Bellsouth Advertising & Publishing Corporation v. Loren L. Chumley, Commissioner of Revenue, State of Tennessee ( 2009 )


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  •                     IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
    AT NASHVILLE
    June 25, 2009 Session
    BELLSOUTH ADVERTISING & PUBLISHING CORPORATION, v.
    LOREN L. CHUMLEY, COMMISSIONER OF REVENUE, STATE OF
    TENNESSEE
    Direct Appeal from the Chancery Court for Davidson County
    No. 04-2232-IV Hon. Richard H. Dinkins, Chancellor
    No. M2008-01929-COA-R3-CV - Filed August 26, 2009
    Plaintiff is subject to excise and franchise taxes in the State of Tennessee. For the five year period
    at issue the Commissioner issued a variance pursuant to the Uniform Division of Income for Tax
    Purposes Act which has been adopted by Tennessee. The variance enabled the Commissioner to
    alter the taxing formula and increase the amount of revenue assessed to plaintiff. Plaintiff filed this
    action in Chancery Court and the Chancellor voided the variance. On appeal, we hold that the
    Commissioner properly exercised her discretion in issuing the variance. We reverse the Chancellor
    and remand.
    Tenn. R. App. P.3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Chancery Court Reversed and
    Remanded.
    HERSCHEL PICKENS FRANKS, P.J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which D. MICHAEL SWINEY ,
    J., and JOHN W. MCCLARTY , J., joined.
    Robert E. Cooper, Jr., Attorney General and Reporter, Michael E. Moore, Solicitor General, Charles
    L. Lewis, Deputy Attorney General, and Joe C. Peel, Senior Counsel, Nashville, Tennessee, for
    Appellant, Commissioner of Revenue.
    James W. McBride, Washington, D.C., and Carolyn W. Schott, Nashville, Tennessee, for Appellee,
    Bellsouth Advertising & Publishing Corporation.
    OPINION
    The determinative issue in this case is whether the defendant/appellant, Tennessee
    Department of Revenue (Commissioner) properly issued a variance pursuant to Tenn. Code Ann.
    §§ 67-4-2014 and 67-4-2112 which required plaintiff/appellee BellSouth Advertising & Publishing
    Corporation (BAPCO) to depart from the standard statutory apportionment formula in determining
    its Tennessee excise and franchise tax. The years at issue are 1997-2001. The excise and franchise
    tax statutes currently in effect govern the years 1999-2001. The excise and franchise tax statutes
    were substantially revised and reenacted in 1999. For the 1997-1998 years at issue, we affirm the
    controlling statutes are former Tenn. Code Ann. §§ 67-4-81 and 67-4-910. However, the parties
    correctly agreed that for the issues under consideration in this case, the provisions of the current
    excise and franchise tax statutes and of those repealed in 1998 are substantially the same. The
    current statutes will be utilized with a footnote reference to the citations of the repealed statutes.
    Background
    Tennessee has adopted the Uniform Division of Income for Tax Purposes Act
    (UDITPA) and the Multistate Tax Commission (MTC) regulations, which provide the allocation and
    apportionment provisions for taxpayers who are taxable in more than one state. The goal of the
    UDITPA and the Tennessee statutes modeled on it is to ensure that each state taxes an appropriate
    portion of a corporation’s income, so that no more than 100% of its income will be subject to tax in
    all jurisdictions. See Donovan Constr. Co. v. Michigan Dept. of Treasury, 
    337 N.W.2d 297
    , 300
    (Mich. 1983). As BAPCO conducts business and derives income in nine states, its income is taxable
    within Tennessee and in those other states.
    Tennessee’s franchise and excise taxes are imposed upon all corporations for the
    privilege of doing business in the state. First Am. Nat’l Bank v. Olsen, 
    751 S.W.2d 417
    , 421 (Tenn.
    1987); Cook Export Corp. v. King, 
    652 S.W.2d 896
    , 900 (Tenn. 1983). Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-
    2001 et seq.1 pertains to excess tax and Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-2101 et seq.2 pertains to franchise
    tax. Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-20073 provides for the imposition of an excise tax:
    (a) All persons, except those having not-for-profit status, doing business in
    Tennessee shall, without exception other than as provided in this part, pay to the
    commissioner, annually, an excise tax, in addition to all other taxes, equal to six and
    one half percent (6 ½ %) of the net earnings for the next preceding fiscal year for
    business done in this state during that fiscal year.
    1
    Formerly § 67-4-801 et seq. (Repl. 1998).
    2
    Formerly § 67-4-901 et seq. (Repl. 1998).
    3
    Formerly § 67-4-806 et seq. (Repl. 1998).
    -2-
    The Excise Tax Law of 1999 also provides for multistate taxpayers like BAPCO to
    allocate and apportion their taxable income to Tennessee under a statutorily prescribed formula. The
    applicable allocation and apportionment provisions are set out in Tenn. § 67-4-2010.4 5
    (a) Any taxpayer having business activities that are taxable both inside and outside
    the state of Tennessee shall allocate or apportion its net earnings or losses as
    provided in this part.
    (b) For purposes of allocation and apportionment of net earnings or losses under this
    part, a taxpayer is taxable in another state if:
    (1) In that state it is subject to a net income tax, a franchise tax measured by net
    income, a franchise tax for the privilege of doing business, or a corporate stock tax;
    or
    (2) That state has jurisdiction to subject the taxpayer to a net income tax regardless
    of whether, in fact, the state does or does not.
    The Tennessee General Assembly adopted a formula for dividing income among the
    various states where a taxpayer does business based on the UDITPA. Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-20126
    defines the standard apportionment ratio as a fraction, the numerator of which is the sum of the
    property, payroll and sales factors of each taxpayer as defined in the statute and the denominator is
    four (4). Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-2012(a). The statute defines each factor as a fraction in which
    the numerator is the taxpayer's respective property, payroll or sales values in Tennessee and the
    denominator is the taxpayer's respective property, payroll or sales values in all jurisdictions. Tenn.
    Code Ann. § 67-4-2012(b)-(g). Of critical importance to the issues under consideration here are the
    provisions found in Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-2012(h) and (I):
    h) Sales of tangible personal property are in this state, if:
    (1) The property is delivered or shipped to a purchaser, other than the United States
    government, inside this state regardless of the F.O.B. point or other conditions of the
    sale; or
    4
    Formerly Tenn. Code Ann. 67-4-809.
    5
    Tenn. Code Ann. 67-4-2010 was amended in 2006, however as the amendment applies to
    tax years beginning on or after January 1, 2006 it has no implication here.
    6
    Formally Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-2012.
    -3-
    (2) The property is shipped from an office, store, warehouse, factory or other place
    of storage in this state and the purchaser is the United States government.
    (I) Sales, other than sales of tangible personal property, are in this state, if the
    earnings-producing activity is performed:
    (1) In this state; or
    (2) Both in and outside this state and a greater proportion of the earnings-producing
    activity is performed in this state than in any other state, based on costs of
    performance. (Emphasis supplied).
    The parties stipulated that BAPCO’s sales at issue in the case are sales other than
    sales of tangible personal property and that BAPCO earned its income by providing advertising
    services. They further stipulated that unless a variance is proper, the provisions found in Tenn. Code
    Ann. §§ 67-4-2012(i)(excise) and 67-4-2111(i)7 (franchise) for determining the numerator of the
    receipts factor are applicable.
    Franchise & Excise Tax Rule 1320-6-1-.34(2) (Rule 34) provides definitions and
    rules contained in Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-2012(i) as follows. The rule references Tenn. Code Ann.
    § 67-4-811(i), the former designation of what is now § 67-4-2012(i) :
    (1) In General. T.C.A. § 67-4-811(i) [now § 67-4-2012(i)] provides for the inclusion
    in the numerator of the sales factor of gross receipts from transactions other than
    sales of tangible personal property (including transactions with the United States
    Government); under this section gross receipts are attributed to this state if the
    earnings producing activity which gave rise to the receipts is performed wholly
    within this state. Also, gross receipts are attributed to this state if, with respect to a
    particular item of income, the earning producing activity is performed within and
    without this state but the greatest proportion of the earnings producing activity is
    performed in this state, based on cost of performance.
    (2) Earnings Producing Activity; Defined. The term “earning producing activity”
    applies to each separate item of income and means the transactions and activity
    directly engaged in by the taxpayer in the regular course of its trade or business for
    the ultimate purpose of obtaining gains or profit. Such activity does not include
    transactions performed on behalf of a taxpayer, such as those conducted on its behalf
    by an independent contractor. Accordingly, the earnings producing activity includes
    but is not limited to the following:
    7
    Formally Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-911.
    -4-
    (a) The rendering of personal services by employees or the utilization of tangible and
    intangible property by the taxpayer in performing a service.
    (b) The sale, rental, leasing, licensing or other use of real property.
    (c) The rental, leasing, licensing or other use of tangible personal property.
    (d) The sale, licensing or other use of intangible personal property.
    The mere holding of intangible personal property is not, of itself, an earning
    producing activity.
    (3) Cost of Performance; Defined. The term “costs of performance” means direct
    costs determined in a manner consistent with generally accepted accounting
    principles and in accordance with accepted conditions or practices in the trade or
    business of the taxpayer.
    (4) Application.
    (a) In General. Receipts (other than from sales or tangible personal property) in
    respect to a particular earnings producing activity are in this state if:
    1. the earnings producing activity is performed wholly within this state; or
    2. the earnings producing activity is performed both in and outside this state and a
    greater proportion of the earnings producing activity is performed in this state than
    in any other state, based on costs of performance.
    UDITPA contemplates that at times a taxpayer or the department of revenues may
    believe that a variance from the apportionment formula is needed. Tennessee’s excise and franchise
    tax statutes and regulations follow UDITPA’s recommended provisions. Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-
    2014 provides:
    (a) If the tax computation, allocation or apportionment provisions of this part or
    chapter 2 of this title do not fairly represent the extent of the taxpayer’s business
    activity in this state, or the taxpayer’s net earnings, the taxpayer may petition for, or
    the department through its delegates may require, in respect to all or any part of the
    taxpayer’s business activity, if reasonable:
    (1) Separate accounting;
    (2) The exclusion of any one (1) or more of the formula factors;
    -5-
    (3) The inclusion of one (1) or more additional apportionment formula factors that
    will fairly represent the taxpayer's business activity in this state;
    (4) The use of any other method to source receipts for purposes of the receipts factor
    or factors of the apportionment formula numerator or numerators; or
    (5) The employment of any other method to effectuate an equitable computation,
    allocation and apportionment of the taxpayer's net earnings or losses that fairly
    represents the extent of the business entity's activities in Tennessee.
    The corresponding regulation to the variance statutes is found at Tennessee Rules and
    Regulations, Rule 1320-6-1-.35 (Rule 35) as follows:
    (1) In General.
    (a)       T.C.A. §§ 67-1-911 and 67-4-812 [now Tenn. Code Ann. §§ 67-1-
    2014 and 67-4-2012] provide that if the allocation and apportionment
    provisions do not fairly represent the extent of the taxpayer’s business
    activity in this state, the taxpayer may petition for or the
    Commissioner of Revenue may require, in respect to all or any part
    of the taxpayer’s business activity, if reasonable:
    ****
    4.        The employment of any other method to effectuate an equitable
    allocation and apportionment of the taxpayer’s capital and net
    earnings for purposes of computing franchise and excise taxes. §§
    67-1-911 and 67-4-812 [now Tenn. Code Ann. §§ 67-1-2014 and 67-
    4-2012] permit a departure from the allocation and apportionment
    provisions only in limited and specific cases. §§ 67-1-911 and 67-4-
    812 may be invoked only in specific cases where unusual fact
    situations (which ordinarily will be unique and nonrecurring) produce
    incongruous results under the apportionment and allocation
    provisions contained in the Franchise and Excise Tax Laws.
    Pleadings
    BAPCO filed a complaint to challenge the assessment of excise and franchise taxes
    for the years 1997 to 2001 against Loren L. Chumley in her capacity as the Commissioner of
    Revenue for the State of Tennessee on July 29, 2004 in the Chancery Court, pursuant to Tenn. Code
    -6-
    Ann. § 67-1-1801(a)(1)(B).8 In the complaint BAPCO characterized itself as engaged in the business
    of compiling and publishing telephone directories pursuant to contracts with regulated and other
    telecommunications providers including BellSouth Telecommunications, Inc., which is an affiliated
    corporation that provides telecommunications services in Tennessee and eight other Southern States.
    BAPCO represented that its revenues were predominately derived from providing advertising
    services for the directories it published and that these advertising services were associated with
    various functions that were all performed outside the state of Tennessee. An affiliated corporation
    of BAPCO’s., L. M. Berry, solicited advertising sales for the directories published by BAPCO in
    Tennessee and other states. L. M. Berry functions as an independent contractor and is subject to
    Tennessee excise and franchise taxes on its own net earnings derived from its activities performed
    on behalf of BAPCO in Tennessee. BAPCO likewise engages another affiliated corporation, Stevens
    Graphics, Inc., as an independent contractor to print the directories BAPCO publishes for
    distribution in Tennessee and other states. Stevens prints all of the directories outside the state of
    Tennessee. The finished directories are then distributed by an independent contractor that is not
    corporately affiliated with BAPCO.
    The complaint stated that following an audit by the Tennessee Department of
    Revenue, Audit Department, BAPCO received a Notice of Assessment dated May 15, 2004 for
    franchise and excise taxes for the period beginning January 1, 1997 and ending December 31, 2001.
    The Notice of Assessment set forth tax liability in the amount of $9,866,769.0 and interest of $3,
    243,892.00, for a total of $13,110,661.00. BAPCO’s complaint challenges the Notice of Assessment
    pursuant to Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-1-1801(a)(1)(B), based on its position that it correctly calculated
    its Tennessee tax liability for the tax periods at issue by utilizing the cost of performance
    methodology prescribed by Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-2012(i) and by the rules and regulations
    promulgated thereunder. BAPCO asked the Court for a judgment finding that it owes no additional
    franchise or excise taxes for the period at issue and for an award of costs, expenses and attorney’s
    fees.
    The Commissioner filed an answer and counterclaim on September 27, 2004, and
    stated the Commissioner’s position that the statutory formula does not operate to fairly represent the
    extent of BAPCO’s activities in Tennessee and that the Commissioner was within her statutorily
    granted discretion to apply a variance with respect to the tax years at issue. The counterclaim
    requested a judgment for the amount of the assessment plus interest, costs, expenses and attorney’s
    fees. The parties then conducted discovery during 2005 and 2006 and the case was set for trial on
    January 29, 2007.
    BAPCO filed a motion for partial summary judgment which addressed the threshold
    issue of whether BAPCO’s sales are sales of tangible personal property or if its sales are other than
    sales of tangible personal property. It asserted that if the Court held that BAPCO’s business was that
    of selling tangible personal property, telephone directories, Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-2012(h) would
    8
    Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-1-1801(a)(1)(B) provides a taxpayer the right to file suit against the
    Commissioner challenging a tax assessment.
    -7-
    provide the apportionment formula for sourcing BAPCO’s receipts to Tennessee. However, if the
    Court held that BAPCO’s business was providing the service of advertising to its customers, the
    individuals and businesses that place advertisements in the directories, Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-
    2012(i) would provide the applicable apportionment formula based on a cost of performance method,
    but for the issuance of a variance.
    On the heels of the motion for summary judgment, the parties entered into a
    stipulation that was intended to make a ruling on BAPCO’s motion unnecessary. The stipulation
    provides:
    “BAPCO’s sales at issue in the case are sales other than sales of tangible personal
    property and that BAPCO earned its revenue by providing advertising services.
    Unless a variance is proper under T. C. A. §§ 67-4-2014, 67-4-2112 and Tennessee
    Regulation, Rule 1320-6-1-.35, the statutory provisions for determining the
    numerator of the receipts factor of the standard apportionment formula for BAPCO
    are T. C. A. § 67-4-2012(i) and § 67-4-2111(i). It is understood and agreed that,
    from time to time, BAPCO does sell some books which are sales of tangible personal
    property and which are properly included in the numerator of the receipts factor.
    The Court entered a pre-trial order, which reiterated the stipulation the parties entered
    into and set forth the contentions of BAPCO and the Commissioner. BAPCO’s contentions are
    summarized as follows:
    The sole issue in this case is whether the Department may require BAPCO to depart
    from the otherwise applicable statute for sourcing receipts to Tennessee for purpose
    of the sales factor in its apportionment formula by issuing a variance claiming that
    the statutory formula does not fairly reflect BAPCO’s business activity in the state.
    The Department set forth two alternative contentions as follows:
    First, the Department contended that use of the cost of performance analysis under
    Tenn. Code Ann. 67-4-2012(i) was correct but that BAPCO’s conclusion that most of its
    performance associated with advertising was outside of Tennessee was wrong. The Department’s
    position was that as BAPCO earns its Tennessee advertising revenues through its distribution of the
    directories in Tennessee, the receipts from advertising should be placed in the numerator of the sales
    factor. Additionally, the Department contended that the costs paid to BAPCO’s affiliates, L. M.
    Berry and BellSouth, should be included in the costs of performance analysis.
    The Department also contended, apparently in the alternative, that as BAPCO’s
    computation of its apportionment formula under Tenn. Code Ann. 67-4-2012(i)(2) did not fairly
    reflect its business activity in Tennessee, the Commissioner properly imposed a variance of the
    standard apportionment formula pursuant to statute. The Commissioner’s variance, which included
    -8-
    BAPCO’s Tennessee advertising receipts in the numerator of the sales factor more fairly reflected
    BAPCO’s business activity in Tennessee than BAPCO’s application of the formula wherein its cost
    of performance outside of the state was not included in the numerator.
    The Pretrial Order also set forth the following burdens of proof:
    1.      BAPCO has the burden of showing whether Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-
    2012(i)(2) (cost of performance for services) applies.
    2.      The Department has the burden of showing that a variance was proper.
    The Trial
    At the trial, BAPCO presented evidence regarding its business and described the flow
    of work from the sales of advertising through the distribution of the Yellow Pages to individuals and
    businesses in Tennessee. Ninety-five percent of BAPCO’s revenue is derived from the delivery of
    advertising services to businesses and individuals who advertise in the Yellow pages directories.
    BAPCO provides advertising services for local and national businesses. Local advertising in
    Tennessee is solicited and handled by sales representatives from the L. M. Berry company, a
    corporation, and is subject to Tennessee excise tax liability. In addition to the sale of local
    advertising, L. M. Berry provides graphic artwork services to the advertisers in the directory, and
    during the years at issue, L. M. Berry was headquartered in Dayton, Ohio and maintained one of its
    regional offices in Brentwood, Tennessee. BAPCO prepares and maintains sales information in its
    Atlanta office for use by L. M. Berry in marketing to the five states covered by its sales agency
    contract with BAPCO. BAPCO has no sales personnel in Tennessee.
    National advertising sales for the Yellow Pages are handled by certified marketing
    representatives located throughout the United States who sell and place advertisements for big
    national companies such as U-Haul, Hertz and Meineke. BAPCO’s national advertising orders are
    processed from BAPCO’s production office in Atlanta, Georgia.
    BAPCO also has a production office in Birmingham, Alabama where it maintains its
    listing data base for both white and yellow pages. The sales support and advertising production
    personnel are located at the Birmingham office.
    BAPCO’s Atlanta, Georgia production office houses marketing support, finance,
    billing, legal human resources and distribution. The multiple consumer guides and community
    information pages contained in the Yellow Pages are compiled by BAPCO at the Atlanta facility.
    The covers of the directories are likewise designed and produced in Atlanta by BAPCO.
    BAPCO transfers the finished directories in electronic form to a server for electronic
    pickup by Stevens Graphics, an independent company owned by BSC. Stevens Graphics prints and
    -9-
    binds the Yellow Pages in plants in either Birmingham or Atlanta. Once the directories are printed
    and bound, they are transferred for distribution to Directory Distribution Associates (DDA) for the
    actual delivery of the directories to homes and businesses in the covered area. DDA performs this
    function in Tennessee. The goal of BAPCO is to have the Yellow Pages9 reach every residence and
    business in the area covered by a particular edition of the directory. .
    During the years at issue, BAPCO produced and caused to be distributed 23,715, 829
    directories in Tennessee. The directories were provided at no cost to the end-user, and almost all
    of BAPCO’s revenues were derived from the sale of advertising in the directories. BAPCO’s yearly
    revenues during the period at issue were between $160,000,000 and $200,000,000. ®. Vol. IX, pp.
    505 - 506). BAPCO’s advertising customers are not obligated to pay for the advertisements in the
    directories until they are distributed. If the customer’s advertisement is not included in the directory,
    the customer is not required to pay for the advertisement.
    The parties developed the background for the issuance of the variance at trial through
    the testimony of BAPCO’s senior tax manager, Kimberly Hill. Ms. Hill explained that in 1997,
    Ernst &Young, an outside accounting firm BAPCO consulted with, brought to BAPCO’s attention
    correspondence dating back to 1995 between the Tennessee Department of Revenue and Ernst &
    Young regarding a taxpayer (not BAPCO) with operations almost identical to those of BAPCO. The
    subject matter of the letter from Ernst & Young was how telephone directory revenues should be
    sourced to Tennessee. The 1995 letter was entered into evidence. A representative of the
    Department responded to the Ernst & Young inquiry and stated that the cost of performance
    regulation, Rule 1320-6-1.34 (Rule 34) was the “appropriate rule for this type of receipt.” Ms. Hill
    explained that after reviewing the 1995 correspondence between Ernst & Young and the Department,
    she studied the Tennessee regulations and statutes with Ernst & Young and a decision was made,
    based on the letters and statutes, that BAPCO had not been filing its returns for Tennessee excise and
    franchise tax correctly. BAPCO amended its 1993, 1994 and 1995 returns and filed its return for
    the tax year 1996 in October of 1997 using the cost of performance method of apportionment
    pursuant to Rule 34.
    In the fall of 1998, the Department commenced an audit of the amended 1993 through
    1996 returns which resulted in a deficiency assessment against BAPCO. The Department’s auditor
    did not find that BAPCO had any direct cost in Tennessee and stated in the audit that “[t]he wording
    of the Tennessee statutes and the facts and circumstances involved with BAPCO’s business activities
    are not in dispute.” Ms. Hill stated the Department did not like the use of the cost of performance
    method and wanted BAPCO to file using a market/circulation based method of sourcing revenues
    to Tennessee. Ms. Hill explained that the circulation based method is similar to the method used
    for the sale of tangible property which looks at where the sales take place rather than the cost of
    performance method used when there is a sale of a service. The difference between the sales factor
    on BAPCO’s original returns and the amended returns for the years 1993, 1994 and 1995 was
    9
    The white and yellow pages in Tennessee are published together as one directory in all of
    the directory coverage areas except Nashville and Memphis.
    -10-
    significant. The total amount on the original returns based on the circulation method was close to
    $400,000,000 while the amended returns for those three years showed a sales factor of just over
    $180,000. BAPCO filed suit against the Department in January 2000 based on the deficiency
    assessment for the years 1993 to 1996 and that suit was settled in May 2003.10
    The evidence shows that an audit for the years 1997 through 2001 took place from
    February to April 2003 and was conducted by Chris Atherton, a Tax Auditor II for the Department.
    The result of the audit was a recommendation that the Commissioner issue a variance regarding the
    calculation of BAPCO’s Tennessee excise and franchise tax because the Department determined that
    BAPCO’s use of the location of its performance costs to allocate its advertising receipts under Tenn.
    Code Ann. § 67-4-2012(i) did not fairly represent the extent of its business activities in Tennessee.
    Mr. Atherton was asked to describe the major factors regarding BAPCO’s business activities he
    considered when recommending that the Department issue the variance. He stated that he considered
    the following:
    1.      BAPCO is engaged in the selling of advertising and the production of
    telephone directories.
    2.      The selling of the advertising in Tennessee was not conducted by BAPCO but
    by an affiliated company, L. M. Berry.
    3.      BAPCO did not have any employees in Tennessee engaged in the selling of
    advertising.
    4.      BAPCO did not produce the directories in Tennessee, they were produced by
    an affiliated company, Steven’s Graphics outside of Tennessee.
    5.      BAPCO had minimal property interest in Tennessee, had no payroll in
    Tennessee and very minimal sales in Tennessee. Thus the numerator in the
    sales factor apportionment calculation used by BAPCO was minimal.
    6.      During the time period audited, BAPCO had imported into Tennessee
    between four and five million directories a year which generated between
    $163,000,000 to almost $200,000,000 a year in advertising revenues.
    7.      It was the auditor’s opinion that these revenue amounts “were not represented
    in the apportionment factors BAPCO used in its excise and franchise tax
    returns.
    Mr. Atherton concluded that BAPCO had no direct costs in Tennessee for purposes
    of the cost of performance methodology, and he also used the same words he had used in the earlier
    audit: “The wording of the Tennessee statutes and the facts and circumstances involved with
    BAPCO’s business activities are not in dispute.” Based on these findings, the auditor recommended
    that the Department issue a variance to include BAPCO’s receipts from advertising revenues earned
    from the directories shipped into Tennessee during the audit period in the sales factor numerator to
    more fairly reflect BAPCO’s business activity in Tennessee. On November 14, 2003, the
    10
    BAPCO claims in its appellate brief that the settlement was “highly favorable to BAPCO”
    but there is no evidence in the record to support that statement.
    -11-
    Commissioner issued a variance letter to BAPCO which sets forth the reasons for the variance and
    is helpful to understanding the issues raised on appeal. The letter states in part:
    After careful review of the facts in this matter, it has been determined that the
    statutory allocation and apportionment provision do not fairly represent the extent of
    business activities conducted in Tennessee by BAPCO. Accordingly, the decision
    has been made to require a variance for tax years subsequent to 1996 pursuant to the
    authority granted by T.C.A. §§ 67-4-2014 and 67-4-2112 (T.C.A. §§ 67-4-812 and
    67-4-911 under prior law).
    BAPCO is a subsidiary of BellSouth Corporation. It is engaged in the business of
    selling advertising and in compiling, publishing and distributing the yellow pages
    directories . . . to [telecommunication] customers . . . free of charge.
    In Tennessee, BAPCO uses L. M. Berry . . . to solicit advertisements for its yellow
    page directories. BAPCO’s artwork, directory production, data processing and
    administrative departments are located in Alabama and Georgia. BAPCO uses a
    printer located outside Tennessee to print the directories. Independent contractors
    deliver the directories to customers of BellSouth in Tennessee.
    In the tax year 2001, BAPCO generated $198,752,347 (10.2352% of [its] everywhere
    gross receipts) in advertising and other revenues from its Tennessee markets. Each
    year BAPCO imports several million copies of yellow pages directories and
    telephone directories into Tennessee to fulfill its advertising contracts with Tennessee
    customers.
    However, BAPCO has a relatively small physical presence in Tennessee. In the tax
    year 2001, its Tennessee assets amounted to only $400,660 (0.1511% of total assets)
    . . . and its Tennessee payroll amounted to only $97,124 (0.0530% of total payroll).
    On franchise and excise tax returns filed with the Department for the calendar years
    1997 through 2001, BAPCO included all of its advertising revenues in its everywhere
    apportionment formula receipts factor. However, none of the advertising revenues
    generated from Tennessee markets were included in its Tennessee apportionment
    formula receipts factors. BAPCO claims that this is in accordance with T.C.A.§§ 67-
    4-2012(i) and 67-4-2111(i) . . . . which provide that sales, other than sales of tangible
    personal property, are in Tennessee only if the greater proportion of the earnings-
    producing activity is performed in Tennessee. BAPCO contends that the greater
    proportion of its earnings-producing activity occurs outside Tennessee and thus
    sources none of its advertising receipts from Tennessee customers to Tennessee for
    purposes of its apportionment formulas.
    When Tennessee advertising receipts are included in the Tennessee receipts factors
    -12-
    of the apportionment formula, the receipts factors and the overall apportionment
    ratios for each year are increased substantially. For example, for the tax year 2001,
    inclusion of Tennessee advertising receipts in the apportionment formula Tennessee
    receipts factors increase the receipts factor ratios from 0.1098% to 10.2352% and the
    overall apportionment ratio from .105925% to 5.168625%.
    Application of the statutory cost-of performance method to source receipts allows
    BAPCO to derive substantial receipts from Tennessee markets without such receipts
    being accounted for in the Tennessee receipts factors of its apportionment formulas.
    For example, in the tax year 2001, BAPCO derived receipts of almost $200 million
    dollars from Tennessee markets. This represented over 10% of its total receipts for
    the year 2001. However, BAPCO included only a little over $2 MILLION (0.1098%)
    of such receipts in its apportionment formula. As a result, the overall apportionment
    ratio is reduced from about 5% to about 1/10th of 1%. Results for other years are
    equally dramatic.
    Consistent with the above facts, I have determined that application of the statutory
    apportionment formula does not operate to fairly represent the extent of BAPCO’s
    business activities in Tennessee. When this is the case, T.C.A. §§ 67-4-2014 and 67-
    4-2112 . . . permit the Department of Revenue, through its delegates, to require the
    use of any other method to source receipts for purposes of the receipts factors of the
    apportionment formula numerators. Our auditors did this for the tax years 1997
    through 2001 by requiring receipts from the sales of advertising to Tennessee
    customers to be included in the numerators of BAPCO’s apportionment formula
    receipts factors for each year and I am affirming the requirement of such a variance,
    not only for the years under audit, but for tax years subsequent to the calendar year
    2001 as well.
    In order for its apportionment formula to fairly represent the extent of its business
    operations in Tennessee, beginning with the tax year 1997 BAPCO will be required
    to include all receipts from the sale of advertising to Tennessee customers in the
    numerators of its franchise, excise tax apportionment formula receipts factors.
    These variance requirements will continue in effect so long as the circumstances
    justifying the variation remain substantially unchanged or until changed or
    discontinued by this Department, whichever occurs first.
    The variance letter required BAPCO to substitute the cost of performance
    methodology required by Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-2012 (i) for sales of other than tangible property,
    such as sales of advertising, with the methodology found in Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-2012 (h), which
    is applicable to the sale of tangible property. Thus, the variance required BAPCO to include in the
    numerator of the sales factor of the apportionment formula its receipts from the sale of advertising
    as if it were selling tangible property. The imposition of the variance resulted in a tax deficiency of
    -13-
    $9,866,769 and interest of $3,243,892, a total of $13, 110,661.
    Following trial, the Trial Court entered a memorandum opinion and order on July 31,
    2008. The Trial Court stated that: “the standard apportionment formula provided by statute is to be
    presumed to be correct and the variance provision is to be narrowly construed. AT&T v. Huddleston,
    
    880 S.W.2d 682
     (Tenn. Ct. App. 1994). The statutory authority for imposing a variance requires
    that the standard formulas ‘not fairly represent the extent of the taxpayer’s business activity in this
    state.” Id. at 692. “The sole fact that a significant amount of revenue is received from the sale of
    advertisement in Tennessee that is not apportioned to Tennessee, which is the only factual basis cited
    by the Commissioner for imposing the variance, does not in and of itself justify the imposition of
    a variance. The Commissioner has not identified a greater proportion of BAPCO’s earnings
    producing activity performed in Tennessee, as defined by the regulations.” The Court held that the
    proper formulas for determining the receipts factor of the standard apportionment for BAPCO are
    Tenn. Code Ann. §§ 67-4-2012(i) and 67-4-2111(i) and that BAPCO’s use of the cost performance
    method was appropriate and consistent with the applicable statutes and regulations. The Trial Court
    voided the action of the Commissioner in imposing a variance.
    Issues Presented for Review on Appeal
    A.      When BAPCO provides advertising in the telephone directories it
    produces that are distributed in Tennessee, does BAPCO’s cost of
    performance of the service of advertising take place solely in
    Tennessee for purposes of Tenn. Code Ann. §§ 67-4-2012(i)(1) and
    67-4-2111(i)(1) even though all activities involved in producing the
    directories are either performed by BAPCO in other states or are
    performed by independent contractors on behalf of BAPCO in and
    out of Tennessee?
    B.      Did the Commissioner of Revenue properly issue a variance ?
    A trial court’s findings of fact in a non-jury trial are reviewed de novo upon the
    record. The trial court is afforded a presumption of correctness unless the preponderance of the
    evidence is otherwise. Tenn. R. App. P. 13 (d); Wright v. City of Knoxville, 
    898 S.W.2d 177
    , 181
    (Tenn. 1995). The trial court’s conclusions of law are reviewed under a purely de novo standard with
    no presumption of correctness. Taylor v. Fezell, 
    158 S.W.3d 352
    , 357 (Tenn. 2005), Union Carbide
    Corp. v. Huddleston 
    854 S.W.2d 87
    , 91 (Tenn. 1993).
    This case involves the construction and application of the Tennessee Excise and
    Franchise Law of 1999, and the standard of review in tax cases is well settled: “The construction of
    statutes and of regulations promulgated pursuant to statutes and the application of those statutes and
    regulations to undisputed facts are questions of law.” Beare Co. v. Tennessee Dept. of Revenue, 
    858 S.W.2d 906
    , 907 (Tenn.1993). Ambiguities in statutes imposing taxes must be resolved in favor
    of the taxpayer. Pan Am World Services, Inc. v. Jackson, 
    754 S.W.2d 53
    , 55 (Tenn. 1988) ( quoting
    -14-
    Tennessee Farmers' Co-op. v. Jackson, 
    736 S.W.2d 87
    , 90 (Tenn.1987)).
    The parties stipulated that BAPCO had the burden of showing that Tenn. Code Ann.
    § 67-4-2012(i)(2) (cost of performance for services) applied to its operations and that the
    Commissioner had the burden of showing that a variance was proper. In American Tel. & Tel. Co.
    v. Huddleston, 
    880 S.W.2d 682
    , 691 -692 (Tenn. App. 1994), the Court discussed the burden of
    proof in an excise tax variance case:
    The standard statutory apportionment formula is presumed to be correct, and the
    party seeking to employ an alternate method has the burden of showing that the
    statutory method is inappropriate. Donald M. Drake Co. v. Dept. Revenue., 500 P.2d
    1041,1043-44(Org. 1972); Donovan Constr. v. Michigan Dept. Treasury, 
    337 N.W. 2d
     297, 300 (Mich. 1983). The variance provision applies only in unusual and
    limited circumstances and is to be interpreted narrowly in order to carry out the
    purpose of uniform apportionment under the act. Donald M. Drake Co., 500 P.2d at
    1044. The burden is on the party seeking a variance to establish that the formula
    does not fairly represent [the taxpayers] business activities in the taxing state.
    Donald M. Drake Co., 500 P.2d at 1041; Deseret Pharm. Co. v. State Tax Comm'n.,
    
    579 P.2d 1322
    , 1326-27 (Utah 1978).
    Id. at 691-692.
    The Commissioner’s first argument on appeal is that the Tennessee excise and
    franchise tax assessed to BAPCO should have been properly calculated pursuant to Tenn. Code Ann.
    §§ 67-4-2012(i)(1) and 67-4-2111(i)(1) instead of Tenn. Code Ann. §§ 67-4-2012(i)(2) and 67-4-
    2111(i)(2). BAPCO, in its returns, calculated the excise tax under §2012(i)(2) and not §2012(i)(1)
    because it contended that a greater proportion or all of its earning producing activity was performed
    in another state. Tenn. Code Ann. §§ 67-4-2012(h) and (i) provide:
    h) Sales of tangible personal property are in this state, if:
    (1) The property is delivered or shipped to a purchaser, other than the United States
    government, inside this state regardless of the F.O.B. point or other conditions of the
    sale; or
    (2) The property is shipped from an office, store, warehouse, factory or other place
    of storage in this state and the purchaser is the United States government.
    (i) Sales, other than sales of tangible personal property, are in this state, if the
    earnings-producing activity is performed:
    (1) In this state; or
    (2) Both in and outside this state and a greater proportion of the earnings-producing
    activity is performed in this state than in any other state, based on costs of
    -15-
    performance.
    The parties stipulated that, absent the issuance of a variance, Tenn. Code Ann. §§ 67-
    4-2012(i) and 67-4-2111(i) are applicable for determining the numerator of the sales factor for the
    numerator or the apportionment formula. They did not stipulate, however, whether part (i)(1) or (i)(2)
    was appropriate to determine BAPCO’s assessment. When the Commissioner issued the variance and
    Notice of Assessment of additional tax due, the utilization of part (i)(2) by BAPCO was not
    questioned and the auditor stated in the audit and at trial that there was no dispute about the wording
    of the Tennessee statutes or BAPCO’s business activities. Shortly before trial, the Commissioner
    raised the argument that BAPCO had wrongly calculated its excise and franchise tax under §§ 67-4-
    2012(i)(2) and 67-4-2111(i)(2) and that, because all of BAPCO’s earning producing activity took
    place in Tennessee, part (i)(1) was applicable and all of its revenues from the sale of advertising
    should have properly been placed in the numerator of the apportionment formula. The application
    of part (i)(1) reaches the same result as the Commissioner reached when she applied the variance, i.e.
    all of the receipts from the sale of advertising is included in the sales factor of the numerator. In the
    pre-trial brief, the Commissioner rejected for the first time BAPCO’s position that because its costs
    of performance for the Tennessee directories were incurred overwhelmingly in Georgia and Alabama
    and little or no costs of performance were incurred in Tennessee, the sales of the advertising services
    should not be included in the numerator of the apportionment formula under § 67-4-2012(i)(2).
    Instead, the Commissioner argued that BAPCO’s earning-producing activity that generates its
    Tennessee advertising revenues is the performance of its advertising service in Tennessee through its
    providing and distributing the yellow pages directories in Tennessee. Further, the Commissioner
    argued that BAPCO uses the Tennessee directories to fulfill its contract obligations to its advertising
    customers who pay to have their advertisements published in the directories and if it were not for the
    publication and distribution of the directories in Tennessee, BAPCO would not earn these advertising
    revenues.
    On appeal, the Commissioner takes the position that the Trial Court erred when it
    found that the Commissioner had failed to support its argument that all costs of performance of the
    sale of advertising took place in Tennessee. The Commissioner’s brief argues as follows:
    BAPCO’s earning producing activity with respect to its advertising sales for the
    Tennessee directories is performed entirely in Tennessee because it is paid to advertise
    only in Tennessee. Thus, the receipts from that activity are subject to tax in
    Tennessee. This is the core principle of franchise and excise taxation - that companies
    should be taxed based on the benefits they derive from the privilege of doing business
    in this state. In this instance, this is accomplished through Tenn. Code Ann. §§ 67-4-
    2012(i)(1)(excise tax) and 67-4-2111(i)(1)(franchise tax), which provide that receipts
    from BAPCO’s advertising in Tennessee must go into the numerator of its Tennessee
    apportionment formula. While BAPCO may perform preliminary work in other states,
    its revenues are entirely due to its performance of advertising services in Tennessee.
    That is what its advertisers in the Tennessee white and yellow pages pay for, and that
    advertising service is accomplished purely through its distribution of telephone
    -16-
    directories in Tennessee. BAPCO’s advertisers . . . are paying purely for the
    distribution of advertising in Tennessee. This is the very service for which its
    customers pay.
    The Commissioner’s example of how BAPCO conducts “earning-producing activity”
    in Tennessee, focuses on the fact that the directories end up in Tennessee.
    Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-2012(i) instructs that the sale of things other than tangible
    personal property, like the sale of advertising, is in Tennessee based on whether (1) earning-producing
    activity is performed in this state or (2) earning-producing activity is both in this state and in other
    states and a greater proportion of the earning-producing activity occurs in Tennessee, based on the
    cost of performance. If either scenario (1) or (2) are answered affirmatively, the sales factor is
    included in the numerator of the apportionment formula. However, if earning-producing activity
    takes place predominately in another state, the sales are not in Tennessee and not included in the
    apportionment formula.
    The Commissioner did not offer any testimony that Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-2012(i)(1)
    should apply rather than part (i)(2). The Department’s employee who performed the audit, Chris
    Atherton, offered testimony as follows:
    Q.      Okay. And, in fact, you didn’t find that they [BAPCO] had any direct costs
    in Tennessee, did you?
    A.      I did not see where they had any costs. They did not produce the directories
    in Tennessee, nor did they have a staff in Tennessee that solicited the
    advertisements or produced layouts or for any costs such as that would have
    been attributable to the production of directories that ultimately ended up in
    Tennessee.
    Atherton further testified that he certified to the Commissioner that BAPCO had no
    direct costs in Tennessee as part of the audit and that he included in the audit the following language:
    “The wording of the Tennessee Statutes and the facts and circumstances involved with BAPCO’s
    business activities and not in dispute.” He also affirmed that the tax assessment issued to BAPCO was
    based on the variance letter by the Commissioner, thus the assessment was not based on the
    application of Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-2012(i)(1) as the Commissioner now argues.
    BAPCO’s earnings producing activity is not just the distribution of the Yellow Pages,
    as its earning producing activity is a series of integrated, interdependent steps to the satisfaction of
    the advertisers from whom BAPCO derives its income. Without these numerous steps BAPCO would
    have no advertising to include in a directory, regardless of the mode of delivery.
    The Commissioner has appealed the Chancellor’s finding that the variance imposed
    by the Commissioner was improper. The Commissioner argues that even if the governing statutes
    -17-
    were read to authorized a cost of performance methodology, the receipts from the advertising
    contained in the directories distributed in Tennessee should be sourced to Tennessee by the
    imposition of a variance. The Commissioner contends that the answer to the key question of whether
    the computation of excise tax based on a cost of performance formula, as applied by both BAPCO
    and the Department, reasonably reflects BAPCO’s business activity in Tennessee is “obviously no”.
    In support of this position, the Commissioner points to the fact that on BAPCO’s returns for the five
    years at issue, using the cost of performance formula to allocate its earnings, BAPCO reported and
    paid only $296,140 in Tennessee excise and franchise tax but derived advertising income from the
    distribution of 23,715,829 directories in Tennessee of $897,488,193 over the same five year period.
    The Commissioner pointedly concludes that “[i]t is patently absurd to contend that a tax payment of
    $296,140 is commensurate with the business BAPCO conducted in Tennessee over the five years
    involved in this case.” Accordingly, the Commissioner argues that under the facts presented by
    BAPCO’s business activities, the cost of performance formula has malfunctioned and the situation
    is precisely one for which the Commissioner was vested with variance powers by the legislature.
    Tennessee courts have repeatedly recognized that the Commissioner of Revenue may
    properly exercise her discretion in varying the statutory apportionment formula when application of
    the formula does not fairly represent the taxpayer's business in the state. See Sherwin-Williams Co.
    v. Johnson, 
    989 S.W.2d 710
    , 716 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1998); American Tel. & Tel. Co. v. Huddleston 
    880 S.W.2d 682
    , 691-692 (Tenn. App. 1994); Federated Stores Realty, Inc. v. Huddleston 
    852 S.W.2d 206
    , 213-214 (Tenn.1992)(statutorily overruled on other grounds); Peterson Mfg. Co. v. State, 
    779 S.W.2d 784
    , 786-787 (Tenn.1989); S. Coach Lines, Inc. v. McCanless, 
    191 Tenn. 634
    , 638, 235 S.
    W.2d 804 (1951); Am. Bemberg Corp. v. Carson, 
    188 Tenn. 263
    , 268-271, 
    219 S.W.2d 169
     (1949).
    There are no Tennessee cases, however, that consider the issuance of a variance from the cost of
    performance formula in connection with the sale of advertising.
    In support of its argument that the variance issued by the Commissioner was entirely
    appropriate, the Commissioner cites to the authors of the UDITPA and their specific concerns
    regarding the application of the cost of performance formula in the arena of income from advertising
    in publications. While the Commissioner acknowledges that the UDITPA as originally developed
    by the Multistate Tax Commission and as adopted in Tennessee, uses formulas designed to apply to
    all businesses, it points out that the authors of the uniform act recognized that those formulas did not
    function very well for certain types of businesses, and provided for variances in Section 18 of the
    uniform act, which is codified as Tenn. Code Ann. §§ 67-4-2014(a) and 67-4-2112(a). Specifically,
    the authors of the uniform act recognized that Section 17, which is the counterpart of Tenn. Code
    Ann. § 67-4-2012(i)(2) and at issue here, did not always adequately deal with all of the types of
    receipts of sales from other than tangible property. The Commissioner cites to Professor William J.
    Pierce, the “father” of UDITPA, who noted the deficiency in this area and the need for a variance
    under Section 18 to deal with certain situations not covered by Section 17 (Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-
    2012(i)(2)) as follows:
    Another problem arises in conjunction with sales other than sales of tangible personal
    property. Section 17 of the uniform act attributes these sales to the state in which the
    -18-
    income-producing activity is performed. If the activity is performed in more than one
    state, the sales are attributed to the state in which the greater proportion of the activity
    was performed, based upon costs of performance. In many types of service functions,
    this approach appears adequate. However, there are many unusual fact situations
    connected with this type of income and probably the general provisions of Section 18
    should be utilized for these cases. If we assume that the activity involved is the
    servicing of industrial equipment, the formula provided in the uniform act could be
    easily applied and the result appears equitable. In contrast, assume that the sales
    item involved is advertising revenue received by a national magazine publisher.
    The state of activity would be difficult, if not impossible, to ascertain, so it would
    appear that this type of income may well be apportioned on the same basis as
    subscription income. The national conference considered this problem at length and
    concluded that for certain types of sales income, exceptions would have to be
    established by the tax collection agencies, since no formula seemed to be satisfactory
    for every conceivable factual situation. Generally, it was felt that the provisions of
    Section 17 were the best that could be designed to cover the greater proportion of
    cases.
    William J. Pierce, The Uniform Division of Income for State Tax Purposes, 35 Taxes 474, 780-781
    (1957)(emphasis added).
    The Commissioner insists that Professor Pierce’s analysis is on point and that the sales
    from advertising in the directories distributed in Tennessee should be apportioned according to a
    circulation or distribution method , as the Commissioner did when the variance was imposed.
    Based on the stated intent of the framers of the UDITPA that a variance from the cost
    of performance formula may be appropriate under certain circumstances, including the specific
    mention of sale of advertising in a publication, and based on the fact that BAPCO has paid only
    $296,140 in Tennessee excise and franchise tax but derived advertising income from the distribution
    of 23,715,829 directories in Tennessee of $897,488,193 during the five years at issue, the application
    of the cost of performance formula does not fairly represent BAPCO's business in the state and that
    the issuance of the variance was appropriate. BAPCO raises several objections to the propriety of the
    application of the variance. BAPCO argues that the variance is improper because the Tennessee cost
    of performance statute is an “all or nothing” statute which for BAPCO produced a sales factor of
    almost zero and that there is nothing unique and nonrecurring about the facts of BAPCO’s business
    activity in Tennessee, or about the costs of performance calculation.
    BAPCO disagrees with the Commissioner’s representation that the cost of
    performance formula “malfunctioned” in this case. BAPCO’s position is that Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-
    4-2012(i) is an “all or nothing” statute and that, as such, it is a “double-edged sword”. BAPCO
    asserts that to the extent that a service business has the largest proportion of its direct costs in
    Tennessee, all of such taxpayer’s receipts are sourced to Tennessee in the calculation of the sales
    factor portion of the formula even if some of the costs of performance occurred elsewhere. Likewise,
    -19-
    if the greater proportion of the direct costs are elsewhere, then the sales factor is zero. Further, the
    statutory formula, which the parties stipulated to as applicable, contemplates that the sales factor
    could very well be zero or near zero, as it appears to be in BAPCO’s case. BAPCO argues that for the
    Commissioner to then issue a variance when a particular business’s sales factor is zero because the
    greater proportion of its direct costs occur outside Tennessee renders section 67-4-2012(i)
    meaningless. While BAPCO argues that UDITPA makes a specific provision to deal with BAPCO’s
    exact situation, Tennessee did not adopt the regulation. Our analysis of UDITPA, when compared
    to the Tennessee statutes, demonstrates that Tennessee has essentially adopted all provisions of the
    UDITPA.
    While BAPCO’s “all or nothing” argument is appealing, in that the Commissioner can
    virtually ignore the statutorily required cost of performance formula when the results are unfavorable
    to the Department, the fact remains that Tenn. Code Ann. §§ 67-4-2014(a) and 67-4-2112(a) were
    enacted by the legislature to provide the Commissioner with the authority to permit or require a
    departure from the standard apportionment formula when application of the formula does not fairly
    represent the extent of the taxpayer’s business activity in Tennessee and the Commissioner is given
    the authority to use any method to source receipts for purposes of the receipts factor or factors of the
    apportionment formula numerator or numerators. Moreover, the authors of the UDITPA, and the
    Tennessee General Assembly were aware that under certain factual scenarios, specifically when the
    sale of advertising is at issue, the statutory formulas just do not work and the tax collector would
    necessarily have to impose a variance. Thus, BAPCO’s “all or nothing” argument is not persuasive.
    BAPCO also makes the argument that the Commissioner did not demonstrate that
    there was something unique and nonrecurring about the facts of BAPCO’s business activity in
    Tennessee or about the costs of performance calculation to justify the imposition of a variance.
    BAPCO’s reliance on the Tennessee Rules and Regulations, Rule 1320-6-1-.35, (Rule 35) is
    misplaced.
    Rule 4 provides:
    The employment of any other method to effectuate an equitable allocation and
    apportionment of the taxpayer’s capital and net earnings for purposes of computing
    franchise and excise taxes, §§67-4-911 and 67-4-812 permit a departure from the
    allocation and apportionment provisions only in limited and specific cases. §§67-4-
    911 and 67-4-812 may be invoked only in specific cases where unusual fact situations
    (which ordinarily will be unique and nonrecurring) produce incongruous results under
    the appointment and allocation provision contained in the Franchise and Excise Tax
    Laws.
    The unusual fact situation in this case is that all of the costs of production occurred
    outside of Tennessee, but the revenue derived from the end product only occurred when the product
    was distributed in Tennessee which only then obligated the purchasers to pay the revenue proceeds
    to the producer for the sale of the advertising. Certainly, the circumstances of this case have a unique
    -20-
    quality, and while the process can be recurring, the “ordinarily” qualifier under the rule does not
    proscribe the issuance of a variance in all such cases.
    In American Tel. & Tel. Co. V. Huddleston, 
    880 S.W.2d 682
    , 691-692 (Tenn. App.
    1994), the Court said at page 691: “The Commissioner may therefore exercise reasonable discretion
    in determining whether facts or circumstances justify departure from the statutory formula.” We hold
    that the Commissioner carried the burden of proof that the facts and circumstances of this case
    enabled her to exercise her reasonable discretion in declaring a variance for the purpose of revising
    this formula to establish the basis for the revenue assessed. We reverse the ruling of the Chancellor
    on this issue.
    The cause is remanded to enter Judgment pursuant to the Commissioner’s
    counterclaim for the full amount of the assessment, plus statutory interest and reasonable attorney’s
    fees and expense of litigation as required by Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-1-1803(d).
    The cost of the appeal is assessed to Bellsouth Advertising & Publishing Corporation.
    _________________________
    HERSCHEL PICKENS FRANKS, P.J.
    -21-