Unanimous: Tax Deal on Tribal Gas Stations Upheld

Posted

OLYMPIA (AP) — The state Supreme Court on Thursday unanimously upheld a lower court ruling in a long-running lawsuit by non-tribal gas station owners challenging gas tax compacts negotiated in the past decade between the state and Indian tribes.

The Supreme Court ruled that non-Indian gas station owners failed to prove that the payments to the tribes, which total about $30 million a year, were not refunds for taxes paid on motor vehicle fuels.

"We also find no unconstitutional delegation of legislative power," the court said in its 26-page opinion.

Under the current system, tribes agreed to buy taxed fuel to sell in their gas stations and the state agreed to refund a portion of the fuel tax receipted to the tribes. The agreements over the past decade have provided tribes refunds equal to 75 percent of the tax on fuel bought by tribal gas stations.

A group of non-tribal gas station owners challenged the lawfulness of these agreements. The trial court dismissed that lawsuit on summary judgment.

The Supreme Court was asked to decide if the tribal agreements violated Washington's constitution, which limits the use of state fuel tax receipts to highway purposes, and whether the Legislature improperly delegated legislative authority to the governor to negotiate those agreements.



The case centered on the definition of a refund.

The state constitution restricts gas-tax revenues for use on roads, but made an exception for refunds to taxpayers.

Gas station owners argued that tribes are not eligible for refunds of gas tax because they neither paid the taxes directly, as suppliers do, nor bear the ultimate burden of the tax, as drivers do.

Attorneys for the state argued that the case threatened to invalidate numerous other tax refunds the Legislature has created. For instance, refunds are available to people who buy fuel for non-highway uses such as construction and farming, among others.