N.M. Taxation & Revenue Dep't v. Casias Trucking , 2014 NMCA 99 ( 2014 )


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    New Mexico Compilation
    Commission, Santa Fe, NM
    '00'04- 17:11:28 2014.10.29
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO
    Opinion Number: 2014-NMCA-099
    Filing Date: July 17, 2014
    Docket No. 32,595
    NEW MEXICO TAXATION
    AND REVENUE DEPARTMENT,
    Appellant,
    v.
    CASIAS TRUCKING,
    Appellee.
    APPEAL FROM THE TAXATION & REVENUE DEPARTMENT
    Monica Ontiveros, Hearing Officer
    New Mexico Taxation & Revenue Department
    Nelson J. Goodin, Chief Legal Counsel
    Santa Fe, NM
    for Appellant
    Wayne G. Chew, P.C.
    Wayne G. Chew
    Albuquerque, NM
    for Appellee
    OPINION
    VIGIL, Judge.
    {1}    Taxpayer Casias Trucking (Casias Trucking) protested a tax assessment issued by
    the Taxation and Revenue Department (the Department). The hearing officer concluded that
    the Department’s method for calculating the amount of taxes owed by Casias Trucking was
    unreliable and abated the assessment. Concluding that the hearing officer’s decision is
    supported by substantial evidence, we affirm.
    1
    BACKGROUND
    {2}     Casias Trucking is a business engaged in the intra-state hauling of construction
    materials. Per NMSA 1978, Section 7-15A-3 (1988), Casias Trucking is required to pay a
    “weight distance tax” on its several trucks that weigh more than 26,000 pounds for miles
    driven on New Mexico highways. In 2010, although Casias Trucking had been filing weight
    distance tax returns and paying weight distance taxes, the Department suspected it was
    underreporting and selected Casias Trucking for a weight distance field audit for tax years
    2007 through 2009. The Department extended the audit to cover tax years 2004 through
    2006 after it identified alleged underreporting in excess of twenty-five percent. See NMSA
    1978, § 7-1-18(D) (2013) (allowing for an extension on the statute of limitations for
    assessing taxes from three years to six years, when taxpayers understate their tax liability on
    their returns by more than twenty-five percent).
    {3}     At the commencement of the audit, Mr. Louie Casias, owner of Casias Trucking, met
    with the auditor and her supervisor and explained that his business did not engage in long-
    distance hauling but that he mostly traveled on construction sites and that he only used five
    trucks. Mr. Casias calculated the mileage his trucks traveled based on the amount of fuel
    purchased as shown in his fuel receipts, multiplied by the industry average of five miles per
    gallon. He then reported the mileage to his accountant, who prepared his tax returns. During
    the audit, Mr. Casias provided the auditor with all of his fuel receipts for 2007 through 2009,
    and he went through the fuel receipts for 2007 with the auditor to show that they matched
    with what he had reported. He also provided a quarterly summary that he had prepared to
    show the total number of gallons of fuel purchased referenced by truck number, along with
    the odometer reading by date. For reasons which we explain in greater detail below, the
    auditor decided Mr. Casias’s summary was unreliable, and refused to calculate mileage
    based on the fuel receipts that Mr. Casias had.
    {4}     As a result of its audit, the Department assessed Casias Trucking with $103,097.36
    in weight tax principal, interest, and penalties for 2004 through 2009. Casias Trucking
    protested the assessment, and a formal hearing was held before a Department hearing officer.
    At the hearing, the Department presented its audit methodology for calculating the amount
    Casias Trucking underpaid and Casias Trucking presented evidence that the Department’s
    methodology produced unreasonably high results. The hearing officer ruled that Casias
    Trucking provided sufficient evidence that the Department’s audit was not reliable and
    abated the claimed amount due. The Department appeals. NMSA 1978, § 7-1-25(A) (1989)
    (“If the protestant or secretary is dissatisfied with the decision and order of the hearing
    officer, the party may appeal to the court of appeals for further relief, but only to the same
    extent and upon the same theory as was asserted in the hearing before the hearing officer.”)
    Additional pertinent facts are discussed below.
    DISCUSSION
    {5}    The Weight Distance Tax Act (the Act), NMSA 1978, §§ 7-15A-1 to -16 (1988, as
    2
    amended through 2009), imposes a tax on all registered vehicles with a declared weight over
    26,000 pounds that travel on state highways. Section 7-15A-3. “The tax shall be paid by
    the registrant, owner or operator of a motor vehicle registered in this state to which the tax
    applies.” Section 7-15A-4. The Act sets forth a schedule for the tax rate, or mills per mile
    rate (mill rate), based upon the declared gross vehicle weight, with the mill rate increasing
    as the weight increases. Section 7-15A-6(A). Motor vehicles that customarily only carry
    a full load one way (a one-way haul) are eligible to pay at the reduced rate of two-thirds of
    the appropriate mill rate. Section 7-15A-6(B)(1)-(2). Taxpayers subject to the Act must
    report to the Department the total number of miles traveled inside and outside of New
    Mexico during the tax payment period. Section 7-15A-8(B). However, the tax rate is
    computed based upon the total number of miles traveled on New Mexico highways during
    the tax period. Section 7-15A-8(A). Unless certain conditions are met to qualify for annual
    payments, taxpayers are required to pay weight distance taxes quarterly. Section 7-15A-9.
    {6}     Taxpayers must maintain records that will permit the accurate computation of taxes.
    NMSA 1978, § 7-1-10(A) (2007). If claiming the one-way haul rate, taxpayers must keep
    records of loaded miles versus empty miles designated by truck number. 3.12.6.11 NMAC.
    The records used to make quarterly tax payments must be kept for four years after the
    payments are made. Section 7-15A-9(D). Upon the Department’s request, taxpayers must
    make their records available “for audit as to accuracy of computations and payments.” Id.;
    see also 3.1.5.8(A) NMAC (“Taxpayers have a duty to provide the secretary or secretary’s
    delegate, upon request, with books of account and other records upon which to establish a
    basis for taxation.”).
    {7}     The Department’s regulations provide that “[t]he adequacy or inadequacy of taxpayer
    records is a matter of fact to be determined by the secretary or secretary’s delegate.”
    3.1.5.8(A) NMAC. “Failure of a taxpayer to keep adequate books of account or other
    records will cause the department to use alternative methods to determine or estimate taxes
    due.” 3.1.5.8(B) NMAC. The Department is authorized to use any method or combination
    of methods to reconstruct or verify taxpayers’ records, including but not limited to utilizing
    bank deposits, comparison to industry standards, and assessment of taxes based on the best
    information available. 3.1.5.8 (C)-(D) NMAC.
    Presumption of Correctness and Burden Shifting
    {8}     “Any assessment of taxes or demand for payment made by the department is
    presumed to be correct.” NMSA 1978, § 7-1-17(C) (2007); see also Torridge Corp. v.
    Comm’r of Revenue, 1972-NMCA-171, ¶ 15, 
    84 N.M. 610
    , 
    506 P.2d 354
    (“The notice of
    assessment of taxes based on the audit is presumed to be correct.”). “The presumption exists
    even if the secretary has issued assessments using alternative methods of reconstruction of
    a tax or has estimated the tax.” 3.1.6.12(B) NMAC. “‘The effect of the presumption of
    correctness is that the taxpayer has the burden of coming forward with some countervailing
    evidence tending to dispute the factual correctness of the assessment made by the
    secretary.’” MPC Ltd. v. N.M. Taxation & Revenue Dep’t, 2003-NMCA-021, ¶ 13, 133
    
    3 N.M. 217
    , 
    62 P.3d 308
    (quoting 3.1.6.12(A) NMAC); see Floyd & Berry Davis Co. v.
    Bureau of Revenue, 1975-NMCA-143, ¶ 8, 
    88 N.M. 576
    , 
    544 P.2d 291
    (“One way for the
    taxpayer to overcome the presumption of correctness of the assessment is to present evidence
    and to show that the decision of the [b]ureau is not supported by substantial evidence.”);
    McConnell v. State ex rel. Bureau of Revenue, 1971-NMCA-181, ¶ 7, 
    83 N.M. 386
    , 
    492 P.2d 1003
    (explaining that the protestor can rebut the presumption of correctness by showing that
    the department failed to follow relevant statutory provisions or presenting evidence tending
    to dispute the factual correctness of the assessments). However, “‘[u]nsubstantiated
    statements that the assessment is incorrect cannot overcome the presumption of
    correctness.’” MPC Ltd., 2003-NMCA-021, ¶ 13 (quoting 3.1.6.12(A) NMAC). “Absent
    a showing of incorrectness by taxpayers, the audit and notice of assessment of taxes must
    stand.” Torridge, 1972-NMCA-171, ¶ 15. On the other hand, when a taxpayer rebuts the
    presumption, the burden shifts to the Department to demonstrate the correctness of the tax
    assessment. MPC Ltd., 2003-NMCA-021, ¶ 13; accord Cibola Energy Corp. v. Roselli,
    1987-NMCA-055, ¶ 11, 
    105 N.M. 774
    , 
    737 P.2d 555
    .
    The Department’s Method
    {9}     During the audit, Casias Trucking provided the auditor with the records used to
    calculate its weight distance tax returns, which consisted of receipts from 2007 through 2009
    for fuel purchased by cash, credit card, and check, as well quarterly summaries it prepared
    that showed the date, truck number, ending odometer reading, and amount of fuel purchased.
    The auditor decided that Casias Trucking’s quarterly summaries were unreliable because the
    odometer readings could not have been an accurate reflection of the actual odometer
    readings since some of the readings went backward or stayed the same as time progressed.
    {10} The auditor also determined that she would not use the fuel receipts to calculate the
    mileage because she concluded that Casias Trucking did not provide fuel receipts for all of
    its trucks. The auditor determined that Casias Trucking, which had bought and sold trucks
    throughout the audited period, had titled seven to ten trucks in this period based on permits
    issued by the motor vehicle division. Yet, the quarterly summaries only accounted for fuel
    purchases for four to five trucks. Believing that Casias Trucking would not buy “expensive”
    trucks that it would not use and that it would have more than one to two receipts per month
    for each truck, she concluded that Casias Trucking did not provide the receipts for all the
    fuel he had purchased. Thus, the auditor decided not to base her audit on Casias Trucking’s
    records.
    {11} Since she had determined Casias Trucking’s records were inadequate, the auditor
    selected an alternate method per 3.1.5.8(B) NMAC for calculating the mileage Casias
    Trucking’s trucks had traveled. She used an averaging method based on subtracting the
    beginning odometer readings from the ending readings for six trucks with available readings,
    dividing that figure by the number of months that had passed between the readings to get the
    average miles of travel per month, and multiplying that figure by three to get the average
    miles traveled per quarter. For the remaining trucks that had unavailable odometer readings,
    4
    either because they were sold, placed out of service, or had an unreliable beginning reading,
    the auditor based the mileage on an average of the quarterly average of the other six trucks.
    {12} According to the auditor’s calculations, Casias Trucking’s trucks had traveled a total
    of 2,416,571 miles from 2004 through 2009, whereas Casias Trucking had reported 228,992
    miles for this period. The auditor credited Casias Trucking for the amount it had paid and
    calculated the difference due. In addition, even though Casias Trucking was required per
    3.12.6.11 NMAC to have its drivers keep records of miles with a full load verses an empty
    load in order to qualify for the one-way haul rate, the auditor utilized the one-way haul rate
    in her calculations after investigating and determining that it was customary for Casias
    Trucking’s trucks to leave full and return empty. However, the auditor did not exclude any
    miles for being exempt (“off road” or off New Mexico highways) because Casias Trucking
    did not keep records of which miles were traveled on and which were off New Mexico
    highways.
    Casias Trucking’s Evidence
    {13} Mr. Casias testified at the hearing that his trucks could not have possibly traveled the
    distances calculated by the Department, and he could not have possibly underreported in the
    amount the Department contended. He said his business consisted of mostly “off road” or
    “on-site hauling”; meaning the trucks hauled construction materials short distances to
    construction projects within New Mexico, only traveling on highways to get to the job sites
    and spending a lot of idle time waiting to dump the materials at the sites. Each truck hauled
    full loads one-way only and traveled anywhere from thirty to fifty miles per day.
    {14} According to Mr. Casias, he only had five to six trucks working at any given time,
    with the other trucks only rarely being used to replace a broken down truck or for an odd job.
    To explain how he could afford to let equipment sit idly, he presented titles showing that all
    of the trucks were purchased used and relatively inexpensively, with a price ranging from
    $150 to $50,000. He also said that he only employed seven drivers, with one to two drivers
    serving as backup drivers. However, Mr. Casias did admit that he reported to his accountant
    who prepared his weight distance taxes only half of the total mileage he calculated because
    he thought he was entitled to cut his miles in half since he only performed one-way hauls,
    which he understood to be an erroneous understanding of the law by the time he testified.
    {15} According to Mr. Casias, his method of using fuel receipts to calculate mileage
    traveled produced a more accurate result than the Department’s method. He said that the
    fuel receipts he provided the auditor were for all of the fuel he purchased. When prompted
    on cross-examination why he only produced fuel receipts for five vehicles when he owned
    more than that, Mr. Casias maintained that he only used five trucks at any given time and on
    a rare occasion, once every six to eight months, he would purchase fuel for one of his backup
    trucks. He only reported on five trucks because those were the trucks being used in his daily
    business.
    5
    The Hearing Officer’s Findings and Conclusions
    {16} The hearing officer found that Casias Trucking owned up to ten trucks during the
    audit period and that Mr. Casias credibly testified that he did not use all of the trucks at the
    same time and only employed seven drivers at any given time, both of which the Department
    failed to rebut. She also found his description of the type of off-road hauling he did was
    credible. Finally, she determined that Mr. Casias credibly testified that he could not have
    traveled the amount of miles or underreported in the amount the Department alleged.
    {17} Although the hearing officer agreed that Casias Trucking’s quarterly summaries were
    unreliable because of the odometer reading anomalies, she also found that Casias Trucking’s
    fuel receipts were “reliable and were not in any way controverted by the Department’s
    evidence.” The hearing officer noted that the Department did not present any evidence that
    additional fuel receipts existed by way of bank statements or otherwise. The auditor’s notes
    indicated that Mr. Casias told her he sometimes paid for fuel by check, yet the auditor failed
    to produce any checks that would show he had purchased additional fuel not accounted for
    in the receipts. She concluded that “without any contradictory evidence, the amount of
    money expended by [Mr. Casias] on fuel is uncontroverted.” Additionally, she noted that
    although the Department refused to use Casias Trucking’s fuel receipts, in a prior case it did
    use a taxpayer’s fuel receipts and applied the industry average of miles per gallon to
    calculate miles driven.
    {18} Based on this evidence, the hearing officer concluded that Mr. Casias had overcome
    the presumption of the correctness of the Department’s assessment and that the Department
    had failed to meet its burden to prove the correctness of its assessment.
    Standard of Review
    {19} Our review of the hearing officer’s decision is not de novo. NMSA 1978, § 7-1-
    25(A) (1989). This Court can only set aside a hearing officer’s decision and order on appeal
    if we conclude that it is “(1) arbitrary, capricious or an abuse of discretion; (2) not supported
    by substantial evidence in the record; or (3) otherwise not in accordance with the law.”
    Section 7-1-25(C); see also Wing Pawn Shop v. Taxation & Revenue Dep’t, 1991-NMCA-
    024, ¶ 8, 
    111 N.M. 735
    , 
    809 P.2d 649
    (“On appeal from an agency determination, we
    determine whether, viewing the evidence in a light most favorable to the agency’s decision,
    the findings have substantial support in the record as a whole.”).
    {20} We first determine whether there is substantial evidence in the record to support the
    hearing officer’s decision. See Floyd & Berry Davis Co., 1975-NMCA-143, ¶ 8. “The
    question is not whether substantial evidence exists to support the opposite result, but rather
    whether such evidence supports the result reached.” Las Cruces Prof’l Fire Fighters v. City
    of Las Cruces, 1997-NMCA-044, ¶ 12, 
    123 N.M. 329
    , 
    940 P.2d 177
    . When more than one
    inference can be drawn from the evidence, the determination made by the hearing officer is
    conclusive. Waldroop v. O’Cheskey, 1973-NMCA-146, ¶ 9, 
    85 N.M. 736
    , 
    516 P.2d 1119
    .
    6
    “[W]e will not reweigh the evidence nor substitute our judgment for that of the fact finder.”
    Las Cruces Prof’l Fire Fighters, 1997-NMCA-044, ¶ 12.
    Analysis
    {21} The parties submitted conflicting evidence regarding the completeness of the fuel
    receipts. Mr. Casias testified that: (1) his trucks only traveled on highways to get to and
    from a job site and spent the majority of time “on site”; (2) he only used five trucks at any
    given time, the other trucks sat unused as “backups” in his yard and were used on rare
    occasions; (3) his trucks including his spare trucks were relatively inexpensive with a
    purchase price as low as $150; (4) he only employed seven drivers with one to two drivers
    serving as backup drivers; (5) he kept all the receipts for fuel he purchased; (6) he based the
    mileage he reported on the amount of fuel he purchased; and (7) calculating the mileage
    based on his fuel receipts would yield the most accurate results despite not all of the fuel
    consumed being used on highways.
    {22} In turn, the Department presented evidence that (1) Casias owned more than five
    trucks at any given time and up to ten trucks at one time, (2) Casias only submitted receipts
    for the same five trucks, (3) it believed that Casias would not let expensive equipment sit on
    his yard without being used, and (4) the auditor believed Casias had purchased more fuel
    than represented by the receipts Mr. Casias had provided.
    {23} The hearing officer found Mr. Casias’s testimony credible. It is “the sole
    responsibility of the trier of fact to weigh the testimony, determine the credibility of the
    witnesses, reconcile inconsistencies, and determine where the truth lies[,]” and we, as the
    reviewing court, do not weigh the credibility of live witnesses. Tallman v. ABF (Arkansas
    Best Freight), 1988-NMCA-091, ¶¶ 3, 7, 
    108 N.M. 124
    , 
    767 P.2d 363
    , holding modified by
    Delgado v. Phelps Dodge Chino, Inc., 2001-NMSC-034, 
    131 N.M. 272
    , 
    34 P.3d 1148
    .
    Thus, the hearing officer’s credibility determinations stand on appeal.
    {24} The Department reasserts in its brief to this Court the same arguments it asserted to
    the hearing officer regarding the inadequacy of Casias Trucking’s fuel receipts, offering that
    the Department “testified in detail about the inadequacy of [Casias Trucking’s] fuel
    receipts.” However, by finding Casias Trucking’s fuel receipts reliable, the hearing officer
    rejected the Department’s underlying premise for using an alternative method to calculate
    mileage. Moreover, “[t]he question is not whether substantial evidence exists to support the
    opposite result, but rather whether such evidence supports the result reached.” Las Cruces
    Prof’l Fire Fighters, 1997-NMCA-044, ¶ 12. Here, the hearing officer rejected the
    Department’s testimony regarding the unreliability of the receipts in favor of Casias
    Trucking’s substantial evidence that its fuel receipts were complete and reliable. When more
    than one inference can be drawn from the evidence, the determination made by the hearing
    officer that Casias Trucking’s fuel receipts were reliable and the amount expended on fuel
    was uncontroverted, is conclusive. See Waldroop, 1973-NMCA-146, ¶ 9 (concluding that
    since more than one inference could be drawn regarding the adequacy of the taxpayer’s
    7
    record’s, the hearing officer’s determination that they were inadequate was conclusive). We
    do not place ourselves in the position of the fact finder and reweigh the evidence. See Las
    Cruces Prof’l Fire Fighters, 1997-NMCA-044, ¶ 12. The hearing officer did not err in
    rejecting the Department’s evidence in favor of Casias Trucking’s substantial evidence.
    {25} The Department further attacks the hearing officer’s application of the law on the
    presumption of correctness and the burden of proof. The Department first contends that the
    hearing officer erred in concluding that Casias Trucking overcame the presumption of the
    correctness of its assessment. Citing Floyd & Berry Davis Co., 1975-NMCA-143, ¶ 8, the
    Department contends that “[t]he presumption of correctness is not overcome when
    contradictory evidence is presented but taxpayer may overcome the presumption by
    presenting evidence that the department’s decision is not supported by substantial evidence.”
    {26} While it is true that a taxpayer can rebut the presumption of correctness by presenting
    evidence that the Department’s decision is not supported by substantial evidence, Floyd &
    Berry Davis Co. does not stand for the proposition that such a demonstration is the only way
    to overcome the presumption. The reviewing agency in Floyd & Berry Davis Co. concluded
    that the taxpayer’s evidence was “not compelling in view of the contradictory evidence” and
    this Court concluded that we must assent to that determination under our standard of review.
    
    Id. ¶ 11.
    That is not an indication that the reviewing agency could not have been legally
    persuaded by the taxpayer’s contrary evidence, but simply that it was not persuaded in that
    particular case. We have the opposite result here. The hearing officer was persuaded by
    Casias Trucking’s conflicting evidence that its fuel receipts were reliable to calculate
    mileage for weight distance tax purposes. She therefore concluded that Casias Trucking
    rebutted the Department’s presumption of correctness for using an alternative methodology,
    and we affirm her conclusion since, as we have stated, it is supported by substantial
    evidence. Thus, we disagree with the Department that the hearing officer impermissibly
    shifted the burden of proof from Casias Trucking to the Department. Once a taxpayer
    overcomes the presumption of correctness, the burden shifts back to the Department to prove
    the correctness of its assessment. See MPC Ltd., 2003-NMCA-021, ¶ 13.
    CONCLUSION
    {27}   We affirm.
    {28}   IT IS SO ORDERED.
    ____________________________________
    MICHAEL E. VIGIL, Judge
    WE CONCUR:
    8
    ____________________________________
    TIMOTHY L. GARCIA, Judge
    ____________________________________
    J. MILES HANISEE, Judge
    9