Court Opinion

ID: 9892249
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-10-21 17:12:04.140326+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:01:38.739554
License: Public Domain

NUMBER 13-21-00335-CV

                        COURT OF APPEALS

               THIRTEENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS

                 CORPUS CHRISTI – EDINBURG

ANADARKO PETROLEUM
CORPORATION,                                                        Appellant,

                                    v.

GLENN HEGAR, COMPTROLLER
OF PUBLIC ACCOUNTS OF THE
STATE OF TEXAS, AND KEN
PAXTON, ATTORNEY GENERAL
OF THE STATE OF TEXAS,                                              Appellees.

                On appeal from the 201st District Court
                      of Travis County, Texas.

                      MEMORANDUM OPINION

  Before Chief Justice Contreras and Justices Longoria and Silva
              Memorandum Opinion by Justice Silva

    Appellant Anadarko Petroleum Corporation (Anadarko) appeals the trial court’s
denial of its petition for a refund for overpayment of state franchise taxes. By a single

issue, Anadarko argues that the trial court erred by denying its refund because it was

entitled to deduct certain settlement payments from its franchise tax payments as costs

of goods sold. We affirm.

                                       I.      BACKGROUND 1

       The facts of this case are largely undisputed and stem from the Deepwater Horizon

disaster in 2010. Anadarko, an oil and natural gas production company, partnered with

British Petroleum (BP) as a non-operating leasehold interest holder in production from

the Offshore Mississippi Canyon Block 252 (MC252) through a joint operating agreement

(JOA). During suspended operations of an exploratory well (the Macondo well), millions

of gallons of oil were released into the Gulf of Mexico, causing billions of dollars in

damages. BP, the operator of the well, coordinated and funded the response, which

included stopping the leak, removing spilled oil, cleaning and restoring natural resources,

and paying damage claims to third parties affected by the spill.

       During the cleanup, BP issued joint interest billing (JIB) invoices to Anadarko for

its share of the expenses, which totaled approximately $6.1 billion. Although Anadarko

disputed its liability, it ultimately settled with BP for $4 billion in cash. In exchange for the

settlement payment, BP agreed to release all claims against Anadarko related to the spill

and indemnify Anadarko for future compensatory damage claims by third parties. The

settlement agreement specified that BP “will use the [c]ash [p]ayment to pay the claims

       1 This appeal was transferred from the Third Court of Appeals in Austin pursuant to an order issued

by the Texas Supreme Court. See TEX. GOV’T CODE ANN. § 73.001.

                                                   2
of [p]ersons whose injuries and damages arise out of or relate to the Deepwater Horizon

[i]ncident.” Anadarko also sold its interest in the well to BP for $87.5 million.

        In its federal income tax filing for 2011, Anadarko included the settlement payment

as a deduction from income. The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) accepted the deduction

under the “origin of the claim” doctrine. 2 In 2012, Anadarko submitted its Texas franchise

tax report based on its 2011 federal income tax return. However, according to Anadarko,

its “tax department had not completed its review of the circumstances surrounding the

[s]pill [p]ayment, [so] it did not initially subtract the payment on its original Texas franchise

tax report.”

        In 2015, Anadarko filed an amended 2012 franchise tax report, including its

settlement payment as costs of goods sold (COGS), deducting it from its revenue, and

seeking a refund of $8,084,838 as overpaid taxes. In 2016, Glenn Hegar, the Comptroller

of Public Accounts of the State of Texas (Comptroller), reclassified the settlement

payment as an indirect cost, limiting Anadarko’s deduction to 4% of the payment. As such,

the Comptroller issued a partial refund of $353,493.92 plus interest. In 2017, Anadarko

filed an administrative petition asking the Comptroller to alter its position and permit

Anadarko to deduct 100% of the settlement payment, but the Comptroller declined.

        In 2018, before the scheduled hearing on Anadarko’s petition, the Comptroller

changed its position, asserting that the settlement payment was completely disallowed as

a deduction and demanding a return of the partial refund it issued to Anadarko. The

        2 The “origin of the claim doctrine” is a federal tax doctrine that looks to the basis of liability for a

settlement payment to determine whether it is tax deductible for federal income tax purposes. See U.S. v.
Gilmore, 372 U.S. 39, 47 (1963).
                                                       3
Comptroller ultimately issued an amended decision, assessing $402,393.83 in additional

franchise tax plus interest. Anadarko made the payment under protest.

        Anadarko filed this suit against appellees Hegar and Ken Paxton, Attorney General

of the State of Texas, seeking a refund of the franchise taxes it paid under the 2012 Texas

franchise tax report. A bench trial proceeded where the following evidence was

presented. 3

A.      David Bump

        David Bump testified he worked for Anadarko from 2006 to 2014. Bump was the

manager of deepwater completions operations in the Gulf of Mexico when the disaster

occurred. When asked about the difference between “tangible” and “intangible” drilling

costs, Bump explained that “the intangible costs are all these services and—and

personnel and people and rental equipment that goes into constructing a well, whereas

the tangible costs are the actual materials that make up that wellbore, so like the pipe and

the casing and the trees.” Bump estimated that intangible drilling costs make up eighty-

five to ninety percent of drilling costs.

        Bump described the Deepwater Horizon disaster as “very, very rare,” but explained

that small spills “occur on a fairly frequent basis.” Bump explained that for this particular

well, BP owned 65% of the well, Mitsui Offshore owned 10%, and Anadarko owned 25%.

The parties agreed that BP would “operate” the well and invoice the remaining partners

on the well for their portion of the expenses.

        3 Over 13,000 pages of trial exhibits were ultimately produced and admitted. The exhibits include

the lease agreement, spill response plan, joint interest billings, settlement agreement, federal tax returns
and ancillary documents, federal litigation transcripts, deposition and administrative hearing transcripts, and
other related documents.

                                                      4
       According to Bump, BP was in the process of temporarily abandoning the well

while they reviewed the data collected from the exploratory drilling when the blowout

occurred. Bump stated that he did not have any personal involvement in the response to

the disaster. Bump recounted some of the methods BP undertook, including drilling relief

wells, setting containment domes, and deploying remote-operated vehicles. Some of the

spilled oil was recovered and shipped for sale or disposal. After the well was plugged, BP

permanently abandoned it.

       Bump explained that “reclamation,” as used in the oil and gas industry, is the

process of returning a jobsite “back to as close as practical to how it looked prior to the

operation starting.” Bump described shoreline cleanup as “very material and manpower

intensive,” requiring “probably hundreds of field offices” to direct people and materials to

the necessary locations. According to Bump, shoreline clean up did not start winding

down until “probably two or three years, if not more, after the event.”

       In addition to claims from federal and state governments, BP received “hundreds

of thousands of personal claims where people were deemed impacted . . . through loss

of wages,” including fishermen, steel mill workers, and other offshore drilling operations.

B.     Mike Kriener

       Mike Kriener testified that he is a “JIB accountant” for Anadarko’s offshore

operations. Kriener further testified that the post-blowout billing to Anadarko was

authorized by two sections of the JOA: one dealing with “[e]cological, [e]nvironmental,

and [s]afety,” and another dealing with well “[a]bandonment and [r]eclamation.” Kriener

noted that BP issued the first JIB for the Macondo well in January 2010. The trial court

                                             5
admitted JIBs from January 2010 through September 2011, when the settlement was

reached. The first JIB issued after the blowout was in April 2010. Although Anadarko paid

the regular costs under the JIB, it refused to pay the amounts related to the blowout,

taking the position that such amounts were attributable to BP’s “willful misconduct and

gross negligence,” which Anadarko claimed it was not financially responsible for under

the JOA.

        Kriener reviewed all the JIBs and summarized them in a single document.

According to Kriener, of the $6.1 billion BP billed to Anadarko, $3.38 billion was for spill

removal costs 4 and $2.37 billion was for damage claims. Although Kriener was not

involved in the settlement negotiations, he agreed that a representative for Anadarko

testified in federal litigation related to the disaster that “the 4-billion-dollar settlement

payment [was] for injuries and damages.” Relatedly, when questioned by the federal court

regarding the $4 billion payment being fungible, Anadarko’s witness responded: “It was

Anadarko’s intent that the money be used for that.”

C.      Estella Alvarado

        Estella Alvarado works for Occidental Petroleum (Oxy), the company that acquired

Anadarko in 2019. Prior to the acquisition, Alvarado worked as a supervisor of production

accounting and regulatory reporting for Anadarko’s domestic and offshore operations.

Alvarado explained that her job consisted of collecting daily oil and gas production and

sales data to provide monthly reports to state and federal agencies.

        4  The spill removal costs included a subcategory titled “INCIDENT RESPONSE” which totaled
$2.63 billion of the $3.38 billion. Other large subcategories include $391 million for “SHORELINE & FIELD
RESPONSE” and $184 million for “COAST GUARD.”

                                                   6
       As to the Macondo well, Alvarado communicated with BP regarding production

quantities. Under federal regulations and the Macondo well lease, the federal government

was entitled to 18.75% royalties on the oil produced, including spilled oil. According to

Alvarado, Anadarko did not consider the spilled oil “produced” because “the well was

never completed.” However, the federal government issued a decision “that the oil that

flowed from the Macondo well was production.” Accordingly, Anadarko paid the federal

government approximately $11,700,00 in royalties.

       Alvarado testified that of the approximately four million barrels of oil that spilled

from the Macondo well, Anadarko’s ownership interest represented one million. Of those

one million barrels, 170,000 were sold and the remaining 830,000 were lost to waste.

Because the cost of the well exceeded the amount it produced, Anadarko classified it as

a dry well.

D.     Jason Shayne Buchanan

       Jason Shayne Buchanan is the director of tax for Oxy. Although Buchanan was

never employed by Anadarko, he reviewed Anadarko’s tax filings for tax years 2008

through 2011. Buchanan noted that Anadarko did not list the settlement payment under

“intangible drilling costs,” instead listing it under “other deductions” on its federal tax

return. Buchanan explained that he believed Anadarko segregated the payment so “it

would be easy for the IRS to review and know where that amount was placed in the

federal income tax return.” Buchanan agreed that Anadarko did not intend to offer any

testimony or evidence that was inconsistent with the stated use of funds in the settlement

agreement. However, Buchanan testified that Anadarko “used the origin of claim

                                             7
doctrine . . . in order to report that expense” as COGS in their formal refund request to

the Comptroller. The majority of Buchanan’s testimony related to Anadarko’s federal tax

return and its characterization of the settlement payment on that return.

       On cross examination, Buchanan acknowledged that in a response to an IRS

inquiry, Anadarko reported that “[i]t did not pay any [JIBs] related to the spill response.”

Additionally, when asked by the IRS whether any of the JIBs were honored, Anadarko

responded, “To the extent that a post-incident invoice included [JIB] amounts for spill

response and other items related to the incident, such amounts were not paid.” Moreover,

for the same tax year, Anadarko only reported $1,257,090.03 as intangible drilling costs

and $69,161,664 as abandonment costs. However, in a separate document to the IRS,

Anadarko stated that it “has agreed to pay $4 billion in cash and transfer its interest in the

MC252 lease to BP . . . and BP has agreed to accept this in full satisfaction of its claims

against Anadarko for [$]6.1 billion of invoices issued to date.”

E.     Judgment

       The parties each submitted proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law and

proposed judgments as their closing argument. The trial court issued a take-nothing

judgment in favor of appellees and issued its findings of fact and conclusions of law. The

trial court concluded, in pertinent part, that the settlement payment was not deductible as

COGS because it was a payment for tort damages for gross negligence, not for expenses

incurred under the JIBs. This appeal followed.

                                  II.    APPLICABLE LAW

       In Texas, taxable entities doing business in the state must pay an annual franchise

                                              8
tax. TEX. TAX CODE ANN. § 171.001(a). As relevant here, “taxable entity” is defined to

include corporations. Id. § 171.0002(a). To determine the tax owed, the taxable entity

must first calculate its taxable margin. See id. § 171.002. The taxable margin may be

calculated several different ways. See id. § 171.101(a). For the purposes of this matter,

the taxable margin may be calculated by subtracting an entity’s COGS from its total

revenue. Id. § 171.101(a)(1)(B)(ii)(a)(1). In calculating COGS, an entity may deduct the

direct costs of acquiring or producing the goods. See id. § 171.1012(c), (d). “A taxable

entity may also subtract certain indirect costs that are ‘in relation to the taxable entity’s

goods.’” Sunstate Equip. Co., LLC v. Hegar, 601 S.W.3d 685, 692 (Tex. 2020) (quoting

TEX. TAX CODE ANN. § 171.1012(d)). “In addition, certain ‘indirect or administrative

overhead costs . . . allocable to the acquisition or production of goods’ may be

subtracted.” Id. (quoting TEX. TAX CODE ANN. § 171.1012(f)). However, the Legislature

expressly prohibited certain costs related to goods from being deducted as COGS,

including “the cost of renting or leasing equipment, facilities, or real property that is not

used for the production of the goods” and “rehandling costs.” TEX. TAX CODE ANN.

§ 171.1012(e)(1), (6).

       “A taxable entity shall determine its [COGS], except as otherwise provided by this

section, in accordance with the methods used on the federal income tax return on which

the report under this chapter is based.” Id. § 171.1012(h). However, the federal methods

do “not affect the type or category of [COGS] that may be subtracted.” Id. “[F]ederal

methods [for determining COGS] are to be used only when there are gaps in the Texas

statute.” Hegar v. Gulf Copper & Mfg. Corp., 601 S.W.3d 668, 684 (Tex. 2020). “For

                                             9
example, . . . because the Tax Code gives no specific instruction as to what accounting

method a taxable entity must use in calculating its costs under [§] 171.1012 (e.g., cash

or accrual), a taxable entity must use the same accounting method it used on its federal

return.” Id. “Subsection 171.1012(h) thus does not affect the specific mandates contained

in other parts of [§] 171.1012, such as the detailed requirements of subsections (c)

through (f), which are the core of the COGS subtraction.” Id. “Accordingly, whether a

particular cost may be included in the COGS subtraction is not dependent on whether a

taxable entity engages in some qualifying activities but rather on whether that cost

independently meets the requirements of [§] 171.1012.” Id.

                               III.   STANDARD OF REVIEW

       Whether an expense is deductible as COGS is a mixed question of law and fact.

First, a trial court must determine what an expense is for—a question of fact—then

whether that expense is included as COGS—a question of law. See Gulf Copper & Mfg.,

601 S.W.3d at 680–84. The trial court’s findings of fact are reviewed under a sufficiency

of the evidence standard while its conclusions of law are reviewed de novo. Hegar v. Am.

Multi-Cinema, Inc., 605 S.W.3d 35, 40 (Tex. 2020).

       “Evidence is legally sufficient if it would enable reasonable and fair-minded people

to reach the verdict under review. We credit favorable evidence if a reasonable factfinder

could do so and disregard contrary evidence unless a reasonable factfinder could not.”

Wichita County v. Envt’l Eng’g & Geotechnics, Inc., 576 S.W.3d 851, 861–62 (Tex. App.—

Austin 2019, no pet.) (internal citations omitted). When reviewing a finding for factual

sufficiency,

                                            10
       we examine the entire record, considering the evidence in favor of and
       contrary to the challenged finding. We must not merely substitute our
       judgment for that of the trier of fact. If we determine the evidence is factually
       insufficient, we must detail the evidence relevant to the issue and explain
       how the contrary evidence greatly outweighs the evidence in support of the
       challenged finding.

Id. at 862. Erroneous findings of fact do not require reversal unless the erroneous finding

is on an ultimate fact issue and immaterial findings are harmless. Yazdani-Beioky v.

Sharifan, 550 S.W.3d 808, 822 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 2018, pet. denied).

       If our review calls on us to determine the meaning of a statute, “our purpose is to

effectuate the Legislature’s intent by giving effect to every word, clause, and sentence.”

Sunstate Equip. Co., 601 S.W.3d at 689–90 (cleaned up). Thus, we start with the statute’s

text and the plain meaning of its words construed within the statute as a whole. Id. at 690.

We will presume the Legislature intended to use the ordinary meaning of a word, unless

otherwise provided for by statute, with each term interpreted consistently throughout the

act. Id. “Only if the text reveals the statute is ambiguous, or applying its plain meaning

would produce an absurd result, will we turn to extrinsic sources.” Id.

                                      IV.     ANALYSIS

       Anadarko argues that the “economic reality” of its payment to BP is that it was

based on the JIBs, from which its settlement payment was calculated, and thus the

payment is deductible as COGS. Appellees, on the other hand, argue that applying the

economic realities doctrine results in the conclusion that the settlement payment was not

deductible as COGS. Because the question of whether an expense is deductible as

COGS is a mixed question of law and fact, we first review the factual findings by the trial

court regarding the nature of the payment made to determine whether they were

                                              11
supported by factually and legally sufficient evidence. See Am. Multi-Cinema, 605 S.W.3d

at 40.

         As part of its argument, Anadarko challenges various findings by the trial court,

including the following:

         14.     Anadarko refused to pay the amounts in the [JIBs] that were a result of the
                 blowout because Anadarko claimed that those costs were the result of
                 [BP]’s gross negligence.[ 5]

                 ....

         19.     Anadarko submitted its $4 billion dollar settlement payment to its excess
                 liability insurer and received $37.5 million in insurance proceeds pursuant
                 to the portion of the excess policy covering “Bodily Injury and Property
                 Damage.”[ 6]

                 ....

         26.     “To the extent that a post incident invoice included [JIB] amounts for spill
                 response and other items related to the incident, such amounts were not
                 paid.”[ 7]

         27.     Anadarko did not pay any [JIBs] related to the Deepwater Horizon disaster
                 spill response.

         28.     Anadarko did not directly or indirectly pay response costs or clean[]up costs
                 for the Deepwater Horizon [d]isaster.

         These findings, in part, supported the trial court’s ultimate conclusion that the

settlement payment was not deductible as COGS because it was a payment for tort

damages for gross negligence. According to Anadarko, the findings “incorrectly omit that

         5 The trial court’s findings of fact included citations to the record to support its findings. For brevity,

we have intentionally excluded those citations.
         6 Anadarko does not challenge the veracity of this finding; rather, it argues that the “finding is

irrelevant” and “incorrectly implies something nefarious related to the insurance payment.”
         7 This finding quotes an exhibit containing communications from Anadarko to the IRS regarding

the JIBs.

                                                        12
Anadarko subsequently agreed to pay a negotiated portion (approximately two-thirds) of

the invoiced costs under the settlement agreement.” Anadarko argues that the costs

incurred under the JIBs are deductible under § 171.1012(c)(7), (d)(3), and (d)(5). Those

expenses are: (1) “the cost of renting or leasing equipment, facilities, or real property

directly used for the production of the goods, including pollution control equipment and

intangible drilling and dry hole costs,” TEX. TAX CODE ANN. § 171.1012(c)(7); (2) “spoilage

and abandonment, including the costs of rework labor, reclamation, and scrap,” id.

§ 171.1012(d)(3); and (3) “postproduction direct costs allocable to the property, including

storage and handling costs, as provided by Subsections (c)(4) and (c)(5).” id.

§ 171.1012(d)(5). We disagree.

        The trial court’s finding that the payment was “a cost of committing a tort” rather

than for the expenses incurred under the JIBs is supported by several pieces of evidence

in the record, which include: (1) the provision in the settlement agreement stating that the

payment must be used “to pay the claims of Persons whose injuries and damages arise

out of or relate to the Deepwater Horizon Incident”; (2) Anadarko’s claim for

reimbursement of the settlement payment under its personal injury and property damage

insurance policy; 8 (3) Anadarko’s response to the IRS wherein it denied paying any of

the post-spill JIBs; (4) testimony in the federal litigation wherein Anadarko sought and

          8 Anadarko argues that “it was reasonable for [it] to submit its settlement payment as a loss under

this policy because the payment covers containment and abandonment of the well, reclamation of the gulf
waters and shorelines, reimbursing the shoreline states for their costs of reclamation and damages to
businesses for lost profits.” We do not doubt the reasonableness of Anadarko’s decision to submit the claim
to its insurance, but we note that Anadarko does not argue that its liability coverage would reimburse it for
ordinary COGS. Moreover, in litigation over the insurance claim, the Texas Supreme Court noted that the
insurance policy covered liability for “[b]odily [i]njury,” “[p]ersonal [i]njury,” and “[p]roperty [d]amage.”
Anadarko Petroleum Corp. v. Hous. Cas. Co., 573 S.W.3d 187, 193–94 (Tex. 2019).

                                                    13
received a benefit arising from a finding that the settlement payment compensated the

victims of the spill; and (5) testimony during the administrative proceeding. 9 See Envt’l

Eng’g & Geotechnics, 576 S.W.3d at 862.

        Anadarko challenges additional findings, including a finding that three of four

Anadarko witnesses had no direct involvement in the underlying events, and a finding

that Anadarko included the settlement payment in “other deductions” rather than dry hole

or intangible drilling costs on its federal tax return. However, these findings do not go to

an ultimate fact issue and are otherwise immaterial to the judgment. See Yazdani-Beioky,

550 S.W.3d at 822. Accordingly, even if these findings are unsupported by the evidence,

that would not require reversal. See id.; TEX. R. APP. P. 44.1(a).

        Having concluded that there is sufficient evidence to support the trial court’s finding

that the settlement payment was for tort damages, we next must determine whether it is

deductible as COGS. See Gulf Copper & Mfg., 601 S.W.3d at 680–84. Tort liability

payments are not “direct costs of acquiring or producing” goods, as required for COGS

deduction under § 171.1012(c). See TEX. TAX CODE ANN. § 171.1012(c). Further, tort

liability payments are not included in the additional deductible “costs in relation to the

taxable entity’s goods” under § 171.1012(d) and Anadarko does not argue so. See id.

        9 Jerry Byrd, Anadarko’s manager of joint interest accounting and joint venture audit, testified in

the administrative proceeding that

        the $4 billion was used against damages and claims, that we honestly felt that the
        government could come back after us under the OPA [Oil Pollution Act]. The $4 billion
        represented the [$]6.1 billion that we had been billed. However, Anadarko felt that the
        majority of costs related to the spill, the cleanup, that sort of thing, had already been paid,
        and our biggest liability was from the [OPA] and wanted to make sure that those people
        were compensated for their damages.

                                                     14
§ 171.1012(d). We presume that the Legislature intentionally excluded tort liability

payments as a deductible COGS. See Sunstate Equip. Co., 601 S.W.3d at 689–90.

Accordingly, we conclude that the settlement payment is not deductible as COGS. 10

       The possibility that a portion of the settlement payment could have been used to

reclaim land damaged by the oil spill alone is not sufficient to allow the entirety of the

settlement payment as COGS deduction where a portion was also used to pay for loss of

income or other unrecoverable damages; rather, Anadarko was required to show that the

expenditure independently met the requirements of § 171.1012. See id. at 687. Similarly,

even if we looked strictly to the records provided by Anadarko to determine whether the

payment constituted a deductible COGS, we would be unable to accomplish such where

the broad categories do not specify how the money was spent. See id. For example,

Anadarko’s summary of the $6.1 billion claimed lists $1.9 billion as “[m]iscellaneous,” $1.8

billion as “EXPADJUST,” and $823 million as “[l]oss and [d]amages.” The voluminous

JIBs are similarly opaque, including categories such as “[c]atastrophe [o]verhead,”

“[t]ransportation,” 11 and “[l]oss & [d]amages.” See id.

       Finally, considering the economic realities of the disaster, we note that at the time

of the settlement, more than $8 billion was claimed by third parties for lost wages, property

damage, and other tort claims. See Roark Amusement & Vending, 422 S.W.3d at 637.

       10 Anadarko does not argue that the settlement payment constitutes an indirect or administrative

overhead cost allocable to the acquisition or production of goods and we express no opinion on whether
the settlement payment would qualify as such. See TEX. TAX CODE ANN. § 171.1012(f).
       11 Inbound transportation costs may be deductible as COGS while outbound transportation may

not. See TEX. TAX CODE ANN. § 171.1012(c)(4) (inbound transportation), and (e)(3) (outbound
transportation). It is unclear from the JIBs what or who was transported or to where.

                                                 15
Moreover, Anadarko received a pecuniary benefit with its settlement agreement: BP

agreed to indemnify it from any future claims, an economic reality that cannot be ignored.

Id. These facts support the finding that the entirety of the settlement payment was for tort

damages, not COGS. See TEX. TAX CODE ANN. § 171.1012; Roark Amusement &

Vending, 422 S.W.3d at 637; Envt’l Eng’g & Geotechnics, 576 S.W.3d at 862.

       Anadarko argues that the language in the settlement agreement should not control

here. According to Anadarko, “If parties were allowed to subjectively categorize the nature

of the claims giving rise to their dispute via a post hoc comment in their settlement

agreement, it would encourage fraudulent tax avoidance and render meaningless the

Legislature’s categories of allowed and disallowed COGS.” We agree with that general

proposition; however, that does not support Anadarko’s attempt to deduct the settlement

payment as COGS. Rather, Anadarko now seeks to engage in post hoc reclassification

of its payment in order to receive a beneficial deduction, the very thing it warns us against.

However, the evidence here supports the trial court’s finding that the franchise tax

payment did not go to the items claimed in the JIBs, but rather to tort damages, which are

not identified as COGS deductions. See TEX. TAX CODE ANN. § 171.1012; Sunstate Equip.

Co., 601 S.W.3d at 687. Accordingly, we overrule Anadarko’s sole issue.

                                    V.      CONCLUSION

       We affirm the trial court’s judgment.

                                                                 CLARISSA SILVA
                                                                 Justice

Delivered and filed on the
19th day of October, 2023.

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