COURT OF APPEALS
EIGHTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS
EL PASO, TEXAS
BRAZOS ELECTRIC POWER §
COOPERATIVE, INC., No. 08-16-00069-CV
§
Appellant, Appeal from the
§
v. 98th District Court
§
TEXAS COMMISSION ON of Travis County, Texas
ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY and §
RICHARD A. HYDE, Executive Director (TC# D-1-GN-14-004531)
of TCEQ, §
Appellees. §
OPINION
The Brazos Electric Power Cooperative (Brazos Electric) and the Texas Commission on
Environmental Quality (TCEQ) do not agree on much in this administrative tax appeal, but when
it comes to the science underlying this dispute, both parties mostly sing from the same hymnal.
In a “single-cycle power plant,” a generator uses a single turbine powered by a natural gas
combustion engine to generate electricity. The engine gives off heat and the pollutant precursor
gas nitrogen oxide (NOx), both of which are vented off into the atmosphere through piping known
as a spooling device. By placing a heat steam recovery generator (HRSG) where the spooling
device used to be, Brazos Electric can turn its single-cycle power plants into “combined-cycle”
power plants that use wasted heat from the gas engine to boil water, create steam, and pass the
steam through the blades of a second, steam-powered turbine. A combined-cycle power plant with
a HRSG still vents NOx into the atmosphere, but the HRSG lets a plant use a given amount of
fossil fuel to effectively power two engines instead of just one, thereby generating more electricity.
The issue in this case is whether by purchasing and using HRSGs at its two power plants,
Brazos Electric is entitled to an ad valorem tax break reserved for devices that are installed to
comply with state and federal regulations aimed at abating air pollution. See TEX.TAX CODE ANN.
§§ 11.31(a)-(b)(West 2015).
Section 11.31 requires TCEQ’s Executive Director to determine whether a device is being
used “wholly or partly” for regulatory compliance purposes before granting a tax break. Id. Where
a dual-use device has a pollution control function, but the device also makes a facility more
productive and more profitable, the Executive Director is limited to granting a tax break that is
proportionate with the device’s pollution abatement value. See TEX.TAX CODE ANN.
§ 11.31(g)(3)(West 2015). To make this relative function determination, TCEQ uses an algebraic
formula known as the cost analysis procedure (CAP) that balances any increased marginal capital
costs associated with upgrading from “dirty” technology to “green” technology against any
positive potential return on investment, applying a tax rate accordingly. See generally 30
TEX.ADMIN.CODE § 17.17 (2017)(Tex. Comm’n on Envtl. Quality, Partial Determinations)
TCEQ’s administrative rules allow for the CAP formula to result in a zero or negative
value. When that happens, TCEQ denies the tax break. 30 TEX.ADMIN CODE § 17.17(d). TCEQ
reasons that the Legislature intended for the Section 11.31 tax break to be used only to coax
businesses into complying with environmental regulations when compliance would otherwise be
“economically irrational” and cost-prohibitive. But if an applicant either saves money on the
front end by adopting cheaper green technology over “dirty” technology, or if on the back end
2
more expensive green technology ultimately pays for itself in the long run by increasing profits,
TCEQ believes regulatory compliance would be economically rational, rendering Section 11.31
tax break unnecessary and unavailable.
That brings us to the second point on which Brazos Electric and TCEQ agree. For purposes
of this appeal, both parties concede that the CAP formula is the only proper decisional framework
to apply, at least in theory. But in its primary appellate issue, Brazos Electric maintains that even
if the CAP formula results in a zero or negative number in a HRSG application, TCEQ cannot by
statute deny HRSGs a tax break, since HRSGs appear on a preordained list of properties at
TEX.TAX CODE ANN. § 11.31(k)(West 2015)(referred to by the parties as “the k-list”) that are
mandatorily entitled to receive some kind of tax break under TEX.TAX CODE ANN. § 11.31(m).
We disagree with Brazos Electric’s reading of Subsection (m), and instead agree with
TCEQ’s position that Subsection (m) does not require the agency to issue a tax break to k-list
properties. Rather, Subsection (m) only requires TCEQ to give k-list applicants certain
administrative preferences during TCEQ’s decisional process; the agency still retains the
discretion to decide whether and on what terms a k-list applicant receives a tax break. We also
disagree with Brazos Electric’s other two alternative appellate contentions: namely, that TCEQ
has engaged in informal rulemaking in violation of the Administrative Procedure Act’s formality
requirement; and that no reasonable person could reject the three alternative proposed CAP
formulations Brazos Electric submitted in its tax applications to TCEQ.
For the following reasons, we will affirm the judgment of the trial court.
BACKGROUND
The Administrative Framework
Beginning in 1994, the Texas Constitution permitted the Legislature to pass laws
3
exempting from taxation “all or part of real and personal property used, constructed, acquired, or
installed wholly or partly to meet” state and federal environmental regulations aimed at “the
prevention, monitoring, control, or reduction of air, water, or land pollution.” TEX.CONST. art.VIII,
§ 1-l (a)-(b). Relying on that grant of authority, the 73rd Legislature passed a law granting a person
an “exemption from taxation of all or part of real and personal property that the person owns and
that is used wholly or partly as a facility, device, or method for the control of air, water, or land
pollution.” See TEX.TAX CODE ANN. § 11.31(a). A facility, device, or method for controlling air
pollution is defined as “any . . . equipment[] or device . . . that is used, constructed, acquired, or
installed wholly or partly to meet or exceed rules or regulations adopted by any environmental
protection agency . . . for the prevention, monitoring, control, or reduction of air . . . pollution.”
TEX.TAX CODE ANN. § 11.31(b).
To qualify for this tax break, an applicant must submit an application detailing three
factors:
(1) The anticipated environmental benefits from the installation of the facility, device, or
method for the control of air, water, or land pollution;
(2) The estimated cost of the pollution control facility, device, or method; and
(3) The purpose of the installation of such facility, device, or method, and the proportion
of the installation that is pollution control property.
TEX.TAX CODE ANN. § 11.31(c). “If the installation includes property that is not used wholly for
the control of air . . . pollution, the person seeking the exemption shall also present such financial
or other data as the executive director [of TCEQ] requires by rule for the determination of the
proportion of the installation that is pollution control property.” Id.
The Texas Legislature vested TCEQ’s Executive Director with the power to administer
this tax break, see TEX.TAX CODE ANN. § 11.31(d), and created a two-step process for seeking a
4
tax exemption. First, the exemption-seeker must file an application for a use “determination” with
the Executive Director, who decides whether certain property qualifies wholly or partially as
pollution-control property. TEX.TAX CODE ANN. §§ 11.31(c), (d). If the property is only partially
used for pollution control, the Executive Director can only grant an exemption that is proportional
to that property’s use for pollution control. TEX.TAX CODE ANN. §§ 11.31(c), (g)(3). Once the
Executive Director has rendered his or her decision, the applicant may take the decision to its local
appraisal district and obtain tax relief. TEX.TAX CODE ANN. § 11.31(d). However, if the applicant
or the appraisal district is unhappy with the Executive Director’s decision, either party may appeal
to the TCEQ commissioners. TEX.TAX CODE ANN. § 11.31(e); 30 TEX.ADMIN.CODE § 17.25
(2017)(Tex. Comm’n on Envtl. Quality, Appeals Process). The appeal hearing is uncontested for
purposes of the Administrative Procedures Act. Id. At this second step of the process, the TCEQ
commissioners, sitting at a regularly scheduled meeting, may either affirm the Executive
Director’s decision or else remand to the Executive Director for a redetermination. Id. From there,
an aggrieved party may seek judicial review of the agency determination in district court.
TEX.WATER CODE ANN. § 5.351(a)(West 2008).
TCEQ’s Cost-Analysis Procedure and the “k-List”
The adjudicative process TCEQ has for Section 11.31 tax breaks has changed throughout
the years. We discuss the previous processes leading up to Brazos Electric’s applications fully in
order to provide context about how for years now TCEQ and stakeholders have struggled with
determining tax breaks for HRSGs.
Initially, in determining whether and to what extent property qualified for a tax break, the
TCEQ processed exemption applications using a three-tiered process:
• Tier I—reserved for equipment identified on an internal TCEQ list that TCEQ had
previously determined qualified for a 100% exemption;
5
• Tier II—reserved for equipment not on the TCEQ list that nevertheless qualified
for a 100% exemption; and
• Tier III—reserved for equipment not on the TCEQ list that was partially exempt
from qualification.
See 30 TEX.ADMIN.CODE §§ 17.2(8-10)(2017)(Tex. Comm’n on Envtl. Quality,
Definitions). For Tier III applicants, TCEQ used and continues to use the CAP formula to
determine an applicant’s effective tax break rate. See 30 TEX.ADMIN.CODE § 17.17(a)(2017)(Tex.
Comm’n on Envtl. Quality, Partial Determinations). At core, the CAP balances out the marginal
capital costs of upgrading equipment against any potential return on investment, expressing that
value as a percentage of the new technology’s overall cost. The percentage is used to determine
if an applicant may receive a tax break, and if so, how much.
The CAP first takes the capital cost of comparable equipment without the pollution control
feature (Capital Cost Old), and then subtracts that value from the capital cost of the actual
equipment at issue with the pollution control feature (Capital Cost New). 30 TEX.ADMIN.CODE
§ 17.17(c)(1). The difference is the marginal cost that TCEQ asserts is the capital value
attributable to pollution control efforts. From there, the CAP further deducts the net value of any
marketable material generated by the equipment over its lifetime; this variable is known as the
“net present value of the marketable product” (NPVMP). Id. §§ 17.17(c)(1)-(2). Whatever amount
is leftover once the NPVMP is subtracted then is divided by the capital cost of the actual equipment
(Capital Cost New) to get a percentage. Id. If the amount is a positive percentage, that percentage
is used as the percentage of the tax break. “If the cost analysis procedure . . . produces a negative
number or a zero, the property is not eligible for a positive use determination.” Id. § 17.17(d). We
set out a simplified algebraic representation of the CAP formula below in Table 1.1:
6
TCEQ’s Simplified Cost Analysis Procedure Formula
( x1 – x2 ) – y
_____________________
· 100 = z%
x1
x1 : Capital cost of the actual equipment at issue, with pollution control feature
(Capital Cost New)1
x2 : Capital cost of comparable equipment without pollution control feature
(Capital Cost Old)
y : Net value of any marketable material generated by equipment over lifetime
(NPVMP)
· : Multiplication sign
z : Percentage of equipment’s capital cost attributable to pollution control/tax
break percentage
Table 1.1
While the CAP functioned well as a tool to compare old technology with new technology,
both parties agree that the CAP presented a challenge for TCEQ’s use determination process both
for dual-use properties that served joint pollution control and production purposes, and for
emergent technologies whose capital costs could not be neatly tethered to those of previously-
known technical analogues.
In 2007, the Legislature amended the Tax Code by creating eighteen categories of property,
technology, and equipment located in TEX.TAX CODE ANN. § 11.31(k) that both parties refer to as
the “k-list.” See Act of June 15, 2007, 80th Leg., R.S., ch. 1277, § 4, 2007 TEX.GEN.LAWS 4261,
1
In the full CAP formula, the Capital Cost New variable is multiplied by a Production Capacity Factor variable, which
“is used to adjust the capacity of the new equipment or process to the capacity of the existing equipment or process.”
30 TEX.ADMIN.CODE 17.17(c)(1). The full CAP formula is:
Production Capacity Factor x Capital Cost New Capital Cost Old NPVMP 100
Capital Cost New
The Production Capacity Factor has been omitted from the simplified CAP formula we use because both parties agree
that variable is not at issue in this case. As such, x1 represents only the Capital Cost New amount.
7
4264. HRSGs are among the technologies that appear on the k-list. TEX.TAX CODE ANN.
§ 11.31(k)(8).
Brazos Electric and TCEQ clash over what placement on the k-list actually means, and we
will address that specific controversy later in the opinion. Suffice to say, in response to the new
legislation, TCEQ took the position that the k-list created an expedited review process for those
particularly listed technologies, but that the Legislature did not require the agency to issue per se
positive use determinations for those technologies. See 33 TEX.REG. 932, 933 (2008)(codifying
former 30 TEX.ADMIN.CODE 17.17(d) and (e))(Tex. Comm’n on Envtl. Quality, Background and
Summary of the Factual Basis for the Adopted Rules).2
TCEQ created a new category of applications—Tier IV—for k-list technologies. Id. at
942. TCEQ also adopted a new rule allowing Tier IV applicants to propose their own ad hoc
methodologies that TCEQ could use to calculate use percentages for that technology, all subject
to the Executive Director’s approval. See id. at 934 (adopting 30 TEX.ADMIN.CODE § 17.17 (d),
(e)(2008), repealed and modified in part, 33 TEX.REG. 10964, 10982 (2010))(“The adopted
amendment adds new §17.17(d) which explains that it is the responsibility of the applicant to
determine a reasonable method for calculating a partial determination for all items submitted under
2
TCEQ’s specific administrative findings on that point read as follows:
[Texas Tax Code] §11.31(k) requires the TCEQ to adopt a list containing the 18 categories of
equipment. However, §11.31(k) does not provide the pollution control percentage for each of the
18 categories of items. Staff reviewed these items and determined that the pollution control
percentage could vary depending upon the type of facility where the property is located, and the
function of the property. After discussions with stakeholders, program staff developed a two-part
list. . . . Part B of the list consists of the 18 property categories listed in TTC, §11.31(k). . . . The
items in Part B are listed without set use determination percentages. Applicants will be required to
calculate an application-specific determination for each piece of equipment. It is the responsibility
of the executive director to determine the proper use percentage using the range of 0%-100%.
Simply because a piece of equipment is on the Equipment and Categories List or purports to fall
under a category set forth on the list, does not mean that it will receive a positive use determination.
The use percentage will be calculated for each piece of property on an application-by-application
basis.
8
a category or categories contained in Part B of the ECL [i.e. the k-list].”).
TCEQ Tackles Tax Breaks for HRSGs Using Ad Hoc Tier IV Review; Appraisal Districts
Revolt; Legislature Requires TCEQ to Apply Rules “Uniformly to All Applicants,” Including
k-List Applicants
Following the Legislature’s adoption of the k-list and TCEQ’s adoption of Tier IV review
for k-list properties and technologies, TCEQ received at least 35 applications for use
determinations for HRSGs and the related enhanced steam turbine systems (ESTs) under Tier IV.
See TEX. LEG. BUDGET BD., TEXAS STATE GOVERNMENT EFFECTIVENESS AND EFFICIENCY:
SELECTED ISSUES AND RECOMMENDATIONS at 109, 111-12 (Jan. 2009). According to TCEQ,
various applicants proposed various methods for calculating pollution control percentages. On
May 1, 2008, TCEQ’s Executive Director, using the ad hoc formulas proposed by the applicants
themselves, approved twenty-five applications for 100 percent positive use determinations for
HRSG applicants, but he made negative use-determinations for the steam turbines attached to the
HRSGs.
Appraisal districts appealed positive-use determinations in six cases, arguing that the
HRSGs in those specific applications were being used solely as production equipment and should
not receive any tax breaks at all (the Group 1 Appeals). Efforts at obtaining a mediated settlement
on proper HRSG use-determination methodology through a “workgroup” between applicants and
appraisal districts failed, and TCEQ’s commissioners docketed the Group 1 Appeals for February
2009. Those appeals were continued indefinitely at the Executive Director’s request.
Meanwhile, in January 2009, the Legislative Budget Board, considering the Tier IV
controversy, its effect on HRSG applicants, and the potential loss of millions of dollars of tax
revenue as a result of inconsistent decisional methodologies,3 recommended that the Legislature
3
The Legislative Budget Board noted that “[b]ecause the first 35 applications for pollution control property tax
exemptions related to HRSGs and ESTs account for equipment valued at more than $2.0 billion, TCEQ’s use
9
[A]mend Texas Tax Code, Section 11, to require TCEQ to use the CAP formula as
a maximum exemption when making a use determination for equipment listed in
Texas Tax Code, Section 11.31(k). The maximum exemption granted any applicant
requesting an exemption for equipment [on the k-list] . . . should not exceed the
exemption that would be granted if the applicant were using the formula. The CAP
formula includes variables that account for the economic benefit to the property
owner of the pollution control equipment. TCEQ allows Tier IV applicants to
develop their own methodology to encourage innovation in use determination. If
the agency would prefer to continue to use such innovation, the statutory change
should be permissive in allowing applicants to develop their own use determination
methodology. However, that methodology should not exceed the maximum
allowable use determination from an application of the CAP formula.
TEX.LEG.BUDGET BD., at 113-14.
After the Legislative Budget Board issued its recommendation, the Texas Legislature
altered the landscape yet again in May 2009 by passing TEX.TAX CODE ANN. § 11.31(g-1). See
Act of May 25, 2009, 81st Leg., R.S., ch. 962, § 3, 2009 TEX.GEN.LAWS 2556, 2557-58 (effective
Sept. 1, 2009). That subsection states:
The standards and methods for making a determination under this section that are
established in the rules adopted under Subsection (g) apply uniformly to all
applications for determinations under this section, including applications relating
to facilities, devices, or methods for the control of air, water, or land pollution
included on a list adopted by the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality
under Subsection (k).
According to its brief, TCEQ interpreted Subsection (g-1) as requiring it to abandon ad hoc
Tier IV review and instead apply the CAP formula to all applications for use determinations
moving forward, including those applications concerning k-list properties. In 2010, TCEQ finally
codified this understanding by repealing Tier IV review and instead requiring all applicants to use
the CAP formula to determine use percentages, regardless of whether the subject property
appeared on the k-list or not. See 33 TEX.REG. 10964, 10982 (2010).
Brazos Electric’s HRSG Exemptions are Rejected
determination of 100 percent for HRSGs and 0 percent for ESTs could reduce taxable property value in the affected
tax districts by as much as $1.5 billion for these applications alone.” Id. at 113.
10
The Initial Applications
In Application #13544, Brazos Electric sought a 100 percent positive use determinations
for its Johnson County facility in April 2009. In May 2009, TCEQ informed Brazos Electric that
it was abating its technical review of the Johnson County application until the six Group 1 Appeals
were resolved. In September 2009, TCEQ informed Brazos Electric that it was subject to the
uniform-decision requirements of the newly-enacted Subsection (g-1), which would affect its
application.4 From that point, administrative activity apparently stopped until March 7, 2012,
when Brazos Electric submitted a revised use determination application for its Johnson County
facility. At that time, Brazos Electric also submitted Application #16413, seeking a separate use
determination for the HRSG at its Jack County facility.
In its revised Johnson County application, Brazos Electric applied the CAP formula using
$28,111,986 as the Capital Cost New variable, $0 as the Capital Cost Old variable, and
$11,039,233.23 as the projected NPVMP production variable, which resulted in a positive use
determination of +60.73%.5 In its Jack County application, Brazos Electric used $105,244,426.00
4
The session law enacting Subsection (g-1), which dictates that TCEQ apply its standards and methods of
determination “uniformly” to all applicants including k-list applicants, specifies that Subsection (g-1) only applied to
cases filed after January 1, 2009, that were not yet final as of the Act’s enactment date of September 1, 2009. See Act
of May 25, 2009, 81st Leg., R.S., ch. 962, § 3(a), 2009 TEX.GEN.LAWS 2556, 2557-58.
Because Brazos Electric filed its Johnson County application after January 1, 2009, and because TCEQ’s decision on
the Johnson County facility had not become final as of September 1, 2009, TCEQ was required to decide the Johnson
County facility application in accordance with the uniform rules of decision mandate of TEX.TAX CODE ANN.
§ 11.31(g-1). Presumably, this is why Brazos Electric has elected to use the CAP as its lodestar on appeal and does
not challenge TCEQ’s rejection of the non-CAP formulations as being erroneous.
That being said, we are aware that our sister court in Austin has decided a consolidated set of appellate cases all
dealing with HRSG applicants who originally applied under Tier IV review, before Subsection (g-1) was enacted. See
Freestone Power Generation, L.L.C. et al v. Tex. Comm'n on Envtl. Quality, Nos. 03-16-00692-CV, No. 03-16-00692-
CV, No. 03-16-00693-CV, No. 03-16-00694-CV, No. 03-16-00695-CV, No. 03-16-00698-CV, No. 03-16-00699-CV,
No. 03-16-00700-CV, and No. 03-16-00701-CV, 2017 WL 3044547 (Tex.App.--Austin July 11, 2017, no
pet.h.)(mem. op.). We address the effect of Freestone later in this opinion.
5
Initial Johnson County CAP formulation, represented mathematically:
11
as the Capital Cost New variable, $0 as the Capital Cost Old variable, and $26,671,381.03 as the
projected NPVMP production variable, which resulted in a positive use determination of
+74.66%.6
The Executive Director summarily rejected both application and issued a negative use
determination on July 2012, stating only: “Heat recovery steam generators and associated
dedicated ancillary equipment are used solely for production; therefore, are not [sic] eligible for a
positive use determination.” Brazos Electric appealed to the Commissioners. On December 10,
2012, the TCEQ Commissioners reversed thirteen of the Executive Director’s HRSG use
determinations (including Brazos Electric’s two appeals), vacated his orders, and remanded the
applications to him for new use determinations.
Proceedings on Remand to the Executive Director
On remand, the Executive Director issued Notices of Deficiency to Brazos Electric with
respect to both the Johnson and Jack County facilities, requesting more information and stating
that he believed the appropriate Capital Cost Old variable that should be used was not “$0,” but
rather the cost of a boiler that produced the same amount of steam as a HRSG. In response, Brazos
Electric objected to the use of the boiler as the Capital Cost Old variable. Brazos Electric
recalculated the original CAP formulation using a slightly lower NPVMP value at the Johnson
County facility, resulting in a proposed positive use determination of +64.29%.7 The Jack County
($28,111,986.00 $0) $11,039,233.23
100 60.73%
$28,111,986.00
6
Initial Jack County CAP formulation, represented mathematically:
($105,244,426.00 $0) $26,671,381.03
100 74.66%
$105,244,426.00
7
Updated initial CAP, represented mathematically:
12
percentage stayed the same. “Without waiving its right to pursue” those use determinations,
Brazos Electric also proposed four alternative methods for determining the tax break. Two
methods did not apply the CAP formula. Brazos Electric has abandoned these options on appeal;
we need not discuss them further. The other two methods applied the CAP using different
variables.
In the first revised CAP formulation, Brazos Electric suggested that a spooling device
worth $150,000 could be used to determine that Capital Cost Old factor, since the spooling
device—essentially, piping—would fill the space between the natural gas generator and the
exhaust stack if the HRSG were removed from the plant. It is undisputed that a spooling device
does not produce steam and has no productive value. This proposed CAP formulation would result
in a +63.76% usage score at the Johnson County facility8 and a +74.52% usage score at the Jack
County facility.9
In its second revised CAP formulation, Brazos Electric reiterated its position that $0 should
be used as the Capital Cost Old variable because no technology comparable to a HRSG existed,
and the company replaced the original $11 million NPVMP variable proposed in its initial
application with a $0 NPVMP variable, resulting in a 100 percent use determination at both
($28,111,986.00 $0) $10,097,697.34
100 64.29%
$28,111,986.00
8
Revised CAP Option #1 for Johnson County facility, represented mathematically:
($28,111,986.00 $150,000.00) $10,037,697.34
100 63.76%
$28,111,986.00
Where $150,000 is the cost of a spooling device, and $10,037,697.34 is the adjusted NPVMP. We note that the
NPVMP factor in this formulation is different that the NPVMP factor used in the updated initial CAP formulation
supra.
9
Revised CAP Option #1 for Jack County facility, represented mathematically:
($105,244,426.00 $150,000.00) $26,671,384.03
100 74.52%
$105,244,426.00
13
facilities.10 Brazos Electric reasoned that the $0 NPVMP input was appropriate because the CAP
formula required it to “imagine a world that bears little resemblance to reality” and presuppose
that a HRSG that was a “stand-alone” item not connected to either a fuel input or an energy output;
under those conditions, the HRSG had zero productive value.
Following a second Notice of Deficiency issued by the Executive Director and a response
from Brazos Electric in which both parties respective positions remained unchanged, the Executive
Director ultimately rejected all of Brazos Electric’s proposed calculations, finding that the
technology most similar to a HRSG was not spooling device/piping, but rather a steam boiler
whose value exceeded the value of the HRSG. In applying the cost of this boiler using the CAP,
the Executive Director issued negative scores for both the the Johnson County facility HRSG (-
82.55%)11 and the Jack County facility HRSG (-277.50%).12 Based on these scores, the Executive
Director issued a negative use determination and denied the tax break. The Executive Director
explained his reasons for rejecting Brazos Electric’s proposed methodologies:
• Modified CAP Calculation (64%) [Spooling Device as CCO]: Capital Cost
New (CCN) includes dedicated ancillary systems. Allowing Capital Cost Old
(CCO) to be equal a pipe [sic] or spool piece ignores that HRSGs are alternative
production equipment. CCO is the cost of comparable equipment without the
10
Revised CAP Option #2 for Jack/Johnson, represented mathematically:
($28,111,986.00 $0) $0
100 100%
$28,111,986.00
11
Executive Director’s CAP formulation for Johnson County facility, represented mathematically:
($28,111,986.00 $41,280,000.00) $10,037,697.34
100 82.55%
$28,111,986.00
Where $134.4 million represents the value of a boiler that produces the same amount of steam as a HRSG.
12
Executive Director’s CAP formulation for Jack County facility, represented mathematically:
($43,225,585.41 $134,400,000.00) $28,774,661.00
100 227.50%
$43,225,585.41
Where $134.4 million represents the value of a boiler that produces the same amount of steam as a HRSG.
14
pollution control. If the HRSGs produce steam, then comparable equipment
that produces steam without pollution control is a boiler. The ED does not find
it reasonable to equate CCO to a spool piece.
• Modified CAP Calculation (100%): Capital Cost New (CCN) includes
dedicated ancillary systems. Allowing Capital Cost Old (CCO) to be $0 ignores
that HRSGs are alternative production equipment. CCO is the cost of
comparable equipment without the pollution control. If the HRSGs produce
steam, then comparable equipment that produces steam without pollution
control is a boiler. The ED does not find it resoanable to attribute $0 cost to
CCO in the CAP.
• CAP as proposed by the executive director . . . : The CAP formula was adopted
by the commission to provide a methodology for determinations that
distinguishes [sic] the proportion of property that is used to control, monitor,
prevent, or reduce pollution from the proportion of property that is used to
produce goods or services. The fact that the CAP calculated results in a
negative number shows that the HRSGs’ and dedicated ancillary equipment’s
pollution prevention benefit is negative by its ability to produce a product.
On second appeal, the Commissioners affirmed the Executive Director’s decision.
Proceedings in District Court
Brazos Electric brought an action under TEX.WATER CODE ANN. § 5.351 seeking
declaratory relief in Travis County district court. Following review of the administrative record
and a hearing, the Travis County district court affirmed TCEQ’s denial of the tax break. This
appeal followed. We hear this case on transfer from our sister court, the Third Court of Appeals
in Austin, by order of the Texas Supreme Court. We apply the precedent of that court and defer
to that court’s decisions to the extent required by the Rules of Appellate Procedure. TEX.R.APP.P.
41.3.
DISCUSSION
Introduction
The Court’s Limited Role in Administrative Appeals and What Questions We May Answer
This case has many moving parts on both a macro and micro level. At the macro level, it
15
implicates numerous important questions about Texas’ environmental policy and the tax incentives
given to encourage businesses to “go green.” It also implicates our fidelity to the Texan
constitutional principle that taxes should be equal and uniform unless voters amend the
Constitution to say otherwise, as well as our deference to the legislative balancing act of ensuring
both that businesses prosper and that our schools, roads, and infrastructure are all properly funded
with taxes. Although the litigants on both sides paint with broad strokes, our role to play in
answering these macro-level questions is much narrower and largely limited by the micro-level
action of administrative mechanisms and appellate rules. We only answer those questions which
are necessary to the resolution of this appeal as between the two parties before us, and only reach
those questions actually raised by these two parties. We winnow away side issues to keep our
opinions clear, focused, usable, and as short as practicable. TEX.R.APP.P. 47.1. So we pause at the
outset to clarify what this case is not about.
This case is not about whether we believe it would be good policy for Brazos Electric to
get a tax break for using HRSGs at their power plants. We do not make policy; we interpret law.
In re Allen, 366 S.W.3d 696, 708 (Tex. 2012). Deciding who should get what tax break and under
what circumstances is the Legislature’s job, not ours, TEX.CONST. art. VIII, §§ 1(a), 1-l, and
administering the tax break set by the Legislature is the TCEQ Executive Director’s job, not ours.
TEX.TAX CODE ANN. § 11.31(d). “Where the action under review involves a matter that the
legislature has committed to the agency’s discretion or judgment, a court will not determine the
advisability or wisdom of the agency’s action but will sustain that action if it is reasonably
supported by substantial evidence.” 2 TEX.JUR.3D ADMINISTRATIVE LAW § 220 (2017). We are
limited to determining whether TCEQ, in rendering its tax decision, acted arbitrarily and
capriciously, or otherwise exceeded the statutory authority granted to it by the Legislature. Mont
16
Belvieu Caverns, L.L.C. v. Tex. Comm’n on Envtl. Quality, 382 S.W.3d 472, 489 (Tex.App.--
Austin 2012, no pet.). If TCEQ acted within the reasonable bounds of its statutory authority, we
have no role to play here. Id.
This case is also not about whether we believe the CAP formula itself is reasonable, fair,
wise, outdated, or prescient, or even whether we believe it takes into account all the intangible
factors that might be relevant in determining whether equipment serves a pollution-control
function and whether its adoption is economically rational. Why not? Because the Rules of
Appellate Procedure prohibit us from entertaining those questions here. While Brazos Electric
complains about a laundry-list of bureaucratic indignities, Brazos Electric also repeatedly
disavows any challenge to the reasonableness of the CAP formula on appeal.13 The parties both
agree in their briefs that the CAP formula is the yardstick we must use in deciding whether
TCEQ—acting within the proper bounds of its statutory authority—can grant the tax break in this
case. We are constrained to considering only those legal issues raised in the briefs. TEX.R.APP.P.
38.1(f). Brazos Electric asks us primarily to sketch out the boundaries of the statute and then
decide whether the Executive Director acted permissibly within those boundaries. Any ancillary
issues not fairly subsumed within the statutory construction question, including the reasonableness
of the CAP formula, have not been assigned for our review, and in civil cases, we are prohibited
from reaching out and reversing a judgment on the basis of unassigned error. See Pat Baker Co.,
Inc. v. Wilson, 971 S.W.2d 447, 450 (Tex. 1998).
Accepting as we must that the only measure we can employ in determining whether Brazos
13
See, e.g., App. Br. 39 (opining that TCEQ may be wise to change the rules in the future but asserting that “in this
appeal, Brazos Electric does not challenge any of the TCEQ’s formally adopted rules. . . . [T]he TCEQ’s decision to
instead retain and expand its use of the CAP formula is not what necessitates negative-use determinations . . . .”);
Reply Br. at 25 (“The TCEQ raises several reasonableness arguments. Most of these arguments relate to the
reasonableness of the CAP formula, which Brazos does not challenge. Instead, Brazos Electric challenges the TCEQ’s
ad hoc decision to insist on using the cost of a new boiler for the ‘Capital Cost Old’ variable when applying the CAP
formula to HRSGs.”).
17
Electric is entitled to the tax break is the CAP formula—with the caveat that TCEQ can only apply
the CAP formula within the proper constraints of the enabling provisions of the Tax Code—we
proceed.
The Precise Issues Raised by Brazos Electric’s Opening Brief
Brazos Electric raises three issues on appeal. In Issue One, Brazos Electric challenges
TCEQ’s authority to deny the tax break at all, arguing that TEX.TAX CODE ANN. § 11.31(m)
requires TCEQ to grant HRSG users some kind of tax break—though Brazos does not specify in
what amount. In Issue Two, Brazos Electric contends that TCEQ violated that Administrative
Procedures Act by effectively adopting an “informal practice” of denying all HRSG tax
applications and refusing to allow any HRSG user to claim an exemption without undergoing the
formal rulemaking process. Finally, in Issue Three, Brazos maintains if TCEQ retained discretion
to decide whether the tax break applies, TCEQ arbitrarily and capriciously denied the tax break in
this case by comparing a HRSG to a particular kind of boiler steam generator, the value of which
exceeds a HRSG.
I.
Issue One: Statutory Construction
In Light of Subsection (m), Can TCEQ Deny a Section 11.31 Tax Break to k-list Properties When
the Application of the CAP Formula Results in a Zero or Negative Value?
We begin with the statutory construction problem underpinning most of Brazos Electric’s
arguments. In Issue One, Brazos Electric contends that Subsection (m) withdraws from TCEQ
any ability or discretion to deny HRSGs a Section 11.31 tax break. Thus, even if an objective
application of the CAP formula results in a zero or a negative number—indicating that TCEQ has
determined the HRSG was not, in fact, installed for a pollution-control purpose—TCEQ must still
grant Brazos Electric a tax break of some kind per Subsection (m).
18
We disagree.
A.
Standard of Review and Statutory Construction Standards
The limits of TCEQ’s discretionary authority under Subsection (m) implicate a question of
statutory construction. We review questions of statutory construction de novo. Mont Belvieu
Caverns, L.L.C., 382 S.W.3d at 486. However, we are also mindful that we hear this case on
transfer from the Third Court of Appeals by order of the Supreme Court of Texas. In this
procedural posture, we are bound to apply the precedent of that court. See TEX.R.APP.P. 41.3. To
the extent that the Third Court has answered an open statutory construction question relevant to
this case, we cannot disregard that interpretation but must apply it, regardless of whether we
personally might have decided the issue differently. Id.14
14
During the pendency of this case, our sister court in Austin decided the case Freestone Power Generation, L.L.C.
v. Texas Commission on Environmental Quality, No. 03–16–00692–CV et al., 2017 WL 3044547 (Tex.App.--Austin
July 11, 2017, no pet.h.)(mem. op.). In Freestone, the Austin court held that TCEQ exceeded its statutory authority
by denying tax breaks to HRSGs because the statute required TCEQ to issue some sort of tax break to k-list
properties. Id. at *6-*7.
Per Rule 41.3, as the transferee court, we are bound by the transferor court’s precedent, even if we would have decided
the case differently working on a clean slate. This Rule has placed us in a difficult position. In truth, given that both
Freestone and this case partially embrace the same open question of law, and that given that Austin is the ultimate
decider under Rule 41.3, it may have served both our courts better if this orphan appeal had not found itself on the
transfer docket in the first place. We respectfully request that the Supreme Court of Texas consider revising the
transfer rule to prevent transfers in situations like this where true issues of first impression are simultaneously
presented in a transferor and transferee court. It creates a serious dilemma for the transferee court: should the
transferee court—often a smaller court—proceed forward allocating limited judicial resources to the case’s resolution
knowing that the transferor court could issue a contrary opinion in the interim that would undercut the transferee’s
work? Or should the transferee court wait until the transferor court decides the issue and let the case potentially sit
on its dockets for months in hopes that the transferor court will, for lack of a better phrase, “do our homework” for
us?
The Court in this case has elected to issue our split-decision opinion in this case as-is. Our reasoning is this: while
Freestone and this case both deal with an overlapping dispositive issue of first impression, and while Freestone’s
holding may be contrary to the majority’s opinion here, the parties in Freestone moved for rehearing. As of the date
of this opinion’s issuance, rehearing was still pending in our sister court, meaning that the Freestone opinion is not yet
final. Because Freestone is not yet final and mandate has not issued, it is not binding and does not constitute
“precedent;” thus we may issue a contrary decision in good faith without violating Rule 41.3.
We do so here not to abdicate our duty to apply our sister court’s law as a virtual panel of that court, or as an affront
to the deciding panel in Freestone; instead we simply seek to offer our sister court the product of our deliberations
19
Our primary purpose in construing a statute is to give effect to the Legislature’s intent. TG
S-Nopec Geophysical Co. v. Combs, 340 S.W.3d 432, 439 (Tex. 2011). The Code Construction
Act recognizes that in interpreting statutes, this Court has leeway to consider many disparate
factors, regardless of whether a statute is ambiguous or not. See TEX.GOV’T CODE ANN. § 311.023
(West 2013). That being said, the Texas Supreme Court has instructed us to always begin our
construction of the statute by using the statute’s words, as the Legislature’s carefully-chosen words
are the truest measure of legislative intent. TG S-Nopec Geophysical Co., 340 S.W.3d at 439. “[I]f
a statute is unambiguous, we adopt the interpretation supported by its plain language unless such
an interpretation would lead to absurd results.” Id. “[I]n the area of tax law, like other areas of
economic regulation, a plain-meaning determination should not disregard the economic realities
underlying the transactions in issue.” Combs v. Roark Amusement & Vending, L.P., 422 S.W.3d
632, 637 (Tex. 2013).
In interpreting provisions of the Tax Code, “[w]ords and phrases shall be read in context
and construed according to the rules of grammar and common usage.” TEX.GOV’T CODE ANN.
§ 311.011(West 2013). “Words and phrases that have acquired a technical or particular meaning,
whether by legislative definition or otherwise, shall be construed accordingly.” Id. We read
statutes as cohesive texts; we do not cherry-pick words and phrases, read them in isolation, and
then decide they alone represent the Legislature’s intent while ignoring the proper context of those
words and phrase. Harmonization of all statutory provisions in a way that is consistent with
legislative intent is always our primary goal, if at all possible. “[W]e consider the statute as a
whole, giving effect to each provision so that none is rendered meaningless or mere surplusage.”
and additional perspectives that the Austin court, as final intermediate appellate arbiter and court of administrative
law expertise, could consider and either accept or reject. What Austin has found to be straightforward has been an
issue that has resulted in differing opinions in El Paso.
20
TIC Energy & Chem., Inc. v. Martin, 498 S.W.3d 68, 75 (Tex. 2016). We presume that the
Legislature intended for its statutes to be constitutional, and we will strive to give statutes a reading
that renders them constitutional. TEX.GOV’T CODE ANN. § 311.021(1); In re Allcat Claims Srv.,
L.P., 356 S.W.3d 455, 468 (Tex. 2011)(orig. proceeding).
“In addition to these general principles that guide our construction of tax code section
11.31, statutory exemptions from taxation, like the pollution-control exemption, are subject to
strict construction because they undermine equality and uniformity by placing a greater burden on
some taxpaying businesses and individuals rather than placing the burden on all taxpayers
equally.” [Internal citations, quotation marks, and alterations omitted]. Mont Belvieu Caverns,
382 S.W.3d at 486-87. “All doubts are resolved against the granting of an exemption.” Id. at 487.
In interpreting the relevant Tax Code provisions, there is also a potential administrative
deference principle at play. An agency’s interpretation of a statute is entitled to our “serious
consideration.” TG S-Nopec Geophysical Co., 340 S.W.3d at 438. If the statute is clear, both we
and the administrative agency have a duty to apply that statute, and we may overrule an
administrative interpretation of a statute. But “[i]f there is vagueness, ambiguity, or room for
policy determinations in a statute or regulation . . . we normally defer to the agency’s interpretation
unless it is plainly erroneous or inconsistent with the language of the statute, regulation, or rule.”
Id.
B.
The General Purpose and Provisions of Section 11.31 as a Whole
As the principles of statutory construction make clear, the language of Subsection (m) is
meaningless without context. Before we can understand what Subsection (m) means, we must
first understand how the tax break in Section 11.31 works generally, what the neighboring
21
provisions around Subsection (m) mean, and where Subsection (m) fits into this legal schematic.
In reading the neighboring subsections of Section 11.31, we find these to be Section 11.31
provision’s relevant highlights:
• Subsection (a)—The property must actually function to control pollution as a
tax break condition: Subsection (a) defines the threshold scope of the tax break
at issue: “A person is entitled to an exemption from taxation of all or part of real
and personal property that the person owns and that is used wholly or partly as a
facility, device, or method for the control of air, water, or land pollution.”
This provision establishes that an applicant can receive a tax break only if their
property “is used wholly or partly” for pollution-control purposes. The negative
implication of this provision is that if property is not used for pollution-control
purposes, the tax break must be denied. Subsection (a) sets eligibility for the tax
break in terms of the property’s function.
• Subsection (b)—Pollution-control property must also actually be adopted for
the specific purpose of complying with environmental regulations or else the tax
break must be denied: Subsection (b) defines what a “facility, device, or method
for the control of air, water, or land pollution” is: “any structure, building,
installation, excavation, machinery, equipment or device, and any attachment or
addition to or reconstruction, replacement, or improvement of that property, that is
used, constructed, acquired, or installed wholly or party to meet or exceed rules or
regulations adopted by any environmental protection agency . . . for the prevention,
monitoring, control, or reduction of air, water, or land pollution.” [Emphasis
added].
This subsection makes clear that in evaluating eligibility for this tax break, the
agency must not only consider whether property has a pollution-control function,
but also the subjective purpose behind the adoption of that property. Under
Subsection (b), if an applicant shows it has adopted “green” technology that wholly
or partly reduces pollution, but the purpose of that adoption was not to comply with
regulations, the tax break must be denied.
• Subsection (c)—Applicants must submit, and TCEQ may consider,
information related to the environmental benefits of the property, the cost of the
property, the purpose of the property, and any other “financial or other data” the
Executive Director requires by rule, before a decision can be made about if the
applicant is eligible for the tax break under the threshold requirements set by
22
Subsections (a) and (b): Subsection (c) requires applicants to submit to TCEQ’s
Executive Director information regarding the following three factors: (1) the
anticipated environmental benefits from the installation of the facility, device, or
method for the control of air, water, or land pollution; (2) the estimated cost of the
pollution control facility, device, or method; and (3) the purpose of the installation
of such facility, device, or method, and the proportion of the installation that is
pollution control property.
The Executive Director also has the explicit authority to require and consider
additional information if the application involves property that is not “wholly” used
to prevent pollution: “the person seeking the exemption shall also present such
financial or other data as the executive director requires by rule for the
determination of the proportion of the installation that is pollution control
property.” This provision gives the Executive Director the power to balance
disparate factors and information in coming to his decision.
• Subsections (d) and (h)—The Executive Director has discretion to determine if
a particular applicant has shown they are statutorily eligible for the tax break,
and, if so, in what amount; he may not grant a tax break if the applicant is
ineligible for the tax break under TCEQ’s rules: Subsection (d) states:
“Following submission of the information required by Subsection (c), the executive
director of the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality shall determine if the
facility, device, or method is used wholly or partly as a facility, device, or method
for the control of air, water, or land pollution.” Subsection (h) states: “The
executive director may not may a determination that property is pollution control
property unless the property meets the standards established under rules adopted
under this section.”
These provision shows the Legislature vested a specific officer—the Executive
Director of TCEQ—with decision-making authority. Indeed, on appeal, the
Commissioners have no power to overrule him and substitute their own judgment
for his; they may only affirm his judgment, or else remand for further proceedings.
TEX.TAX CODE ANN. § 11.31(e). The Executive Director is limited to grant a tax
break only when the applicant proves it is entitled to the tax break under TCEQ’s
internal rules.
• Subsection (g)—The Commission has explicit rulemaking authority to
implement its own rules in deciding how it wants to administer Section 11.31 tax
break applications, so long as the rules are sufficiently specific to ensure equal
and uniform application across the board and the rules allow for distinctions to
be made between proportion of property used to prevent pollution v. proportion
23
used to produce goods or services. Per Third Court precedent, this rulemaking
authority allows TCEQ to consider “economic irrationality” as a factor in
assessing purpose of installation: Subsection (g) allows the Commission to adopt
rules to implement Section 11.31, provided that those rules must “(1) establish
specific standards for considering applications for determinations; (2) be
sufficiently specific to ensure that determinations are equal and uniform; and (3)
allow for determinations that distinguish the proportion of property that is used to
control, monitor, prevent, or reduce pollution from the proportion of property that
is used to produce goods or services.”
This subsection tracks the language of Subsection (a) and (b) and implicitly
recognizes that the Executive Director can only grant tax breaks to entities with
property that both functions as a pollution-control device and is adopted for the
purpose of complying with environmental regulations. It also implicitly recognizes
that the Commission can adopt rules, like the CAP formula, that balance the relative
values of pollution control and productive aspects in determining whether the
property was actually adopted for purposes of complying with environmental
regulations under Subsection (b).
The Third Court of Appeals, whose precedent we must apply in this case, has
put a further gloss on this particular subsection and what we may infer about
the Legislature’s intent. In interpreting Subsection (g)(3)--the provision
directing TCEQ to adopt rules of determination that account for the difference
between pollution-control and productive aspects of property--, the Third Court
held that this subsection “reflect[ed] legislative intent to limit the pollution-
control property exemption solely to capital investment made to comply with
state or federal environmental regulations that does not yield productive
benefits and would thus otherwise be irrational economically.” [Emphasis
added]. Mont Belvieu Caverns, 382 S.W.3d at 489. The Third Court also noted
that its plain-language read of Subsection (g)(3) as allowing TCEQ to consider
economic irrationality as a factor was reflected in the law’s legislative history.
Id. (citing relevant portions of legislative history). Thus, in considering the
purpose of property’s installation under Subsection (b), the Third Court of
Appeals has found that Subsection (g)(3) allows TCEQ to consider economic
irrationality in its analysis, and to limit the granting of these tax breaks to
situations in which compliance with an environmental regulation would be
economically irrational.15
15
Brazos Electric contends that the Third Court’s interpretation of Subsection (g)(3) as containing an economic-
irrationality component does not bind us as precedent because Mont Belvieu Caverns arose in a 100 percent-use
determination context rather than a partial-use determination context like the case at bar, thereby making the true legal
interpretation of Subsection (g)(3) subject to our scrutiny and potential revision. This argument misses the mark.
24
• Subsection (g-1)—The Commissions’ Rules of Decision apply uniformly to all
Section 11.31 tax break applicants, even to those properties that appear on the
k-list: Subsection (g-1) makes clear that k-list properties are not exempt from the
generally applicable rules of decision As we will explain below, k-list properties
do get some administrative preferences: under Subsection (m), k-list applicants are
excused from providing one of the three required categories of information
mandated by Subsection (c)(i.e., k-list applicants do not have to show their property
has an environmental benefit), and Subsection (m) applicants are also entitled to
expedited view within 30 days. Still, Subsection (g-1) makes clear that k-list
applicants do not otherwise receive special treatment in the administrative decision-
making process and should be subject to the same standards as all other applicants.
In this context, this also means that we use the CAP formula to measure tax break
eligibility, since that is the specific rule that TCEQ has chosen to implement.
In summary, after reading all the relevant provisions of Section 11.31 together and in
concert with the relevant case law, we distill the Legislature’s intent into four overarching points:
1) Property is eligible for a tax break under Section 11.31 if it is used wholly or
partly for pollution control, (i.e. the property has a “green” function); AND
2) The property does not qualify as being wholly or partly for pollution control
purposes unless it is adopted for the specific purpose of complying with an
environmental regulation (i.e. the property has to be installed for a “green”
purpose as defined by government regulators); AND
Under the principles of stare decisis, where an intermediate appellate court “gives a particular effect to a statute” in a
case, and that ruling is not overruled by a higher court, “that determination is binding and conclusive on all later suits
involving the same subject matter” in that district. Messina v. State, 904 S.W.2d 178, 181 (Tex.App.--Dallas 1995,
no writ). An interpretation of a particular statute does not change across contexts under stare decisis. Rather, the law
stays the same and it is in the application of the law to the facts that distinctions emerge. See id. (stare decisis does
not preclude a court from deciding cases differently while applying the same law if relevant factual distinctions change
the outcome). To say otherwise disregards the principle of consistency underlying stare decisis and improperly opens
the door to results-oriented decision-making.
We find that the Third Court’s interpretation of the statutory language as revealing a certain legislative intent binds
us. In terms of the interpretation of Tax Code provisions at play, this case involves the same subject matter as Mont
Belvieu Caverns. The Third Court’s interpretation of Subsection (g)(3) arose, like this case, in the context of a Section
11.31 tax application that was rejected by TCEQ and, like this case, involved a determination of the limits of TCEQ’s
tax break-granting authority. The Third Court’s interpretation of Subsection (g)(3) also arose, like this case, in the
context of harmonizing all portions of Section 11.31 so that they may be read consistently, which is what we must
endeavor to do here. Our reading of Subsection (m) is informed by the provisions around it. Mont Belvieu Caverns
interprets the provisions around Subsection (m) and found that economic irrationality is a factor TCEQ must consider
in reaching its tax decision for Section 11.31 generally. Whether we agree with that proposition or not, it is precedent
of the transferor court that binds us, the transferee court, under TEX.R.APP.P. 48.1.
25
3) TCEQ must make proportional determinations as to how much of a property’s
purpose actually goes to pollution control, and how much goes to production
purposes that generate more profit for the applicant (i.e. the purpose of this
specific tax break is to encourage compliance with environmental regulations,
not to encourage productivity and allow businesses to get a financial boon and
then exempt their higher profits from taxation); AND
4) In considering whether the actual purpose for the installation of the subject
property is pollution control, TCEQ must take into account financial realities
and must consider whether it would otherwise be economically irrational for
the applicant to adopt “green” technology and comply with governmental
regulations (i.e. if it is economically rational for the applicant to adopt “green”
technology, say because the technology is so productive or so much cheaper
than “dirty” alternatives, then the tax break must be denied, as the Legislature
intended for this tax break only to be used to coax businesses into complying
with environmental regulations where compliance would otherwise be cost-
prohibitive once return on investment is taken into account).
Under Section 11.31, a property’s green function and green purpose must be balanced
against the countervailing need to ensure that the tax break is given only to that portion of the
property actually attributable to pollution control efforts and not profitable production efforts, and
only to the extent that compliance with regulations would be economically irrational, all things
considered—including overall return on investment. Having put the legal scaffolding around
Section 11.31 together, we must now determine whether and to what extent Subsection (m) alters
or destroys the general premises underpinning Section 11.31’s purpose with respect to k-list
properties.
C.
Where Does Subsection (m) Fit In To Section 11.31’s Overall Framework?
Brazos Electric threads a fine needle on appeal. It does not challenge the CAP formula,
but asserts only that TCEQ cannot deny k-list properties a Section 11.31, even when the CAP
26
formula equals zero or less,16 because Subsection (m) contains mandatory language that always
requires a positive use determination for k-list properties.
Subsection (m) states:
Notwithstanding the other provisions of this section, if the facility, device, or
method for the control of air, water, or land pollution described in an application
for an exemption under this section is a facility, device, or method included on the
list adopted under Subsection (k), the executive director of the Texas Commission
on Environmental Quality, not later than the 30th day after the date of receipt of the
information required by Subsections (c)(2) and (3) and without regard to whether
the information required by Subsection (c)(1) has been submitted, shall determine
that the facility, device, or method described in the application is used wholly or
partly as a facility, device, or method for the control of air, water, or land pollution
and shall take the actions that are required by Subsection (d) in the event such a
determination is made.
TEX.TAX CODE ANN. § 11.31(m).
For two reasons, we reject the argument that an application of the CAP formula that results
in an answer of zero or less is prohibited by statute because that is the functional equivalent of a
negative-use determination, and Subsection (m) requires the Executive Director to always issue a
positive-use determination for k-list property.
First, while Subsection (m) does require the Executive Director to assume k-list properties
16
We pause briefly to take issue with Brazos Electric’s proposed application of the CAP formula to avoid the zero
problem. Brazos Electric asks us to remand this case and instruct TCEQ that in applying the CAP formula in k-list
cases, it must scrupulously do so in a way that ensures that whatever result it gets always comes out to more than zero.
But Brazos Electric’s proposed results-driven application of the CAP formula violates Section (g-1), which requires
TCEQ to apply its administrative rules of decision-making consistently across contexts, even to k-list properties.
The CAP formula rule requires all applicants to submit proposed factors that appear on the left-side of the equal sign
to TCEQ, and whatever appears on the right side of the equal sign after the objective application of the fundamental
rules of mathematics is the number all parties use as reference. That is common-sense arithmetic. An approach that
preordains a solution to the CAP formula and then forces TCEQ to choose variable that fit that a purpose-driven
solution is an arbitrary and capricious approach that contravenes mathematical common sense. “[I]f an agency ‘does
not follow the clear, unambiguous language of its own regulation, we reverse its action as arbitrary and capricious.’”
Tex. Indus. Energy Consumers v. CenterPoint Energy Hous. Elect., L.L.C., 324 S.W.3d 95, 104 (Tex. 2010). More to
the point, Brazos Electric asks for k-list applicants to receive the type of special treatment that Section (g-1) does not
permit. We are unpersuaded that this approach is correct, and cannot endorse it. Further, because we find the statute
does allow negative use determinations here, the question of whether TCEQ can reject a tax break application if the
CAP equals zero or less is moot.
27
have an environmental benefit under Subsection (c)(1) and to grant k-list applicants expedited
review, Subsection (m) also does not withdraw all discretion from the hands of the Executive
Director. He must still determine to what extent the pollution-control property was actually
installed “wholly or partly” for regulatory compliance purposes.
Second, in measuring the Executive Director’s discretion set by the phrase “wholly or
partly,” we find that the “part” in “partly” is consistently used throughout Section 11.31 to mean
“less than whole,” which can embrace zero or negative values—and, by extension, negative use
determinations. As such, when viewed with the understanding that phrases should be defined
consistently throughout a statute, and when read in harmony with the other portions of Section
11.31, Subsection (m) does not stand as a bar to a zero or negative finding. Subsection (m) simply
creates a presumption that k-list property has an environmental benefit, but TCEQ may still find,
once all relevant factors are considered, that a specific applicant is not actually using k-list property
for the purpose of complying with cost-prohibitive environmental regulations.
1.
Subsection (m) Does Not Eliminate TCEQ’s Discretion in Administering the Section 11.31, Nor
Does it Abrogate the Executive Director’s Duty to Determine Which “Part” of a k-List Property
is Actually Being Used for Pollution Control Purposes and Not Productive Purposes
In determining whether, as Brazos Electric contends, TCEQ must grant a HRSG
“something” in terms of a tax break, we must address which portions of Subsection (m) are
mandatory, and which are not.
At issue here is what the word “shall” means in the phrase “the executive director . . . shall
determine that the facility, device, or method described in the application is used wholly or partly
as a facility, device, or method for the control of air, water, or land pollution . . . .” [Emphasis
added]. Brazos Energy is correct in pointing out that “unless the context in which the word or
28
phrase appears necessarily requires a different construction or unless a different construction is
expressly provided by statute . . . ‘[s]hall’ imposes a duty.” TEX.GOV’T CODE ANN.
§ 311.016(3)(West 2013). “We generally construe the word ‘shall’ as mandatory, unless
legislative intent suggests otherwise.” Albertson’s, Inc. v. Sinclair, 984 S.W.2d 958, 961 (Tex.
1999). However, words and phrases in a statute are read in context, not in isolation, and separate
provisions of the same statute are read harmonically so that they do not conflict, if at all possible.
TIC Energy & Chem., Inc., 498 S.W.3d at 75. As the Code Construction Act and the case law
both acknowledge, “shall” can mean different things in different contexts. “In determining
whether the Legislature intended a provision to be mandatory or directory, we consider the plain
meaning of the words used, as well as the entire act, its nature and object, and the consequences
that would follow from each construction.” Albertson’s, Inc., 984 S.W.2d at 961.
Here, the use of the word “shall” when read in context does not require the Executive
Director to issue per se positive use determinations to k-list property. Yes, Subsection (m) is
largely framed in terms of mandatory language: if property appears on the k-list, then “not later
than the 30th day after the date of receipt of the information required by Subsections (c)(2)[cost of
the facility] and (3)[information about the purpose of the facility], and without regard to whether
the information required by Subsection (c)(1)[environmental impact information] has been
submitted, shall determine that the facility, device, or method described in the application is used
wholly or partly as a facility, device, or method for the control of air, water, or land pollution . . . .”
[Emphasis added]. But “shall determine” is only half the story. The prepositional phrase in the
middle of Subsection (m) is the real focus of this passage. Reworked, the sentence reads that the
Executive Director “shall determine that the facility . . . is used wholly or partly” to control air
pollution “not later than the 30th day after” the application is received and “without regard to
29
whether the information required by Subsection (c)(1) has been submitted.” This subsection
merely sets the conditions and timelines of decisions; it does not preordain a specific decision.
The proper reading of this section is that it commands the Executive Director to make a decision
within certain timelines, and to give k-list properties the benefit of the doubt with regard to
Subsection (c)(1) information. It does not mandate a positive-use determination, but instead
requires the Executive Director to exercise his discretion—in compliance with TCEQ’s internal
rules of decision, TEX.TAX CODE ANN. 11.31(g), (g-1)(h)—to determine proportionality (“wholly
or partly”) of the tax break for k-list properties.
Subsection (m) says the Executive Director shall determine the facility is “used wholly or
partly” as pollution-control property. Notably, Subsection (m) does not say that the Executive
Director must grant a k-list applicant something. The “wholly or partly” phrase in Subsection (m),
which is a phrase repeated over and over again throughout Section 11.31, is especially vital to our
understanding of the Executive Director’s power. “Statutory terms should be interpreted
consistently in every part of an act.” Tex. Dep’t of Transp. v. Needham, 82 S.W.3d 314, 318 (Tex.
2002). In other subsections of Section 11.31, “wholly or partly” is a discretionary signifier
showing that the Executive Director still retains discretion to determine what “part” of a property
is actually attributable to pollution-control purposes. See Mont Belvieu Caverns, 382 S.W.3d at
488-89 (discussing the use determination process generally).
Brazos Electric does not dispute that the Executive Director retains some discretion over
Subsection (m) applications. Thus, the true statutory question here is not whether the Executive
Director has discretion, but how far this discretion goes for k-list properties. More to the point:
bearing in mind that phrases should generally be interpreted consistently throughout an act, and
given that use of the phrase “partly” in other parts of Section 11.31 allows the Executive Director
30
to make negative use determinations generally, does “partly” nevertheless mean something
different in Subsection (m) than it does in other parts of Section 11.31?
We think not.
2.
TCEQ’s Discretion is Not Statutorily Limited to Making Non-Zero Pollution Control Findings
for k-List Properties
a.
The Plain Contextual Meaning of “Part” As Used in the Section 11.31 Means “Less than
Whole,” Which Embraces Zero or Negative Amounts; Its Use in Subsection (m) Indicates a
Legislative Intent to Allow for Negative Use Determinations for k-List Properties
Brazos Electric argues that notwithstanding the use of the phrase “wholly or partly” as a
discretionary signifier that encompasses negative use determinations in other portions of the
statute, “partly” takes on a new meaning in Subsection (m), one that forces the Executive Director
to grant the electric company “something.” Why? In Brazos Electric’s view, the “part” in “partly”
has only one possible meaning—it necessarily means “more than nothing.” See “Partly,”
MERRIAM-WEBSTER’S COLLEGIATE DICTIONARY 904 (11th ed.)(defining “partly” as “in some
measure or degree; PARTIALLY”).
We disagree that “partly” as used in Subsection (m) absolutely requires the Executive
Director to grant k-list applicants “more than nothing.” To say that the “part” in “partly”
conclusively means “more than nothing” and thus cabins the agency’s discretion into finding non-
zero use per se does not acknowledge the inherent elasticity of the language at issue. We interpret
words in light of common understanding and definitions. Contrary to Brazos Electric’s assertion,
“part” as commonly understood is not a word with one sole definition. Brazos Electric cites to
Merriam-Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary as a source, but even in that dictionary, multiple
definitions of the word emerge. Indeed, it is reasonable to understand “part,” “partly,” and
31
“partially” in ways that cut both for and against both parties. “Part” can mean “less than whole”
(which embraces zero or negative values),17 or “part” can mean “more than nothing” (which
excludes zero and negative values).18 So which definition do we apply here? Both are reasonable,
commonly understood interpretations of that word. At best, Brazos Electric’s proposed definition
only conjures up a linguistic ambiguity. “Ambiguity exists if reasonable persons can find different
meanings in the statute.” Tex. Dep’t of Pub. Safety v. Swierski, 49 S.W.3d 417, 419 (Tex.App.--
Fort Worth 2001, no pet.).
But we do not read words in isolation from the subsection in which they appear, and we do
not read subsections in isolation from their place in a statutory scheme. “The meaning of a word
that appears ambiguous when viewed in isolation may become clear when the word is analyzed in
light of the terms that surround it.” TG S-NOPEC Geophysical Co., 340 S.W.3d at 441. Here,
when Subsection (m) is read in the context of the statute as a whole, giving effect to the
Legislature’s intent as expressed in the text it adopted, the meaning becomes obvious because the
word appears in a phrase that is consistently applied across various subsections of Section 11.31—
“partly” means “less than whole,” which can also mean “zero.”19 The scope of the Executive
Director’s discretion for k-list properties is the same as the scope of his discretion for Section 11.31
applications generally: he is confined to granting tax breaks only where a facility, device, or
17
See, e.g., Part, Dictionary.com, http://www.dictionary.com/browse/part (“Part . . . refer[s] to something that is less
than the whole.”); “Part,” Merriam-Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary 902 (11th ed.)(“syn PART, PORTION, PIECE,
MEMBER, DIVISION, SECTION, SEGMENT, FRAGMENT mean something less than the whole. PART is a
general term appropriate when indefiniteness is required . . .”).
“Partly,” Merriam-Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary 904 (11th ed.)(defining “partly” as “in some measure or degree;
18
PARTIALLY”).
19
Even if we are wrong that “part” when read in context clearly means “less than whole,” as we have said, the best
that Brazos Electric can do is present this Court with a linguistic ambiguity in the statute. “Part” can just as easily
mean either “more than nothing” as it can mean “less than whole.” When a statute is ambiguous and can be read
multiple reasonable ways, we defer to the agency’s choice among the reasonable interpretations. Mont Belvieu
Caverns, L.L.C., 382 S.W.3d at 487. That means that under agency deference principles, we would still be required
to recognize that that statute allows for negative-use determinations, even for k-list properties.
32
method was used wholly or partly as a method of controlling pollution. See TEX.TAX CODE ANN.
§ 11.31(a). If no part of the device is being used for pollution control purposes, the tax break must
be denied.
As TCEQ intones in its brief, purpose of adoption matters even when it comes to k-list
property, and as the agency posits in its colorful hypothetical, an eccentric billionaire cannot
simply purchase k-list property like a HRSG, bury it in the desert outside Marfa, call it an art
installation, and expect to receive a tax break simply because HRSGs are on the k-list. Subsection
(m) still requires the Executive Director to make a use determination. But to read Subsection (m)’s
“shall determine that” language as mandating a tax break in every situation ignores the meaning
that the phrase “wholly or partly” has acquired in other parts of the same statute; indeed, it writes
those words out of Subsection (m) completely. It also ignores other provisions of Section 11.31
requiring the Executive Director to carefully weigh disparate factors in making a use
determination. We must give all words in a text meaning if possible. The statute requires the
Executive Director to make a decision and to grant k-list applicants certain administrative
preferences in terms of initial burden and speed of decision, but nothing in Subsection (m) clearly
restricts TCEQ to solely making positive-use determinations for k-list properties.
b.
Brazos Electric’s Alternative Reading is Unworkable and Would Invite Constitutional
Challenges
We are further convinced TCEQ’s plain language reading of Subsection (m) is correct by
the fact that Brazos Electric’s alternative reading is not complete or workable. For example, while
Brazos Electric maintains that Subsection (m) requires a non-zero tax break, the company also
never specifies how much the minimum acceptable tax break for k-list properties is under its
reading of Subsection (m). Is it 10 percent? Is it 65 percent? Is it a de minimis amount awarded
33
simply to vindicate rights? Brazos Electric never says, nor does it explain how we or TCEQ could
ascertain what the minimum tax rate for k-list properties from Subsection (m)’s facial silence on
that issue.
These questions are not merely rhetorical. We are mindful of our duty to fashion useable
standards that the agency can apply on remand and other courts may apply in the future. See
TEX.GOV’T CODE ANN. § 311.021 (West 2013)(instructing courts to presume the Legislature
intends to write statutes that have “a result feasible of execution”). In its prayer, Brazos Electric
simply asks us to declare that the statute requires a certain minimum tax rate not apparent from the
face of Section 11.31, and then remand the case to TCEQ with orders to figure out what that
ephemeral non-zero tax rate might be. Brazos Electric’s inability to point to specific, workable
standards we can apply in determining a “minimum tax break” cuts against the validity of that
interpretation, particularly when TCEQ’s approach harmonizes Subsection (m) with all parts of
Section 11.31. TCEQ’s is the only sensible, workable reading of Subsection (m)’s plain language.
Subsection (m) states that if a k-list device is installed for air pollution control purposes, “the
executive director . . . shall determine that the . . . device . . . is used wholly or partly as a . . .
device . . . for the control of air . . . pollution[.]” We cannot, at Brazos Electric’s request, strike
out the phrase beginning “is used wholly or partly” from Subsection (m) and then replace it with
the words “is entitled to a non-zero tax break” in an attempt to make the statute say what we think
the Legislature was trying to say. We are not legislators, nor are we the Congress’ copy editors.
We take the law as we find it and interpret the law as written. See Tex. Lottery Comm’n v. First
State Bank of DeQueen, 325 S.W.3d 628, 637-38 (Tex. 2010)(courts may not “fix” legislative
“mistakes” made in a statute to comport with what they think the Legislature meant, but must
instead follow “direct and clear statutory language that does not create an absurdity”).
34
We also hesitate to endorse Brazos Electric’s reading because if Subsection (m) applies as
broadly as Brazos Electric suggests and encompasses positive use determination for businesses
that would otherwise recover increased marginal costs with return on investment, that could result
in Subsection (m)’s constitutionality being called into question. “When construing statutes we
presume the Legislature intended them to comply with the Texas Constitution.” In re Allcat
Claims Serv., L.P., 356 S.W.3d 455, 468 (Tex. 2011)(orig. proceeding). “[I]n construing
amendments to the Texas Constitution we ascertain and give effect to the plain intent and language
of the framers of the amendments and of the people who adopted them, beginning with and giving
primacy to the language that was adopted.” Id. The relevant constitutional provision authorizing
the enactment of Section 11.31 states:
The legislature by general law may exempt from ad valorem taxation all or part of
real and personal property used, constructed, acquired, or installed wholly or partly
to meet or exceed rules or regulations adopted by any environmental protection
agency of the United States, this state, or a political subdivision of this state for the
prevention, monitoring, control, or reduction of air, water, or land pollution.
TEX.CONST. art. VIII, § 1-l(a).
As with Section 11.31, the constitutional provision authorizing the tax break calls for
proportionality in use determinations. We read this provision as allowing the Legislature to grant
tax breaks to properties that actually serve pollution control functions. Brazos Electric insists that
Subsection (m) requires TCEQ to grant k-list property applicants some amount of a tax break,
regardless of whether it was adopted for the purpose of pollution control. As we read Brazos
Electric’s argument, k-list property would be entitled to a tax break even if it were being used
solely as production equipment. Not only does this reading contravene the amendment’s plain
language mandate, it contravenes the intent of this amendment’s framers. As the House Research
Organization noted, the framers of Proposition 2—which would eventually become TEX.CONST.
35
art. VIII, § 1-l—did not intend to grant the Legislature the power to give tax breaks to production
equipment. Rather, the specific concern of proponents was addressing the rising cost of regulatory
compliance and ensuring that Texas both incentivized compliance and remained competitive with
other states who provided similar tax off-sets. Supporters made clear that they did not intend for
the Legislature to pass tax breaks that would simply make facilities more productive, and
opponents specifically complained that the Legislature should not be allowed to subsidize
profitable ventures veiled as pollution control efforts:
Proposition 2 would amend the Texas Constitution to permit the Legislature to
exempt from property taxation all or part of property used, constructed, acquired or
installed wholly or partly to meet federal, state or local regulations for the
prevention, monitoring, control or reduction of air, water or land pollution.
. . .
Supporters Say: Proposition 2 would promote voluntary compliance with
environmental regulations and help preserve jobs by offering a property-tax
exemption for pollution control.
. . .
It is unfair to tax businesses on property they are required by law to purchase. There
is a growing public consensus that businesses should be required to minimize
pollution, but most companies that must buy pollution control devices now were
doing nothing illegal in the past. They should not face the double burden of
mandatory expenses and increased taxes paid on the property value added by those
expenses.
Proposition 2 is not some benefit just for big business. Small companies would be
entitled to seek the same exemptions as a large refinery. Many small businesses --
including dry cleaners, gas stations, auto body shops, dentists, printers and photo
labs -- face large expenses to comply with new environmental regulations. The tax
exemption would provide an economic incentive for these small companies, which
generate a large proportion of all pollution, to comply fully with all environmental
requirements.
. . .
Only the value of that part of a new device that actually relates to pollution control
would receive an exemption. A device that only increased a plant's productivity or
36
capacity would not qualify for an exemption. All applications for exemption would
have to be certified by the state and go through a state permit process, assuring that
application of the exemption would be uniform and nondiscriminatory.
. . .
Opponents Say: . . . Because many pollution control devices also increase the
productivity of a plant, a company may reap economic benefits from pollution
control and does not need an extra benefit in the fo[rm] of a government subsidy.
House Research Org., Special Legislative Report No. 184, 1993 Constitutional Amendments: The
November 2 Election (Aug. 30, 1993), at 8-11, available at
http://www.lrl.state.tx.us/scanned/Constitutional_Amendments/amendments73_HRO_1993-11-
02.pdf.
Brazos Electric’s proposed reading would leave Subsection (m) open to a potential
constitutional challenge that the Legislature exceeded its constitutional authority by enacting
Subsection (m) and granting a per se tax break to k-list properties, even if they were being used
solely for productive purposes. We believe that TCEQ’s reading of Subsection (m) not only
harmonizes all Section 11.31’s provisions together, but it is also consistent with the intent of the
constitutional amendment’s framers and does not leave Subsection (m) open to a potential
constitutional attack.
c.
Legislative History Confirms k-List Was Created to Speed Up the Administrative Process for
Certain Properties, Not Eliminate Agency Discretion
We find the statute to be unambiguous as written. The text of Subsection (m) can be
harmonized with the remaining portions of Section 11.31, meaning that our search for legislative
intent should end with the text itself and consideration of Subsection (m)’s legislative history is
unnecessary. Nevertheless, while we may not use legislative history to contravene a statute’s plain
language, we may still consult legislative history for other purposes, such as to bolster a plain
37
reading of the statute or else to clarify any ambiguities in an unclear statute. See Mont Belvieu
Caverns, 382 S.W.3d at 489 (using legislative history to bolster its conclusion that its plain
language reading of the statute was correct). While the legislative history of Subsections (k) and
(m) is scant, what little on-point history we have found confirms that the Legislature intended for
TCEQ to retain discretion to deny tax breaks, even for items that appear on the k-list, and that the
Legislature’s primary intent in adopting the k-list was to eliminate some administrative hurdles for
certain tax applicants.
The k-list and Subsection (m) have their genesis in House Bill 3732, proposed during the
80th Legislature’s Regular Session. H.B. 3732 contained a package of several incentives aimed
generally at promoting clean energy, and when was H.B. 3732 was ultimately passed, it made
changes and additions to numerous provisions of the Texas Tax, Health, and Government Codes.
With respect to Section 11.31 specifically, H.B. 3732 added Subsection (k) and (m). See Act of
Sept. 1, 2007, 80th Leg., R.S., ch. 1277, § 4, 2007 TEX.GEN.LAWS 4261, 4264 (codified at
TEX.TAX CODE ANN. §§ 11.31(k), (m)).
In a bill analysis generated April 25, 2007, the day that the House Committee on Energy
Resources unanimously voted the bill out of committee, the Texas House Research Organization
outlined the properties that would eventually be included on the k-list, including HRSGs, and
specifically explained what placement on the k-list would mean:
The bill would require the TCEQ to establish a non-exclusive list of pollution-
control facilities, devices, or methods, which would have to be updated at least once
every three years and include:
. . .
• heat recovery steam generators;
. . .
If an applicant intended to seek a tax exemption or tax rollback, used one of the
38
methods from the list above, and detailed the estimated cost and purpose of a
project, the executive director of TCEQ would have no more than 30 days to
determine if the facility, device, or method was used wholly or partly as a method
of controlling pollution and take actions as required by Tax Code, 11.31(d), without
regard to whether information had been submitted about the anticipated
environmental benefits of the project. [Emphasis added].
House Comm. on Energy Resources, Bill Analysis, Tex. H.B. 3732, 80th Leg., R.S.
(Apr. 25, 2007).
This bill analysis shows that the Legislature intended for Subsections (k) and (m) to provide
k-list properties with certain administrative benefits so as to streamline and expedite considerations
of those applications. The bill analysis also shows the Legislature clearly contemplated that even
under expedited consideration, the Executive Director would retain discretion to issue a negative
use determination if the applicant failed to establish eligibility for the tax break. The Legislature’s
intent in establishing the k-list was to make the administrative process more streamlined, not to
overrule the Executive Director’s judgment by legislative fiat and create a ministerial duty to grant
a tax break. All things considered, Brazos Electric’s reading of Subsection (m) is untenable.
4.
Conclusion: What Placement on the k-List Actually Means
The plain language of Subsection (m), properly harmonized with its neighboring
provisions, does not reflect an unequivocal intent to give every k-list applicant some kind of tax
break, even where k-list property is not subjectively used for pollution control purposes, but only
to strengthen a company’s bottom line. On the contrary, the use of the phrase “wholly or partly”
in Subsection (m) signifies that the Legislature intended to leave the Executive Director’s
discretion to issue negative use determination intact. The legislative history of H.B. 3732 confirms
this intent. This reading is workable, and it is consistent with the text and intent of the enabling
constitutional amendment.
39
Brazos Electric largely argues that it would be bad policy for TCEQ to deny HRSGs a tax
break. “[P]olicy arguments cannot prevail over the words of the statute.” [Internal quotes
omitted]. In re Blair, 408 S.W3d 843, 869 (Tex. 2013). If, as Brazos Electric claims, the
Legislature did intend for all k-list applicants to get “something” in terms of a tax break, then the
solution is not for us to edit the statute, insert or remove words, and fashion the tax break into
something we think the Legislature and the people of this State would approve of. That is
legislating from the bench, and it would necessarily involve making a slew of policy judgment
relating to state energy goals and the shifting of burdens on taxpayers that are beyond both our
constitutional mandate and our institutional competence. We only say what the law is, and we
believe our interpretation of the law as written is correct. If the statute was miswritten in a way
that does not comport with the Legislature’s actual intent, the Legislature is free to amend the
statute to make its will clearer.
Placement on the k-list entitles an applicant to a presumption that the property has an
environmental benefit under Subsection (c)(1). It entitles an applicant to expedited review within
30 days. It does not entitle an applicant to a per se tax break.
Issue One is overruled.
II.
Informal Rulemaking In Violation of the APA
Has TCEQ Adopted a Policy of Denying All HRSGs a Tax Break Or Else Removed HRSGs from
the k-List Without First Undergoing Formal Rulemaking As Required By Subsection (l)?
In Issue Two, Brazos Electric asserts that TCEQ has “decided to apply the CAP equation
in a manner that guarantees that a HRSG will never qualify for the tax exemption[,]” thereby
effectively removing HRSGs from the k-list without first undertaking the formal rulemaking
process for k-list removal as required by TEX.TAX CODE ANN. § 11.31(l). Brazos Electric also
40
avers that multiple statements that the Executive Director made in court filings are “irrefutable”
proof that TCEQ has informally adopted a policy of denying tax breaks to all HRSGs, despite the
fact that the Legislature has already identified HRSGs as clean technology. Specifically, Brazos
Electric directs our attention to the following statements made in the Executive Director’s
Response Brief in the appeal before the TCEQ commissioners:
• “HRSGs do not provide an environmental benefit.”
• “HRSGs are not used wholly or partly to prevent, monitor, or control air, water, or land
pollution.”
• “HRSGs are not pollution control devices.”
We deal with Brazos Electric’s evidentiary contention first, and will not belabor this point:
arguments made by an agency in a legal brief are not “rules.” See Tex. Mut. Ins. Co. v. Vista Cmty.
Med. Ctr., L.L.P., 275 S.W.3d 538, 555 (Tex.App.--Austin 2008, pet. denied). To hold that every
statement an agency makes, including those made in court filings, constitute “rules” would cripple
an agency’s ability to “carry out its legislative functions[,]” “state its reasons for denying a petition
to adopt a rule[,] or file a brief in a court or agency proceeding[.]” Id. While Brazos Electric is
correct that the Executive Director has made broad statements about the inadequate environmental
benefits of HRSGs in legal briefs at various stages of litigation, these statements are no evidence
of intent to adopt a widespread policy applicable in every case. We must take these statements in
context and recognize that these are comments made in the course and scope of adversarial
advocacy before the courts. Id.
As for Brazos Electric’s sweeping allegations that TCEQ essentially adopted an informal
new rule that will foreclose all HRSG applications moving forward, the company cites no factual
or legal authority in support of this proposition. Brazos Electric asserts that (1) TCEQ has stated
in some way that it will always plug in the cost of a new boiler into the Capital Cost Old portion
41
of the CAP when dealing with HRSG applications, and that (2) use of a new boiler’s cost as the
Capital Cost Old variable in the CAP formula will guarantee that every HRSG tax break
application from here on out will fail.
But Brazos Electric does not direct us to anything competent in the record that says that
TCEQ will use the cost of a new boiler as the “Capital Cost Old” value in the CAP for each and
every HRSG application, nor does Brazos Electricity explain how TCEQ’s application of the CAP
will make every application for a HRSG tax break mathematically futile. Instead, Brazos Electric
states in its brief that “the TCEQ does not deny that the variable it insists on using for ‘Capital
Cost Old’ in the CAP formula, which applies to all exemption applications, will always yield a
negative result for HRSGs.” But TCEQ does deny that its application of the CAP formula will
always yield negative results, meaning that we cannot rely on Brazos Electric’s bare assertion as
dispositive evidence, particularly given the lack of citations. See TEX.R.APP.P. 38.1(g)(“In a civil
case, the court will accept as true the facts stated unless another party contradicts them. The
statement must be supported by record references.”).20 TCEQ also denies making any attempt to
remove HRSGs from the k-list, noting that when it last performed its statutorily-mandated triennial
review of k-list technologies in August 2014, it ultimately elected not to remove any technologies
from that list. See 39 TEX.REG. 6483, 6484 (2014)(Tex. Comm’n on Envt’l Quality, Tax Relief
for Property Used for Environmental Protection, Background and Summary of Factual Basis for
the Adopted Rules)(“A triennial review is required for the Expedited Review List by § 17.17(b),
in accordance with Texas Tax Code, § 11.31(l). The Expedited Review List has been reviewed
20
TCEQ does admit that since reverting from Tier IV review back to the CAP formula, it has denied all the HRSG
applications it has received. However, TCEQ explains that the percentages for varying facilities have differed greatly,
and that one facility applying for an HRSG tax break received a -2% rating, right on the cusp of a positive-use
determination. TCEQ maintains that if the price of electricity or steam had been different, the NPVMP would have
been lower, and that facility may have obtained a positive-use determination.
42
and the commission determined that no updates are necessary. Therefore, no charges to § 17.17
were proposed for this rule-making.”).
The Rules of Appellate Procedure requires factual assertions to be supported by record
references. TEX.R.APP.P. 38.1(g). Brazos Electric’s factual assertions in this portion of its brief
are not supported by record citations. Beyond citations to TCEQ’s pleadings and statements made
in the course of litigation—which are incompetent evidence here—and beyond insinuations that
the Executive Director is biased against HRSG technology, Brazos Electric never directs our
attention to any document or piece of evidence that would constitute proof of an informal rule
adoption. It may be that there is administrative resistance to recognizing the environmental
benefits of HRSGs, but Brazos Electric has failed to prove up that thesis here.
In addition to citing to facts in the record, litigants in the Court of Appeals must also cite
legal authorities in support of their arguments. TEX.R.APP.P. 38.1(i). Although Brazos Electric
cites generally to cases that say an agency action cannot conflict with a statute, and although
Brazos Electric generally maintains that TCEQ’s actions conflict with the statute because they are
ultra vires, Brazos Electric never puts those principles in context. See Nevarez v. Inv. Retrievers,
Inc., 324 S.W.3d 238, 240 (Tex.App.--El Paso 2010, no pet.)(failure to explain how cases cited
apply to a particular case does not meet TEX.R.APP.P. 38.1 briefing standard); Valadez v. Avitia,
238 S.W.3d 843, 845 (Tex.App.--El Paso 2007, no pet.)(holding that while briefing is sufficient
“if it directs the reviewing court’s attention to the error about which the complaint is made,”
briefing requirements are not met when litigant fails to “provide substantive analysis of the legal
issue”). Brazos Electric’s brief (1) fails to cite authority defining what a “rule” is for purposes of
the Administrative Procedures Act, (2) fails to apply the definition in explaining why TCEQ’s
actions constituted the adoption of a “new rule,” (3) fails to explain what the significance of
43
adopting a new rule without complying with the APA is, and (4) fails to request specific relief for
this alleged violation of the APA.
It is not the job of this Court to connect unrelated dots, hunt down relevant authority, or
speculate as to what exactly it is a party is attempting to argue or what relief it is requesting. Doing
so would risk placing this Court in the position of having to guess what a litigant means, or worse—
inadvertently becoming an advocate for a party as the Court attempts to fill in the blanks. Valadez,
238 S.W.3d at 845. The briefing rules also serve a claims-processing purpose, and particularly in
cases regarding technical subject matter, and particularly in cases that are granted oral argument
before this Court, good briefing matters. “Failure to provide citations or argument and analysis as
to an appellate issue may waive it.” Ross v. St. Luke’s Episcopal Hosp., 462 S.W.3d 496, 500
(Tex. 2015). That is the situation here.
Issue Two is waived for lack of adequate briefing.21
III.
Improper Application of CAP Formula
21
Even if we are incorrect and the issue is adequately brief, we have found no evidence in the record that would show
TCEQ adopted a statement of general applicability regarding HRSG applicants, that such a statement was binding, or
that such a statement would have the practice effect of “removing” HRSGs from the k-list. A rule under the APA:
(A) means a state agency statement of general applicability that:
(i) implements, interprets, or prescribes law or policy; or
(ii) describes the procedure or practice requirements of a state agency;
(B) includes the amendment or repeal of a prior rule; and
(C) does not include a statement regarding only the internal management or organization of a state agency
and not affecting private rights or procedures.
TEX.GOV’T CODE ANN. § 2001.003(6)(West 2016).
The process Brazos Electric describes appears to be more akin to an application of nonbinding guidelines in the process
of evaluating rights under a properly promulgated rule. See Tex. State Bd. of Pharmacy v. Witcher, 447 S.W.3d 520,
529 (Tex.App.--Austin 2014, pet. denied)(“nonbinding evaluative guidelines that take into consideration case-specific
circumstances” are generally not “rules” under the APA); Slay v. Tex. Comm’n on Envtl. Quality, 351 S.W.3d 532,
546 (Tex.App.--Austin 2011, pet. denied)(guidelines TCEQ staff used in determining when to recommend
administrative sanctions were not “rules”). Based on the record before us, we would find on the merits that HRSGs
remain on the k-list and TCEQ has not adopted any policies that would undercut that fact.
44
Finally, in Issue Three, Brazos Electric argues that TCEQ acted arbitrarily and capriciously
by selecting a boiler as technology that was comparable to a HRSG and applying the cost of a
boiler as the Capital Cost Old variable in the CAP formula. TCEQ defends its choice of the boiler
as being reasonable, but the agency asserted during oral argument that the boiler issue is a red
herring, and we may affirm TCEQ’s decision to reject Brazos Electric’s tax request on alternative
grounds. Namely, TCEQ maintains that Brazos Electric has flipped the threshold burden of proof
in its brief; it was actually Brazos Electric’s burden to establish it was entitled to a tax break, and
that burden included furnishing comparable variables that would still result in a positive outcome
once they were run through the CAP formula. Using that burden of proof and applying the abuse
of discretion standard, TCEQ argues we cannot overturn TCEQ’s rejection of Brazos Electric’s
application because its decision regarding the CAP variables fell within the zone of reasonable
disagreement.
We agree with TCEQ on all points.
A.
Standard of Review for Administrative Decisions
The standard of review “defines the relationship between this Court and the court below.”
State v. Villegas, 506 S.W.3d 717, 727 (Tex.App.--El Paso 2016, pet. granted). “These standards
frame the issues, define the depth of review, assign power among judicial actors, and declare the
proper material to review.” [Internal citation and quotation marks omitted]. W. Wendall Hall et
al., Hall’s Standard of Review in Texas, 42 ST. MARY’S L.J. 1, 9 (2010). The standard of review
framework limits this Court’s ability to review lower court rulings and constrains our power to
overturn them.
Our review of agency decisions is similarly limited. We review TCEQ’s determination of
45
entitlement to a Section 11.31 tax break in a non-contested case such as this one under the arbitrary
and capricious standard. Mont Belvieu Caverns, 382 S.W.3d at 485. Our power on appeal under
this standard is extremely limited. On arbitrariness review, “[a] court is not to ask whether a
regulatory decision is the best one possible or even whether it is better than the alternatives.” Fed.
Energy Reg. Comm’n v. Elec. Power Supply Ass’n, 136 S.Ct. 760, 782, 193 L.Ed.2d 661
(2016)(discussing meaning of “arbitrary and capricious” in federal administrative context); accord
2 TEX.JUR.3D ADMINISTRATIVE LAW § 237. Instead, “[a]n administrative agency is said to act
arbitrarily or capriciously where, among other things, it fails to consider a factor the Legislature
has directed it to consider, considers an irrelevant factor, or considered relevant factors but still
reaches a completely unreasonable result.” City of Waco v. Texas Comm’n on Envtl. Quality, 346
S.W.3d 781, 819 (Tex.App.-Austin 2011, pet. denied).
“Ultimately, we are concerned not with the correctness of the Commission’s decision, but
its reasonableness.” Employees Retirement Sys. of Tex. v. Garcia, 454 S.W.3d 121, 132
(Tex.App.--Austin 2014, pet. denied). In determining reasonableness, we give agencies broad
leeway. “The test is not whether the agency made the correct conclusion in our view, but whether
some reasonable basis exists in the record for the agency’s action.” [Internal citation omitted]. Id.
“Our review of the administrator’s decision is not complex or technical; we must assure the
decision falls somewhere on a continuum of reasonableness—even if on the low end.” [Internal
citation and alterations omitted]. Phillips v. Metro. Life Ins. Co., 405 S.W.3d 880, 891 (Tex.App.-
-Dallas 2013, no pet.)(defining arbitrary and capricious standard of review in ERISA context). We
take an administrator’s stated reasons for a decision at face-value and “must judge the validity of
the decision according to the basis upon which it purports to rest.” Smith v. Hous. Chem. Srvs.,
Inc., 872 S.W.2d 252, 267 (Tex.App.--Austin 1994, writ denied). “The [subjective] thought
46
processes or motivations of an administrator are irrelevant in the judicial determination whether
the agency order is reasonably sustained by appropriate findings and conclusions that have support
in the evidence.” [Internal citation and alterations omitted]. Id.
We only “remand for arbitrariness if we conclude that the agency has not genuinely
engaged in reasoned decision-making.” [Internal quotations omitted]. CPS Energy v. Pub. Util.
Comm’n, -- S.W.3d --, No. 03-14-00340-CV, 2017 WL 744694, *6 (Tex.App.--Austin Feb. 24,
2017, no pet.h.). If the agency did not act in an arbitrary or capricious manner, we must affirm the
agency decision. Tex. Health Facilities Comm’n, 665 S.W.2d at 452.
“In tax-exemption cases, the claimant . . . bears the burden of ‘clearly showing’ that it falls
within the statutory exemption.” Tex. Student Housing Authority v. Brazos Cty. Appraisal Dist.,
460 S.W.3d 137, 140-41 (Tex. 2015). Tax exemptions may not “be raised by implication, but
must affirmatively appear, and all doubts are resolved in favor of taxing authority and against the
claimant.” Id. at 141.
B,
Analysis
A large part of Brazos Electric’s argument in Issue Three finds its footing in the premise
that the statute constrains the Executive Director’s discretion in making use determinations for k-
list properties. We dispelled that argument in our resolution of Issue One. The only issue
remaining whether the Executive Director’s decision was so unreasonable as to be arbitrary and
capricious. The briefing on this issue is sparse, but still sufficient to warrant our review under the
Rules of Appellate Procedure. We will do our best to analyze the reasonableness of the Executive
Director’s decision in light of the points Brazos Electric raised in its brief.
Throughout the application process, Brazos Electric ultimately submitted a total of five
47
different proposed calculations of its tax break rate to TCEQ. Two of those, submitted in the
Johnson County application under Tier IV review, did not apply the CAP. Brazos Electric has
abandoned those non-CAP applications on appeal.22 Instead, Brazos Electric argues before this
Court that TCEQ improperly rejected the company’s proposed CAP variables which would have
resulted in the following partial use determinations:
• For both Johnson and Jack County facilities, a 100% use determination (using
$0 as the value for Capital Cost Old and the NPVMP production variable);
• For its Johnson and Jack County facilities, use determinations of +64.29% and
+74.66% respectively (using $0 as the Capital Cost Old value, and applying a
non-zero NPVMP production value); and
• For its Johnson and Jack County facilities, use determination of +63.76% and
+74.52% respectively (using the cost of a spooling device as the Capital Cost
Old value).
We find that TCEQ did not act arbitrarily or capriciously in rejecting these proposed
formulations of the CAP.
1.
Administrative Rules for Determining CAP Variable Values
Recall that the CAP formula applies as follow:
22
As we noted previously, the Johnson County application, while filed under ad hoc Tier IV review, was subject to
having Subsection (g-1)’s uniformity-of-decision requirement imposed on it retroactively, meaning that TCEQ had to
use the same method of decision it applied to other applicants (i.e. the CAP formula) for k-list applicants. See
TEX.TAX CODE ANN. § 11.31(g-1)(standards of decision adopted by TCEQ must be applied to all classes of applicants,
including k-list applicants); Act of May 25, 2009, 81st Leg., R.S., ch. 962, § 3, 2009 TEX.GEN.LAWS 2556, 2557-58
(Subsection (g-1) applies to all applications filed after January 1, 2009, that were not yet final as of September 1,
2009).
48
( x1 – x2 ) - y
_____________________
· 100 = z%
x1
x1 : Capital cost of the actual equipment at issue, with pollution control feature
(Capital Cost New)
x2 : Capital cost of comparable equipment without pollution control feature
(Capital Cost Old)
y : Net value of any marketable material generated by equipment over lifetime
(NPVMP)
· : Multiplication sign
z : Percentage of equipment’s capital cost attributable to pollution control/tax
break percentage
Table 2.1
TCEQ’s administrative rules set definitions for Capital Cost New (x1), Capital Cost Old
(x2), and NPVMP (y). “Capital Cost New is the estimated total capital cost of the new equipment
or process.” 30 TEX.ADMIN.CODE § 17.17(c)(1) fig., n. 2. “Capital Cost Old is the cost of
comparable equipment or process without the pollution control.” Id. at n.3. Section 17.17(c)(1)
recognize four alternate standards for calculating the Capital Cost Old (CCO) variable:
3.1
If comparable equipment without the pollution control feature is on the market
in the United States, then an average market price of the most recent generation
of technology must be used.
3.2
If the conditions in variable 3.1 do not apply and the company is replacing an
existing unit that already has received a positive use determination, the company
shall use the CCO from the application for the previous use determination.
3.3
If the conditions in variable 3.1 and 3.2 do not apply and the company is
replacing an existing unit, then the company shall convert the original cost of the
unit to today’s dollars by using a published industry specific standard.
. . .
3.4
If the conditions in variable 3.1, 3.2 and 3.3 do not apply, and the company can
obtain an estimate of the cost to manufacture the alternative equipment without
the pollution control feature, then an average estimated cost to manufacture the
49
unit must be used. The comparable unit must be the most recent generation of
technology. A copy of the estimate must be provided with the worksheet
including the specific source of the information.
Id.
The NPVMP is defined as:
The net present value of the marketable product recovered for the expected lifetime
of the property . . . Typically, the most recent three-year average price of the
material as sold on the open market should be used in the calculation. . . .23
Id.
Again, we note that Brazos Electric has not challenged any of these definitions or rules of
decision as being substantively or procedurally defective. As such, these rules and definitions bind
us in deciding whether the agency acted arbitrarily or capriciously.
We interpret administrative regulations and rules as questions of law, using the same
principles of textual construction as with statutes. TG S-NOPEC Geophysical Co., 340 S.W.3d at
438. “In construing a Commission rule, our primary objective is to give effect to the Commission’s
intent.” Rodriguez v. Serv. Lloyds Ins. Co., 997 S.W.2d 248, 254 (Tex. 1999). Undefined terms
are “typically given their ordinary meaning” unless “a different or more precise definition is
23
On appeal, neither side argues that the NPVMP was calculated incorrectly. Nevertheless, as background
information, the NPVMP under the administrative rules is calculated using the following formula:
n
(Marketable Product Value - Production Cost)
NPVMP
f 1 (1 Interest Rate)
• n = Estimated useful life of equipment in years
• Marketable Productive Value = (1) the retail value of the product produced by the equipment for one year
periods (typically the most recent three-year average price of the material as sold on the open market), or (2)
value assigned to material for internal accounting purposes, if material is used as an intermediate material in
a production process.
• Production Cost = costs directly attributed to the production of the product, including raw materials, storage,
transportation, and personnel, but excluding non-cash costs, such as overhead and depreciation.
• Interest Rate = 10%
See 30 TEX.ADMIN.CODE § 17.17(c)(2).
50
apparent from the term’s use” in context. TG S-NOPEC Geophysical Co., 340 S.W.3d at 439.
2.
TCEQ Could Rationally Reject Brazos Electric’s Use of “$0” as the Capital Cost Old and
Production Variables in Johnson County Application, Resulting in a 100% Use Determination;
Brazos Concedes that HRSGs Have Productive Value, and Under Mont Belvieu Caverns,
Equipment With Productive Value Cannot Receive a 100% Use Determination as a Matter of
Law
We deal first a proposed 100 percent use determination application that Brazos Electric
submitted for its Johnson County facility. We find that TCEQ did not act arbitrarily or capriciously
by rejecting this particular formulation.
In response to a notice of technical deficiency issued by the Executive Director in its
Johnson County application, Brazos Electric submitted a proposed recalculation of the CAP using
a $0 value for Capital Cost Old and a $0 value for the NPVMP production factor, resulting in a
100 percent use determination. Brazos Electric explains that it selected $0 as the Capital Cost Old
factor because there is no comparable technology to a HRSG, and it selected $0 as the output value
because without attaching the HRSG to a steam turbine, the steam is useless and of no value.
Therefore, the productive equipment is not the HRSG, it is the steam turbine.
As TCEQ correctly says in its brief, this formulation is unreasonable out of hand because
it would require TCEQ to grant a 100 percent use determination when at maximum, Brazos Electric
can only qualify for a partial use determination. We agree that this issue is governed squarely by
Mont Belvieu Caverns.
In Mont Belvieu Caverns, a Section 11.31 tax break applicant stored natural gas liquids in
underground salt dome caverns. To retrieve the natural gas liquids from the caverns, the applicant
would pump brine into the caverns, which would displace the natural gas. The brine was kept in
large surface ponds. The applicant sought a 100 percent positive use determination for the ponds
51
and related equipment, arguing that the brine ponds allowed the company to re-use brine rather
than disposing of it in injection wells and then using fresh water to create new brine. 382 S.W.3d
at 480. On appeal, the applicant conceded that “its brine-pond system is part of the process by
which it produces its gas-storage services for customers,” but the applicant nevertheless urged a
100 percent use determination. Id. at 488. The Third Court disagreed, holding that “property
cannot qualify as 100% pollution-control property if any portion of its value is attributable to its
capacity to produce goods and services.” Id. at 489.
Here, Brazos Electric proposed an application of the CAP formula that resulted in a 100
percent positive use determination, despite the fact that it has conceded that the HRSG serves a
production purpose—it produces steam that is in turn used to power a steam turbine. A 100 percent
positive use determination would be prohibited in this situation under Mont Belvieu Caverns. As
such, TCEQ did not act arbitrarily or capriciously by rejecting this application of the CAP formula.
3.
TCEQ Could Rationally Reject Brazos Electric’s Remaining Two CAP Formulations That
Resulted in Partial Use-Determinations, and Instead Select a Boiler as the Capital Cost Old
Factor, Resulting in a Negative Use Determination
We will address Brazos Electric’s remaining two CAP formulations together, as they both
apply the NPVMP production variable and result in potentially permissible partial use
determinations. For these two formulations, TCEQ rejected Brazos Electric’s proposed Capital
Cost Old variable inputs and instead sua sponte elected to apply its own Capital Cost Old variable
input.
TCEQ is correct that Brazos Electric bears the burden of establishing the tax break, and
that we should focus our attention on the Capital Cost Old inputs that Brazos Electric actually
submitted. See Tex. Student Housing Authority, 460 S.W.3d at 141. TCEQ urges us to affirm the
52
agency’s decision to reject both the spooling device and “$0” as Capital Cost Old variable without
regard to whether TCEQ’s alternate selection of the boiler as the Capital Cost Old variable was
reasonable. While we believe TCEQ’s approach is consistent with the burden of proof in tax cases,
out of an abundance of caution, we will address the reasonableness of the Capital Cost Old
variables selected by both Brazos Electric and TCEQ. In any event, whether we address the
proposed variable in isolation or in relation to one another, the result remains the same. TCEQ
ultimately had three reasonable options in front of it. Its selection of one reasonable option and its
rejection of the two others was not arbitrary or capricious and is not subject to our potential
revision.
i.
TCEQ Could Rationally Reject Brazos Electric’s Use of the Spooling Device/Piping As An
Analogue Technology to HRSGs; Spooling Devices Have No Productive Value
Brazos Electric’s first potentially permissible partial use CAP application applied the value
of a spooling device as the Capital Cost Old variable, resulting in use determination of +63.76%
for the Johnson County facility and +74.52% for the Jack County facility. TCEQ rejected Brazos
Electric’s use of the spooling device, finding that the spooling device was not equipment
comparable to a HRSG, but that a boiler was. Brazos Electric challenges TCEQ’s decision that
spooling devices and HRSGs are not comparable analogues as being arbitrary and capricious,
wholly outside the zone of reasonable disagreement. We cannot say that TCEQ was wholly
irrational in rejecting Brazos Electric’s use of the spooling device as a comparable analogue device
for purposes of the Capital Cost Old factor.
Brazos Electric’s rationale for using the spooling device as being comparable equipment is
based primarily on the schematic layout of its facilities. In a single-cycle plant without a HRSG,
53
the spooling device vents heat from the natural gas generator into an exhaust tower, where it is
released into the atmosphere. A combined-cycle power plant replaces the spooling device with a
HRSG, which recaptures the heat and diverts it to power a second (steam) generator. Without a
HRSG, Brazos Electric’s plants would have be to replumbed with a spooling device to allow the
heat to pass through to an exhaust stack to the atmosphere. Because HRSGs and spooling devices
both funnel heat away from the natural gas turbine, and because they occupy the same position in
the facility schematics, Brazos Electric insists that HRSGs and spooling devices are comparable
technologies, and that no reasonable person could find otherwise.
But just because the empty space at Brazos Electric’s power plants would be filled with
spooling devices instead of HRSGs does not make it reasonable to assume the two pieces of
equipment are analogues. A spooling device connects to an exhaust stack and vents heat off as a
waste product; it does not convert heat into steam that can then be used to power a generator. By
contrast, a HRSG takes wasted heat from a gas engine and uses it to create steam, which is then
used to power a steam generator. While HRSGs and spooling devices occupy the same place in a
factory schematic, a HRSG serves an additional function that a spooling device does not—it
converts wasted heat into more electricity. That is a distinction with a significant difference. The
TCEQ recognized as much when it denied the use of a spooling device as a comparable analogue
technology for the Capital Cost Old variable.
“Comparable equipment” is undefined in the regulations, which means we must take the
word “comparable” in its common usage. Again, under the arbitrary and capricious standard, the
question is not whether we, sitting in the Executive Director’s chair, would find that the HRSG
and the spooling device are comparable. Recognizing the deference we must give to the Executive
Director’s decision under the principles of administrative law, the real question is whether it would
54
be reasonable for a person to see a HRSG and a spooling device as not being comparable to one
another. We can overturn TCEQ’s decision only if no reasonable person could reject Brazos
Electric’s comparison of the HRSG and the spooling device as being sufficiently similar. Here,
we uphold the Executive Director’s decision to reject the spooling device as the Capital Cost Old
variable because a reasonable person could believe that a HRSG and a spooling device do not serve
the save function in a power plant, and are thus not comparable to one another. The Executive
Director decision was not arbitrary or capricious.
ii.
TCEQ Could Rationally Reject Brazos Electric’s Use of $0 as the Capital Cost Old Variable,
Even When the NPVMP Variable Was Also Applied to Recapture Productive Value; TCEQ’s
Finding That a HRSG and a Boiler Serve the Same Function in a Power Plant Was Reasonable
Finally, we deal with the Executive Director’s decision to reject a $0 value as the Capital
Cost Old variable, even when coupled with a positive NPVMP variable, in favor of the boiler. The
Executive Director’s rationale for comparing boilers and HRSGs is simple: both create steam that
can be used to power a steam engine, rendering their functions similar. On appeal, TCEQ also
points out that many combined-cycle power plants use boilers as a back-up redundancy measure
to keep the steam engine running in the event the HRSG stops functioning.
We find, based on the record and arguments presented, that the Executive Director’s
selection of the boiler as the Capital Cost Old variable was not arbitrary or capricious.
Brazos Electric never directly disputes the assertion that a HRSG and the boiler are
functionally comparable, but instead, the company makes much of the fact that the value of the
Capital Cost Old factor TCEQ has selected is disproportionate as compared to the price of the
HRSGs. Brazos Electric complains that the technology is not “comparable” because the old
technology is more expensive than the new technology, meaning that it cannot possibly establish
55
eligibility for a tax break. But the flaw that Brazos Electric complains about is actually a key
aspect of the CAP formula. The Section 11.31 tax break is limited to those situations in which
compliance with environmental regulation would be economically irrational. Mont Belvieu
Caverns, 382 S.W.3d at 489. The CAP accounts for economic rationality by producing negative
values when new technology costs less than older comparable technology, with the rationale being
that if new technology is cheaper than old technology, tax incentives are unnecessary because
compliance with green regulations is economically rational. To the extent that Brazos Electric is
reiterating its no less-than-zero result argument, we disregard it. Nothing in the statute or rules
prevents the Executive Director from finding that comparable old technology is actually more
expensive than new technology and applying those factors accordingly in the CAP. Nothing in
administrative rules prevents the Executive Director from selecting the boiler as the Capital Cost
Old factor.
Brazos Electric also argues that it was reasonable for the company to submit a $0 value as
the Capital Cost Old variable because the HRSGs’ productive value would be recaptured anyway
by the NPVMP variable. Barring the fact that this approach would essentially strike out the use
of a Capital Cost Old variable completely in contravention to the text of the administrative rule,
the question is not whether Brazos Electric’s proposed methodology was reasonable. The question
is whether the approach the Executive Director employed was wholly unreasonable. We cannot
say here that it was. The rule requires the use of a Capital Cost Old factor to account for marginal
costs, and the Executive Director explained his reasons why he selected the boiler as an analogue
for a HRSG—both produce steam that can be converted into energy.
Our review on appeal does not permit us to consider whether we, sitting in the TCEQ
Executive Director’s chair, would have chosen a different analogue technology, or even whether
56
some other even better analogue technology exists. Instead, the narrow question we must answer
under the standard of review is whether the Executive Director acted arbitrarily or capriciously in
selecting the boiler as a comparable analogue because he viewed the steam-making functions of a
HRSG as being similar to the steam-making functions of a boiler. The Executive Director has
stated his reasons for making his selection. In light of the stated reasons for selecting the boiler as
an analogue, we cannot say the Executive Director acted arbitrarily and capriciously by selecting
a technology that had a similar function. His decision fell within the zone of reasonable
disagreement.
Brazos Electric strongly insinuates that the Executive Director’s stated reasons do not
represent his true views but are simply a pretextual veil he hides behind in imposing his own biases
against HRSG applicants; in the company’s view, the Executive Director’s selection of the boiler
was actually a cynical move calculated to force a negative use determination after the TCEQ
Commissioner’s struck down the Executive Director’s original findings on appeal. We empathize
with the company’s frustrations in dealing with this administrative process, particularly given that
especially with the Johnson County facility, litigation seems to have dragged on for years. That
being said, “[t]he thought processes or motivations of an administrator are irrelevant in the judicial
determination whether the agency order is reasonably sustained by appropriate findings and
conclusions that have support in the evidence.” Smith, 872 S.W.2d at 266. We cannot go behind
the Executive Director’s stated reasons and question his motives in arriving at his decision. “We
must judge the validity of the decision according to the basis upon which it purports to rest.” Id.
at 267. We take his decision as-is and decide only if the administrator acted within the scope of
his power. The Executive Director acted reasonably within the bounds of his discretionary
authority in selecting the boiler as a Capital Cost Old analogue to a HRSG.
57
Our opinion should not be read as foreclosing the possibility that future HRSG applicants
may come up with a better comparable alternative to a boiler, one that would render TCEQ’s use
of the boiler wholly unreasonable by comparison. Our opinion also does not foreclose future
legislative intervention or more nuanced rulemaking from TCEQ to clarify what seems to be an
increasingly Kafkaesque corner of environmental law. Instead, we simply state that based on the
record presented and the arguments as teed up in the parties’ briefs in this specific case, we cannot
overturn the Executive Director’s decision here.
5.
CAP Formula Application Conclusion
TCEQ acted within the bounds of its discretion by rejecting Brazos Electric’s proposed
formulations of the CAP: the first formulation provides a 100 percent use determination when once
has not been earned, and the other two formulations failed to use an analogue device that has
comparable productive aspects and failed to offset potential return on investment against cost as
required by the CAP. TCEQ also acted within the bounds of its discretion by selecting and
applying a boiler as a comparable Capital Cost Old factor because both served a steam-making
function.
Issue Three is overruled.
IV.
Coda
It may be that companies like Brazos Electric should be entitled to tax breaks for adopting
clean technologies like HRSGs, even if the company does receive an incidental benefit from going
green and that tax money would otherwise go to this state’s government, education system, and
infrastructure. That policy question is beyond our purview. We are tasked solely with deciding
how much leeway TCEQ had in administering the tax break set by the Legislature. Based on our
58
read of the statutes, TCEQ had the power to deny the tax break here, even in light of the positive
environmental effects HRSGs have, because the free market worked, clean technology made a
power plant more productive, and the interests of a corporation and environmentalists aligned,
rendering the tax incentive unnecessary. TCEQ acted within the proper bounds of the discretionary
authority given to it by the Legislature.
To the extent the law as it exists now may create unforeseen tax consequences or undercut
the purpose of the incentives, the fixes to these thorny issues are legislative or administrative, not
judicial.
CONCLUSION
None of the appellate points raised by Brazos Electric constitute reversible error. The
judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
September 15, 2017
YVONNE T. RODRIGUEZ, Justice
Before Rodriguez, J., Palafox, J., and Larsen, Senior Judge
Larsen, Senior Judge (Sitting by Assignment)
Palafox, J. (Dissenting)
59