Case Information
*2 Before MURNAGHAN and WILLIAMS, Circuit Judges, and Cynthia H. HALL, Senior Circuit Judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, sitting by designation.
_________________________________________________________________ Affirmed by published opinion. Senior Judge Hall wrote the opinion, in which Judge Murnaghan and Judge Williams joined. _________________________________________________________________ COUNSEL
ARGUED: William Francis Fox, Jr., Harleysville, Pennsylvania, for Appellants. Silas Bent Taylor, Senior Deputy Attorney General, Charleston, West Virginia, for Appellees. ON BRIEF: Logan Hassig, SNYDER & HASSIG, New Martinsville, West Virginia, for Appel- lants. Armando Benincasa, William E. Adams, Jr., Office of Legal Services, WEST VIRGINIA DIVISION OF ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION, Charleston, West Virginia, for Appellees Caffrey and Huffman. OPINION
CYNTHIA HOLCOMB HALL, Senior Circuit Judge: Valero Terrestrial Corp. ("Valero") appeals the district court's granting of summary judgment in favor of John Caffrey ("Caffrey" or "appellee") (sued in his official capacity as the Director of the Divi- *3 sion of Environmental Protection for the State of West Virginia along with other West Virginia state officials). Valero had sued Caffrey seeking declaratory and injunctive relief claiming that a charge imposed by West Virginia Code § 22-16-4(a) (the Solid Waste Assessment Fee), a section of West Virginia's Landfill Closure Act, is an unconstitutional violation of the commerce clause and Valero's substantive due process rights. Before the district court reached the substantive portion of Valero's claim, it deemed the charge imposed by § 22-16-4(a) a "tax" for purposes of the federal Tax Injunction Act 1 ("TIA") and consequently declared itself without jurisdiction to decide Valero's substantive claim. We have jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291, and we affirm. I.
Appellants (Valero, Lackawanna Transport Company, Solid Waste Services, Inc., and d/b/a J.P. Mascaro & Sons) own and operate two landfills and a solid waste transport company that uses landfills to dis- pose of customers' waste in West Virginia. Under West Virginia law, appellants are assessed various charges 2 that are imposed on parties that partake in the landfill industry.
One such charge is mandated by West Virginia Code§ 22-16-4(a) which imposes "a solid waste assessment fee . . . upon the disposal of solid waste at any solid waste disposal facility[(landfill)] in this state in the amount of three dollars and fifty cents per ton . . . ." The charge is imposed upon "the person disposing of solid waste at [the landfills] . . . and the fee [is] collected by the operator of the [landfill] who . . . remit[s] it to the tax commissioner" on a monthly basis. See W. Va. Code § 22-16-4(b). 1 See 28 U.S.C. § 1341.
2 Terminology in this case is rather confusing. The West Virginia stat- ute at issue in this case refers to the assessments as "fees." However, because the issue in this case is to determine whether the assessments are "fees" or "taxes," to refer to this assessment as a "fee" a priori would complicate matters unnecessarily. Therefore we refer to the assessment as a "charge" throughout the analysis.
The revenue collected from the charge described above is depos- ited into the "Closure Cost Assistance Fund" which is dedicated to West Virginia's Landfill Closure Assistance Program. See W. Va. Code §§ 22-16-1 and 22-16-12. This Program provides funding for landfills that do not meet certain environmental criteria set out by the Environmental Protection Agency ("EPA"). The EPA, in promulgat- ing its environmental criteria for the regulation of landfills, was con- cerned with remedying those instances where landfills would contribute to serious groundwater contamination.
The scheme enacted by West Virginia to combat contaminated landfills was constructed to address the problem concerning those landfill facilities whose owners were not able to pay the costs of upgrade or closure. Because of the combined necessities of complying with the EPA regulations and cleaning up contamination which cre- ated an enormous potential health hazard, the West Virginia legisla- ture deemed that the charge at issue here would be funneled towards the landfill closure/upgrade costs for those facilities unable to afford such expenses. The West Virginia legislature stressed that this was necessary because a large percentage of citizens within the state rely on groundwater as their sole source of water.
Once the funds are collected, they are deposited under the rubric of the Landfill Closure Assistance Fund which is designated as a spe- cial revenue fund. Nevertheless, this fund is part of the general state fund within the state treasury and under the control of the State Trea- surer. As such, any refund ordered by that account would come directly from the state treasury in accordance with state law which states that all money collected under the acts of the legislature becomes part of the state treasury. See W. Va. Code § 12-2-2. Appellants challenged the constitutionality of the charge assessed under § 22-16-4(a). They claim that § 22-16-4(a) violates interstate commerce rights protected under the dormant Commerce Clause and also violates substantive due process rights. Appellees countered with the claim that the TIA divests the district court of jurisdiction on the basis that the charge imposed by § 22-16-4(a) is a "tax" and not a "fee." The district court agreed with appellees' argument and constru- ing appellees' motion to dismiss for lack of subject matter jurisdiction as a motion for summary judgment, granted summary judgment for *5 appellees before reaching the merits of appellants' claim. Appellants appeal this ruling. II.
We review de novo a grant of summary judgment. See Akers v.
Caperton,
The TIA provides:
The district court shall not enjoin, suspend, or restrain the
assessment, levy, or collection of any tax under State law
where a plain, speedy and efficient remedy may be had in
the courts of such State.
3
28 U.S.C. § 1341. The TIA represents a recognition that states are
best situated to administer their own fiscal operations. See Tully v.
Griffin, Inc.,
In San Juan Cellular, the court set out the precise confines of a
"classic tax" versus a "classic fee." The "classic tax" is imposed by
the legislature upon a large segment of society, and is spent to benefit
the community at large. See San Juan Cellular ,
When the three-part inquiry yields a result that places the charge
somewhere in the middle of the San Juan Cellular descriptions, the
most important factor becomes the purpose behind the statute, or reg-
ulation, which imposes the charge. See South Carolina v. Block, 717
F.2d 874, 887 (4th Cir. 1983). In those circumstances if the ultimate
use of the revenue benefits the general public then the charge will
qualify as a "tax," while if the benefits are more narrowly circum-
scribed then the charge will more likely qualify as a "fee." See San
Juan Cellular,
The last part of the test also yields to the conclusion that the charge is a "tax" because the benefits of the charge touch a large segment of *7 the West Virginia population. The statute was passed pursuant to an EPA regulation that sought to reduce the hazard of contaminated landfills. The aim of the West Virginia statute is to enable those land- fill owners, who cannot for financial reasons comply with EPA regu- lations, close or upgrade said landfills to non-hazardous levels. Thus, it is the environmental safety of West Virginia's groundwater that is the paramount purpose of the § 22-16-4(a) charge and it cannot be said that such purpose serves a small section of society.
Appellants, in applying the San Juan Cellular test, cite five reasons
why the charge at issue should be declared a "fee" and not a "tax."
Upon close examination of the five reasons argued by appellants, it
emerges that in fact these five reasons boil down to one. That reason
being that the revenue raised by § 22-16-4(a) is deposited into a spe-
cial fund and used for a specific purpose.
4
By such reasoning, appel-
lants are elevating form over substance in denigration of the central
holding of San Juan Cellular that mandates an examination of the use
and purpose of the charge rather then a cursory review of where the
revenue is placed or how the charge is referred to in the promulgating
document. See San Juan Cellular,
More instructive to the analysis of § 22-16-4(a) is American Land-
5
Appellants also cite to a West Virginia state court case. See Wetzel
County Solid Waste Authority v. West Virginia Division of Natural
Resources,
In ruling the charge a "tax" under the TIA, the Sixth Circuit rea-
soned that of supreme relevance was the fact that the fund "while sep-
arate from the general revenue, serves public purposes benefitting the
entire community" and related directly to the citizens of Ohio. See id.
at 839-40. This holding is particularly instructive in this case because
the American Landfill court had more factors that pointed towards the
direction of "fee" characteristics under San Juan Cellular and never-
theless ruled the charge a "tax." In American Landfill the levying
authority was the administrative agency and one of the enumerated
purposes of the charge was to defray administrative costs while here
such facts are not present. Therefore, the remaining overarching simi-
larities between American Landfill and § 22-16-4(a), being the gen-
eral benefit of the charge to the community, argue in favor of
declaring § 22-16-4(a) a "tax."
Appellants final argument is that the district court judge in this
case, Judge Stamp, has already ruled that § 22-16-4(a) is a "fee"
rather than a "tax" in a previously related case. See Valero Terrestrial
Corp. v. McCoy,
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the district court's opinion declaring W. Va. Code § 22-16-4(a) to be a"tax." The district court was correct to declare itself without jurisdiction to entertain Valero's claim pursuant to the TIA.
AFFIRMED
