PUBLISHED
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
PITT COUNTY, Individually and on
behalf of all others similarly
situated,
Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
HOTELS.COM, L.P.; HOTELS.COM GP,
LLC; HOTWIRE, INC.; CHEAP
TICKETS, INC.; CENDANT TRAVEL
DISTRIBUTION SERVICES GROUP, INC.;
EXPEDIA, INCORPORATED;
INTERNETWORK PUBLISHING
CORPORATION, d/b/a Lodging.com; No. 07-1900
LOWEST FARE.COM, INC.; ORBITZ,
INC.; ORBITZ, LLC; PRICELINE.COM,
INC.; TRAVELOCITY.COM, LP;
TRAVELWEB, LLC; TRAVELNOW.COM,
INC.; DOES, 1-1000, Inclusive,
Defendants-Appellees,
and
SITE59.COM; TRAVELOCITY.COM,
INC.; MAUPINTOUR HOLDING, LLC,
Defendants.
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Eastern District of North Carolina, at Raleigh.
Terrence W. Boyle, District Judge.
(4:06-cv-00030-BO)
2 PITT COUNTY v. HOTELS.COM
Argued: October 30, 2008
Decided: January 14, 2009
Before MICHAEL and AGEE, Circuit Judges,
and Martin K. REIDINGER, United States District Judge
for the Western District of North Carolina,
sitting by designation.
Affirmed by published opinion. Judge Michael wrote the
opinion, in which Judge Agee and Judge Reidinger joined.
COUNSEL
ARGUED: John Timothy Murray, Sr., MURRAY & MUR-
RAY, Sandusky, Ohio, for Appellant. Darrel J. Hieber,
SKADDEN, ARPS, SLATE, MEAGHER & FLOM, L.L.P.,
Los Angeles, California, for Appellees. ON BRIEF: Rebecca
Cameron Blount, BLOUNT & BLOUNT, P.C., Greenville,
North Carolina, for Appellant. Charles B. Neely, Jr., Nancy S.
Rendleman, Robert W. Shaw, WILLIAMS MULLEN
MAUPIN TAYLOR, Raleigh, North Carolina, for Appellees;
Karen L. Valihura, Michael A. Barlow, SKADDEN, ARPS,
SLATE, MEAGHER & FLOM, L.L.P., Wilmington, Dela-
ware, for Appellees Priceline.com, Inc., Lowestfare.com, Inc.,
and Travelweb, L.L.C.; James P. Karen, Deborah S. Sloan,
JONES DAY, Dallas, Texas, for Appellees Hotels.com, L.P.,
Hotels.com GP, L.L.C., Hotwire, Inc., Expedia, Incorporated,
and TravelNow.com., Inc.; Paul E. Chronis, Elizabeth B. Her-
rington, MCDERMOTT WILL & EMERY, L.L.P., Chicago,
Illinois, for Appellees Orbitz, Inc., Orbitz, L.L.C., Internet-
work Publishing Corporation, d/b/a Lodging.com, Cheap
Tickets, Inc., and Cendant Travel Distribution Services
Group, Inc.; Brian S. Stagner, KELLY HART & HALLMAN,
L.L.P., Fort Worth, Texas, for Appellee Travelocity.com, L.P.
PITT COUNTY v. HOTELS.COM 3
OPINION
MICHAEL, Circuit Judge:
North Carolina’s Pitt County (the County) appeals the dis-
missal of its putative class action brought against a number of
online travel companies for failure to pay the County’s hotel
occupancy tax. The online companies purchase rooms from
hotels in the County at wholesale rates, charge consumers
marked-up rates, but remit no occupancy taxes to the County.
The district court determined that the online companies were
not subject to the County’s occupancy tax and dismissed the
action on the ground that the County lacked standing to sue.
North Carolina law permits Pitt County to collect, under its
own ordinance, an occupancy tax from a business renting
rooms in the county if the operator of the business comes
within the definition of "retailer" under the state’s sales tax
statute, N.C. Gen. Stat. § 105-164.4(a)(3). "Operators of
hotels, motels, tourist homes, tourist camps, and similar type
businesses . . . are considered retailers" under the statute. Id.
We conclude that an online travel company does not meet this
statutory definition of a "retailer" because it is not a business
that is of a type similar to a hotel, motel, tourist home, or tour-
ist camp. We therefore agree with the district court that the
County is not entitled to collect the occupancy tax. Although
we conclude that the County has standing to sue, we affirm
the district court’s judgment of dismissal on the alternative
ground that the County’s complaint fails to state a claim.
I.
In December 2005 Pitt County filed a complaint in North
Carolina state court alleging that the defendant online travel
companies had failed to remit taxes to the County as required
by its occupancy tax ordinance. The action was removed to
the Eastern District of North Carolina. The County’s com-
plaint, in illustrating its claim, offers the following hypotheti-
4 PITT COUNTY v. HOTELS.COM
cal: Hotels.com purchases a hotel room in Pitt County for a
wholesale rate of $70.00 per night and re-lets the same room
to a consumer at a retail rate of $100.00 per night. In this situ-
ation the hotel remits an occupancy tax to the County of 3
percent of the $70.00 per night wholesale rate it receives for
the room. According to the complaint, the higher retail rate of
$100.00 per night is nowhere taken into account in the calcu-
lation and remittance of the occupancy tax. Thus, Pitt County
claims that it receives only 3 percent of $70.00, or $2.10,
rather than 3 percent of $100.00, or $3.00, a shortfall of 90¢
on the hypothetical room rental.
The defendant online travel companies filed a motion to
dismiss pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6)
for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted.
In their motion the online companies asserted that they do not
owe room occupancy taxes because the scope of the County’s
occupancy tax is constrained by the North Carolina state sales
tax, and the online companies are not subject to the state sales
tax. The district court initially denied the online companies’
motion to dismiss, reasoning in part that the relevant statutes
were sufficiently broad to cover the transactions in question.
The online travel companies then filed a motion for recon-
sideration, again contending that they were not subject to the
County’s occupancy tax ordinance. At the hearing on the
motion to reconsider, the district court, for the first time,
expressed a concern about whether the County had standing
to sue. The court observed that if, as an initial matter, the
online companies are not subject to the County’s occupancy
tax ordinance, then the County has no entitlement to the tax
and has suffered no injury in fact. The court, with the consent
of the online companies, recharacterized their motion for
reconsideration as one made under Rule 12(b)(1). The court
subsequently dismissed Pitt County’s action for lack of stand-
ing, and the County now appeals.
PITT COUNTY v. HOTELS.COM 5
II.
The issue before us is whether Pitt County is entitled to col-
lect the occupancy tax on hotel rooms based on the rates
charged by online travel companies when the rooms are re-let.
We review de novo the district court’s dismissal for lack of
subject matter jurisdiction under Federal Rule of Civil Proce-
dure 12(b)(1). Evans v. B.F. Perkins Co., 166 F.3d 642, 647
(4th Cir. 1999). In reviewing the dismissal, we are "not lim-
ited to evaluation of the grounds offered by the district court
to support its decision, but [we] may affirm on any grounds
apparent from the record." Suter v. United States, 441 F.3d
306, 310 (4th Cir. 2006) (quoting United States v. Smith, 395
F.3d 516, 519 (4th Cir. 2005)).
A.
The County’s authority to tax room rental transactions
within its borders is constrained by state statutory provisions
as well as the language of the County’s occupancy tax ordi-
nance.
In 1987 the North Carolina General Assembly passed an
enabling act that authorizes Pitt County to
levy a room occupancy tax of three percent (3%) of
the gross receipts derived from the rental of any
room, lodging, or similar accommodation furnished
by a hotel, motel, inn, or similar place within the
county that is subject to sales tax imposed by the
State under G.S. 105-164.4(3).*
*The numbering but not the text of the relevant portion of N.C. Gen.
Stat. § 105-164.4 has been amended so that subsection 105-164.4(3) is
now numbered 105-164.4(a)(3). The County does not contend that the
state’s failure to update the numbering in the enabling act renders the sales
tax provision inapplicable to the County’s ordinance. To minimize confu-
sion, we will refer to the § 105-164.4(3) in the enabling act by its current
numbering: § 105-164.4(a)(3).
6 PITT COUNTY v. HOTELS.COM
1987 N.C. Sess. Laws 143. A tax levied pursuant to the
enabling act is to be collected by the "operator of a business
subject to the tax." Id.
Pitt County enacted an occupancy tax pursuant to the
enabling act that essentially tracks the act’s language. The
County ordinance provides in relevant part that:
There shall be levied a room occupancy tax in the
amount of three (3) percent of the gross receipts
derived from the rental in the county of any room,
lodging, or similar accommodation subject to sales
tax under G.S. 105-164.4(3), which shall be in addi-
tion to any state or local sales tax.
Pitt County Ord. § 8-50.
N.C. Gen. Stat. § 105-164.4, the sales tax provision
referred to in Pitt County’s ordinance, levies the state sales
tax on "retailers" and defines the term in the context of the
rental of rooms and lodging as follows:
Operators of hotels, motels, tourist homes, tourist
camps, and similar type businesses and persons who
rent private residences and cottages to transients are
considered retailers under this Article. A tax at the
general rate of tax is levied on the gross receipts
derived by these retailers from the rental of any
rooms, lodgings, or accommodations furnished to
transients for a consideration. . . .
N.C. Gen. Stat. § 105-164.4(a)(3) (2007).
The parties agree that the scope of the County’s occupancy
tax is limited to businesses that fit the definition of "retailers"
in § 105-164.4(a)(3).
With the statutory context established, we turn first to the
issue of standing raised by the district court.
PITT COUNTY v. HOTELS.COM 7
B.
In ruling on the motion for reconsideration, the district
court analyzed the language of the sales tax statute and con-
cluded that the term "retailer" as defined in N.C. Gen. Stat.
§ 105-164.4(a)(3) does not apply to the online travel compa-
nies. Based on this conclusion, the district court determined
that Pitt County was not entitled to any revenue from the
online companies under its ordinance and had consequently
suffered no injury in fact. The court therefore decided that the
County lacked standing to bring this action and dismissed it
pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(1) for lack
of subject matter jurisdiction. We disagree with the district
court’s conclusion that it lacked jurisdiction.
The district court’s analysis improperly conflated the
threshold standing inquiry with the merits of the County’s
claim. "To satisfy the standing requirement of the case-or-
controversy limitation on judicial authority found in Article
III, Section 2 of the Constitution, the party invoking federal
court jurisdiction must show that (1) it has suffered an injury
in fact, (2) the injury is fairly traceable to the defendants’
actions, and (3) it is likely, and not merely speculative, that
the injury will be redressed by a favorable decision." Long
Term Care Partners, LLC v. United States, 516 F.3d 225,
230-31 (4th Cir. 2008) (citing Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife,
504 U.S. 555, 560-61 (1992)); see also Friends of the Earth,
Inc. v. Gaston Copper Recycling Corp., 204 F.3d 149, 154
(4th Cir. 2000) (en banc). "With regard to the injury-in-fact
prong of the standing test, [a plaintiff] need not prove the
merits of [its] case in order to demonstrate that [it] ha[s] Arti-
cle III standing." Am. Library Ass’n v. FCC, 401 F.3d 489,
493 (D.C. Cir. 2005). And a "district court has jurisdiction if
‘the right of the [plaintiffs] to recover under their complaint
will be sustained if the [applicable laws] are given one con-
struction and will be defeated if they are given another’
. . . ." Steel Co. v. Citizens for a Better Env’t, 523 U.S. 83, 89
(1998) (quoting Bell v. Hood, 327 U.S. 678, 685 (1946)).
8 PITT COUNTY v. HOTELS.COM
Here, Pitt County alleges that it was injured by the failure
of the online travel companies to remit occupancy taxes on
the full rental rate of hotel rooms in the County. The County’s
right to recovery depends upon whether online travel compa-
nies are subject to the occupancy tax ordinance, a question of
statutory construction. That the district court ultimately dis-
agreed with the County regarding the applicability of the tax
to online companies does not mean that the County failed to
allege an injury in fact. To hold otherwise would reduce all
merits inquiries in cases of this type into standing inquiries.
Our determination that the County has standing to bring
this action countermands the district court’s dismissal pursu-
ant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(1). It does not,
however, end our inquiry. The defendant online companies
urge affirmance on an alternative ground provided by Rule
12(b)(6): the County’s complaint fails to state a claim upon
which relief can be granted. We may affirm on this alternative
ground if we conclude—as did the district court in its standing
inquiry—that the County’s occupancy tax does not reach the
online companies. See Suter v. United States, 441 F.3d 306,
310 (4th Cir. 2006).
C.
The dispositive issue is whether the phrase "[o]perators of
hotels, motels, tourist homes, tourist camps, and similar type
businesses" in § 105-164.4(a)(3) in the North Carolina sales
tax statute applies to online travel companies.
Online travel companies are not operators of the hotels
whose rooms they offer to the public on the internet. See
Webster’s Third New International Dictionary 1580-81
(2002) (defining "operator" in the context of a business as "a
person who actively operates a business (as a mine, a farm,
or a store) whether as owner, lessor, or employee" and defin-
ing "operate" as "to manage and put or keep in operation
whether with personal effort or not"). The online companies,
PITT COUNTY v. HOTELS.COM 9
as the allegations in the County’s complaint recognize, have
no role in the day-to-day operation or management of the
hotels. Thus, they cannot be said to operate the hotels.
The County contends, however, that online travel compa-
nies and hotels are "similar type businesses" because the
online companies, like hotels, make a profit or gain from the
rental of rooms. This argument for a functional view of online
travel companies is based on the definition of "business"
found in N.C. Gen. Stat. § 105-164.3. Under that provision
the term "business" "[i]ncludes any activity engaged in by any
person or caused to be engaged in by him with the object of
gain, profit, benefit or advantage, either direct or indirect.
. . ." N.C. Gen. Stat. § 105-164.3(1d) (2007). The County’s
argument does not withstand scrutiny.
We are guided here by the familiar ejusdem generis canon
of statutory construction: "where general words follow a des-
ignation of particular subjects or things, the meaning of the
general words will ordinarily be presumed to be, and con-
strued as, restricted by the particular designations and as
including only things of the same kind, character and nature
as those specifically enumerated." Smith v. Smith, 331 S.E.2d
682, 686-87 (N.C. 1985) (quoting State v. Lee, 176 S.E.2d
772, 774 (N.C. 1970)).
In § 105-164.4(a)(3) the phrase "similar type businesses" is
preceded by four specifically enumerated businesses: hotels,
motels, tourist homes, and tourist camps. The specifically
enumerated businesses in the statute, unlike online travel
companies, all provide lodging to patrons on site. They are all
physical establishments with rooms or other accommodations
where guests can stay. A business that arranges for the rental
of hotel rooms over the internet, but that does not physically
provide the rooms, is not a business that is of a similar type
to a hotel, motel, or tourist home or camp. Any different con-
clusion would be inconsistent with the canon of ejusdem
generis.
10 PITT COUNTY v. HOTELS.COM
The County also argues that rejecting a functional interpre-
tation of "similar type businesses" in the statute would create
an absurd result, opening a potential loophole. This argument
relies on City of Fairview Heights v. Orbitz, Inc., No. 05-CV-
840 (S.D. Ill. July 12, 2006). In Fairview Heights the district
court, faced with a similar arrangement of parties and a simi-
lar tax ordinance, cautioned against the "potentially gaping
loophole" that would be permitted by the online travel compa-
nies’ interpretation of the tax provision:
a hotel operator could simply incorporate a shell
entity or make some other similar arrangement, rent
the hotel rooms to that entity for a nominal amount,
and then re-rent the rooms to consumers, who would
be taxed only on the nominal sum paid by the side
entity to the operator.
Id., slip op. at 13. Even if we assume that the court in Fair-
view Heights is correct about the viability of this loophole, its
potential for mischief does not compel a broader interpreta-
tion of the "similar type businesses" language in the North
Carolina sales tax statute.
Rather, "it seems to us preferable to accept the statute as
written, leaving to [the legislature] the function of closing
loopholes (if they exist) . . . ." Penn Sec. Life Ins. Co. v.
United States, 524 F.2d 1155, 1163 (Ct. Cl. 1975), aff’d sub
nom. United States v. Consumer Life Ins. Co., 430 U.S. 725
(1977). The loophole identified in Fairview Heights, if indeed
it is a real one, may simply indicate that the North Carolina
General Assembly failed to consider the tax consequences of
a situation where hotel rooms are rented first at wholesale and
later re-let at retail rates to consumers. On the other hand, the
statute’s language may be the result of the legislature’s delib-
erate choice to limit the application of the sales tax to the
actual operators of hotels and similar type businesses. In
either case, we may not expand the statute’s reach beyond
what its plain language will bear.
PITT COUNTY v. HOTELS.COM 11
We therefore conclude that, under the plain meaning of
§ 105.164.4(a)(3), an online travel company is not a retailer
because it is not a business of a type that is similar to a hotel,
motel, or tourist home or camp. As a result, an online travel
company is not subject to the Pitt County occupancy tax.
D.
Even if we were to decide that the phrase "similar type
businesses" in § 105-164.4(a)(3) is ambiguous as to its appli-
cability to online travel companies, the County would still not
prevail. North Carolina has a well-established canon of statu-
tory construction governing ambiguity in tax statutes: "Where
the meaning of a tax statute is doubtful, it should be construed
against the state and in favor of the taxpayer unless a contrary
legislative intent appears." Colonial Pipeline Co. v. Clayton,
166 S.E.2d 671, 679 (N.C. 1969); accord United States v.
Merriam, 263 U.S. 179, 188 (1923) ("If the words [of a tax
statute] are doubtful, the doubt must be resolved against the
Government and in favor of the taxpayer.").
The County argues that this canon is inapplicable here
because even if the statute is ambiguous with respect to its
application to online travel companies, the state legislature
expressed a clear intent to tax the room rate paid by the con-
sumer rather than the lower wholesale rate paid by the online
company to the hotel that is subject to the sales tax. To dem-
onstrate this "contrary legislative intent," the County directs
us to a separate provision, N.C. Gen. Stat. § 105-164.26, enti-
tled "Presumption that sales are taxable." Section 105-164.26
provides that "it shall be presumed that all gross receipts of
wholesale merchants and retailers are subject to the retail
sales tax until the contrary is established by proper records as
required in this Article." N.C. Gen. Stat. § 105-164.26 (2007).
Contrary to the County’s assertion, § 105-164.26 does
nothing to overcome the canon for interpreting ambiguities in
the tax laws. Section 105-164.26 creates a presumption that
12 PITT COUNTY v. HOTELS.COM
all gross receipts of "wholesale merchants and retailers" are
subject to the sales tax. However, the dispositive issue in the
case is whether online travel companies are retailers in the
first place under the definition in § 105-164.4(a)(3). If online
travel companies were retailers, then they would be subject to
the state sales tax and potentially subject to the County’s
occupancy tax. However, as we have concluded, online travel
companies are not retailers (and therefore not subject to tax)
under the plain language of § 105-164.4(a)(3), and § 105-
164.26’s "[p]resumption that sales are taxable" does nothing
to change our conclusion.
III.
In sum, we disagree with the district court’s determination
that it lacked jurisdiction to entertain Pitt County’s claim in
this case, but we affirm the court’s dismissal of the complaint
on the alternative ground that it fails to state a claim upon
which relief can be granted.
AFFIRMED