions of the legislation by which the tax was enacted. It is obvious that for the purpose of the utility gross-receipts tax, the legislature further refined the classification of public utilities. Section
"(a) For the purpose of this article, the following terms shall have the respective meanings ascribed by this Section:
. . . .
"(7) Utility. Every person regularly engaged in furnishing Utility services to another person or other persons in the State of Alabama.
"(8) Utility Services. Electricity, domestic water, natural gas, telegraph services and telephone services to subscribers. . . ."
It requires little logic to recognize that the legislature determined that certain public utilities engaged in furnishing subscriber services to persons within the state would be taxed upon the gross receipts from such services. Other public utilities such as pipelines engaged in interstate commerce would not be included for many obvious reasons. However, such failure to tax does not limit the general classification of public utility used in licensing and ad valorem tax statutes. Such distinctions in classification for taxing purposes are within the broad powers of a legislature and are presumed valid under the constitution. Howell v. Malone,
The trial court found that the statutory definition contained in §
Colonial shares common characteristics of a utility so that statutorily classifying it as a utility is not unreasonable. For example, Colonial has the right of eminent domain in Alabama. See §§
The Department further contends that the trial court erred in finding that the treatment of oil pipeline property as Class I property of utilities for ad valorem tax purposes violates the equal protection clauses of the United States Constitution and Alabama Constitution of 1901. State *412
legislatures are presumed to have acted within their constitutional power in passing laws, even though in practice their laws result in some inequality. Howell v. Malone, supra.
Moreover, a statutory discrimination will not be set aside if any set of facts reasonably may be conceived to justify it. Id.
The equal protection clause "imposes no iron rule of equality, prohibiting the flexibility and variety that are appropriate to reasonable schemes of state taxation." Allied Stores of Ohio,Inc. v. Bowers,
In order for a state taxing classification to withstand a challenge on constitutional grounds under the equal protection clause, there must be a "rational basis" for the possible discriminatory effect of that tax. The trial court determined that there was no rational basis for treating the property of buslines, trucklines, airlines or water carriers differently from that of Colonial. The Alabama Supreme Court in Gideon v.Alabama State Ethics Commission,
In determining whether there is a proper governmental purpose,
Carmichael v. Southern Coal Coke Co.,"A state legislature, in the enactment of laws, has the widest possible latitude within the limits of the Constitution. In the nature of the case it cannot record a complete catalogue of the considerations which move its members to enact laws. In the absence of such a record courts cannot assume that its action is capricious, or that, with its informed acquaintance with local conditions to which the legislation is to be applied, it was not aware of the facts which afford a reasonable basis for its action."
"A state law is not arbitrary though it `discriminate[s] in favor of a certain class . . . if the discrimination is founded upon a reasonable distinction, or difference in state policy,' not in conflict with the Federal Constitution." Kahn v. Shevin,
After examining the law and the findings of the trial court, we conclude that the trial court erred in finding that the state had no rational basis for its decision to include oil pipelines in §
Currently, the state is specifically forbidden to classify the property of motor carriers as Class I property by 49 U.S.C.A. *413
§ 11503a, which gives the motor carriers the same protection from high assessment rates that is afforded railroads and air carriers. Were it not for the supremacy of federal statutes over state law, airlines, trucklines and railroads, which are included in §
We stated in Metropolitan Life Insurance Co. v. Forrester,
For error in the application of law to the facts, the order of the court below is reversed, and the case is remanded for entry of judgment in favor of the Department of Revenue.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
BRADLEY and HOLMES, JJ., concur.
