IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL
FIRST DISTRICT, STATE OF FLORIDA
DIRECTV, INC., N/K/A NOT FINAL UNTIL TIME EXPIRES TO
DIRECTV, LLC, AND FILE MOTION FOR REHEARING AND
ECHOSTAR SATELLITE, DISPOSITION THEREOF IF FILED
L.L.C., N/K/A DISH
NETWORK, L.L.C.,
Appellants,
v. CASE NOS. 1D13-5444 & 1D14-0292
STATE OF FLORIDA,
DEPARTMENT OF REVENUE,
MARCUS AND PATRICIA
OGBORN, ON BEHALF OF
THEMSELVES AND OTHERS
SIMILARLY SITUATED, JIM
ZINGALE, ACTING IN HIS
OFFICIAL CAPACITY AS THE
DIRECTOR OF THE FLORIDA
DEPARTMENT OF REVENUE,
AND FLORIDA CABLE
TELECOMMUNICATIONS
ASSOCIATION,
Appellees.
_____________________________/
Opinion filed June 11, 2015.
An appeal from the Circuit Court for Leon County.
Terry P. Lewis, Judge.
Katherine E. Giddings and Kristen M. Fiore of Akerman LLP, Tallahassee; Peter
O. Larsen, Timothy J. McDermott, and Aleksas A. Barauskas of Akerman LLP,
Jacksonville; E. Joshua Rosenkranz and Jeremy N. Kudon of Orrick, Herrington &
Sutcliffe LLC, New York, N.Y., pro hac vice; and Eric A. Shumsky of Orrick,
Herrington & Sutcliffe LLC, Washington, D.C., pro hac vice, for Appellants.
Christine Davis Graves of Carlton Fields Jorden Burt, P.A., Tallahassee; John A.
Hinman of Hinman & Carmichael, San Francisco, CA, pro hac vice, for Amicus
Curiae National Association of Wine Retailers.
Joseph C. Mellichamp, III, and J. Clifton Cox, Assistant Attorneys General,
Tallahassee, for Appellee State of Florida.
Amelia T. Rudolph, Eric S. Tresh, and Zachary T. Atkins of Sutherland Asbill &
Brennan LLP, Atlanta, GA, pro hac vice; David Konuch, Tallahassee, for Appellee
Florida Cable Telecommunications Association.
ROBERTS, J.
This appeal arises from a final summary judgment finding that section
202.12(1), Florida Statutes, which imposes a higher tax rate on satellite services
than on cable services, is constitutional. The Appellants, Directv, Inc. and
Echostar, L.L.C. (“the satellite companies”), contend that the statute
unconstitutionally discriminates against interstate commerce in both effect and
purpose, which is in violation of the Commerce Clause. We agree and reverse.
2
I. Factual background
A. Cable and satellite companies
The satellite companies provide multi-channel video programming to
subscribers in Florida and nationwide by means of satellites stationed above the
earth. These satellites gather and transmit the programming signals from uplink
facilities located in Arizona, California, Colorado, and Wyoming. Subscribers in
Florida receive programming by means of small satellite dishes mounted on or
near their homes. As such, satellite companies do not utilize local infrastructure
because they transmit their signals directly to their subscribers.
Cable companies, on the other hand, provide multi-channel video
programming using local distribution facilities. Specifically, cable companies
distribute their programming from headends spread throughout the state that
compile the programming and deliver the packages to customers using coaxial or
fiber optic cables that are laid across the state in a ground-based network and
usually utilize public rights-of-way.
B. The Communications Services Tax
Before 2001, Florida’s sales tax on television services was six percent for all
subscribers regardless of whether the provider was a cable or satellite company. §
212.05, Fla. Stat. (1999). Cable companies were required to pay franchise fees or
rent to local governments in order to use the local rights-of-way for their ground-
3
based networks. However, in 2001, the Florida Legislature passed the
Communications Services Tax Simplification Law (“the CST”), which imposed a
differential tax rate for cable and satellite services. § 202.12(1), Fla. Stat. (2001)
(taxing cable service at 6.8 percent and satellite service at 10.8 percent). Currently,
cable service is taxed at a rate of 6.65 percent, and satellite service is taxed at a rate
of 10.8 percent. § 202.12(1), Fla. Stat. (2014). It is this difference in taxation rates
that the satellite companies allege violates the dormant Commerce Clause.
II. Procedural background
The satellite companies filed suit in 2005 seeking a declaratory judgment
holding the sales tax provision in the CST unconstitutional, a permanent injunction
against the enforcement of the provision, and a refund of the taxes paid pursuant to
the provision.1 In ruling on cross-motions for summary judgment, the trial court
held that section 202.12(1), Florida Statutes, does not violate the Commerce
Clause because it does not benefit in-state economic interests or similarly-situated
entities.
III. Standard of review
An order granting summary judgment is reviewed de novo to determine
whether there are genuine issues of material fact and whether the trial court
1
This suit was consolidated with another case filed by satellite customers that
made substantially similar arguments. Those customers are named as Appellees in
this appeal but do not appear to be participating.
4
properly applied the correct rule of law. Futch v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc., 988 So.
2d 687, 690 (Fla. 1st DCA 2008). “Summary judgment should be affirmed only if
the movant has proven the nonexistence of any material factual dispute.” Auto-
Owners Ins. Co. v. Young, 978 So. 2d 850, 852 (Fla. 1st DCA 2008). In
considering a motion for summary judgment, the court must draw all reasonable
inferences from the evidence in favor of the non-moving party, and even the
slightest doubt as to the existence of a disputed issue of material fact will preclude
summary judgment. See Laidlaw v. Krystal Co., 53 So. 3d 1128, 1129 (Fla. 1st
DCA 2011).
IV. Tax refund - facial challenge
The Appellee, the Department of Revenue (“the Department”), argues that
the satellite companies cannot seek a tax refund because they failed to exhaust the
available administrative remedies. To receive a tax refund, a taxpayer must file a
refund application with the Department. § 215.26(2), Fla. Stat. (2005). If the
refund application is denied, the taxpayer can contest the denial in the circuit court.
§ 72.011(2)(a), Fla. Stat. (2005). Here, there is no evidence in the record that the
satellite companies filed a refund application. As such, the Department is correct
that the parties failed to exhaust the available administrative remedies.
However, there is an exception to the process required by Chapter 215. If a
taxpayer is seeking a refund pursuant to section 215.26, Florida Statutes, and the
5
sole basis for the refund is that the statute imposing the tax is facially
unconstitutional, the circuit court will have jurisdiction despite the taxpayer’s
failure to exhaust administrative remedies. Sarnoff v. Fla. Dep’t of Highway
Safety & Motor Vehicles, 825 So. 2d 351, 357 (Fla. 2002). This exception is
known as the direct-file exception. Id.
The Department argues the direct-file exception is inapplicable here because
this is not a facial challenge to the statute. This Court describes a facial challenge
as follows:
A facial challenge to a statute is more difficult than an “as applied”
challenge because the challenger must establish that no set of
circumstances exists under which the statute would be valid. Except in
a First Amendment challenge, the fact that the act might operate
unconstitutionally in some hypothetical circumstance is insufficient to
render it unconstitutional on its face; such a challenge must fail unless
no set of circumstances exists in which the statute can be
constitutionally applied. A facial challenge considers only the text of
the statute, not its application to a particular set of circumstances, and
the challenger must demonstrate that the statute's provisions pose a
present total and fatal conflict with applicable constitutional
standards.
Cashatt v. State, 873 So. 2d 430, 434 (Fla. 1st DCA 2004).
Here, the satellite companies argue that there is no set of circumstances in
which the CST would be valid because the text of the statute shows it was enacted
with a discriminatory purpose and has a discriminatory effect, which violates the
Commerce Clause. The Department counters that arguments regarding
discriminatory purpose and effect cannot be facial challenges. For the basis of its
6
argument, the Department references the following United States Supreme Court
quote: “[A] tax may violate the Commerce Clause if it is facially discriminatory,
has a discriminatory intent, or has the effect of unduly burdening interstate
commerce.” Amerada Hess Corp. v. Dir., Div. of Taxation, N.J. Dep’t of
Treasury, 490 U.S. 66, 75 (1989). The Department has interpreted this statement
to mean that arguments regarding discriminatory intent or effect cannot be facial
challenges. This is an incorrect interpretation of this statement. The Department is
conflating a type of general constitutional challenge with a specific type of
Commerce Clause challenge. A party can pose a facial challenge to a statute by
arguing that there is no set of circumstances where it could apply constitutionally
because of its discriminatory purpose or its discriminatory effect on interstate
commerce. Because this is the satellite companies’ argument, the direct-file
exception applies, and this Court can properly consider the effect and purpose
arguments.
V. Commerce Clause
The Commerce Clause states, “The Congress shall have power to . . .
regulate Commerce with foreign Nations, and among the several states.” Article I,
§ 8, cl. 3, U.S. Const. Attendant with this grant of authority to Congress, the
United States Supreme Court has recognized a dormant Commerce Clause, which
limits the states’ power to regulate interstate commerce. Simmons v. State, 944
7
So. 2d 317, 329 (Fla. 2006). A state or local regulation violates the dormant
Commerce Clause if the regulation treats out-of-state commerce differently from
in-state commerce. Reinish v. Clark, 765 So. 2d 197, 211 (Fla. 1st DCA 2000).
To discriminate, the statute must place a greater economic burden on those
industries or companies outside the state and give an economic advantage to those
operating within the state. Id.; see also Simmons, 944 So. 2d at 330 (“[S]tatutes
that openly discriminate against out-of-state economic interests in order to protect
in-state interests are subject to a per se rule of invalidity.”). Where a law is found
to be discriminatory, it will be stricken as a violation of the Commerce Clause
without any additional inquiry. Reinish, 765 So. 2d at 211.
There are three ways in which a statute can discriminate against out-of-state
interests: (1) it may be facially discriminatory; (2) it may discriminate in its
practical effect; or (3) it may have a discriminatory intent. Amerada Hess, 490
U.S. at 75. Here, the satellite companies argue that the sales tax portion of the
CST is discriminatory in effect and purpose.
1. Discriminatory effect
A state law is discriminatory in effect if it affects similarly-situated entities
in a market by imposing disproportionate burdens on out-of-state interests and
conferring advantages upon in-state interests. Family Winemakers of Cal. v.
Jenkins, 592 F.3d 1, 10 (1st Cir. 2010) (citing to Or. Waste Sys., Inc., v. Dep’t of
8
Envtl. Quality, 511 U.S. 93, 99 (1994) & Gen. Motors Corp. v. Tracy, 519 U.S.
278, 298 (1997)). Here, the sales tax portion of the CST is discriminatory in effect
because it affects similarly-situated entities, cable and satellite companies, by
imposing a disproportionate burden on satellite service and conferring an
advantage upon cable services, which use in-state infrastructure.
A. Substantially similar entities
The trial court below found that satellite and cable companies are inherently
different entities, which took the CST out of the purview of the Commerce Clause.
“Any notion of discrimination assumes a comparison of substantially similar
entities.” Tracy, 519 U.S. at 298. As such, if the differences between two
companies render the entities not substantially similar, the Commerce Clause is not
implicated. Id. at 298-99 (holding that a statute did not discriminate in practical
effect because the two entities in consideration were not similar markets and/or
competitors and were not similarly situated). The United States Supreme Court
further explained:
This is so for the simple reason that the difference in products may
mean that the different entities serve different markets, and would
continue to do so even if the supposedly discriminatory burden were
removed. If in fact that should be the case, eliminating the tax or
other regulatory differential would not serve the dormant Commerce
Clause's fundamental objective of preserving a national market for
competition undisturbed by preferential advantages conferred by a
State upon its residents or resident competitors.
Id. at 299.
9
Here, cable and satellite companies provide multichannel television
programming to Florida subscribers. As such, they operate in the same market and
are direct competitors within that market. They differ in the deployment of
technology, the need for local infrastructure, and the additional services offered.
However, mere differences in how a service is provided is not enough to overcome
the fact that the companies compete in the same market and sell virtually identical
products at retail.
B. In-state interests
In addition to a finding the companies at issue are similarly-situated entities,
courts must also find in-state interests to be present in order for the Commerce
Clause to be implicated. Oregon Waste, 511 U.S. at 99. If a tax discriminates
against interstate commerce by providing a direct commercial advantage to local
businesses, it violates the Commerce Clause. Boston Stock Exch. v. State Tax
Comm’n, 429 U.S. 318, 329 (1977); Maryland v. Louisiana. 451 U.S. 725 (1981)
(holding that the tax “unquestionably discriminates against interstate commerce in
favor of local interests” because it provided an exemption for gas consumed within
the state and provided a tax credit to encourage local mineral exploration). Here,
the Appellees contend that because satellite and cable companies are interstate
companies with corporate headquarters and principal places of business located
outside of Florida, no in-state interests are benefited and the Commerce Clause is
10
not implicated. However, the interstate nature of the business does not necessarily
preclude a finding of a local economic interest. Commerce Clause analysis focuses
not on the domiciles of particular corporations, but on whether a law results in
differential treatment of in-state and out-of-state economic interests.
The Florida Supreme Court examined a Commerce Clause challenge
involving interstate businesses in Delta Air Lines, Inc. v. Department of Revenue,
455 So. 2d 317, 318 (Fla. 1984). Delta involved a tax credit that applied to air
carriers with a corporate or business home office in Florida and maintained a
workforce of more than 1200 employees in Florida. Id. Air carriers that did not
meet these requirements would not receive the credit, which could amount to up to
five million dollars. Id. The Florida Supreme Court held that the “corporate
income tax credit provide[d] a direct commercial advantage to select Florida-based
air carriers and thereby violate[d] the Commerce Clause.” Id. at 321.
Like the air carriers in Delta, the satellite and cable companies are interstate
in nature with local economic interests. While the cable companies do not have
offices located within the state, they employ Florida workers and use extensive
local infrastructure. It is this local infrastructure and local employment that
provides an in-state economic interest for the cable companies. Because the sales
tax portion of the CST burdens interstate commerce by imposing a higher tax rate
on those communication companies that do not invest in local economies, it
11
violates the Commerce Clause.
C. Effect of CST
i. Effect case law
This case is similar to a number of other cases where the Supreme Court
invalidated taxes that had the effect of favoring companies that performed their
production activities locally or used local infrastructure for their production. See
Bacchus Imports, Ltd. v. Dias, 468 U.S. 263, 265-72 (1984); Hunt v. Wash. State
Apple Adver. Comm’n, 432 U.S. 333, 349-51 (1977) (finding that a North
Carolina statute, which required all closed containers of apples sold in the state to
bear the applicable U.S. grade or standard that was used by North Carolina apple
producers, violated the dormant Commerce Clause because it discriminated against
apples from other states that used a different grading system); C&A Carbone v.
Town of Clarkstown, 511 U.S. 383, 390-91 (1994); Dean Milk Co. v. City of
Madison, 340 U.S. 349 (1951) (striking down a city ordinance that required all
milk sold in the city, from both in-state and out-of-state, to be pasteurized within
five miles of the city lines). The situation here is analogous to this line of authority
because the businesses receiving a benefit from the differential tax rate, the cable
companies, “produce” their services locally by using local infrastructure. Because
the CST favors communications services that use local infrastructure, it has a
discriminatory effect on interstate commerce.
12
ii. Aggregate tax rate
The Department argues that there is no discrimination in practical effect
because if this Court considers the entirety of the CST, cable and satellite are taxed
roughly the same. The Florida Supreme Court has ruled that courts should
consider an entire taxing scheme in its analysis of a certain section. Dep’t of
Revenue v. Kuhnlein, 646 So. 2d 717, 722 (Fla. 1994). In Kuhnlein, the court
examined whether an act imposing an impact fee only on vehicles purchased or
titled in other states violated the Commerce Clause. Id. at 719. The Department
argued that the overall taxing scheme for vehicles needed to be considered. Id. at
722. The court agreed, finding that “reviewing courts must consider the actual
effects of statutes, rather than isolated technicalities.” Id. (internal citations
omitted).
Here, cable and satellite services are taxed at different rates under section
202.12(1) of the CST, which results in a four-percent differential. See § 202.12(1),
Fla. Stat. (2005) (providing that satellite service is taxed at 10.8 percent and cable
service is taxed at 6.8 percent).2 However, section 202.19 of the CST provides for
the imposition of local CSTs for cable companies. § 202.19, Fla. Stat. (2005).
Counties and municipalities may tax cable companies up to 5.1 percent. §
2
Cable and satellite services are also subject to a Gross Receipts Tax, which is
equal for both types of services. § 203.01(2)(b), Fla. Stat. (2005) (“The rate
applied to communications services shall be 2.37 percent.”).
13
202.19(2)(a), Fla. Stat. (2005). Satellite companies are not subject to the local
CST because federal law exempts satellite service from all local taxes and fees. 47
U.S.C. § 152 (1996). The Department concludes that in those municipalities where
the local CST is four percent, the tax rate for cable and satellite services is roughly
equal. However, this method of attaining a semblance of equality is untenable.
There is no guarantee that the local governments charging four percent will
continue to do so, and the Department fails to offer the number of counties that
must charge the four percent in order for the tax rate to be considered equal
between satellite and cable services. This is an insufficient method of ensuring
equal treatment.
iii. Operational differences
The Department relies on two United States Supreme Court cases, Exxon v.
Governor of Maryland, 437 U.S. 117 (1978), and Amerada Hess v. Division of
Taxation, 490 U.S. at 66, to argue that the differential tax rate is a result of the
differences in the nature of cable and satellite services rather than the location of
their activities and, as such, there is no discriminatory effect. The Department’s
analysis and reliance on these two cases is affirmed in the other appellate court
decisions addressing this issue. See Directv, Inc. v. Treesh, 487 F.3d 471, 481 (6th
Cir. 2007); Directv, Inc. v. State, 632 S.E.2d 543, 663-69 (N.C. Ct. App. 2006),
Directv, Inc. v. Levin, 941 N.E.2d 1187, 1195 (Ohio 2010).
14
In Exxon, the Maryland Legislature, responding to evidence that oil
producers were favoring company-operated gasoline stations, enacted a statute
prohibiting oil producers or refiners from operating retail service stations in the
state. 437 U.S. at 117. The oil producers filed suit arguing that the statute violated
the Commerce Clause because it interfered with the functioning of the interstate
market. Id. at 127. The court rejected the appellants’ argument, finding that the
Commerce Clause does not protect a particular structure or method of operation in
a retail market. Id. As such, the court held the statute did not violate the
Commerce Clause. Id. at 127-28.
Following Exxon, the Amerada Hess court examined the dormant
Commerce Clause’s application to a state tax law. 490 U.S. at 68-69. In 1980,
Congress had enacted the Crude Oil Windfall Profit Tax Act, which imposed a tax
on the “windfall” profit that crude-oil producers receive from the oil they produce.
Id. at 69 (citing to 26 U.S.C. §§ 4986-4998 (1980)). The Act provided that, for
federal income tax purposes, the windfall profit tax would be deductible. Id. In
1986, New Jersey passed its Corporation Business Tax Act, which imposed a tax
on a portion of the entire net income of a corporation for the privilege of doing
business within the state. Id. (citing to N.J. Stat. § 54:10A-1 (1986)). Under the
New Jersey Act, a corporation’s entire net income must be determined without the
exclusion, deduction, or credit of taxes paid or accrued to the federal government.
15
Id. The appellants argued that the add-back provision, by denying a deduction for
windfall profit tax payments, discriminated against oil producers who sold their
own oil in favor of independent retailers who did not produce oil. Id. at 78. The
court held that “[w]hatever different effect the add-back provision may have on
these two categories of companies results solely from differences between the
nature of their businesses, not from the location of their activities.” Id. As such,
the court found no violation of the Commerce Clause. Id. at 79.
Other jurisdictions have examined these two cases and misapplied their
holdings to differential taxes on satellite and cable. In Directv v. State, the Court
of Appeals of North Carolina examined a North Carolina statute that imposed a
sales tax on “direct-to-home satellite service,” but not on cable service. 632 S.E.2d
at 660 (citing to N.C. Stat. § 105-164.4(a)(6), (2001)). The court applied Exxon
and Amerada Hess and found that even if satellite companies were able to establish
an in-state distribution system, the tax would still be imposed “because of the
means that they use to deliver” their services. Id. at 667-68. Similarly, the court
found that cable companies with out-of-state distribution systems would still be
exempt from the tax imposed because of how they deliver their services. Id. at
668. The court concluded that the differential tax rate was the result of operational
differences in the delivery of cable and satellite and not from the geographical
location of the businesses and, as such, it did not have a discriminatory effect in
16
violation of the Commerce Clause. Id. at 668.
Similarly, in Directv v. Treesh, the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals examined
a Kentucky taxing scheme that taxed cable and satellite at the same rate but
prohibited local government from levying franchise fees and taxes on cable
companies. 487 F.3d at 475. Relying on Exxon and Amerada Hess, the court
found that cable and satellite services were “distinct” and “relied upon two very
different means of delivering broadcasts.” Id. at 480. Because the “dormant
Commerce Clause is intended to protect interstate commerce, and not particular
firms engaged in interstate commerce, or the modes of operation used by those
firms,” the court found it was not violated by the taxing scheme. Id. at 480-81.
Finally, in Directv v. Levin, the Ohio Supreme Court considered an Ohio
statute that imposed a sales tax on satellite service, but not on cable service. 941
N.E.2d at 1191 (citing to R.C. 5739.01 (2003)). The Ohio Supreme Court, relying
on Exxon and Amerada Hess, as well as State and Treesh, found that the tax did
not discriminate based on geography and that the cable industry was not a local
interest. Id. at 1195-96.
Exxon and Amerada Hess are clearly distinguishable from this case because
the statute at issue in Exxon and the tax at issue in Amerada Hess had no effect on
the interstate flow of goods and did not give local interests a competitive advantage
over out-of-state interests. Here, it is undisputed that cable and satellite television
17
programmers provide programming using different methods. However, one
important facet of that difference is that cable providers utilize local infrastructure
to provide their services. Cable provider’s reliance on local rights-of-way
transforms its interests into local interests. The sales tax portion of the CST gives
a competitive advantage to television programming providers that use local rights-
of-way. This shows the CST has a discriminatory effect. The operational
differences present in this case do not shield the CST from Commerce Clause
scrutiny.
Because the CST has a discriminatory effect on satellite companies, it
violates the Commerce Clause, and the trial court erred in finding otherwise.
2. Discriminatory purpose
A finding that state legislation constitutes economic protectionism may be
made on the basis of discriminatory purpose. Bacchus, 468 U.S. at 270 (citing to
Hunt, 432 U.S. at 352-353). To determine whether there is discriminatory purpose,
courts look to the language and the legislative history of the statute in question.
Bacchus, 468 U.S. at 270-72. For example, in Bacchus, the court looked at the
legislative history of the statute that exempted Hawaiian-produced fruit wine and
okolehao liquor from an alcohol tax. Id. at 270-71. In Senate Committee reports,
the Hawaii Legislature stated that the exemption of the okolehao from the alcohol
tax was to encourage and promote the establishment of the okolehao liquor
18
industry. Id. at 270 (citing to In re Bacchus Imports, Ltd., 656 P.2d 724, 730
(Haw. 1982)). The reports also provided that the exemption of fruit wine
manufactured in Hawaii with Hawaiian products was intended to help stimulate the
local fruit wine industry. Bacchus, 468 U.S. at 270-71 (citing to In re Bacchus,
656 P.2d at 730).
The Appellants provided the trial court with affidavits from lobbyists and
two former legislators, which stated that the cable lobbyists sought a differential
tax rate for cable and satellite because satellite was beginning to take over some of
cable’s market share. The trial court did not err in refusing to consider these
affidavits. The intent of the Legislature in enacting a statute is “best revealed
through the actual language used and any applicable legislative history, rather than
through the testimony of individual legislators regarding their subjective intentions
in proposing, amending, or voting for or against a particular piece of legislation.”
League of Women Voters of Fla. v. Fla. House of Representatives, 132 So. 3d 135,
150 (Fla. 2013) (citing to Heart of Adoptions, Inc. v. J.A., 963 So. 2d 189, 198
(Fla. 2007) (stating the general principle of statutory construction that “legislative
intent is determined primarily from the statute's text”)). Here, section 202.105,
Florida Statutes, provides the legislative findings and intent of the CST:
(1) It is declared to be a specific legislative finding that the creation of
this chapter fulfills important state interests by reforming the tax laws
to provide a fair, efficient, and uniform method for taxing
communications services sold in this state. This chapter is essential to
19
the continued economic vitality of this increasingly important industry
because it restructures state and local taxes and fees to account for the
impact of federal legislation, industry deregulation, and the
convergence of service offerings that is now taking place among
providers. This chapter promotes the increased competition that
accompanies deregulation by embracing a competitively neutral tax
policy that will free consumers to choose a provider based on tax-
neutral considerations. This chapter further spurs new competition by
simplifying an extremely complicated state and local tax and fee
system. Simplification will lower the cost of collecting taxes and fees,
increase service availability, and place downward pressure on price.
Newfound administrative efficiency is demonstrated by a reduction in
the number of returns that a provider must file each month. By
restructuring separate taxes and fees into a revenue-neutral
communications services tax centrally administered by the
department, this chapter will ensure that the growth of the industry is
unimpaired by excessive governmental regulation. The tax imposed
pursuant to this chapter is a replacement for taxes and fees previously
imposed and is not a new tax. The taxes imposed and administered
pursuant to this chapter are of general application and are imposed in
a uniform, consistent, and nondiscriminatory manner.
§ 202.105, Fla. Stat., (2001). There is nothing in the language of the chapter
implementing the CST that shows a discriminatory purpose.
The specific statutory section at issue, section 202.12, Florida Statutes, was
first enacted on October 1, 2001. There was no mention of an intent to favor cable
companies in any of the 2000 Senate and House Journals. Additionally, in the
April 14, 2000, Senate Staff Analysis and Economic Impact Statement, the
analysts found that the CST’s impact would provide the benefit of a simplified tax
structure for all communication service providers. Senate Staff Analysis and
Economic Impact Statement, Senate Bill 1338 (April 14, 2000). Unlike the Senate
20
Committee reports in Bacchus, there is no evidence that the Legislature sought to
favor the cable providers.
Therefore, the trial court did not err when it found there was no evidence of
a discriminatory purpose.
VII. Conclusion
Because the sales tax portion of the CST violates the Commerce Clause due
to its discriminatory effect, this Court REVERSES the trial court’s order granting
summary judgment and order awarding costs and REMANDS to the trial court to
determine the refund amount.
SWANSON, J., CONCURS; MARSTILLER, J., DISSENTS with opinion.
21
MARSTILLER, J., dissenting.
For the following reasons, I respectfully dissent from the majority decision
and would affirm the summary final judgment ruling that the CST does not violate
the dormant Commerce Clause.
I do not agree the satellite and cable providers are similarly situated entities
for purposes of dormant Commerce Clause analysis; in my view, the majority
opinion fails to fully consider all the differences between the two.3 Mainly,
however, I disagree with the majority’s characterizing the cable providers’ use of
local infrastructure, reliance on local rights-of-way and employment of Florida
workers as in-state economic interests giving rise to the proscriptions of the
dormant Commerce Clause. As the trial court found based on the undisputed facts
brought out below, “[t]he cable companies may have more of a presence in the
state because of the nature of the technology they utilize in providing their
services, but the satellite companies have a significant presence in the state as
well.” Indeed, DirecTV and Echostar filed verified statements below averring that
each has employees based in Florida—DirecTV has independent contractors here,
as well—who are responsible for “sale of its services and installation, servicing,
and/or maintenance of its property.” I do not believe we can properly ignore or
discount these facts. Inasmuch as the cable providers and the satellite providers
3
See infra n.3.
22
both have human and physical assets in Florida which they use to provide services
to their customers, they both have significant in-state economic interests. I fail to
see how, under these facts, the cable providers have local economic interests, but
the satellite providers do not. And I find nothing in dormant Commerce Clause
jurisprudence that would justify invalidating Florida’s CST based on one group’s
comparatively greater economic investment in the state where both groups have
economic investment here.4
4
But cf. DirecTV, Inc. v. Roberts, No. M2013-01673-COA-R3-CV, slip op. (Tenn.
Ct. App. Feb. 27, 2015), and DirecTV, LLC v. Dep’t of Revenue, 25 N.E.3d 259
(Mass. 2015). The Tennessee court in Roberts¸ although ultimately finding the
state sales tax law challenged by satellite TV providers not in violation of the
dormant Commerce Clause, see infra. n.3, found the law impermissibly
discriminated based on the extent of “use of infrastructure,” citing Bacchus
Imports Ltd. v. Dias, 468 U.S. 263 (1984). DirecTV v. Roberts, slip op. at 11. But
Bacchus did not involve comparative local “use of infrastructure” or local
“investment” by otherwise non-state-based companies. Rather Bacchus involved a
clear-cut case of economic protectionism for a home-grown liquor industry against
out-of-state producers. Thus, in my view, Bacchus provides no jurisprudential
support for the approach taken by either the Tennessee court or the majority in this
case. Notably, the Tennessee court recognized:
[N]egative Commerce Clause precedent does not explain
[ ] how state legislatures are to weigh variances in
investment in order to avoid favoritism. . . . Case law
does not explain what differential, either in value or type,
of local investment will render different treatment of
competing companies discriminatory for purposes of the
negative Commerce Clause.
Roberts, slip op. at 12. I submit the reason such explanation has not been
forthcoming is because the dormant Commerce Clause does not apply where the
taxpayers involved all have some in-state investment. The Massachusetts court in
23
The majority opinion analogizes the situation here to Delta Air Lines, but
that case is, in fact, inapposite. There, the state law at issue “provide[d] a credit
against the corporate income tax for air common carriers who have a corporate or
business home office in Florida and also maintain a work force of more than 1200
employees in the state.” 455 So. 2d at 319. The credit would offset up to half of
an air carrier’s fuel tax bill. Id. The Florida Supreme Court held the tax credit
discriminated against interstate commerce by giving commercial advantage “to
Florida-based air common carriers over non-Florida-based carriers.” Id. at 320.
The distinction drawn in Delta Air Lines does not exist in the case before us
because none of the companies are Florida based. None have corporate
headquarters or business home offices here. And the fact that the cable providers,
because of the technology they use, have more infrastructure and assets in Florida
than do the satellite providers does not make this a case of Florida-based interests
Revenue simply assumed, without explanation, that the cable providers and
satellite providers represent in-state and out-of-state interests, respectively, and
cited Lewis v. BT Investment Managers, Inc., 447 U.S. 27, 42 n.9 (1980), for
support. DirecTV v. Dep’t of Revenue, 25 N.E.3d at 654-55, 655 n.12. However,
Lewis, like Bacchus, did not deal with comparative local investment by two groups
of industry participants. Rather, the state law at issue in Lewis prohibited banks,
bank holding companies and trust companies with principal operations outside the
state from establishing local operations. Lewis v. BT Inv. Managers, Inc., 447 U.S.
at 42. Thus, there too, economic protectionism of local business was the
impermissible objective of the statute; it was not a case of the state choosing to
favor two industry groups, both with some quantum of local investment, as we
have here.
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versus non-Florida-based interests.
I also believe the majority opinion, in focusing solely on the extent of in-
state economic investment by cable providers and disregarding in-state investment
by satellite providers, misapprehends the purpose of the dormant Commerce
Clause. Relying primarily on the fact that the cable providers use local rights-of-
way, the majority opinion discounts the decisions of the Sixth Circuit Court of
Appeals, the Ohio Supreme Court and the North Carolina Court of Appeals
holding that the pertinent distinction between satellite providers and cable
providers is operational and not geographical. But those courts correctly
recognized that the type of economic protectionism the dormant Commerce Clause
prohibits is not present in this situation where the state is not protecting local
industry. “[C]able companies are no more ‘local’ in nature than are satellite
companies.” DirecTV, Inc. v. State, 632 S.E.2d at 548. Moreover, application of
the CST “does not depend on the geographic location of the programming
provider. Rather, the sale of satellite broadcasting services is subject to [the
higher] tax regardless of whether the provider is an in-state or out-of-state
business[.]” DirecTV v. Levin, 941 N.E.2d at 1195. In other words, if any of the
satellite TV providers were to headquarter itself in Florida, the CST would operate
no differently as to that provider. As such, the CST does not offend the policy
advanced by the dormant Commerce Clause, and the summary final judgment
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should be affirmed. 5
Assuming arguendo the CST does discriminate against out-of-state interests,
5
But cf. DirecTV, Inc. v. Roberts and DirecTV, LLC v. Dep’t of Revenue, supra
n.2, the two most recent decisions (as of this writing) in the apparently growing
line of these cases. Although the Tennessee and Massachusetts courts found their
states’ taxing schemes discriminated against out-of-state interests, they
nevertheless upheld the statutes against the satellite providers’ dormant Commerce
Clause challenge because the satellite providers and cable providers are not
substantially similar entities as a threshold matter. See Roberts, slip op. at 17;
Revenue, N.E.3d at 266-68; see also Gen. Motors Corp. v. Tracy, 519 U.S. 278,
298 (1997) (“Any notion of discrimination assumes a comparison of substantially
similar entities.); Colgate-Palmolive Co. v. Fla. Dep’t of Revenue, 988 So. 2d
1212, 1216 (Fla. 1st DCA 2008) (“In considering whether facial discrimination
exists in a taxing scheme, courts must look to the treatment applied to similarly
situated taxpayers.”) (citing Kraft Gen. Foods, Inc. v. Iowa Dep’t of Revenue &
Fin., 505 U.S. 71, 81 n.12 (1992)).
The difference in [federal] regulatory treatment between
satellite and cable and the resulting benefits inuring to
cable customers mean that satellite providers and cable
providers are not substantially similar entities for
purposes of the Commerce Clause. . . . [T]he bundle of
services offered by cable providers differs substantially
from the bundle of services provided by satellite
providers. Cable providers must offer several public
service items, including local broadcast stations,
educational stations, emergency information, and certain
signal quality. Satellite providers are almost entirely free
from these obligations. While the services cable
providers must offer under federal law may not be widely
known to or necessarily coveted by consumers, federal
law nonetheless distinguishes the services and cable
providers and satellite providers. Therefore the disparate
tax treatment of satellite providers and cable providers
does not constitute discrimination.
Roberts, slip op. at 17.
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as asserted by the satellite providers, to the extent there is a set of circumstances, as
just stated, under which the statute clearly would not have such discriminatory
effect, the facial challenge to the statute fails. “A facial challenge to a legislative
act is . . . the most difficult challenge to mount successfully. The challenger must
establish that no set of circumstances exists under which [the tax] would be valid.”
State, 632 S.E.2d at 547 (quotations and citations omitted). The satellite providers
have not satisfied their very high burden in this constitutional challenge, and the
summary final judgment can be upheld on this basis, as well.
The bottom line is that the dormant Commerce Clause does not protect
satellite TV providers from differential tax treatment simply because their
technology is not land based. It does not protect “the particular structure or
methods of operation in a retail market.” Exxon Corp., 437 U.S. at 127. The
majority’s decision to invalidate Florida’s CST is inconsistent with this principle
and contrary to dormant Commerce Clause jurisprudence. I understand the
concern over a taxing scheme that appears to favor one group of industry
competitors over another. But “‘applying the dormant Commerce Clause in cases
that do not present the equivalent of a protective tariff’—i.e., where the tax does
not draw geographic lines, favor local products, or promote local companies—[ ]
‘dramatically increase[s] the clause’s scope.’” Levin, 941 N.E.2d at 1194 (quoting
Treesh, 487 F.3d at 481). The majority’s decision takes that dramatic step, and I
27
am not prepared to follow.
For the foregoing reasons, I respectfully dissent from the decision to
invalidate the CST. I note, however, “a facially discriminatory tax may still
survive Commerce Clause scrutiny if it is a truly ‘compensatory tax’ designed
simply to make interstate commerce bear a burden already borne by intrastate
commerce.’” Fulton Corp. v. Faulkner, 516 U.S. 325, 331 (1996) (quoting
Associated Industries of Mo. v. Lohman, 511 U.S. 641, 647 (1994)). Having
concluded the CST facially discriminates against interstate commerce, the majority
should not stop there, but should remand the cause for further consideration by the
trial court.
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