2010 Wyoming Statutes
Title 39 - Taxation And Revenue
Chapter 11 - Administration

CHAPTER 14 - MINE PRODUCT TAXES ARTICLE 1 COAL

 

39-14-101. Definitions.

 

(a) As used in this article:

 

(i) "Arm's-length market or sales price" means the transaction price determined in connection with a bona fide arm's length sale;

 

(ii) "Bona fide arm's-length sale" means a transaction in cash or terms equivalent to cash for specified property rights after reasonable exposure in a competitive market between a willing, well informed and prudent buyer and seller with adverse economic interests and assuming neither party is acting under undue compulsion or duress;

 

(iii) "Department review" means, but is not limited to, corrections of clerical errors or reconciliations of tax reports with reports required by other state or federal agencies;

 

(iv) "Mine product valuation amendment" means a valuation adjustment determination made by the department including special directives;

 

(v) "Mining or production" means drilling, blasting, loading, roadwork, overburden removal, pre-mouth of the mine reclamation, transportation from the point of severance to the mouth of the mine, and maintenance of facilities and equipment directly relating to any of the functions stated in this paragraph;

 

(vi) "Mouth of the mine" means the point at which a mineral is brought to the surface of the ground and is taken out of the pit, shaft or portal. For a surface mine, this point shall be the top of the ramp where the road or conveying system leaves the pit. For an in situ mine, the point shall be the wellhead;

 

(vii) "Processing" means crushing, sizing, milling, washing, drying, refining, upgrading, beneficiation, sampling, testing, treating, heating, separating, tailings or reject material disposal, compressing, storing, loading for shipment, transportation from the mouth of the mine to the loadout, transportation to market to the extent included in the price and provided by the producer, processing plant site and post-mouth of mine reclamation, maintenance of facilities and equipment relating to any of the functions stated in this paragraph, and any other function after severance that changes the physical or chemical characteristics or enhances the marketability of the mineral;

 

(viii) "Purchaser" means the first purchaser who acquires the produced valuable coal deposit from the taxpayer for value;

 

(ix) "Severance tax" means an excise tax imposed on the present and continuing privilege of removing, extracting, severing or producing any mineral in this state;

 

(x) Beginning January 1, 1989, "taxable value" means one hundred percent (100%) of the fair market value of the gross product of minerals and mine products;

 

(xi) "Transportation to market provided by a third party" means the costs incurred for any movement of a mineral which is performed by a third party, after completion of all mining and processing functions, beyond the point of loading for shipment to the customer, commonly referred to as the loadout, established by contract or by government regulations;

 

(xii) "Transportation to market provided by the producer" means the costs incurred for any movement of a mineral which is performed by the producer beyond the point of loading for shipment to the customer, commonly referred to as the loadout, completed by the employees of the producer using equipment owned by the producer;

 

(xiii) "Underground coal" means coal mined by methods of man-made excavation underneath the surface of the earth utilizing shafts, tunnels or lifts, including planes connected with excavations penetrating the mineral stratum;

 

(xiv) "Unreported production" means production volume for which no tax report was filed for the reporting period by the taxpayer or his agent;

 

(xv) "Value of the gross product" means fair market value as prescribed by W.S. 39-11-101, less any deductions and exemption allowed by Wyoming law or rules.

 

39-14-102. Administration; confidentiality.

 

(a) The department shall annually value and assess the gross product of all mines and mining claims at its fair market value for taxation.

 

(b) Based upon the information received or procured pursuant to W.S. 39-14-107(a) or 39-14-108(a) and except as otherwise provided, the department shall annually value the gross product for the preceding calendar year, in appropriate unit measures of all mines and mining claims from which valuable deposits are produced.

 

(c) Except as otherwise provided, in the event the product as defined in W.S. 39-14-103(b)(iii) is not sold at the mouth of the mine by bona fide arms-length sale, or if the product of the mine is used without sale, the department shall determine the fair market value by application of recognized appraisal techniques.

 

(d) Annually, on or before June 1, or as soon thereafter as the fair market value is determined, the department shall certify the valuation determined by the department to the county assessor of the county in which the property is located, to be entered upon the assessment rolls of the county.

 

(e) All taxpayer returns and return information shall be confidential and, except as authorized below, no current or former official, officer, employee or agent of the state of Wyoming or any political subdivision thereof shall disclose any such information obtained by him in connection with his service as an officer or employee.

 

(f) As used in this section, taxpayer returns and return information shall include, but not be limited to, all statements, reports, summaries and all other data and documents under audit or provided by the taxpayer in accordance with the provisions of W.S. 39-14-107(a) and related provision.

 

(g) Without written authorization from the taxpayer, no current or former official, officer, employee or agent of the state of Wyoming or any political subdivision thereof shall release taxpayer returns and return information pertaining to taxes imposed by this article, except:

 

(i) Information may be released to the governor or his designee, members of the board, to employees of the department of audit, the department of revenue, the consensus revenue estimating group and to the attorney general;

 

(ii) Upon prior notice to the taxpayer, information may be released by the department, upon written application, to any other governmental entity if the governmental entity shows sufficient reason to obtain the information for official business;

 

(iii) Information is admissible in court or administrative proceedings related to mineral taxes or government royalties.

 

(h) Any person receiving information pursuant to paragraph (g)(ii) of this section shall sign an agreement with the department to keep the information confidential.

 

(j) Units of production reported by the taxpayer and the taxpayer's taxable value are not confidential and may be released without qualification.

 

(k) Any person who negligently violates subsections (e) through (j) of this section is guilty of a misdemeanor and upon conviction shall be fined not more than one thousand dollars ($1,000.00). Any person who intentionally violates subsections (e) through (j) of this section is guilty of a misdemeanor and upon conviction shall be fined not less than one thousand dollars ($1,000.00), but not more than five thousand dollars ($5,000.00) and imprisoned for not more than one (1) year.

 

(m) Repealed By Laws 2000, Ch. 68, 1.

 

39-14-103. Imposition.

 

(a) Taxable event. The following shall apply:

 

(i) There is levied a severance tax on the value of the gross product for the privilege of severing or extracting both surface and underground coal in the state. The severance tax imposed by this article may be in addition to other taxes, including but not limited to the ad valorem taxes imposed by W.S. 39-13-104.

 

(b) Basis of tax (valuation). The following shall apply:

 

(i) Coal shall be valued for taxation as provided in this subsection;

 

(ii) The value of the gross product shall be the fair market value of the product at the mouth of the mine where produced, after the mining or production process is completed;

 

(iii) Except as otherwise provided, the mining or production process is deemed completed when the mineral product reaches the mouth of the mine. In no event shall the value of the mineral product include any processing functions or operations regardless of where the processing is performed;

 

(iv) Except as otherwise provided, if the product as defined in paragraph (iii) of this subsection is sold at the mouth of the mine, the fair market value shall be deemed to be the price established by bona fide arms-length sale;

 

(v) In the event the product as defined in paragraph (iii) of this subsection is sold at the mouth of the mine without further movement or processing, the fair market value shall be the price established by bona fide arms-length sale less exempt royalties;

 

(vi) In the event the product as defined in paragraph (iii) of this subsection is not sold at the mouth of the mine by bona fide arms-length sale, or, except as otherwise provided, if the product of the mine is used without sale, the department shall determine the fair market value of coal in accordance with paragraph (vii), (viii), (ix) or (x) of this subsection;

 

(vii) For coal sold away from the mouth of the mine pursuant to a bona fide arms-length sale, the department shall calculate the fair market value of coal by multiplying the sales value of extracted coal, less transportation to market provided by a third party to the extent included in sales value, all royalties, ad valorem production taxes, severance taxes, black lung excise taxes and abandoned mine lands fees, by the ratio of direct mining costs to total direct costs. Nonexempt royalties, ad valorem production taxes, severance taxes, black lung excise taxes and abandoned mine lands fees shall then be added to determine fair market value. For purposes of this paragraph:

 

(A) The sales value of extracted coal shall be the selling price pursuant to an arms-length contract. To the extent not included in the selling price pursuant to an arms-length contract, and to the extent that the following represent partial consideration for the value of the coal, sales value shall include the value per ton attributable to the extracted coal for any consideration provided to the seller in the form of heat content adjustments, price escalations or de-escalations, expense reimbursements, capital, facilities or equipment, services for mining, handling, processing or transporting the coal at or near the mine site, or any payment received for the current or past sale of extracted coal, by or on behalf of the purchaser. Sales value per ton shall include consideration provided for the deferral of extraction and sale in the taxable period in which the purchaser receives credit for the payment as a result of subsequent extraction and sale of the deferred production;

 

(B) Direct mining costs include mining labor including mine foremen and supervisory personnel whose primary responsibility is extraction of coal, supplies used for mining, mining equipment depreciation, fuel, power and other utilities used for mining, maintenance of mining equipment, coal transportation from the point of severance to the mouth of the mine, and any other direct costs incurred prior to the mouth of the mine that are specifically attributable to the mining operation;

 

(C) Total direct costs include direct mining costs determined under subparagraph (B) of this paragraph plus mineral processing labor including plant foremen and supervisory personnel whose primary responsibility is processing coal, supplies used for processing, processing plant and equipment depreciation, fuel, power and other utilities used for processing, maintenance of processing equipment, coal transportation from the mouth of the mine to the point of shipment, coal transportation to market to the extent included in the price and provided by the producer, and any other direct costs incurred that are specifically attributable to the mining, processing or transportation of coal up to the point of loading for shipment to market;

 

(D) Indirect costs, royalties, ad valorem production taxes, severance taxes, black lung excise taxes and abandoned mine lands fees shall not be included in the computation of the ratio set forth in this paragraph. Indirect costs include but are not limited to allocations of corporate overhead, data processing costs, accounting, legal and clerical costs, and other general and administrative costs which cannot be specifically attributed to an operational function without allocation.

 

(viii) For coal used without sale, or coal not sold pursuant to a bona fide arms-length agreement, the sales value for the purposes of paragraph (vii) of this subsection shall be the fair market value of coal which is comparable in the quality, quantity, terms and conditions under which the coal is being used or sold, both in the spot market and through long-term agreements negotiated within the previous twelve (12) months, multiplied by the respective number of tons used or sold for each reporting period;

 

(ix) Notwithstanding paragraph (viii) of this subsection, the sales value for purposes of paragraph (vii) of this subsection for coal used as a feedstock in a coal enhancement process which has been subjected to normal processes necessary to achieve marketability, shall be the market value of comparable coal as determined by this paragraph. The market value of comparable coal attributable to feedstock coal shall be:

 

(A) A representative selling price received or receivable which shall be determined by the first of the following subdivisions that is applicable, multiplied by the total feedstock tons used in each reporting period:

 

(I) Arms-length price of comparable coal produced from the same mine and sold under comparable terms, or if a comparable coal price is not available from the same mine, the arms-length price of comparable coal produced from other mines in the area and sold under comparable terms;

 

(II) Price reported to a public utility commission for comparable coal produced from the same mine and sold under comparable terms, or if a comparable coal price is not available from the same mine, the price reported to a public utility commission for comparable coal produced from other mines in the area and sold under comparable terms;

 

(III) Other published or publicly available market prices for comparable coal produced from mines in the area and sold under comparable terms.

 

(B) If subparagraph (A) of this paragraph is not applicable, then the sales value for coal used as a feedstock shall be the total arms-length selling price of the enhanced coal sold during the reporting period multiplied by the total of the enhanced tons sold.

 

(x) In the event that unique or unusual circumstances exist such that the department or the taxpayer is unable to determine the value of the gross product of coal from a mine or mining claim by application of the methods provided in this subsection, the taxpayer may petition the department for approval to use an alternate valuation method. The department shall approve or deny the use of an alternate valuation method and shall so inform the parties within forty-five (45) days of the date the petition is filed.

 

(c) Taxpayer. The following shall apply:

 

(i) In the case of the gross product of all mines and mining claims produced under lease, the lessor is liable for the payment of ad valorem taxes on the product removed only to the extent of the lessor's retained interest under the lease, whether royalty or otherwise, and the lessee or his assignee is liable for all other ad valorem taxes due on production under the lease;

 

(ii) Any taxpayer paying the taxes imposed by this article on any valuable deposit may deduct the severance taxes paid from any amounts due or to become due to the interest owners of such valuable deposit in proportion to the interest ownership;

 

(iii) Any person extracting valuable products subject to this chapter and any person owning an interest in the valuable products to the extent of their interest ownership are liable for the payment of the severance taxes imposed by this article together with any penalties and interest.

 

39-14-104. Tax rate.

 

(a) Except as otherwise provided by W.S. 39-14-105, the total severance tax rate for surface coal shall be seven percent (7%). This rate comprises one and one-half percent (1.5%) imposed by Wyoming constitution article 15, section 19, and five and one-half percent (5.5%) imposed statutorily. The tax shall be distributed as provided in W.S. 39-14-111 and is imposed as follows:

 

(i) One and one-half percent (1.5%); plus

 

(ii) One-half percent (.5%); plus

 

(iii) Two percent (2%); plus

 

(iv) One and one-half percent (1.5%); plus

 

(v) One percent (1%); plus

 

(vi) One-half percent (.5%).

 

(b) The total severance tax rate for underground coal shall be three and three-quarters percent (3.75%). The tax shall be distributed as provided in W.S. 39-14-111 and is imposed as follows:

 

(i) One and one-half percent (1.5%); plus

 

(ii) One and one-quarter percent (1.25%); plus

 

(iii) One percent (1%).

 

39-14-105. Exemptions.

 

(a) Coal has no value and is exempt from taxation if it is consumed prior to sale for the purpose of treating or processing coal produced from the same mine.

 

(b) Notwithstanding W.S. 39-14-104 and effective January 1, 1999, when the application of taxes under W.S. 39-14-104 results in a tax on a ton of surface mined coal in excess of sixty cents ($.60), or thirty cents ($.30) on a ton of underground mined coal, the coal is exempt from the tax which exceeds the maximum amount per ton. This exemption shall be applicable to:

 

(i) New agreements entered into between March 31, 1987, and December 31, 2003, if:

 

(A) The application of the taxes in W.S. 39-14-104 results in a tax on a ton of surface mined coal in excess of sixty cents ($.60), or thirty cents ($.30) on a ton of underground mined coal at the time the agreement is entered and the coal is first produced under the agreement;

 

(B) Production and delivery of coal actually commences pursuant to the agreement between March 31, 1987, and December 31, 2003;

 

(C) The coal is transported and consumed outside the borders of the state of Wyoming; and

 

(D) The new contract or agreement is not the result of the purchaser breaching a contract with another Wyoming producer; or

 

(ii) New agreements entered into between January 1, 1987, and December 31, 2003, to supply coal to a facility in the planning stage or under construction at the time the new agreement is entered if:

 

(A) The application of the taxes in W.S. 39-14-104 results in a tax on a ton of surface mined coal in excess of sixty cents ($.60), or thirty cents ($.30) on a ton of underground mined coal at the time the agreement is entered and the coal is first produced under the agreement;

 

(B) The coal is transported and consumed outside the borders of the state of Wyoming; and

 

(C) The new contract or agreement is not the result of the purchaser breaching a contract with another Wyoming producer; or

 

(iii) A contract or agreement which existed on January 1, 1987, or a modification to that contract or agreement occurring between March 31, 1987, and December 31, 2003, between a Wyoming coal producer and a purchaser for consumption in an electrical generating facility or coking facility located in Wyoming to the extent that the producer's annual production and deliveries under the contract exceeds the average annual tonnage of coal delivered during calendar years 1985 and 1986 under the same contract. The exemption applies to the amount of additional coal produced in each of calendar years 1987 through 2003 and thereafter, so long as the additional coal is produced and delivered annually. If the annual deliveries after calendar year 2003 fall below the average of the 1985 and 1986 production, the exemption will no longer apply even if subsequent production exceeds the average of the 1985 and 1986 production unless the annual deliveries after calendar year 2000 fall below the average of the 1985 and 1986 production by reason of fire, explosion, earthquake, windstorm, accident, flood, equipment failure, act of God, war, seizure or activities of the armed forces, or other casualty or act beyond the reasonable control of either party to the contract or agreement. The exemption applies to contracts or agreements described in this paragraph only if a facility's total annual purchase of Wyoming coal exceeds the average annual tonnage of Wyoming coal purchased by the facility during calendar years 1985 and 1986;

 

(iv) Coal consumed by any coking facility located in Wyoming if the producer demonstrates to the department of revenue that the Wyoming coal consumed at the coking facility has displaced an equivalent quantity of coal produced outside of Wyoming. The exemption applies to the amount of Wyoming coal delivered and consumed by the coking facility in calendar year 1989 and thereafter, so long as the Wyoming coal is produced and delivered annually. If annual deliveries after calendar year 2003 fall below the previous year's deliveries, the exemption will no longer apply unless shipments are curtailed as the result of conditions described under paragraph (iii) of this subsection.

 

(c) The limitation on excise taxation provided for in subsection (b) of this section shall be applicable to a contract or agreement for the duration of its term or any extension thereof executed prior to December 31, 2003. If a producer and purchaser of coal under a contract or agreement existing on January 1, 1999, mutually rescind that contract or agreement and execute a new contract or agreement under substantially similar terms or amend an existing contract to diminish the total revenue which would have accrued under that contract, the coal sold under the new or amended contract shall be taxed under the provisions of this section without regard to the tax limitation imposed by subsection (b) of this section.

 

(d) Repealed By Laws 2008, Ch. 44, 2.

 

39-14-106. Licenses; permits.

 

There are no specific applicable provisions for licenses and permits for this article.

 

39-14-107. Compliance; collection procedures.

 

(a) Returns and reports. The following shall apply:

 

(i) Annually, on or before February 25 of the year following the year of production any person whose property is subject to W.S. 39-14-102(a) shall sign under oath and submit a statement listing the information relative to the property and affairs of the company as the department may require to assess the property:

 

(A) For mines and mining claims, the same date as prescribed by paragraph (iv) of this subsection for December production. In addition to the information required by this subsection, Wyoming coal producers shall provide to the department a summary of each new coal sales agreement for total sales in excess of ten thousand (10,000) tons and any amendment to an existing agreement for total sales in excess of ten thousand (10,000) tons signed during each calendar quarter no later than the last day of the month following the end of the calendar quarter. Each summary shall be on a form prescribed by the department and shall contain the date the agreement or amendment was executed, term of the agreement or amendment, annual volume or total volume if the agreement or amendment is for less than one (1) year, heat content requirements, quality specifications, nature and extent of enhancement if any, transportation terms, contract price and an explanation of any consideration that is a part of the sales value but not included in the contract price. A copy of each coal sales agreement or amendment shall be provided by the producer to the department no later than eighteen (18) months after the date the agreement or amendment was signed unless the agreement is not yet publicly available. If the agreement is not yet publicly available, the producer shall, in lieu of providing a copy of the agreement, notify the department in writing that the agreement is not yet publicly available and when the producer believes the agreement will be publicly available. It will thereafter be the responsibility of the producer to ascertain if and when the agreement does become publicly available and to provide a copy to the department within thirty (30) days from the date the agreement becomes publicly available. The producer may be relieved of the responsibility of ascertaining the date the agreement becomes publicly available by supplying a copy to the department. The coal sales agreements, amendments and summaries shall not be considered public records and shall not be open to public inspection. The coal sales agreements, amendments and summaries shall be considered taxpayer return information and shall be made available in accordance with applicable confidentiality statutes to the extent needed to carry out official duties under this section and W.S. 39-14-102(e) through (k). Proprietary information derived from the agreements and summaries shall be aggregated by the department on a calendar year basis prior to disclosure to any person not authorized by law to have access to the information. Any producer complying with this section shall not be required to provide subsequent summaries or copies of the same agreement or amendments to any of the agencies or officials identified by this section and W.S. 39-14-102(e) through (k). Any producer complying with this section shall not be required to provide other state agencies authorized by law to have access to the information, additional copies of sales agreements, amendments or summaries except as required through formal discovery in a contested case.

 

(ii) All information and reports shall be notarized and signed by a person who has legal authority to bind the taxpayer;

 

(iii) For mines and mining claims, the department may presume that the property is located in the county in which production is reported by the taxpayer. The department shall not direct any county to provide relief for taxes paid on taxable valuation which was erroneously reported and certified to the wrong county unless the taxpayer files or is directed to file amended returns within two (2) years of the date of the original certification of the production. Unless there is evidence of bad faith or willful disregard of production circumstances, no taxpayer shall be required to pay taxes on production which was erroneously reported and certified to the wrong county if relief for taxes paid is not allowed under this provision;

 

(iv) Except as provided in paragraph (v) of this subsection, each taxpayer liable for severance taxes under W.S. 39-14-103 shall report monthly to the department. The monthly tax reports are due on or before the twenty-fifth day of the second month following the month of production. Reports shall be filed on forms prescribed by the department. The department may allow extensions for filing returns by regulation;

 

(v) If a taxpayer's liability for severance tax imposed under this article is less than thirty thousand dollars ($30,000.00) for the preceding calendar year, monthly reporting requirements are waived and the taxpayer shall report annually. The annual report is due on February 25 of the year following the year in which production occurred. If a taxpayer who reports and pays annually accumulates an annual liability exceeding thirty thousand dollars ($30,000.00), that taxpayer shall commence reporting monthly as provided in paragraph (iv) of this subsection during the production year following the year in which the accumulated tax liability exceeded thirty thousand dollars ($30,000.00). It is the taxpayer's responsibility to notify the department concerning the change from annual to monthly reporting requirements or from monthly to annual reporting;

 

(vi) For mines and mining claims, the taxpayer shall report the location of the production to the county and tax district in which the mine or mining claim is located, based upon the actual taxable production produced by the mine in each county or tax district. Other reasonable methods of reporting the location of production may be approved by the department upon written request of the taxpayer or taxing jurisdiction.

 

(b) Payment. The following shall apply:

 

(i) Annually, on or before October 10 the county treasurer shall send a written statement in sealed envelopes of total tax due, itemized as to property description, assessed value and mill levies, to each taxpayer at his last known address. Failure to send notice, or to demand payment of taxes, does not invalidate any taxes due;

 

(ii) Ad valorem taxes provided by this act are due and payable at the office of the county treasurer of the county in which the taxes are levied. Fifty percent (50%) of the taxes are due on and after September 1 and payable on and after November 10 in each year and the remaining fifty percent (50%) of the taxes are due on and after March 1 and payable on and after May 10 of the succeeding calendar year except as hereafter provided. If the entire tax is paid on or before December 31, no interest or penalty is chargeable;

 

(iii) Except as provided in paragraph (iv) of this subsection, each taxpayer liable for a severance tax under W.S. 39-14-103 shall pay monthly tax payments to the department. The payment shall be determined by the taxpayer based on the value of the gross product produced and saved during the second preceding month, and tax computed on value at rates prescribed in this chapter. The monthly tax payments are due on or before the twenty-fifth day of the second month following the month of production. If the report the taxpayer is required to file shows tax due, the taxpayer shall pay the tax due when the report is filed. The department may allow extensions for paying taxes by regulation. The department may, if an extension is granted, request the payment of the reasonable estimate of ninety percent (90%) of the tax by the statutory due date, with the remaining tax remitted with the extended return;

 

(iv) If a taxpayer's liability for severance tax imposed under this article is less than thirty thousand dollars ($30,000.00) for the preceding calendar year, monthly payment requirements are waived and the taxpayer shall pay the tax annually. The annual payment is due on February 25 of the year following the year in which production occurred. If a taxpayer who pays annually accumulates an annual liability exceeding thirty thousand dollars ($30,000.00), that taxpayer shall commence remitting tax payments as provided in paragraph (iii) of this subsection during the production year following the year in which the accumulated tax liability exceeded thirty thousand dollars ($30,000.00). It is the taxpayer's responsibility to notify the department concerning the change from annual to monthly payment requirements or from monthly to annual payment.

 

(c) Timelines. Except as otherwise provided, there are no specific applicable provisions for timelines for this article.

 

39-14-108. Enforcement.

 

(a) General. The following shall apply:

 

(i) If the statement provided by W.S. 39-14-107(a)(i) is not filed, the department shall value the property from the best information available. The department may use information other than contained in the statement provided by W.S. 39-14-107(a)(i) to determine the fair market value of the property provided by W.S. 39-14-102(a);

 

(ii) When a taxpayer producing valuable deposits fails to pay the taxes imposed by this article when due, the purchaser of the produced valuable deposit shall withhold and remit to the department the taxpayer's subsequently accruing taxes on the produced valuable deposit acquired by the purchaser. This provision is subject to the following conditions:

 

(A) The department shall notify the purchaser and taxpayer in writing on or before the first day of the production month for which subsequent taxes are due that the purchaser shall begin remitting taxes to the department as provided in W.S. 39-14-107(b)(iii);

 

(B) The department shall notify the purchaser in writing of the proper rates for calculating taxes due and the percentage of the produced valuable deposit subject to taxation by this article;

 

(C) The amount of tax paid by a purchaser to the department, as required by this paragraph, shall offset and satisfy all claims for payments for the purchase of produced valuable deposits to the extent of the tax payment;

 

(D) This paragraph shall not apply under circumstances where the purchaser is required to continue payments due to legal proceedings;

 

(E) This paragraph shall not apply until after the purchaser has been notified in writing that subsequent accruing taxes will be payable by the purchaser.

 

(iii) Severance taxes due together with interest, penalties and costs shall be collectible by the department by appropriate judicial proceedings.

 

(b) Audits. The following shall apply:

 

(i) The department may employ examiners and obtain other technical services, to investigate and examine the books and records of any person paying taxes imposed under W.S. 39-13-101 through 39-13-111. The department shall notify the county assessor of any change in valuation as determined by audits, examinations or investigations establishing:

 

(A) Taxable volumes or values were not accurately reported;

 

(B) Clerical errors were made in determining taxable volumes or values;

 

(C) Taxable volumes or values for the year that production occurred were not calculated in compliance with Wyoming statutes or rules governing the determinations; or

 

(D) Additional payment for production was received and not reported whether such payment was received in the year of production or in subsequent years.

 

(ii) Effective until March 1, 1994, the department is authorized to rely on final audit findings under W.S. 9-2-2003, taxpayer amended returns or department review, and to certify mine product valuation amendments for production in calendar year 1985 and thereafter, to the county assessor of the county in which the property is located, to be entered upon the assessment rolls of the county and taxes computed and collected thereon subject to appeal under W.S. 39-14-109(b)(ii);

 

(iii) Commencing January 1, 2003, the department is authorized to rely on final audit findings, taxpayer amended returns or department review, and to certify mine product valuation amendments to the county assessor of the county in which the property is located, to be entered upon the assessment rolls of the county and taxes computed and collected thereon subject to appeal under W.S. 39-14-109(b)(ii), provided that the return is filed within three (3) years from the date the production should have been reported pursuant to W.S. 39-14-107(a)(i), and that the audit or review commenced within the time period as required by paragraph (vii) of this subsection. Commencement of an audit, completion of an audit, and final audit findings and final determination by the department being issued to the taxpayer shall not preclude the taxpayer from filing amended returns within the time period specified herein, and the amended returns may be audited within the time period stated in paragraph (vii) of this subsection;

 

(iv) The department is authorized to rely on final audit findings, taxpayer amended returns or department review, and to assess deficient severance tax payments, interest and penalty, if any, for the same periods governing mine product valuation amendments pursuant to paragraphs (ii) and (iii) of this subsection;

 

(v) All audits or department reviews, as applicable, pursuant to paragraphs (ii), (iii) and (iv) of this subsection are subject to the following conditions:

 

(A) Audits are commenced when the taxpayer receives written notice of the intended action;

 

(B) Prior to entering the premises of a taxpayer or third party, the taxpayer or third party shall be provided at least fourteen (14) days written notice;

 

(C) Audits are completed when the final findings are issued to the taxpayer by the department of audit;

 

(D) Unless otherwise agreed to in writing, audits shall be completed and the final audit findings issued to the taxpayer not later than the end of the month two (2) years after the audit is commenced and not sooner than one (1) year following the reporting date for ad valorem taxes;

 

(E) Any assessment or levy, including the assessment of a penalty and interest, if any, resulting from final audit findings or department review shall be issued within one (1) year following the completion of the audit or review;

 

(F) Upon receipt of department review findings, the taxpayer shall have sixty (60) days in which to submit a response.

 

(vi) Where there is evidence of gross negligence by the taxpayer in reporting and valuing production, an audit may examine prior years and issue assessments where gross negligence occurred. This section shall not apply to mine product valuation amendments to add the value of unreported production;

 

(vii) Audits provided by this article shall commence within three (3) years and six (6) months immediately following the reporting date for ad valorem taxes and taxpayers shall keep accurate books and records of all production subject to taxes imposed by this article and determinations of taxable value as prescribed by W.S. 39-14-103(b) for a period of seven (7) years and make them available to department examiners for audit purposes. Amended returns filed with the department during the conduct of an audit prior to the issuance of the final audit findings may be made available by the taxpayer to the audit examiners. If the examination discloses evidence of gross negligence by the taxpayer in reporting and paying the tax, the department may examine all pertinent records for any reporting period without regard to the limitations set forth in paragraphs (vii) and (viii) of this subsection;

 

(viii) In order to examine relevant books or records of a taxpayer subject to a tax imposed by this article or to secure any information related to enforcement of this article, authorized representatives of the department may at any time during normal business hours enter premises of a taxpayer liable for a tax imposed by this article or the premises of any third party having information regarding that taxpayer's liability. Prior to entering the premises of a taxpayer or third party, the department shall provide fourteen (14) days written notice to the taxpayer and third party. Such examinations shall be completed and the written results thereof provided to the taxpayer by the end of the third calendar year following the calendar year in which the audit was commenced;

 

(ix) The state may employ auditors and obtain other technical assistance necessary to determine if the tax imposed by this article has been properly reported and paid.

 

(c) Interest. The following shall apply:

 

(i) The taxpayer is entitled to receive an offsetting credit for any overpaid gross product or severance tax identified by an audit that is within the scope of the audit period, without regard to the limitation period for requesting refunds. In calculating interest, the department or board of county commissioners shall first compute a net deficiency amount after subtracting any offsetting credit and then calculate any interest due;

 

(ii) Taxes are delinquent pursuant to paragraphs (iii) and (iv) of this subsection when a taxpayer or his agent knew or reasonably should have known that the total tax liability was not paid when due;

 

(iii) The balance of any ad valorem tax not paid as provided by W.S. 39-14-107(b)(ii) is delinquent after the day on which it is payable and shall bear interest at eighteen percent (18%) per annum until paid or collected;

 

(iv) Effective January 1, 1994, interest at an annual rate equal to the average prime interest rate as determined by the state treasurer during the preceding fiscal year plus four percent (4%) shall be added to all delinquent severance taxes on any mineral produced on or after January 1, 1994. To determine the average prime interest rate, the state treasurer shall average the prime interest rate for at least seventy-five percent (75%) of the thirty (30) largest banks in the United States. The interest rate on delinquent severance taxes shall be adjusted on January 1 of each year following the year in which the taxes first became delinquent. In no instance shall the delinquent tax rate be less than twelve percent (12%) nor greater than eighteen percent (18%) from any mineral produced on or after January 1, 1994. The interest rate on any delinquent mineral tax from any mineral produced before January 1, 1994, shall be eighteen percent (18%) per annum.

 

(d) Penalties. The following shall apply:

 

(i) The taxpayer is entitled to receive an offsetting credit for any overpaid gross product or severance tax identified by an audit that is within the scope of the audit period, without regard to the limitation period for requesting refunds. In calculating penalty, the department or board of county commissioners shall first compute a net deficiency amount after subtracting any offsetting credit and then calculate any penalty due;

 

(ii) If any person fails to file the report required by W.S. 39-14-107(a)(i)(A) by the due date or any extension thereof, the department may impose a penalty equal to a total of one percent (1%) of the taxable value of the production from the well, mine or mining claim but not to exceed five thousand dollars ($5,000.00) for each calendar month or portion thereof that the report or information is late. If any person fails to file reports and other information required by rule of the department of revenue other than those required by W.S. 39-14-107(a)(iv) or 39-14-107(a)(i)(A), the department may impose a penalty of up to one thousand dollars ($1,000.00). The department may waive penalties under this paragraph for good cause. Penalties imposed under this paragraph may be appealed to the state board of equalization;

 

(iii) If any person fails to make or file a return and remit the tax as required by W.S. 39-14-107, the department shall impose a penalty of five percent (5%) of the taxes due for each thirty (30) day period, or fraction thereof, elapsing between the due date of the return and the date filed, unless the person for good cause obtains from the department an extension of time for filing prior to the due date for filing. In no event shall the total penalty imposed by this subsection exceed twenty-five percent (25%) of the tax due. The department, for good cause, may waive a penalty imposed for failure to file a return for any one (1) month in a calendar year, provided that:

 

(A) The return was filed within five (5) business days following the due date, including an approved extension period; and

 

(B) The taxpayer requests the waiver in writing within fifteen (15) days after the return was filed, setting forth the reasons for the late filing.

 

(iv) If any part of a tax deficiency is due to negligence or intentional disregard of rules and regulations, there shall be added a penalty of five percent (5%) of the amount of the deficiency plus interest as provided by paragraph (c)(iv) of this subsection. The taxes, penalty and interest shall be paid by the taxpayer within ten (10) days after receipt of notice and demand by the department;

 

(v) The department may credit or waive penalties imposed by paragraphs (iii) and (iv) of this subsection as part of a settlement or for any other good cause.

 

(e) Liens. The following shall apply:

 

(i) Repealed by Laws 2002, Ch. 50, 2.

 

(ii) Repealed By Laws 2002, Ch. 50, 2.

 

(iii) Repealed By Laws 2002, Ch. 50, 2.

 

(iv) All taxes, fees, penalties and interest imposed under this article are an automatic and continuing lien in favor of the state of Wyoming. The lien is on all property in the state of Wyoming, real, tangible and intangible, including all after acquired property rights, future production and rights to property, of any person severing minerals in this state and who is liable under Wyoming law for the collection, payment or remittance of the severance tax and corresponding penalty or interest as of the date such taxes, fees, penalties or interest is due, and remains a lien until paid;

 

(v) A lien under this subsection is also a lien on all interests in the mineral estate from which the production was severed, and on all future production of the same mineral from the same leasehold, regardless of any change of ownership or change in the person extracting the mineral;

 

(vi) Any lien arising under this subsection is superior and paramount to all other liens, claims, mortgages or any other encumbrance of any kind except a lien, claim, mortgage or other encumbrance of record held by a bona fide creditor and properly perfected, filed or recorded under Wyoming law prior to the filing of a lien as provided by paragraph (viii) of this subsection;

 

(vii) The department may file a notice of lien at any time at its discretion, except no lien shall be enforced until the right of the taxpayer to file and properly perfect an appeal concerning the tax delinquent property before the state board of equalization has expired. A properly perfected appeal on the tax delinquent property before the state board of equalization or any subsequent properly perfected appeal on the same property to a district court or the supreme court shall stay enforcement of a lien filed by the department until such appeal has been exhausted or concluded;

 

(viii) In order to perfect a tax lien under this subsection, the department of revenue shall file a notice of the tax lien with the secretary of state. The notice of the tax lien shall contain:

 

(A) The name and last known address of the person or persons against whose property the lien is filed including, but not limited to, the person severing the mineral;

 

(B) The name and address of the department of revenue as the holder of the lien and the name of the contact person within the department;

 

(C) The amount of the tax, fees, penalties and interest owed the state of Wyoming;

 

(D) A statement that the amount of the unpaid tax, fees, penalties or interest is a lien on all property, real, tangible or intangible, including all after acquired property and rights to the property belonging to the person who severed the mineral and located within the state of Wyoming, as well as all interest in the mineral estate from which the production was severed and any future production from the same mineral leasehold.

 

(ix) No other action beyond that described in paragraph (viii) of this subsection shall be required to perfect a tax lien;

 

(x) The filing of the notice of the tax lien as described in paragraph (viii) of this subsection shall constitute record notice of the tax lien;

 

(xi) One (1) notice of the tax lien shall be deemed sufficient to cover all taxes, together with interest, fees and penalty of the same nature which may accrue after the filing of the notice;

 

(xii) Any tax lien created under this subsection and duly filed with the secretary of state shall survive the death or incapacitation of any person, and shall survive any other destruction or attempted destruction of any interest in property owned by any person liable under Wyoming law for the collection, payment or remittance of taxes, fees, penalties or interest to the state;

 

(xiii) In the event of foreclosure, the department of revenue shall be entitled to recover the costs of filing the lien, foreclosing on the lien and reasonable attorney's fees;

 

(xiv) All notice of tax liens shall be released within sixty (60) days after taxes, penalties and interest due are paid or collected;

 

(xv) Notwithstanding that the lien is a lien on all interests in the mineral estate from which the production was severed and on all future production from the same leasehold, the department may for good cause shown, release the lien on all property in this state, real, tangible and intangible, and settle delinquent taxes, interest and penalties to be collected against future production from that leasehold;

 

(xvi) The secretary of state is authorized and directed to maintain copies of all tax liens filed by the department of revenue pursuant to this chapter, and to maintain a data base of such tax liens and to provide copies to any person pursuant to the duties of the secretary of state as set forth in W.S. 9-1-301 et seq. All tax liens on file with any county in this state and in good standing on the effective date of this paragraph shall remain effective and in good standing. Within sixty (60) days of the effective date of this paragraph, the director of the department of revenue shall transmit to the secretary of state for filing copies of all tax liens that the director seeks to have in continuing effect. Upon the filing of a copy of the tax lien with the secretary of state, the tax lien shall continue to be fully effective until released by the department of revenue.

 

(f) Tax sales. There are no specific applicable provisions for tax sales for this article.

 

39-14-109. Taxpayer remedies.

 

(a) Interpretation requests. The following shall apply:

 

(i) The taxpayer may request a value determination from the department and propose a value determination method which may be used until the department issues a value determination. The taxpayer shall submit all available data relevant to its proposal and any additional information the department deems necessary. After the department issues its determination, the taxpayer shall make adjustments based upon the value established or request a hearing by the board;

 

(ii) A taxpayer may request and the department shall provide written interpretations of these statutes and rules. When requesting an interpretation, a taxpayer must set forth the facts and circumstances pertinent to the issue. If the department deems the facts and circumstances provided to be insufficient, it may request additional information. A taxpayer may act in reliance upon a written interpretation through the end of the calendar year in which the interpretation was issued, or until revoked by the department, whichever occurs last if the pertinent facts and circumstances were substantially correct and fully disclosed.

 

(b) Appeals. The following shall apply:

 

(i) Following determination of the fair market value of property the department shall notify the taxpayer by mail of the assessed value. The person assessed may file written objections to the assessment with the board within thirty (30) days of the date of postmark and appear before the board at a time specified by the board. The person assessed shall also file a copy of the written objections with the county treasurer of the county in which the property is located, who shall notify the county assessor and the board of county commissioners, with an estimate of the tax amount under appeal based upon the previous year's tax levy;

 

(ii) Mine product valuation amendments under this section may be appealed by the taxpayer to the board within thirty (30) days of the final administrative decision;

 

(iii) Any taxpayer who feels aggrieved by the valuation and taxes levied by this article may appeal to the board. The appeal does not relieve the taxpayer from paying the tax when due and payable nor does the payment invalidate the appeal. No restraining order or injunction shall be granted or issued by any court or judge to restrain or enjoin the collection of any tax, interest or penalty imposed by this article;

 

(iv) The state board of equalization shall perform the duties specified in article 15, section 10 of the Wyoming constitution and shall hear appeals from county boards of equalization and review final decisions of the department upon application of any interested person adversely affected, including boards of county commissioners for the purposes of this paragraph, under the contested case procedures of the Wyoming Administrative Procedure Act. Any interested person adversely affected by the adoption, amendment or repeal of a rule pursuant to W.S. 16-3-103(a) shall be afforded an opportunity for a hearing before the board;

 

(v) Any person including the state of Wyoming aggrieved by any order issued by the board, or any county board of equalization whose decision has been reversed or modified by the state board of equalization, may appeal the decision of the board to the district court of the county in which the property or some part thereof is situated.

 

(c) Refunds. The following shall apply:

 

(i) If a taxpayer has reason to believe that ad valorem taxes imposed by this article have been overpaid, a request for refund shall be filed with the department by submitting amended returns within three (3) years from the date the production should have been reported pursuant to W.S. 39-14-107(a)(i). Any refund granted shall be subject to modification or revocation upon audit;

 

(ii) If a taxpayer has reason to believe that taxes imposed by this article have been overpaid, a request for refund shall be filed with the department by submitting an amended return within three (3) years from the date the production should have been reported pursuant to W.S. 39-14-107(a)(i). Refunds of two thousand dollars ($2,000.00), or less may be applied to subsequent payments for taxes imposed by this article. Requests for refunds exceeding two thousand dollars ($2,000.00) shall be approved in writing by the department prior to the taxpayer receiving credit. All refunds granted are subject to modification or revocation upon audit;

 

(iii) Notwithstanding paragraphs (i) and (ii) of this subsection, the taxpayer is entitled to receive a refund of any overpaid ad valorem or severance tax identified by an audit regardless of whether a refund has been requested.

 

(d) Credits. The following shall apply:

 

(i) Any refund may, at the discretion of the board of county commissioners, be made in the form of credit against future tax payments for a period not to exceed five (5) years. Unless otherwise agreed to by the taxpayer, refunds in the form of credit against future tax payments shall be made in no less than equal annual amounts. The board of county commissioners shall not provide a credit for interest on the excess tax paid unless the taxes are paid under protest due to an appeal pending before the state board of equalization and the taxpayer prevails in the appeal;

 

(ii) The taxpayer is entitled to receive an offsetting credit for any overpaid gross product or severance tax identified by an audit that is within the scope of the audit without regard to the limitation period for requesting refunds;

 

(iii) If a taxpayer overpaid taxes imposed by this article, the department shall allow a credit in the amount of the overpayment to be taken on the taxpayer's subsequent monthly reports for the production year.

 

(e) Redemption. There are no specific applicable provisions for redemption for this article.

 

(f) Escrow. The following shall apply:

 

(i) If ad valorem taxes are paid under protest to the extent of and due to an appeal pending before the state board of equalization or any court of competent jurisdiction, the county treasurer shall deposit that protested amount under appeal in an interest bearing escrow account and withhold distribution until a final decision on the appeal has been rendered. To the extent the taxpayer prevails in the appeal, the county treasurer shall refund that amount under appeal, plus interest earned thereon, to the taxpayer within thirty (30) days from the day the final decision is rendered. If the taxpayer pays to the county an amount in excess of the protested amount under appeal, the excess shall be distributed as provided by law;

 

(ii) If severance taxes are paid under protest to the extent of and due to an appeal pending before the state board of equalization or any court of competent jurisdiction, the state treasurer shall deposit that protested amount under appeal in a separate interest bearing escrow account and withhold distribution until a final decision on the appeal has been rendered by the state board of equalization or the court. To the extent the taxpayer prevails in the appeal, the state treasurer shall refund that amount under appeal, plus interest earned thereon, to the taxpayer within thirty (30) days from the day the final decision is rendered. If the taxpayer pays to the state an amount in excess of the protested amount under appeal, the excess shall be distributed as provided by law;

 

(iii) This provision does not enlarge or curtail the ability of a taxpayer to appeal any department of revenue decision as otherwise provided for under this act.

 

39-14-110. Statute of limitations.

 

Except as otherwise provided in this article, there is no general statute of limitations for this article.

 

39-14-111. Distribution.

 

(a) As provided by W.S. 39-14-104(a), the total severance tax rate for surface coal shall be seven percent (7%). As provided by W.S. 39-14-104(b), the total severance tax rate for underground coal shall be three and three-quarters percent (3.75%). A one and one-half percent (1.5%) tax imposed by W.S. 39-14-104(a)(i) and a one and one-half percent (1.5%) tax imposed by W.S. 39-14-104(b)(i) shall be deposited into the permanent Wyoming mineral trust fund. All other taxes imposed by W.S. 39-14-104(a) and (b) shall be deposited into the severance tax distribution account.

 

(b) Repealed by Laws 2002, Ch. 62, 2.

 

(c) Repealed By Laws 2002, Ch. 62, 2.

 

(d) Repealed By Laws 2002, Ch. 62, 2.

 

(e) If the cumulative taxes levied against coal in this section do not exceed sixty cents ($.60) per ton of surface mined coal, or thirty cents ($.30) per ton of underground mined coal, the tax proceeds shall be distributed in the manner provided in this section. If the cumulative taxes in this section exceed sixty cents ($.60) per ton of surface mined coal, or thirty cents ($.30) per ton of underground mined coal, so that the limit imposed by W.S. 39-14-105(b) becomes operative, an amount equal to one and one-half percent (1.5%) of the value of the gross product of coal extracted shall be deducted from the total tax proceeds for deposit in the permanent mineral trust fund and the remaining proceeds shall be distributed on a pro rata basis for the purposes specified in this section and any other applicable law.

 

(f) Repealed by Laws 2000, Ch. 97, 4.

 

(g) All payments received pursuant to W.S. 39-14-107(b)(iii) shall be transferred to an account. The monies in this account shall be invested or deposited in accordance with W.S. 9-4-714 through 9-4-831, and any interest earned shall be credited to the general fund. The revenue under W.S. 39-14-107(b)(iii) shall be distributed in accordance with this section subject to the following and except as otherwise provided by law for fiscal year 1994:

 

(i) Revenues earned during each fiscal year shall be recognized as revenue during that fiscal year for accounting purposes;

 

(ii) Revenues which are earned and received during the first three (3) calendar quarters of the fiscal year shall be distributed within the first fifteen (15) days of October, January and April. For the last quarter of each fiscal year, revenues earned or received shall be distributed not later than June 30. In computing distributions for the last quarter, the state treasurer shall use the most recent consensus revenue estimating group estimates to the extent that earnings cannot be determined by June 30. Not later than September 15, the state treasurer shall compute the actual earnings for the last quarter of the preceding fiscal year and make adjustments to the October distributions in an amount equal to the difference between revenues earned and actual distributions for the preceding fiscal year.

 

(h) Repealed By Laws 2001, Ch. 209, 3.

 

(j) Repealed by Laws 2000, Ch. 97, 4.

 

(k) Repealed By Laws 2002, Ch. 62, 2.

 

ARTICLE 2 - OIL AND GAS

 

39-14-201. Definitions.

 

(a) As used in this article:

 

(i) "Arm's-length market or sales price" means the transaction price determined in connection with a bona fide arm's length sale;

 

(ii) "Bona fide arm's-length sale" means a transaction in cash or terms equivalent to cash for specified property rights after reasonable exposure in a competitive market between a willing, well informed and prudent buyer and seller with adverse economic interests and assuming neither party is acting under undue compulsion or duress;

 

(iii) "Average daily production" means the qualified maximum total production of domestic crude oil produced from wells reported as oil wells to the Wyoming oil and gas commission during the preceding calendar year divided by the number of calendar days in that year times the number of wells which produced and wells which injected substances for the recovery of crude petroleum from that property or lease in that year. To qualify as maximum total production each well must have been maintained at the maximum feasible rate of production in accordance with recognized conservation practices and not significantly curtailed by reason of mechanical failure or other disruption in production;

 

(iv) "Collection wells" means reservoir access holes drilled from underground shafts or tunnels from which crude oil or natural gas is produced;

 

(v) "Compressor" means a device associated with processing or transporting natural gas which mechanically increases the pressure of natural gas;

 

(vi) "Crude oil" means the crude petroleum oil and any other hydrocarbons, regardless of gravity, produced at the well in liquid form by ordinary production methods and which are not the result of condensation of gas before or after it leaves the reservoir;

 

(vii) "Dehydrator" means a device which removes water vapor that is commonly associated with raw natural gas;

 

(viii) "Department review" means, but is not limited to, corrections of clerical errors or reconciliations of tax reports with reports required by other state or federal agencies;

 

(ix) "Gathering" means the transportation of crude oil, lease condensate or natural gas from multiple wells by separate and individual pipelines to a central point of accumulation, dehydration, compression, separation, heating and treating or storage;

 

(x) "Heating and treating" means the removal of solid, liquid and gaseous components from the well stream by chemical, mechanical and thermal processes;

 

(xi) "Lease" means the area encompassed in the leasehold granting the right to explore for or produce crude oil or natural gas, which may include a single tract or multiple tracts of land described in the instrument granting the leasehold;

 

(xii) "Lease automatic custody transfer unit (LACT)" means a device which automatically and mechanically measures and at which point custody of crude oil transfers from the producer to the purchaser;

 

(xiii) "Lease condensate" means liquid hydrocarbons which are separated from other components of the natural gas production stream on the lease or before the inlet to a natural gas processing facility;

 

(xiv) "Mine product valuation amendment" means a valuation adjustment determination made by the department including special directives;

 

(xv) "Natural gas" means all gases, both hydrocarbon and nonhydrocarbon, that occur naturally beneath the earth's crust and are produced from an oil or gas well. For the purposes of taxation, the term natural gas includes products separated for sale or distribution during processing of the natural gas stream including, but not limited to plant condensate, natural gas liquids and sulfur;

 

(xvi) "Purchaser" means the first purchaser who acquires the produced crude oil, lease condensate or natural gas from the taxpayer for value;

 

(xvii) "Previously shut-in well" means a well from which crude oil previously has been produced and from which no production has occurred for at least the two (2) consecutive years prior to January 1, 1995;

 

(xviii) "Processing" means any activity occurring beyond the inlet to a natural gas processing facility that changes the well stream's physical or chemical characteristics, enhances the marketability of the stream, or enhances the value of the separate components of the stream. Processing includes, but is not limited to fractionation, absorption, adsorption, flashing, refrigeration, cryogenics, sweetening, dehydration within a processing facility, beneficiation, stabilizing, compression (other than production compression such as reinjection, wellhead pressure regulation or the changing of pressures and temperatures in a reservoir) and separation which occurs within a processing facility;

 

(xix) "Property" means lease or unit. The term "property" is synonymous with the term "mining claim";

 

(xx) "Recompletion" means any downhole operation that is conducted to establish production of an oil or gas well in any geological interval not currently completed or producing which has been approved as a recompletion by the Wyoming oil and gas conservation commission;

 

(xxi) "Reservoir" means an underground accumulation of oil or gas or both characterized by a single pressure system which is segregated from other such accumulations;

 

(xxii) "Separating" means the isolation of the well stream into discrete gas, liquid hydrocarbons, liquid water and solid components;

 

(xxiii) "Severance tax" means an excise tax imposed on the present and continuing privilege of removing, extracting, severing or producing any mineral in this state;

 

(xxiv) "Stripper production" means the production from a property or lease whose average daily production of crude petroleum from wells reported as oil wells to the Wyoming oil and gas commission did not exceed:

 

(A) Ten (10) barrels per day per well during the preceding calendar year if the average price received by the producer for production from the property was twenty dollars ($20.00) or more per barrel; or

 

(B) Fifteen (15) barrels per day per well during the preceding calendar year if the average price received by the producer for production from the property was less than twenty dollars ($20.00) per barrel.

 

(xxv) "Sweetening" means any activity that removes acid gases, such as hydrogen sulfide and carbon dioxide, from the well stream. Sweetening includes, but is not limited to absorption, stabilization, thermal and catalytic conversions, chemical reaction and regeneration;

 

(xxvi) "Tertiary production" means the crude oil recovered from a petroleum reservoir by means of a tertiary enhanced recovery project to which one (1) or more tertiary enhanced recovery techniques meeting the certification requirements of the Wyoming oil and gas conservation commission or the United States government are being applied;

 

(xxvii) "Unit" means the total area incorporated in a unitization agreement providing for a consolidated development and operational plan to recover oil or gas from the lease areas incorporated in the unit. Participating areas of units as designated by the Wyoming oil and gas conservation commission may be designated as separate units for production tax purposes;

 

(xxviii) "Unreported production" means production volume for which no tax report was filed for the reporting period by the taxpayer or his agent;

 

(xxix) "Value of the gross product" means fair market value as prescribed by W.S. 39-14-203(b), less any deductions and exemption allowed by Wyoming law or rules;

 

(xxx) "Well" means a hole drilled in the earth for the purpose of finding or producing crude oil or natural gas;

 

(xxxi) "Wildcat well" means any crude oil or natural gas well designated as a wildcat well by the Wyoming oil and gas conservation commission. The Wyoming oil and gas conservation commission shall adopt rules and criteria to implement this designation process. The rules and criteria shall provide that wildcat wells are wells outside known fields or new wells which are determined by the commission to have discovered crude oil or natural gas in a pool not previously proven productive;

 

(xxxii) "Workover" means any downhole operation that is designed to sustain, restore or increase the production rate or the ultimate recovery in the geologic interval in which an oil or gas well or group of wells is currently completed and producing and approved as a workover by the Wyoming oil and gas conservation commission;

 

(xxxiii) For the purposes of W.S. 39-14-203(b)(vi)(E), "rate of return" means the weighted average cost of capital (hereafter referred to as the "capitalization rate") as calculated under this paragraph for the ten (10) largest natural gas producers in this state on a production volume basis during the preceding production year for which the appropriate data is publicly available (hereafter referred to as the "representative companies"). The following shall apply:

 

(A) The capitalization rate is any rate used to convert an income stream into a present worth of future benefits. The rate reflects the relationship between one (1) year's income or an annual average of several years' income and the corresponding value. The department shall annually calculate the capitalization rate based upon the band of investment method as defined by this paragraph. The primary components of the capitalization rate shall include capital structure and cost of capital (debt, preferred and equity capital) as developed in appropriate money markets for the representative companies;

 

(B) "Band of investment method" means that the capitalization rate is equal to the weighted average cost of the debt and equity portions of the capital investment. The following shall apply:

 

(I) Proper development and application of the band of investment shall require obtaining and analyzing data for the percent of debt and equity which makes up the capital structure as determined from published financial sources such as Moody's bond record, Moody's bond survey, Value Line, Moody's public utility or transportation manuals, regulatory reports or other recognized financial materials. The determination shall be done by the corporate bonds' rating of the representative companies or other means if bond ratings are not available;

 

(II) Debt rate estimates used in the band of investment method shall reflect the average current cost of yield to maturity of outstanding issues of debt financing for the year ending closest to the date of the calculation of the capitalization rate required by this paragraph. The rates shall be taken from published financial sources such as Moody's public utility news reports or other recognized financial materials. The determination shall be done by corporate bond rating of the representative companies;

 

(III) Preferred rate estimates used in the band of investment method shall reflect the average current cost of market yield of outstanding issues of preferred stock financing for the year ending closest to the date of the calculation of the capitalization rate required by this paragraph. The rates shall be taken from published financial sources such as Moody's public utility news reports or other recognized financial materials. The determination shall be done by corporate bond rating of the representative companies;

 

(IV) The current cost of equity shall be based on data from the capital markets of the representative companies. Equity rates shall reflect the representative cost of equity financing for the representative companies by corporate bond rating as of the date of the calculation of the capitalization rate under this paragraph. The current cost of equity shall be developed by accepted models in the appraisal and financial communities. These models shall include, but are not limited to, equity risk premium, capital asset pricing model and the discounted cash flow model. The sources of required data shall be taken from published financial sources such as Value Line, Ibbotson Associates, Wall Street Journal, regulatory filings and other recognized financial materials. Not later than March 15 of each year, the department shall conduct a public meeting for presentation of the capitalization rate to be used to value production in the same calendar year in which the rate is determined. Notice of the date and time of the meeting shall be provided to all interested parties at least thirty (30) days prior to the meeting. Interested parties may present written or oral comments on the proposed capitalization rate or within five (5) business days thereafter. A final determination of the capitalization rate shall be made available on or before March 31 or as soon thereafter as possible;

 

(V) Within thirty (30) days of the final capitalization rate determination under this paragraph, the taxpayer shall file amended returns and remit any severance tax due for that portion of the year for which the capitalization rate had yet to be determined and no interest or penalty shall be due as a result of the application of the new capitalization rate.

 

(xxxiv) For the purposes of W.S. 39-14-203(b)(vi)(E), "return on investment" means the product of the rate of return multiplied by the gross capital investment in all processing and transportation facilities used by the taxpayer to process or transport natural gas from the point of valuation to the point of arms-length sale as maintained on the taxpayer's books and records under generally accepted accounting principles;

 

(xxxv) For the purposes of W.S. 39-14-203(b)(vi)(E), "total direct processing and transportation costs" means all costs incurred by the taxpayer to operate all processing or transportation facilities from the point of valuation to the point of arms-length sale as maintained on the taxpayer's books and records. The costs shall include salaries and benefits; contract labor; repairs and maintenance including processing facility turnarounds; fuel, power and utilities; chemicals; processing facility premise lease costs to nonaffiliated parties; waste water treatment; disposal of byproduct and waste products; safety; costs of environmental permitting and monitoring, federal and state environmental compliance fees and costs, excluding compensatory and punitive damages and governmental penalties; laboratory; distributive control system; and ad valorem taxes on real and tangible personal property excluding the gross products tax. The taxpayer shall be entitled to its proportionate share of the total direct processing and transportation costs as measured by its percentage of inlet volumes;

 

(xxxvi) For the purposes of paragraph (xxxiv) of this subsection, "gross capital investment" means the total gross capitalized investment in the processing and transportation facilities from the point of valuation to the point of arms-length sale as maintained on the taxpayer's books and records under generally accepted accounting principles. The gross capital investment shall be calculated based on the company's books and records as of January 1 plus December 31 of the production year, divided by two (2). For purposes of this paragraph, gross capital investment shall not include any investment in equipment that is considered permanently abandoned under generally accepted accounting principles. Gross capital investment shall include items which are not in continuous operation if they remain on the company's books and records under generally accepted accounting principles.

 

39-14-202. Administration; confidentiality.

 

(a) Administration. The following shall apply:

 

(i) The department shall annually value and assess crude oil, lease condensate or natural gas production at its fair market value for taxation;

 

(ii) Based upon the information received or procured pursuant to W.S. 39-14-207(a) or 39-14-208(a), the department shall annually value crude oil, lease condensate and natural gas for the preceding calendar year in appropriate unit measures at the fair market value of the product, after the mining or production process is completed;

 

(iii) Annually, on or before June 1, or as soon thereafter as the fair market value is determined, the department shall certify the valuation determined by the department to the county assessor of the county from which the crude oil, lease condensate or natural gas was produced to be entered upon the assessment rolls of the county;

 

(iv) Repealed by Laws 2009, Ch. 168, 207.

 

(v) Repealed by Laws 2009, Ch. 168, 207.

 

(vi) Repealed by Laws 2009, Ch. 168, 207.

 

(vii) Repealed by Laws 2009, Ch. 168, 207.

 

(viii) Repealed by Laws 2009, Ch. 168, 207.

 

(ix) Repealed By Laws 2008, Ch. 44, 2.

 

(x) Repealed by Laws 2009, Ch. 168, 207.

 

(xi) Repealed By Laws 2000, Ch. 68, 1.

 

(b) Confidentiality. The following shall apply:

 

(i) All taxpayer returns and return information shall be confidential and, except as authorized below, no current or former official, officer, employee or agent of the state of Wyoming or any political subdivision thereof shall disclose any such information obtained by him in connection with his service as an officer or employee;

 

(ii) As used in this subsection, taxpayer returns and return information shall include, but not be limited to, all statements, reports, summaries and all other data and documents under audit or provided by the taxpayer in accordance with the provisions of W.S. 39-14-207(a) and related provision;

 

(iii) Without written authorization from the taxpayer, no current or former official, officer, employee or agent of the state of Wyoming or any political subdivision thereof shall release taxpayer returns and return information pertaining to taxes imposed by this article, except:

 

(A) Information may be released to the governor or his designee, members of the board, to employees of the department of audit, the department of revenue, the consensus revenue estimating group and to the attorney general;

 

(B) Upon prior notice to the taxpayer, information may be released by the department, upon written application, to any other governmental entity if the governmental entity shows sufficient reason to obtain the information for official business;

 

(C) Information is admissible in court or administrative proceedings related to mineral taxes or government royalties.

 

(iv) Any person receiving information pursuant to subparagraph (iii)(B) of this subsection shall sign an agreement with the department to keep the information confidential;

 

(v) Units of production reported by the taxpayer and the taxpayer's taxable value are not confidential and may be released without qualification;

 

(vi) Any person who negligently violates this subsection is guilty of a misdemeanor and upon conviction shall be fined not more than one thousand dollars ($1,000.00). Any person who intentionally violates this subsection is guilty of a misdemeanor and upon conviction shall be fined not less than one thousand dollars ($1,000.00), but not more than five thousand dollars ($5,000.00) and imprisoned for not more than one (1) year.

 

39-14-203. Imposition.

 

(a) Taxable event. The following shall apply:

 

(i) There is levied a severance tax on the value of the gross product extracted for the privilege of severing or extracting crude oil, lease condensate or natural gas in the state. The tax imposed by this subsection shall be in addition to all other taxes imposed by law including, but not limited to, ad valorem taxes imposed by W.S. 39-13-101 through 39-13-111.

 

(b) Basis of tax. The following shall apply:

 

(i) Crude oil, lease condensate and natural gas shall be valued for taxation as provided in this subsection;

 

(ii) The fair market value for crude oil, lease condensate and natural gas shall be determined after the production process is completed. Notwithstanding paragraph (x) of this subsection, expenses incurred by the producer prior to the point of valuation are not deductible in determining the fair market value of the mineral;

 

(iii) The production process for crude oil or lease condensate is completed after extracting from the well, gathering, heating and treating, separating, injecting for enhanced recovery, and any other activity which occurs before the outlet of the initial storage facility or lease automatic custody transfer (LACT) unit;

 

(iv) The production process for natural gas is completed after extracting from the well, gathering, separating, injecting and any other activity which occurs before the outlet of the initial dehydrator. When no dehydration is performed, other than within a processing facility, the production process is completed at the inlet to the initial transportation related compressor, custody transfer meter or processing facility, whichever occurs first;

 

(v) If the crude oil, lease condensate or natural gas production as provided by paragraphs (iii) and (iv) of this subsection are sold to a third party, or processed or transported by a third party at or prior to the point of valuation provided in paragraphs (iii) and (iv) of this subsection, the fair market value shall be the value established by bona fide arms-length transaction;

 

(vi) In the event the crude oil, lease condensate or natural gas production as provided by paragraphs (iii) and (iv) of this subsection is not sold at or prior to the point of valuation by bona fide arms-length sale, or, except as otherwise provided, if the production is used without sale, the department shall identify the method it intends to apply under this paragraph to determine the fair market value and notify the taxpayer of that method on or before September 1 of the year preceding the year for which the method shall be employed. The department shall determine the fair market value by application of one (1) of the following methods:

 

(A) Comparable sales - The fair market value is the representative arms-length market price for minerals of like quality and quantity used or sold at the point of valuation provided in paragraphs (iii) and (iv) of this subsection taking into consideration the location, terms and conditions under which the minerals are being used or sold;

 

(B) Comparable value - The fair market value is the arms-length sales price less processing and transportation fees charged to other parties for minerals of like quantity, taking into consideration the quality, terms and conditions under which the minerals are being processed or transported;

 

(C) Netback - The fair market value is the sales price minus expenses incurred by the producer for transporting produced minerals to the point of sale and third party processing fees. The netback method shall not be utilized in determining the taxable value of natural gas which is processed by the producer of the natural gas;

 

(D) Proportionate profits The proportionate profits method shall only be used as a method in conjunction with the provisions of the modified netback method in subparagraph (E) of this paragraph. The fair market value is:

 

(I) The total amount received from the sale of the minerals minus exempt royalties, nonexempt royalties and production taxes times the quotient of the direct cost of producing the minerals divided by the direct cost of producing, processing and transporting the minerals; plus

 

(II) Nonexempt royalties and production taxes.

 

(E) Modified netback The fair market value is:

 

(I) The total amount received from the sale of the natural gas minus the total direct processing and transportation costs, any arms-length transportation fees from the point of valuation to the point of arms-length sale, overhead costs directly related to facility operations not to exceed ten percent (10%) of the total direct processing and transportation costs, exempt royalties and return on investment incurred by the taxpayer from the point of valuation to the point of arms-length sale;

 

(II) There shall be one (1) point of valuation for all interest owners of the processing facility;

 

(III) Any producer utilizing the modified netback method set forth in this subparagraph shall be required to calculate the taxable value for the tax year under the methods of both this subparagraph and subparagraph (D) of this paragraph (hereafter referred to as the "annual floor test"). The taxable value for the year shall be the higher of the two (2) taxable values determined under the annual floor test. If the valuation method is changed as a result of the provision in this subparagraph, no interest or penalties shall be due if the taxpayer files the amended returns and remits the additional severance tax due under this subparagraph not later than May 25 of that calendar year. After the first year of applicability of this subparagraph, for each succeeding year the taxpayer's monthly severance tax returns shall be filed using the valuation method determined under the annual floor test for the immediately preceding calendar year.

 

(vii) When the taxpayer and department jointly agree, that the application of one (1) of the methods listed in paragraph (vi) of this subsection does not produce a representative fair market value for the crude oil, lease condensate or natural gas production, a mutually acceptable alternative method may be applied;

 

(viii) If the fair market value of the crude oil, lease condensate or natural gas production as provided by paragraphs (iii) and (iv) of this subsection is determined pursuant to paragraph (vi) of this subsection, the method employed shall be used in computing taxes for three (3) years including the year in which it is first applied or until changed by mutual agreement between the department and taxpayer. If the taxpayer believes the valuation method selected by the department does not accurately reflect the fair market value of the crude oil, lease condensate or natural gas, the taxpayer may appeal to the board of equalization for a change of methods within one (1) year from the date the department notified the taxpayer of the method selected;

 

(ix) If the department fails to notify the taxpayer of the method selected pursuant to paragraph (vi) of this subsection, the taxpayer shall select a method and inform the department. The method selected by the taxpayer shall be used in computing taxes for three (3) years including the year in which it is first applied or until changed by mutual agreement between the taxpayer and the department. If the department believes the valuation technique selected by the taxpayer does not accurately reflect the fair market value of the crude oil, lease condensate or natural gas, the department may appeal to the board of equalization for a change of methods within one (1) year from the date the taxpayer notified the department of the method selected;

 

(x) If crude oil is enhanced prior to the point of valuation as defined in paragraph (iii) of this subsection by either a blending process with a higher grade hydrocarbon or through a refining process such as cracking, then the fair market value shall be the fair market value of the crude oil absent the blending or refining process;

 

(xi) For natural gas, the total of all actual transportation costs from the point where the production process is completed to the inlet of the processing facility or main transmission line shall not exceed fifty percent (50%) of the value of the gross product without approval of the department based on documentation that the costs are due to environmental, public health or safety considerations, or other unusual circumstances.

 

(c) Taxpayer. The following shall apply:

 

(i) In the case of ad valorem taxes on crude oil, lease condensate or natural gas produced under lease, the lessor is liable for the payment of ad valorem taxes on crude oil, lease condensate or natural gas production removed only to the extent of the lessor's retained interest under the lease, whether royalty or otherwise, and the lessee or his assignee is liable for all other ad valorem taxes due on production under the lease;

 

(ii) In the case of severance taxes, any person extracting crude oil, lease condensate or natural gas and any person owning an interest in the crude oil, lease condensate or natural gas production to the extent of their interest ownership are liable for the payment of the severance taxes together with any penalties and interest;

 

(iii) Any taxpayer paying severance taxes on any crude oil, lease condensate or natural gas production may deduct the taxes paid from any amounts due or to become due to the interest owners of such production in proportion to the interest ownership.

 

39-14-204. Tax rate.

 

(a) Except as otherwise provided by this section and W.S. 39-14-205, the total severance tax on crude oil, lease condensate or natural gas shall be six percent (6%), comprising one and one-half percent (1.5%) imposed by the Wyoming constitution article 15, section 19 and the remaining amount imposed by Wyoming statute. The tax shall be distributed as provided in W.S. 39-14-211 and is imposed as follows:

 

(i) One and one-half percent (1.5%); plus

 

(ii) One-half percent (.5%); plus

 

(iii) Two percent (2%), except for the period January 1, 1999 through December 31, 1999, the rate for crude oil production under this paragraph shall be one percent (1%). If the average monthly price received by Wyoming crude oil producers as determined by the department of revenue equals or exceeds twenty dollars ($20.00) per barrel for three (3) consecutive months, the reduced tax rate of one percent (1%) specified in this paragraph for the period of January 1, 1999 through December 31, 1999 shall terminate; plus

 

(iv) Two percent (2%), except for the period January 1, 1999 through December 31, 1999, the rate for crude oil production under this paragraph shall be one percent (1%). If the average monthly price received by Wyoming crude oil producers as determined by the department of revenue equals or exceeds twenty dollars ($20.00) per barrel for three (3) consecutive months, the reduced tax rate of one percent (1%) specified in this paragraph for the period of January 1, 1999 through December 31, 1999 shall terminate.

 

39-14-205. Exemptions.

 

(a) Stripper production is exempt from the severance taxes imposed by W.S. 39-14-204(a)(iii).

 

(b) Crude oil extracted from collection wells prior to January 1, 1999, is exempt from the severance taxes imposed by W.S. 39-14-204(a)(ii), (iii) and (iv).

 

(c) Tertiary production resulting from projects certified by the Wyoming oil and gas conservation commission after March 31, 2003, and before March 31, 2008, is exempt from the severance taxes imposed by W.S. 39-14-204(a)(iii) for a period of five (5) years from date of first tertiary production provided no exemption shall be allowed under this subsection in those months when the price received by the producer for the tertiary production equals or exceeds twenty-seven dollars and fifty cents ($27.50) per barrel. A taxpayer claiming a tax reduction under this subsection is prohibited from claiming a tax reduction provided by subsection (f) or (g) of this section.

 

(d) In the case of tertiary production of crude oil resulting from injection of carbon dioxide gas, all Wyoming severance taxes paid on the carbon dioxide gas injected shall be deducted from and allowed as a credit against the severance taxes imposed on the oil produced by the injection.

 

(e) Crude oil or natural gas produced from a wildcat well drilled and completed on or after January 1, 1991, and on or before December 31, 1994, is exempt from the severance taxes imposed by W.S. 39-14-204(a)(iii) and (iv) for a period of four (4) years commencing the date of first production from the well.

 

(f) Crude oil and natural gas produced from wells drilled between July 1, 1993, and March 31, 2003, except the production from collection wells, is exempt from the severance taxes imposed by W.S. 39-14-204(a)(iii) and (iv) for the first twenty-four (24) months of production on oil production up to sixty (60) barrels per day or its equivalency in gas production, which for purposes of this subsection shall be six (6) MCF gas production for one (1) barrel oil production, or until the price received by the producer for the new production is equal to or exceeds twenty-two dollars ($22.00) per barrel of oil or two dollars and seventy-five cents ($2.75) per MCF of natural gas for the preceding six (6) month period of time. Provided however, that a taxpayer claiming a tax reduction under this subsection is prohibited from claiming a tax reduction provided by subsection (c) or (e) of this section. Nothing in this subsection shall apply to natural gas produced from any well completed for production at a depth of less than two thousand feet (2,000) from the earth's surface if drilling activities commenced on or after April 1, 2000.

 

(g) Incremental crude oil or natural gas production resulting from a workover or recompletion of an oil or gas well between January 1, 1997, and March 31, 2001, shall be exempt from the severance taxes imposed by W.S. 39-14-204(a)(iii) and (iv) for a period of twenty-four (24) months immediately following the workover or recompletion. Rules, definitions and regulations to implement the provisions of this subsection shall be promulgated by the Wyoming oil and gas conservation commission in consultation with the mineral tax division of the department of revenue. Provided, however that a taxpayer claiming a tax reduction under this subsection is prohibited from claiming a tax reduction provided by subsection (c) or (e) of this section.

 

(h) Crude oil produced from previously shut-in wells is exempt from the severance taxes imposed by W.S. 39-14-204(a)(ii), (iii) and (iv) for the first sixty (60) months of renewed production or until the average price received by the producer for the renewed production is equal to or exceeds twenty-five dollars ($25.00) per barrel of oil for the preceding six (6) months, whichever sooner occurs.

 

(j) Natural gas which is vented or flared under the authority of the Wyoming oil and gas conservation commission and natural gas which is reinjected or consumed prior to sale for the purpose of maintaining, stimulating, treating, transporting or producing crude oil or natural gas on the same lease or unit from which it was produced has no value and is exempt from taxation.

 

(k) A taxpayer who is liable for payment of taxes under W.S. 39-14-204(a)(i), (ii) and (iii) on the production of natural gas is entitled to a credit against those taxes in an amount equal to fifty percent (50%) of the amount certified by the gas research review committee under W.S. 39-14-202(a)(iv) through (x) as a qualifying investment by that taxpayer in a research project. Credits under this section shall first be applied to tax liability under W.S. 39-14-204(a)(iii) and then to the tax liability under W.S. 39-14-204(a)(ii).

 

39-14-206. Licenses; permits.

 

There are no specific applicable provisions for licenses and permits for this article.

 

39-14-207. Compliance; collection procedures.

 

(a) Returns and reports. The following shall apply:

 

(i) Annually, on or before February 25 of the year following the year of production any person whose crude oil, lease condensate or natural gas production is subject to W.S. 39-14-202(a) shall sign under oath and submit a statement listing the information relative to the production and affairs of the company as the department may require to assess the production;

 

(ii) All information and reports shall be notarized and signed by a person who has legal authority to bind the taxpayer;

 

(iii) For crude oil, lease condensate or natural gas, the taxpayer shall report the location of the production to the county and tax district in which the well or property is located, based upon the actual taxable production produced by the well or property in each county or tax district. Other reasonable methods of reporting the location of production may be approved by the department upon written request of the taxpayer or taxing jurisdiction;

 

(iv) For crude oil, lease condensate or natural gas, the department may presume that the production is located in the county in which production is reported by the taxpayer pursuant to paragraph (iii) of this subsection. The department shall not direct any county to provide relief for taxes paid on taxable valuation which was erroneously reported and certified to the wrong county unless the taxpayer files or is directed to file amended returns within two (2) years of the date of the original certification of the production. Unless there is evidence of bad faith or willful disregard of production circumstances, no taxpayer shall be required to pay taxes on production which was erroneously reported and certified to the wrong county if relief for taxes paid is not allowed under this provision;

 

(v) Except as provided in paragraph (vi) of this subsection, each taxpayer liable for severance taxes under W.S. 39-14-203(a) shall report monthly to the department. The monthly tax reports are due on or before the twenty-fifth day of the second month following the month of production. Reports shall be filed on forms prescribed by the department. The department may allow extensions for filing returns by regulation;

 

(vi) If a taxpayer's liability for severance taxes is less than thirty thousand dollars ($30,000.00) for the preceding calendar year, monthly reporting requirements are waived and the taxpayer shall report annually. The annual report is due on February 25 of the year following the year in which production occurred. If a taxpayer who reports annually accumulates an annual liability exceeding thirty thousand dollars ($30,000.00), that taxpayer shall commence reporting monthly as provided in paragraph (v) of this subsection during the production year following the year in which the accumulated tax liability exceeded thirty thousand dollars ($30,000.00). It is the taxpayer's responsibility to notify the department concerning the change from annual to monthly reporting requirements or from monthly to annual reporting.

 

(b) Payment. The following shall apply:

 

(i) Annually, on or before October 10 the county treasurer shall send a written statement in sealed envelopes of total ad valorem tax due, itemized as to production description, assessed value and mill levies, to each taxpayer at his last known address. Failure to send notice, or to demand payment of taxes, does not invalidate any taxes due;

 

(ii) Ad valorem taxes are due and payable at the office of the county treasurer of the county in which the taxes are levied. Fifty percent (50%) of the taxes are due on and after September 1 and payable on and after November 10 in each year and the remaining fifty percent (50%) of the taxes are due on and after March 1 and payable on and after May 10 of the succeeding calendar year except as hereafter provided. If the entire tax is paid on or before December 31, no interest or penalty is chargeable;

 

(iii) Except as provided in paragraph (iv) of this subsection, each taxpayer liable for severance taxes under W.S. 39-14-203(a) shall pay monthly tax payments to the department. The payment shall be determined by the taxpayer based on the value of the gross product of the crude oil, lease condensate or natural gas produced and saved during the second preceding month, and tax computed on value at rates prescribed by W.S. 39-14-204(a). The monthly tax payments are due on or before the twenty-fifth day of the second month following the month of production. If the report the taxpayer is required to file shows tax due, the taxpayer shall pay the tax due when the report is filed. The department may allow extensions for paying taxes by regulation. The department may, if an extension is granted, request the payment of the reasonable estimate of ninety percent (90%) of the tax by the statutory due date, with the remaining tax remitted with the extended return;

 

(iv) If a taxpayer's liability for severance taxes is less than thirty thousand dollars ($30,000.00) for the preceding calendar year, monthly payment requirements are waived and the taxpayer shall pay the tax annually. The annual report and payment are due on February 25 of the year following the year in which production occurred. If a taxpayer who pays annually accumulates an annual liability exceeding thirty thousand dollars ($30,000.00), that taxpayer shall commence remitting tax payments as provided in paragraph (iii) of this subsection during the production year following the year in which the accumulated tax liability exceeded thirty thousand dollars ($30,000.00). It is the taxpayer's responsibility to notify the department concerning the change from annual to monthly payment requirements or from monthly to annual payment.

 

(c) Timelines. Except as otherwise specifically provided, there are no general applicable provisions for timelines for this article.

 

39-14-208. Enforcement.

 

(a) General. The following shall apply:

 

(i) If the statement provided by W.S. 39-14-207(a)(i) is not filed, the department shall value the crude oil, lease condensate or natural gas production from the best information available. The department may use information other than contained in the statement provided by W.S. 39-14-207(a)(i) to determine the fair market value of the production provided by W.S. 39-14-202(a);

 

(ii) When a taxpayer producing crude oil, lease condensate or natural gas fails to pay the severance taxes when due, the purchaser of the produced crude oil, lease condensate or natural gas shall withhold and remit to the department the taxpayer's subsequently accruing taxes on the produced crude oil, lease condensate or natural gas acquired by the purchaser. This provision is subject to the following conditions:

 

(A) The department shall notify the purchaser and taxpayer in writing on or before the first day of the production month for which subsequent taxes are due that the purchaser shall begin remitting taxes to the department as provided in W.S. 39-14-207(b)(iii);

 

(B) The department shall notify the purchaser in writing of the proper rates for calculating taxes due and the percentage of the produced crude oil, lease condensate or natural gas subject to taxation;

 

(C) The amount of tax paid by a purchaser to the department, as required by this paragraph, shall offset and satisfy all claims for payments for the purchase of produced crude oil, lease condensate or natural gas to the extent of the tax payment;

 

(D) This paragraph shall not apply under circumstances where the purchaser is required to continue payments due to legal proceedings;

 

(E) This paragraph shall not apply until after the purchaser has been notified in writing that subsequent accruing taxes will be payable by the purchaser.

 

(iii) Severance taxes due together with interest, penalties and costs shall be collectible by the department by appropriate judicial proceedings.

 

(b) Audits. The following shall apply:

 

(i) The department may employ examiners and obtain other technical services, to investigate and examine the books and records of any person paying ad valorem taxes under W.S. 39-13-101 through 39-13-111. The department shall notify the county assessor of any change in valuation as determined by audits, examinations or investigations establishing:

 

(A) Taxable volumes or values were not accurately reported;

 

(B) Clerical errors were made in determining taxable volumes or values;

 

(C) Taxable volumes or values for the year that production occurred were not calculated in compliance with Wyoming statutes or rules governing the determinations; or

 

(D) Additional payment for production was received and not reported whether such payment was received in the year of production or in subsequent years.

 

(ii) Effective until March 1, 1994, the department is authorized to rely on final audit findings under W.S. 9-2-2003, taxpayer amended returns or department review, and to certify mine product valuation amendments for production in calendar year 1985 and thereafter, to the county assessor of the county from which the crude oil, lease condensate or natural gas was produced to be entered upon the assessment rolls of the county and taxes computed and collected thereon subject to appeal under W.S. 39-14-209(b)(v);

 

(iii) Commencing January 1, 2003, the department is authorized to rely on final audit findings, taxpayer amended returns or department review, and to certify mine product valuation amendments to the county assessor of the county from which the crude oil, lease condensate or natural gas was produced, to be entered upon the assessment rolls of the county and taxes computed and collected thereon subject to appeal under W.S. 39-14-209(b)(v), provided that the return is filed within three (3) years from the date the production should have been reported pursuant to W.S. 39-14-207(a)(i), and that the audit or review commenced within the time period as required by paragraph (vii) of this subsection. Commencement of an audit, completion of an audit, and final audit findings and final determination by the department being issued to the taxpayer shall not preclude the taxpayer from filing amended returns within the time period specified herein, and the amended returns may be audited within the time period stated in paragraph (vii) of this subsection;

 

(iv) The department is authorized to rely on final audit findings, taxpayer amended returns or department review, and to assess deficient severance tax payments, interest and penalty, if any, for the same periods governing mine product valuation amendments pursuant to paragraphs (ii) and (iii) of this subsection;

 

(v) All audits or department reviews, as applicable, pursuant to paragraphs (ii), (iii) and (iv) of this subsection are subject to the following conditions:

 

(A) Audits are commenced when the taxpayer receives written notice of the intended action;

 

(B) Prior to entering the premises of a taxpayer or third party, the taxpayer or third party shall be provided at least fourteen (14) days written notice;

 

(C) Audits are completed when the final findings are issued to the taxpayer by the department of audit;

 

(D) Unless otherwise agreed to in writing, audits shall be completed and the final audit findings issued to the taxpayer not later than the end of the month two (2) years after the audit is commenced and not sooner than one (1) year following the reporting date for ad valorem taxes;

 

(E) Any assessment or levy, including the assessment of a penalty and interest, if any, resulting from final audit findings or department review shall be issued within one (1) year following the completion of the audit or review;

 

(F) Upon receipt of department review findings, the taxpayer shall have sixty (60) days in which to submit a response.

 

(vi) Where there is evidence of gross negligence by the taxpayer in reporting and valuing production, an audit may examine prior years and issue assessments where gross negligence occurred. This subsection shall not apply to mine product valuation amendments to add the value of unreported production;

 

(vii) Audits provided by this article shall commence within three (3) years and six (6) months immediately following the reporting date for ad valorem taxes and taxpayers shall keep accurate books and records of all production subject to severance taxes imposed by this article and determinations of taxable value as prescribed by W.S. 39-14-103(b) for a period of seven (7) years and make them available to department examiners for audit purposes. Amended returns filed with the department during the conduct of an audit prior to the issuance of the final audit findings may be made available by the taxpayer to the audit examiners. If the examination discloses evidence of gross negligence by the taxpayer in reporting and paying the tax, the department may examine all pertinent records for any reporting period without regard to the limitations set forth in paragraphs (vii) and (viii) of this subsection;

 

(viii) In order to examine relevant books or records of a taxpayer subject to severance taxes imposed by this article or to secure any information related to enforcement of this article, authorized representatives of the department may at any time during normal business hours enter premises of a taxpayer liable for a severance tax imposed by this article or the premises of any third party having information regarding that taxpayer's liability. Prior to entering the premises of a taxpayer or third party, the department shall provide fourteen (14) days written notice to the taxpayer and third party. Such examinations shall be completed and the written results thereof provided to the taxpayer by the end of the third calendar year following the calendar year in which the audit was commenced;

 

(ix) The state may employ auditors and obtain other technical assistance necessary to determine if the severance tax imposed by this article has been properly reported and paid;

 

(x) Audits of mineral production are subject to the authority and procedures set forth in W.S. 9-2-2003.

 

(c) Interest. The following shall apply:

 

(i) The taxpayer is entitled to receive an offsetting credit for any overpaid gross product or severance tax identified by an audit that is within the scope of the audit period, without regard to the limitation period for requesting refunds. In calculating interest, the department or board of county commissioners shall first compute a net deficiency amount after subtracting any offsetting credit and then calculate any interest due;

 

(ii) Taxes are delinquent pursuant to paragraphs (iii) and (iv) of this subsection when a taxpayer or his agent knew or reasonably should have known that the total tax liability was not paid when due;

 

(iii) The balance of any ad valorem tax not paid as provided by W.S. 39-14-207(b)(ii) is delinquent after the day on which it is payable and shall bear interest at eighteen percent (18%) per annum until paid or collected;

 

(iv) Effective January 1, 1994, interest at an annual rate equal to the average prime interest rate as determined by the state treasurer during the preceding fiscal year plus four percent (4%) shall be added to all delinquent severance taxes on any mineral produced on or after January 1, 1994. To determine the average prime interest rate, the state treasurer shall average the prime interest rate for at least seventy-five percent (75%) of the thirty (30) largest banks in the United States. The interest rate on delinquent taxes shall be adjusted on January 1 of each year following the year in which the taxes first became delinquent. In no instance shall the delinquent tax rate be less than twelve percent (12%) nor greater than eighteen percent (18%) from any mineral produced on or after January 1, 1994. The interest rate on any delinquent crude oil, lease condensate or natural gas severance tax from any crude oil, lease condensate or natural gas produced before January 1, 1994, shall be eighteen percent (18%) per annum.

 

(d) Penalties. The following shall apply:

 

(i) The taxpayer is entitled to receive an offsetting credit for any overpaid gross product or severance tax identified by an audit that is within the scope of the audit period, without regard to the limitation period for requesting refunds. In calculating penalty, the department shall first compute a net deficiency amount after subtracting any offsetting credit and then calculate any penalty due;

 

(ii) If any person fails to file the ad valorem report required by W.S. 39-14-207(a)(i) by the due date or any extension thereof, the department may impose a penalty equal to a total of one percent (1%) of the taxable value of the production from the well or property but not to exceed five thousand dollars ($5,000.00) for each calendar month or portion thereof that the report or information is late. If any person fails to file reports and other information required by rule of the department of revenue other than those required by W.S. 39-14-207(a)(v) or 39-14-207(a)(i) the department may impose a penalty of up to one thousand dollars ($1,000.00). The department may waive penalties under this subsection for good cause. Penalties imposed under this subsection may be appealed to the state board of equalization;

 

(iii) If any person fails to make or file a severance tax return and remit the tax as required by W.S. 39-14-207(a)(v) and (b)(iii), the department shall impose a penalty of five percent (5%) of the taxes due for each thirty (30) day period, or fraction thereof, elapsing between the due date of the return and the date filed, unless the person for good cause obtains from the department an extension of time for filing prior to the due date for filing. In no event shall the total penalty imposed by this subsection exceed twenty-five percent (25%) of the tax due. The department, for good cause, may waive a penalty imposed for failure to file a return for any one (1) month in a calendar year, provided that:

 

(A) The return was filed within five (5) business days following the due date, including an approved extension period; and

 

(B) The taxpayer requests the waiver in writing within fifteen (15) days after the return was filed, setting forth the reasons for the late filing.

 

(iv) If any part of a severance tax deficiency is due to negligence or intentional disregard of rules and regulations, there shall be added a penalty of five percent (5%) of the amount of the deficiency plus interest as provided by W.S. 39-14-208(c)(iv). The taxes, penalty and interest shall be paid by the taxpayer within ten (10) days after receipt of notice and demand by the department;

 

(v) The department may credit or waive penalties imposed by paragraphs (iii) and (iv) of this subsection as part of a settlement or for any other good cause.

 

(e) Liens. The following shall apply:

 

(i) Repealed By Laws 2002, Ch. 50, 2.

 

(ii) Repealed By Laws 2002, Ch. 50, 2.

 

(iii) Repealed By Laws 2002, Ch. 50, 2.

 

(iv) All taxes, fees, penalties and interest imposed under this article are an automatic and continuing lien in favor of the state of Wyoming. The lien is on all property in the state of Wyoming, real, tangible and intangible, including all after acquired property rights, future production and rights to property, of any person severing minerals in this state and who is liable under Wyoming law for the collection, payment or remittance of the severance tax and corresponding penalty or interest as of the date such taxes, fees, penalties or interest is due, and remains a lien until paid;

 

(v) A lien under this subsection is also a lien on all interests in the mineral estate from which the production was severed, and on all future production of the same mineral from the same leasehold, regardless of any change of ownership or change in the person extracting the mineral;

 

(vi) Any lien arising under this subsection is superior and paramount to all other liens, claims, mortgages or any other encumbrance of any kind except a lien, claim, mortgage or other encumbrance of record held by a bona fide creditor and properly perfected, filed or recorded under Wyoming law prior to the filing of a lien as provided by paragraph (viii) of this subsection;

 

(vii) The department may file a notice of lien at any time at its discretion, except no lien shall be enforced until the right of the taxpayer to file and properly perfect an appeal concerning the tax delinquent property before the state board of equalization has expired. A properly perfected appeal on the tax delinquent property before the state board of equalization or any subsequent properly perfected appeal on the same property to a district court or the supreme court shall stay enforcement of a lien filed by the department until such appeal has been exhausted or concluded;

 

(viii) In order to perfect a tax lien under this subsection, the department of revenue shall file a notice of the tax lien with the secretary of state. The notice of the tax lien shall contain:

 

(A) The name and last known address of the person or persons against whose property the lien is filed including, but not limited to, the person severing the mineral;

 

(B) The name and address of the department of revenue as the holder of the lien and the name of the contact person within the department;

 

(C) The amount of the tax, fees, penalties and interest owed the state of Wyoming;

 

(D) A statement that the amount of the unpaid tax, fees, penalties or interest is a lien on all property, real, tangible or intangible, including all after acquired property and rights to the property belonging to the person who severed the mineral and located within the state of Wyoming, as well as all interest in the mineral estate from which the production was severed and any future production from the same mineral leasehold.

 

(ix) No other action beyond that described in paragraph (viii) of this subsection shall be required to perfect a tax lien;

 

(x) The filing of the notice of the tax lien as described in paragraph (viii) of this subsection shall constitute record notice of the tax lien;

 

(xi) One (1) notice of the tax lien shall be deemed sufficient to cover all taxes, together with interest, fees and penalty of the same nature which may accrue after the filing of the notice;

 

(xii) Any tax lien created under this subsection and duly filed with the secretary of state shall survive the death or incapacitation of any person, and shall survive any other destruction or attempted destruction of any interest in property owned by any person liable under Wyoming law for the collection, payment or remittance of taxes, fees, penalties or interest to the state;

 

(xiii) In the event of foreclosure, the department of revenue shall be entitled to recover the costs of filing the lien, foreclosing on the lien and reasonable attorney's fees;

 

(xiv) All notice of tax liens shall be released within sixty (60) days after taxes, penalties and interest due are paid or collected;

 

(xv) Notwithstanding that the lien is a lien on all interests in the mineral estate from which the production was severed and on all future production from the same leasehold, the department may for good cause shown, release the lien on all property in this state, real, tangible and intangible, and settle delinquent taxes, interest and penalties to be collected against future production from that leasehold;

 

(xvi) The secretary of state is authorized and directed to maintain copies of all tax liens filed by the department of revenue pursuant to this chapter, and to maintain a data base of such tax liens and to provide copies to any person pursuant to the duties of the secretary of state as set forth in W.S. 9-1-301 et seq. All tax liens on file with any county in this state and in good standing on the effective date of this paragraph shall remain effective and in good standing. Within sixty (60) days of the effective date of this paragraph, the director of the department of revenue shall transmit to the secretary of state for filing copies of all tax liens that the director seeks to have in continuing effect. Upon the filing of a copy of the tax lien with the secretary of state, the tax lien shall continue to be fully effective until released by the department of revenue.

 

(f) Tax sales. There are no specific applicable provisions for tax sales for this article.

 

39-14-209. Taxpayer remedies.

 

(a) Interpretation requests. The following shall apply:

 

(i) The taxpayer may request a value determination from the department and propose a value determination method which may be used until the department issues a value determination. The taxpayer shall submit all available data relevant to its proposal and any additional information the department deems necessary. After the department issues its determination, the taxpayer shall make adjustments based upon the value established or request a hearing by the board;

 

(ii) A taxpayer may request and the department shall provide written interpretations of these statutes and rules. When requesting an interpretation, a taxpayer must set forth the facts and circumstances pertinent to the issue. If the department deems the facts and circumstances provided to be insufficient, it may request additional information. A taxpayer may act in reliance upon a written interpretation through the end of the calendar year in which the interpretation was issued, or until revoked by the department, whichever occurs last if the pertinent facts and circumstances were substantially correct and fully disclosed.

 

(b) Appeals. The following shall apply:

 

(i) Any person aggrieved by any final administrative decision of the department may appeal to the state board of equalization. Appeals shall be made in a timely manner as provided by rules and regulations of the board by filing with the board a notice of appeal specifying the grounds therefor. The department shall, within a timely manner as specified by board rules and regulations, transmit to the board the complete record of the action from which the appeal is taken;

 

(ii) Any interested person adversely affected by the adoption, amendment or repeal of a rule pursuant to W.S. 16-3-103(a) shall be afforded an opportunity for a hearing before the state board of equalization;

 

(iii) Any person including the state of Wyoming aggrieved by any order issued by the state board of equalization, or any county board of equalization whose decision has been reversed or modified by the state board of equalization, may appeal the decision of the board to the district court of the county in which the production or some part thereof is situated;

 

(iv) Following determination of the fair market value of crude oil, lease condensate or natural gas production the department shall notify the taxpayer by mail of the assessed value. The person assessed may file written objections to the assessment with the state board of equalization within thirty (30) days of the date of postmark and appear before the board at a time specified by the board. The person assessed shall also file a copy of the written objections with the county treasurer of the county in which the production is located, who shall notify the county assessor and the board of county commissioners, with an estimate of the tax amount under appeal based upon the previous year's tax levy;

 

(v) Mine product valuation amendments may be appealed by the taxpayer to the state board of equalization within thirty (30) days of the final administrative decision;

 

(vi) Any taxpayer who feels aggrieved by the valuation and severance taxes levied by this article may appeal to the state board of equalization. The appeal does not relieve the taxpayer from paying the tax when due and payable nor does the payment invalidate the appeal. No restraining order or injunction shall be granted or issued by any court or judge to restrain or enjoin the collection of any severance tax, interest or penalty imposed by this article.

 

(c) Refunds. The following shall apply:

 

(i) If a taxpayer has reason to believe that ad valorem taxes imposed by this article have been overpaid, a request for refund shall be filed with the department by submitting amended returns within three (3) years from the date the production should have been reported pursuant to W.S. 39-14-207(a)(i). Any refund granted shall be subject to modification or revocation upon audit;

 

(ii) If a taxpayer has reason to believe that severance taxes imposed by this article have been overpaid, a request for refund shall be filed with the department by submitting an amended return within three (3) years from the date the production should have been reported pursuant to W.S. 39-14-207(a)(i). Refunds of two thousand dollars ($2,000.00), or less may be applied to subsequent payments for severance taxes imposed by this article. Requests for refunds exceeding two thousand dollars ($2,000.00) shall be approved in writing by the department prior to the taxpayer receiving credit. All refunds granted are subject to modification or revocation upon audit;

 

(iii) Notwithstanding paragraphs (i) and (ii) of this subsection, the taxpayer is entitled to receive a refund of any overpaid ad valorem or severance tax identified by an audit regardless of whether a refund has been requested.

 

(d) Credits. The following shall apply:

 

(i) Any ad valorem tax refund may, at the discretion of the board of county commissioners, be made in the form of credit against future tax payments for a period not to exceed five (5) years. Unless otherwise agreed to by the taxpayer, refunds in the form of credit against future tax payments shall be made in no less than equal annual amounts. The board of county commissioners shall not provide a credit for interest on the excess tax paid unless the taxes are paid under protest due to an appeal pending before the state board of equalization and the taxpayer prevails in the appeal;

 

(ii) If a taxpayer overpaid severance taxes imposed by this article, the department shall allow a credit in the amount of the overpayment to be taken on the taxpayer's subsequent monthly reports for the production year;

 

(iii) The taxpayer is entitled to receive an offsetting credit for any overpaid ad valorem or severance tax identified by an audit that is within the scope of the audit without regard to the limitation period for requesting refunds.

 

(e) Redemption. There are no specific applicable provisions for redemption for this article.

 

(f) Escrow. The following shall apply:

 

(i) If ad valorem taxes are paid under protest to the extent of and due to an appeal pending before the state board of equalization or any court of competent jurisdiction, the county treasurer shall deposit that protested amount under appeal in an interest bearing escrow account and withhold distribution until a final decision on the appeal has been rendered. To the extent the taxpayer prevails in the appeal, the county treasurer shall refund that amount under appeal, plus interest earned thereon, to the taxpayer within thirty (30) days from the day the final decision is rendered. If the taxpayer pays to the county an amount in excess of the protested amount under appeal, the excess shall be distributed as provided by law;

 

(ii) If severance taxes are paid under protest to the extent of and due to an appeal pending before the state board of equalization or any court of competent jurisdiction, the state treasurer shall deposit that protested amount under appeal in a separate interest bearing escrow account and withhold distribution until a final decision on the appeal has been rendered by the state board of equalization or the court. To the extent the taxpayer prevails in the appeal, the state treasurer shall refund that amount under appeal, plus interest earned thereon, to the taxpayer within thirty (30) days from the day the final decision is rendered. If the taxpayer pays to the state an amount in excess of the protested amount under appeal, the excess shall be distributed as provided by law;

 

(iii) The provisions of paragraph (ii) of this subsection do not enlarge or curtail the ability of a taxpayer to appeal any department of revenue decision as otherwise provided for under this act.

 

39-14-210. Statute of limitations.

 

Except as otherwise provided in this article, there is no general statute of limitations for this article.

 

39-14-211. Distribution.

 

(a) The state treasurer shall transfer the revenue collected from the severance tax imposed by W.S. 39-14-204(a)(i) into the permanent Wyoming mineral trust fund. The state treasurer shall transfer the revenue collected from the severance tax imposed by W.S. 39-14-204(a)(ii), (iii) and (iv) into the severance tax distribution account.

 

(b) Repealed By Laws 2002, Ch. 62, 2.

 

(c) Repealed By Laws 2002, Ch. 62, 2.

 

(d) Repealed By Laws 2002, Ch. 62, 2.

 

(e) Revenues to be distributed to local governments under W.S. 39-14-801 shall be distributed as follows:

 

(i) Distributions shall be made quarterly in an amount equal to one-fourth (1/4) of the amount estimated to be earned in the current fiscal year based upon the most recent consensus revenue estimating group estimates. In computing distributions, the state treasurer shall make adjustments to reflect changes in the consensus revenue estimating group estimates;

 

(ii) Not later than September 15, the state treasurer shall compute actual earnings for the months of the preceding fiscal year for which estimates were used in computing distributions. The state treasurer shall make adjustments to distributions during the current fiscal year in an amount equal to the difference between revenues earned and actual distributions for the preceding fiscal year.

 

(f) Repealed By Laws 2001, Ch. 209, 3.

 

(g) Repealed By Laws 2001, Ch. 209, 3.

 

(h) Repealed By Laws 2002, Ch. 45, 2, Ch. 62, 2.

 

(j) Repealed By Laws 2002, Ch. 62, 2.

 

39-14-212. Taxation of certain helium.

 

(a) As used in this section:

 

(i) "Helium" means helium which is a component of a natural gas stream leased by the United States to any lessee pursuant to the Mineral Leasing Act of 1920, 30 U.S.C. section 181. All other helium shall be subject to taxation pursuant to the provisions of this article;

 

(ii) "Present and continuing privilege of removing, extracting, severing or producing" means the right to physically separate the helium, by itself, or as a component of the gas stream, from the ground;

 

(iii) All other definitions in W.S. 39-14-201 are incorporated herein by reference to the extent that they may apply.

 

(b) Administration; confidentiality: The department shall annually value and assess helium production at its fair market value for taxation in accordance with the applicable provisions of W.S. 39-14-202.

 

(c) Taxable event: There is levied a severance tax on the value of the gross product extracted for the present and continuing privilege of removing, extracting, severing or producing helium in this state. The tax imposed by this subsection shall be in addition to all other taxes imposed by law.

 

(d) Basis of tax: Helium shall be valued for taxation as natural gas as provided in W.S. 39-14-203(b).

 

(e) Taxpayer: Any person removing, extracting, or severing helium from the ground; or, to the extent of his interest ownership, any person owning an interest in the helium, is liable for the payment of the severance taxes together with any penalties and interest, provided however, that helium shall be subject to the severance tax only once.

 

(f) Tax rate: Helium shall be subject to the severance tax rate for natural gas as provided in W.S. 39-14-204.

 

(g) Exemptions: The exemptions from taxation provided by W.S. 39-14-205 for natural gas shall apply to natural gas containing helium.

 

(h) Compliance; collection procedures: The severance tax related provisions of W.S. 39-14-207 shall apply to helium production.

 

(j) Enforcement: All severance tax related provisions of W.S. 39-14-208 shall apply to helium production.

 

(k) Taxpayer remedies: All severance tax related provisions of W.S. 39-14-209 shall apply to helium production.

 

(m) Distribution: Severance tax revenues from helium production shall be distributed as provided by W.S. 39-14-211.

 

ARTICLE 3 - TRONA

 

39-14-301. Definitions.

 

(a) As used in this article:

 

(i) "Arm's-length market or sales price" means the transaction price determined in connection with a bona fide arm's length sale;

 

(ii) "Bona fide arm's-length sale" means a transaction in cash or terms equivalent to cash for specified property rights after reasonable exposure in a competitive market between a willing, well informed and prudent buyer and seller with adverse economic interests and assuming neither party is acting under undue compulsion or duress;

 

(iii) "Department review" means, but is not limited to, corrections of clerical errors or reconciliations of tax reports with reports required by other state or federal agencies;

 

(iv) "Mine product valuation amendment" means a valuation adjustment determination made by the department including special directives;

 

(v) "Mining or production" means drilling, blasting, loading, roadwork, overburden removal, pre-mouth of the mine reclamation, transportation from the point of severance to the mouth of the mine, and maintenance of facilities and equipment directly relating to any of the functions stated in this paragraph;

 

(vi) "Mouth of the mine" means the point at which a mineral is brought to the surface of the ground and is taken out of the pit, shaft or portal. For a surface mine, this point shall be the top of the ramp where the road or conveying system leaves the pit. For an in situ mine, the point shall be the wellhead;

 

(vii) "Processing" means crushing, sizing, milling, washing, drying, refining, upgrading, beneficiation, sampling, testing, treating, heating, separating, tailings or reject material disposal, compressing, storing, loading for shipment, transportation from the mouth of the mine to the loadout, transportation to market to the extent included in the price and provided by the producer, processing plant site and post-mouth of mine reclamation, maintenance of facilities and equipment relating to any of the functions stated in this paragraph, and any other function after severance that changes the physical or chemical characteristics or enhances the marketability of the mineral;

 

(viii) "Purchaser" means the first purchaser who acquires the produced valuable trona deposit from the taxpayer for value;

 

(ix) Beginning January 1, 1989, "taxable value" means one hundred percent (100%) of the fair market value of the gross product of minerals and mine products;

 

(x) "Severance tax" means an excise tax imposed on the present and continuing privilege of removing, extracting, severing or producing any mineral in this state;

 

(xi) "Transportation to market provided by the producer" means the costs incurred for any movement of a mineral which is performed by the producer beyond the point of loading for shipment to the customer, commonly referred to as the loadout, completed by the employees of the producer using equipment owned by the producer;

 

(xii) "Unreported production" means production volume for which no tax report was filed for the reporting period by the taxpayer or his agent;

 

(xiii) "Value of the gross product" means fair market value as prescribed by W.S. 39-11-101(a)(vi), less any deductions and exemption allowed by Wyoming law or rules.

 

39-14-302. Administration; confidentiality.

 

(a) The department shall annually value and assess the gross product of all mines and mining claims at its fair market value for taxation.

 

(b) The department shall annually value the gross product for the preceding calendar year, in appropriate unit measures of all mines and mining claims from which valuable deposits are produced.

 

(c) Except as otherwise provided, in the event the product as defined in W.S. 39-14-303(b)(iv) is not sold at the mouth of the mine by bona fide arms-length sale, or if the product of the mine is used without sale, the department shall determine the fair market value by application of recognized appraisal techniques.

 

(d) Annually, on or before June 1, or as soon thereafter as the fair market value is determined, the department shall certify the valuation determined by the department to the county assessor of the county in which the property is located, to be entered upon the assessment rolls of the county.

 

(e) All taxpayer returns and return information shall be confidential and, except as authorized below, no current or former official, officer, employee or agent of the state of Wyoming or any political subdivision thereof shall disclose any such information obtained by him in connection with his service as an officer or employee.

 

(f) As used in this section, taxpayer returns and return information shall include, but not be limited to, all statements, reports, summaries and all other data and documents under audit or provided by the taxpayer in accordance with the provisions of W.S. 39-14-307(a) and related provision.

 

(g) Without written authorization from the taxpayer, no current or former official, officer, employee or agent of the state of Wyoming or any political subdivision thereof shall release taxpayer returns and return information pertaining to taxes imposed by this article, except:

 

(i) Information may be released to the governor or his designee, members of the board, to employees of the department of audit, the department of revenue, the consensus revenue estimating group and to the attorney general;

 

(ii) Upon prior notice to the taxpayer, information may be released by the department, upon written application, to any other governmental entity if the governmental entity shows sufficient reason to obtain the information for official business;

 

(iii) Information is admissible in court or administrative proceedings related to mineral taxes or government royalties.

 

(h) Any person receiving information pursuant to paragraph (g)(ii) of this section shall sign an agreement with the department to keep the information confidential.

 

(j) Units of production reported by the taxpayer and the taxpayer's taxable value are not confidential and may be released without qualification.

 

(k) Any person who negligently violates subsections (e) through (j) of this section is guilty of a misdemeanor and upon conviction shall be fined not more than one thousand dollars ($1,000.00). Any person who intentionally violates subsections (e) through (j) of this section is guilty of a misdemeanor and upon conviction shall be fined not less than one thousand dollars ($1,000.00), but not more than five thousand dollars ($5,000.00) and imprisoned for not more than one (1) year.

 

(m) Repealed By Laws 2000, Ch. 68, 1.

 

39-14-303. Imposition.

 

(a) Taxable event. The following shall apply:

 

(i) There is levied a severance tax on the value of the gross product for the privilege of severing or extracting trona, in the state. The severance tax imposed by this article may be in addition to other taxes, including but not limited to the ad valorem taxes imposed by W.S. 39-13-104.

 

(b) Basis of tax (valuation). The following shall apply:

 

(i) Trona shall be valued for taxation as provided in this section;

 

(ii) The department shall calculate the value of trona ore for severance and ad valorem tax purposes by using the individual producer's fair market value of soda ash f.o.b. plant multiplied by the industry factor divided by the individual producer's trona to soda ash ratio less exempt royalties. The industry factor shall be thirty-two and five-tenths percent (32.5%);

 

(iii) The value of the gross product shall be the fair market value of the product at the mouth of the mine where produced, after the mining or production process is completed;

 

(iv) Except as otherwise provided, the mining or production process is deemed completed when the mineral product reaches the mouth of the mine. In no event shall the value of the mineral product include any processing functions or operations regardless of where the processing is performed;

 

(v) Except as otherwise provided, if the product as defined in paragraph (iv) of this subsection is sold at the mouth of the mine, the fair market value shall be deemed to be the price established by bona fide arms-length sale.

 

(c) Taxpayer. The following shall apply:

 

(i) In the case of the gross product of all mines and mining claims produced under lease, the lessor is liable for the payment of ad valorem taxes on the product removed only to the extent of the lessor's retained interest under the lease, whether royalty or otherwise, and the lessee or his assignee is liable for all other property taxes due on production under the lease;

 

(ii) Any taxpayer paying the taxes imposed by this article on any valuable deposit may deduct the severance taxes paid from any amounts due or to become due to the interest owners of such valuable deposit in proportion to the interest ownership;

 

(iii) Any person extracting valuable products subject to this article and any person owning an interest in the valuable products to the extent of their interest ownership are liable for the payment of the severance taxes imposed by this article together with any penalties and interest.

 

39-14-304. Tax rate.

 

(a) The total severance tax rate for trona shall be four percent (4%). The tax shall be distributed as provided in W.S. 39-14-311 and is imposed as follows:

 

(i) Two percent (2%); plus

 

(ii) Two percent (2%).

 

39-14-305. Exemptions.

 

There are no specific applicable provisions for exemptions for this chapter.

 

39-14-306. Licenses; permits.

 

There are no specific applicable provisions for licenses and permits for this chapter.

 

39-14-307. Compliance; collection procedures.

 

(a) Returns, reports. The following shall apply:

 

(i) Annually, on or before February 25 of the year following the year of production any person whose property is subject to W.S. 39-14-302(a) shall sign under oath and submit a statement listing the information relative to the property and affairs of the company as the department may require to assess the property;

 

(ii) All information and reports shall be notarized and signed by a person who has legal authority to bind the taxpayer;

 

(iii) For mines and mining claims, the department may presume that the property is located in the county in which production is reported by the taxpayer. The department shall not direct any county to provide relief for taxes paid on taxable valuation which was erroneously reported and certified to the wrong county unless the taxpayer files or is directed to file amended returns within two (2) years of the date of the original certification of the production. Unless there is evidence of bad faith or willful disregard of production circumstances, no taxpayer shall be required to pay taxes on production which was erroneously reported and certified to the wrong county if relief for taxes paid is not allowed under this provision;

 

(iv) Except as provided in paragraph (v) of this subsection, each taxpayer liable for severance taxes under W.S. 39-14-303 shall report monthly to the department. The monthly tax reports are due on or before the twenty-fifth day of the second month following the month of production. Reports shall be filed on forms prescribed by the department. The department may allow extensions for filing returns by regulation;

 

(v) If a taxpayer's liability for severance tax imposed under this article is less than thirty thousand dollars ($30,000.00) for the preceding calendar year, monthly reporting requirements are waived and the taxpayer shall report annually. The annual report is due on February 25 of the year following the year in which production occurred. If a taxpayer who reports annually accumulates an annual liability exceeding thirty thousand dollars ($30,000.00), that taxpayer shall commence reporting monthly as provided in paragraph (iv) of this subsection during the production year following the year in which the accumulated tax liability exceeded thirty thousand dollars ($30,000.00). It is the taxpayer's responsibility to notify the department concerning the change from annual to monthly reporting requirements or from monthly to annual reporting;

 

(vi) For mines and mining claims, the taxpayer shall report the location of the production to the county and tax district in which the mine or mining claim is located, based upon the actual taxable production produced by the mine in each county or tax district. Other reasonable methods of reporting the location of production may be approved by the department upon written request of the taxpayer or taxing jurisdiction.

 

(b) Payment. The following shall apply:

 

(i) Annually, on or before October 10 the county treasurer shall send a written statement in sealed envelopes of total tax due, itemized as to property description, assessed value and mill levies, to each taxpayer at his last known address. Failure to send notice, or to demand payment of taxes, does not invalidate any taxes due;

 

(ii) Ad valorem taxes provided by this act are due and payable at the office of the county treasurer of the county in which the taxes are levied. Fifty percent (50%) of the taxes are due on and after September 1 and payable on and after November 10 in each year and the remaining fifty percent (50%) of the taxes are due on and after March 1 and payable on and after May 10 of the succeeding calendar year except as hereafter provided. If the entire tax is paid on or before December 31, no interest or penalty is chargeable;

 

(iii) Except as provided in paragraph (iv) of this subsection, each taxpayer liable for a severance tax under W.S. 39-14-303(a) shall pay monthly tax payments to the department. The payment shall be determined by the taxpayer based on the value of the gross product produced and saved during the second preceding month, and tax computed on value at rates prescribed in this article. The monthly tax payments are due on or before the twenty-fifth day of the second month following the month of production. If the report the taxpayer is required to file shows tax due, the taxpayer shall pay the tax due when the report is filed. The department may allow extensions for paying taxes by regulation. The department may, if an extension is granted, request the payment of the reasonable estimate of ninety percent (90%) of the tax by the statutory due date, with the remaining tax remitted with the extended return;

 

(iv) If a taxpayer's liability for severance tax imposed under this article is less than thirty thousand dollars ($30,000.00) for the preceding calendar year, monthly payment requirements are waived and the taxpayer shall pay the tax annually. The annual payment is due on February 25 of the year following the year in which production occurred. If a taxpayer who pays annually accumulates an annual liability exceeding thirty thousand dollars ($30,000.00), that taxpayer shall commence remitting tax payments as provided in paragraph (iii) of this subsection during the production year following the year in which the accumulated tax liability exceeded thirty thousand dollars ($30,000.00). It is the taxpayer's responsibility to notify the department concerning the change from annual to monthly payment requirements or from monthly to annual payment.

 

(c) Timelines. Except as otherwise specifically provided, there are no general applicable provisions for timelines for this article.

 

39-14-308. Enforcement.

 

(a) General. The following shall apply:

 

(i) If the statement provided by W.S. 39-14-307(a)(i) is not filed, the department shall value the property from the best information available. The department may use information other than contained in the statement provided by W.S. 39-14-307(a)(i) to determine the fair market value of the property provided by W.S. 39-14-302(a);

 

(ii) When a taxpayer producing valuable deposits fails to pay the taxes imposed by this article when due, the purchaser of the produced valuable deposit shall withhold and remit to the department the taxpayer's subsequently accruing taxes on the produced valuable deposit acquired by the purchaser. This provision is subject to the following conditions:

 

(A) The department shall notify the purchaser and taxpayer in writing on or before the first day of the production month for which subsequent taxes are due that the purchaser shall begin remitting taxes to the department as provided in W.S. 39-14-307(b)(iii);

 

(B) The department shall notify the purchaser in writing of the proper rates for calculating taxes due and the percentage of the produced valuable deposit subject to taxation by this article;

 

(C) The amount of tax paid by a purchaser to the department, as required by this paragraph, shall offset and satisfy all claims for payments for the purchase of produced valuable deposits to the extent of the tax payment;

 

(D) This paragraph shall not apply under circumstances where the purchaser is required to continue payments due to legal proceedings;

 

(E) This paragraph shall not apply until after the purchaser has been notified in writing that subsequent accruing taxes will be payable by the purchaser.

 

(iii) Severance taxes due together with interest, penalties and costs shall be collectible by the department by appropriate judicial proceedings.

 

(b) Audits. The following shall apply:

 

(i) The department may employ examiners and obtain other technical services, to investigate and examine the books and records of any person paying taxes imposed under W.S. 39-13-101 through 39-13-111. The department shall notify the county assessor of any change in valuation as determined by audits, examinations or investigations establishing:

 

(A) Taxable volumes or values were not accurately reported;

 

(B) Clerical errors were made in determining taxable volumes or values;

 

(C) Taxable volumes or values for the year that production occurred were not calculated in compliance with Wyoming statutes or rules governing the determinations; or

 

(D) Additional payment for production was received and not reported whether such payment was received in the year of production or in subsequent years.

 

(ii) Effective until March 1, 1994, the department is authorized to rely on final audit findings under W.S. 9-2-2003, taxpayer amended returns or department review, and to certify mine product valuation amendments for production in calendar year 1985 and thereafter, to the county assessor of the county in which the property is located, to be entered upon the assessment rolls of the county and taxes computed and collected thereon subject to appeal under W.S. 39-14-309(b)(ii);

 

(iii) Commencing January 1, 2003, the department is authorized to rely on final audit findings, taxpayer amended returns or department review, and to certify mine product valuation amendments to the county assessor of the county in which the property is located, to be entered upon the assessment rolls of the county and taxes computed and collected thereon subject to appeal under W.S. 39-14-309(b)(ii), provided that the return is filed within three (3) years from the date the production should have been reported pursuant to W.S. 39-14-307(a)(i), and that the audit or review commenced within the time period as required by paragraph (vii) of this subsection. Commencement of an audit, completion of an audit, and final audit findings and final determination by the department being issued to the taxpayer shall not preclude the taxpayer from filing amended returns within the time period specified herein, and the amended returns may be audited within the time period stated in paragraph (vii) of this subsection;

 

(iv) The department is authorized to rely on final audit findings, taxpayer amended returns or department review, and to assess deficient severance tax payments, interest and penalty, if any, for the same periods governing mine product valuation amendments pursuant to paragraphs (ii) and (iii) of this subsection;

 

(v) All audits or department reviews, as applicable, pursuant to paragraphs (ii), (iii) and (iv) of this subsection are subject to the following conditions:

 

(A) Audits are commenced when the taxpayer receives written notice of the intended action;

 

(B) Prior to entering the premises of a taxpayer or third party, the taxpayer or third party shall be provided at least fourteen (14) days written notice;

 

(C) Audits are completed when the final findings are issued to the taxpayer by the department of audit;

 

(D) Unless otherwise agreed to in writing, audits shall be completed and the final audit findings issued to the taxpayer not later than the end of the month two (2) years after the audit is commenced and not sooner than one (1) year following the reporting date for ad valorem taxes;

 

(E) Any assessment or levy, including the assessment of a penalty and interest, if any, resulting from final audit findings or department review shall be issued within one (1) year following the completion of the audit or review;

 

(F) Upon receipt of department review findings, the taxpayer shall have sixty (60) days in which to submit a response.

 

(vi) Where there is evidence of gross negligence by the taxpayer in reporting and valuing production, an audit may examine prior years and issue assessments where gross negligence occurred. This section shall not apply to mine product valuation amendments to add the value of unreported production;

 

(vii) Audits provided by this article shall commence within three (3) years and six (6) months immediately following the reporting date for ad valorem taxes and taxpayers shall keep accurate books and records of all production subject to taxes imposed by this article and determinations of taxable value as prescribed by W.S. 39-14-303(b) for a period of seven (7) years and make them available to department examiners for audit purposes. Amended returns filed with the department during the conduct of an audit prior to the issuance of the final audit findings may be made available by the taxpayer to the audit examiners. If the examination discloses evidence of gross negligence by the taxpayer in reporting and paying the tax, the department may examine all pertinent records for any reporting period without regard to the limitations set forth in paragraphs (vii) and (viii) of this subsection;

 

(viii) In order to examine relevant books or records of a taxpayer subject to a tax imposed by this article or to secure any information related to enforcement of this article, authorized representatives of the department may at any time during normal business hours enter premises of a taxpayer liable for a tax imposed by this article or the premises of any third party having information regarding that taxpayer's liability. Prior to entering the premises of a taxpayer or third party, the department shall provide fourteen (14) days written notice to the taxpayer and third party. Such examinations shall be completed and the written results thereof provided to the taxpayer by the end of the third calendar year following the calendar year in which the audit was commenced;

 

(ix) The state may employ auditors and obtain other technical assistance necessary to determine if the tax imposed by this article has been properly reported and paid.

 

(c) Interest. The following shall apply:

 

(i) The taxpayer is entitled to receive an offsetting credit for any overpaid gross product or severance tax identified by an audit that is within the scope of the audit period, without regard to the limitation period for requesting refunds. In calculating interest, the department or board of county commissioners shall first compute a net deficiency amount after subtracting any offsetting credit and then calculate any interest due;

 

(ii) Taxes are delinquent pursuant to paragraphs (iii) and (iv) of this subsection when a taxpayer or his agent knew or reasonably should have known that the total tax liability was not paid when due;

 

(iii) The balance of any ad valorem tax not paid as provided by W.S. 39-14-307(b)(ii) is delinquent after the day on which it is payable and shall bear interest at eighteen percent (18%) per annum until paid or collected;

 

(iv) Effective January 1, 1994, interest at an annual rate equal to the average prime interest rate as determined by the state treasurer during the preceding fiscal year plus four percent (4%) shall be added to all delinquent severance taxes on any mineral produced on or after January 1, 1994. To determine the average prime interest rate, the state treasurer shall average the prime interest rate for at least seventy-five percent (75%) of the thirty (30) largest banks in the United States. The interest rate on delinquent taxes shall be adjusted on January 1 of each year following the year in which the taxes first became delinquent. In no instance shall the delinquent tax rate be less than twelve percent (12%) nor greater than eighteen percent (18%) from any mineral produced on or after January 1, 1994. The interest rate on any delinquent mineral tax from any mineral produced before January 1, 1994, shall be eighteen percent (18%) per annum.

 

(d) Penalties. The following shall apply:

 

(i) The taxpayer is entitled to receive an offsetting credit for any overpaid gross product or severance tax identified by an audit that is within the scope of the audit period, without regard to the limitation period for requesting refunds. In calculating penalty, the department or board of county commissioners shall first compute a net deficiency amount after subtracting any offsetting credit and then calculate any penalty due;

 

(ii) If any person fails to file the report required by W.S. 39-14-307(a)(i) by the due date or any extension thereof, the department may impose a penalty equal to a total of one percent (1%) of the taxable value of the production from the well, mine or mining claim but not to exceed five thousand dollars ($5,000.00) for each calendar month or portion thereof that the report or information is late. If any person fails to file reports and other information required by rule of the department of revenue other than those required by W.S. 39-14-307(a)(iv) or 39-14-307(a)(i), the department may impose a penalty of up to one thousand dollars ($1,000.00). The department may waive penalties under this paragraph for good cause. Penalties imposed under this paragraph may be appealed to the state board of equalization;

 

(iii) If any person fails to make or file a return and remit the tax as required by W.S. 39-14-307, the department shall impose a penalty of five percent (5%) of the taxes due for each thirty (30) day period, or fraction thereof, elapsing between the due date of the return and the date filed, unless the person for good cause obtains from the department an extension of time for filing prior to the due date for filing. In no event shall the total penalty imposed by this subsection exceed twenty-five percent (25%) of the tax due. The department, for good cause, may waive a penalty imposed for failure to file a return for any one (1) month in a calendar year, provided that:

 

(A) The return was filed within five (5) business days following the due date, including an approved extension period; and

 

(B) The taxpayer requests the waiver in writing within fifteen (15) days after the return was filed, setting forth the reasons for the late filing.

 

(iv) If any part of a tax deficiency is due to negligence or intentional disregard of rules and regulations, there shall be added a penalty of five percent (5%) of the amount of the deficiency plus interest as provided by paragraph (c)(iv) of this section. The taxes, penalty and interest shall be paid by the taxpayer within ten (10) days after receipt of notice and demand by the department;

 

(v) The department may credit or waive penalties imposed by paragraphs (iii) and (iv) of this subsection as part of a settlement or for any other good cause.

 

(e) Liens. The following shall apply:

 

(i) Repealed By Laws 2002, Ch. 50, 2.

 

(ii) Repealed By Laws 2002, Ch. 50, 2.

 

(iii) Repealed By Laws 2002, Ch. 50, 2.

 

(iv) All taxes, fees, penalties and interest imposed under this article are an automatic and continuing lien in favor of the state of Wyoming. The lien is on all property in the state of Wyoming, real, tangible and intangible, including all after acquired property rights, future production and rights to property, of any person severing minerals in this state and who is liable under Wyoming law for the collection, payment or remittance of the severance tax and corresponding penalty or interest as of the date such taxes, fees, penalties or interest is due, and remains a lien until paid;

 

(v) A lien under this subsection is also a lien on all interests in the mineral estate from which the production was severed, and on all future production of the same mineral from the same leasehold, regardless of any change of ownership or change in the person extracting the mineral;

 

(vi) Any lien arising under this subsection is superior and paramount to all other liens, claims, mortgages or any other encumbrance of any kind except a lien, claim, mortgage or other encumbrance of record held by a bona fide creditor and properly perfected, filed or recorded under Wyoming law prior to the filing of a lien as provided by paragraph (viii) of this subsection;

 

(vii) The department may file a notice of lien at any time at its discretion, except no lien shall be enforced until the right of the taxpayer to file and properly perfect an appeal concerning the tax delinquent property before the state board of equalization has expired. A properly perfected appeal on the tax delinquent property before the state board of equalization or any subsequent properly perfected appeal on the same property to a district court or the supreme court shall stay enforcement of a lien filed by the department until such appeal has been exhausted or concluded;

 

(viii) In order to perfect a tax lien under this subsection, the department of revenue shall file a notice of the tax lien with the secretary of state. The notice of the tax lien shall contain:

 

(A) The name and last known address of the person or persons against whose property the lien is filed including, but not limited to, the person severing the mineral;

 

(B) The name and address of the department of revenue as the holder of the lien and the name of the contact person within the department;

 

(C) The amount of the tax, fees, penalties and interest owed the state of Wyoming;

 

(D) A statement that the amount of the unpaid tax, fees, penalties or interest is a lien on all property, real, tangible or intangible, including all after acquired property and rights to the property belonging to the person who severed the mineral and located within the state of Wyoming, as well as all interest in the mineral estate from which the production was severed and any future production from the same mineral leasehold.

 

(ix) No other action beyond that described in paragraph (viii) of this subsection shall be required to perfect a tax lien;

 

(x) The filing of the notice of the tax lien as described in paragraph (viii) of this subsection shall constitute record notice of the tax lien;

 

(xi) One (1) notice of the tax lien shall be deemed sufficient to cover all taxes, together with interest, fees and penalty of the same nature which may accrue after the filing of the notice;

 

(xii) Any tax lien created under this subsection and duly filed with the secretary of state shall survive the death or incapacitation of any person, and shall survive any other destruction or attempted destruction of any interest in property owned by any person liable under Wyoming law for the collection, payment or remittance of taxes, fees, penalties or interest to the state;

 

(xiii) In the event of foreclosure, the department of revenue shall be entitled to recover the costs of filing the lien, foreclosing on the lien and reasonable attorney's fees;

 

(xiv) All notice of tax liens shall be released within sixty (60) days after taxes, penalties and interest due are paid or collected;

 

(xv) Notwithstanding that the lien is a lien on all interests in the mineral estate from which the production was severed and on all future production from the same leasehold, the department may for good cause shown, release the lien on all property in this state, real, tangible and intangible, and settle delinquent taxes, interest and penalties to be collected against future production from that leasehold;

 

(xvi) The secretary of state is authorized and directed to maintain copies of all tax liens filed by the department of revenue pursuant to this chapter, and to maintain a data base of such tax liens and to provide copies to any person pursuant to the duties of the secretary of state as set forth in W.S. 9-1-301 et seq. All tax liens on file with any county in this state and in good standing on the effective date of this paragraph shall remain effective and in good standing. Within sixty (60) days of the effective date of this paragraph, the director of the department of revenue shall transmit to the secretary of state for filing copies of all tax liens that the director seeks to have in continuing effect. Upon the filing of a copy of the tax lien with the secretary of state, the tax lien shall continue to be fully effective until released by the department of revenue.

 

(f) Tax sales. There are no specific applicable provisions for tax sales for this article.

 

39-14-309. Taxpayer remedies.

 

(a) Interpretation requests. The following shall apply:

 

(i) The taxpayer may request a value determination from the department and propose a value determination method which may be used until the department issues a value determination. The taxpayer shall submit all available data relevant to its proposal and any additional information the department deems necessary. After the department issues its determination, the taxpayer shall make adjustments based upon the value established or request a hearing by the board;

 

(ii) A taxpayer may request and the department shall provide written interpretations of these statutes and rules. When requesting an interpretation, a taxpayer must set forth the facts and circumstances pertinent to the issue. If the department deems the facts and circumstances provided to be insufficient, it may request additional information. A taxpayer may act in reliance upon a written interpretation through the end of the calendar year in which the interpretation was issued, or until revoked by the department, whichever occurs last if the pertinent facts and circumstances were substantially correct and fully disclosed.

 

(b) Appeals. The following shall apply:

 

(i) Following determination of the fair market value of property the department shall notify the taxpayer by mail of the assessed value. The person assessed may file written objections to the assessment with the board within thirty (30) days of the date of postmark and appear before the board at a time specified by the board. The person assessed shall also file a copy of the written objections with the county treasurer of the county in which the property is located, who shall notify the county assessor and the board of county commissioners, with an estimate of the tax amount under appeal based upon the previous year's tax levy;

 

(ii) Mine product valuation amendments under this section may be appealed by the taxpayer to the board within thirty (30) days of the final administrative decision;

 

(iii) Any taxpayer who feels aggrieved by the valuation and taxes levied by this article may appeal to the board. The appeal does not relieve the taxpayer from paying the tax when due and payable nor does the payment invalidate the appeal. No restraining order or injunction shall be granted or issued by any court or judge to restrain or enjoin the collection of any tax, interest or penalty imposed by this article;

 

(iv) The state board of equalization shall perform the duties specified in article 15, section 10 of the Wyoming constitution and shall hear appeals from county boards of equalization and review final decisions of the department upon application of any interested person adversely affected, including boards of county commissioners for the purposes of this subsection, under the contested case procedures of the Wyoming Administrative Procedure Act. Any interested person adversely affected by the adoption, amendment or repeal of a rule pursuant to W.S. 16-3-103(a) shall be afforded an opportunity for a hearing before the board;

 

(v) Any person including the state of Wyoming aggrieved by any order issued by the board, or any county board of equalization whose decision has been reversed or modified by the state board of equalization, may appeal the decision of the board to the district court of the county in which the property or some part thereof is situated.

 

(c) Refunds. The following shall apply:

 

(i) If a taxpayer has reason to believe that ad valorem taxes imposed by this article have been overpaid, a request for refund shall be filed with the department by submitting amended returns within three (3) years from the date the production should have been reported pursuant to W.S. 39-14-307(a)(i). Any refund granted shall be subject to modification or revocation upon audit;

 

(ii) If a taxpayer has reason to believe that taxes imposed by this article have been overpaid, a request for refund shall be filed with the department by submitting an amended return within three (3) years from the date the production should have been reported pursuant to W.S. 39-14-307(a)(i). Refunds of two thousand dollars ($2,000.00), or less may be applied to subsequent payments for taxes imposed by this article. Requests for refunds exceeding two thousand dollars ($2,000.00) shall be approved in writing by the department prior to the taxpayer receiving credit. All refunds granted are subject to modification or revocation upon audit;

 

(iii) Notwithstanding paragraphs (i) and (ii) of this subsection, the taxpayer is entitled to receive a refund of any overpaid ad valorem or severance tax identified by an audit regardless of whether a refund has been requested.

 

(d) Credits. The following shall apply:

 

(i) Any refund may, at the discretion of the board of county commissioners, be made in the form of credit against future tax payments for a period not to exceed five (5) years. Unless otherwise agreed to by the taxpayer, refunds in the form of credit against future tax payments shall be made in no less than equal annual amounts. The board of county commissioners shall not provide a credit for interest on the excess tax paid unless the taxes are paid under protest due to an appeal pending before the state board of equalization and the taxpayer prevails in the appeal;

 

(ii) The taxpayer is entitled to receive an offsetting credit for any overpaid gross product or severance tax identified by an audit that is within the scope of the audit without regard to the limitation period for requesting refunds;

 

(iii) If a taxpayer overpaid taxes imposed by this article, the department shall allow a credit in the amount of the overpayment to be taken on the taxpayer's subsequent monthly reports for the production year.

 

(e) Redemption. There are no specific applicable provisions for redemption for this article.

 

(f) Escrow. The following shall apply:

 

(i) If ad valorem taxes are paid under protest to the extent of and due to an appeal pending before the state board of equalization or any court of competent jurisdiction, the county treasurer shall deposit that protested amount under appeal in an interest bearing escrow account and withhold distribution until a final decision on the appeal has been rendered. To the extent the taxpayer prevails in the appeal, the county treasurer shall refund that amount under appeal, plus interest earned thereon, to the taxpayer within thirty (30) days from the day the final decision is rendered. If the taxpayer pays to the county an amount in excess of the protested amount under appeal, the excess shall be distributed as provided by law;

 

(ii) If severance taxes are paid under protest to the extent of and due to an appeal pending before the state board of equalization or any court of competent jurisdiction, the state treasurer shall deposit that protested amount under appeal in a separate interest bearing escrow account and withhold distribution until a final decision on the appeal has been rendered by the state board of equalization or the court. To the extent the taxpayer prevails in the appeal, the state treasurer shall refund that amount under appeal, plus interest earned thereon, to the taxpayer within thirty (30) days from the day the final decision is rendered. If the taxpayer pays to the state an amount in excess of the protested amount under appeal, the excess shall be distributed as provided by law;

 

(iii) This provision does not enlarge or curtail the ability of a taxpayer to appeal any department of revenue decision as otherwise provided for under this act.

 

39-14-310. Statute of limitations.

 

Except as otherwise provided in this article, there is no general statute of limitations for this article.

 

39-14-311. Distribution.

 

(a) As provided by W.S. 39-14-304(a), the total severance tax rate for trona shall be four percent (4%). The taxes imposed by W.S. 39-14-304(a) shall be deposited into the severance tax distribution account.

 

(b) Repealed By Laws 2002, Ch. 62, 2.

 

(c) All payments received pursuant to W.S. 39-14-307(b)(iii) shall be transferred to an account. The monies in this account shall be invested or deposited in accordance with W.S. 9-4-714 through 9-4-831, and any interest earned shall be credited to the general fund. The revenue under W.S. 39-14-307(b)(iii) shall be distributed in accordance with this section, subject to the following and except as otherwise provided by law for fiscal year 1994:

 

(i) Revenues earned during each fiscal year shall be recognized as revenue during that fiscal year for accounting purposes;

 

(ii) Revenues which are earned and received during the first three (3) calendar quarters of the fiscal year shall be distributed within the first fifteen (15) days of October, January and April. For the last quarter of each fiscal year, revenues earned or received shall be distributed not later than June 30. In computing distributions for the last quarter, the state treasurer shall use the most recent consensus revenue estimating group estimates to the extent that earnings cannot be determined by June 30. Not later than September 15, the state treasurer shall compute the actual earnings for the last quarter of the preceding fiscal year and make adjustments to the October distributions in an amount equal to the difference between revenues earned and actual distributions for the preceding fiscal year.

 

ARTICLE 4 - BENTONITE

 

39-14-401. Definitions.

 

(a) As used in this article:

 

(i) "Arm's-length market or sales price" means the transaction price determined in connection with a bona fide arm's length sale;

 

(ii) "Bona fide arm's-length sale" means a transaction in cash or terms equivalent to cash for specified property rights after reasonable exposure in a competitive market between a willing, well informed and prudent buyer and seller with adverse economic interests and assuming neither party is acting under undue compulsion or duress;

 

(iii) "Department review" means, but is not limited to, corrections of clerical errors or reconciliations of tax reports with reports required by other state or federal agencies;

 

(iv) "Mine product valuation amendment" means a valuation adjustment determination made by the department including special directives;

 

(v) "Mining or production" means drilling, blasting, loading, roadwork, overburden removal, pre-mouth of the mine reclamation, transportation from the point of severance to the mouth of the mine, and maintenance of facilities and equipment directly relating to any of the functions stated in this paragraph;

 

(vi) "Mouth of the mine" means the point at which a mineral is brought to the surface of the ground and is taken out of the pit, shaft or portal. For a surface mine, this point shall be the top of the ramp where the road or conveying system leaves the pit. For an in situ mine, the point shall be the wellhead;

 

(vii) "Processing" means crushing, sizing, milling, washing, drying, refining, upgrading, beneficiation, sampling, testing, treating, heating, separating, tailings or reject material disposal, compressing, storing, loading for shipment, transportation from the mouth of the mine to the loadout, transportation to market to the extent included in the price and provided by the producer, processing plant site and post-mouth of mine reclamation, maintenance of facilities and equipment relating to any of the functions stated in this paragraph, and any other function after severance that changes the physical or chemical characteristics or enhances the marketability of the mineral;

 

(viii) "Purchaser" means the first purchaser who acquires the produced valuable bentonite deposit from the taxpayer for value;

 

(ix) "Severance tax" means an excise tax imposed on the present and continuing privilege of removing, extracting, severing or producing any mineral in this state;

 

(x) Beginning January 1, 1989, "taxable value" means one hundred percent (100%) of the fair market value of the gross product of minerals and mine products;

 

(xi) "Transportation to market provided by the producer" means the costs incurred for any movement of a mineral which is performed by the producer beyond the point of loading for shipment to the customer, commonly referred to as the loadout, completed by the employees of the producer using equipment owned by the producer;

 

(xii) "Unreported production" means production volume for which no tax report was filed for the reporting period by the taxpayer or his agent;

 

(xiii) "Value of the gross product" means fair market value as prescribed by W.S. 39-11-101(a)(vi), less any deductions and exemption allowed by Wyoming law or rules.

 

39-14-402. Administration; confidentiality.

 

(a) The department shall annually value and assess the gross product of all mines and mining claims at its fair market value for taxation.

 

(b) The department shall annually value the gross product for the preceding calendar year, in appropriate unit measures of all mines and mining claims from which valuable deposits are produced.

 

(c) Annually, on or before June 1, or as soon thereafter as the fair market value is determined, the department shall certify the valuation determined by the department to the county assessor of the county in which the property is located, to be entered upon the assessment rolls of the county.

 

(d) All taxpayer returns and return information shall be confidential and, except as authorized below, no current or former official, officer, employee or agent of the state of Wyoming or any political subdivision thereof shall disclose any such information obtained by him in connection with his service as an officer or employee.

 

(e) As used in this section, taxpayer returns and return information shall include, but not be limited to, all statements, reports, summaries and all other data and documents under audit or provided by the taxpayer in accordance with the provisions of W.S. 39-14-407(a) and related provision.

 

(f) Without written authorization from the taxpayer, no current or former official, officer, employee or agent of the state of Wyoming or any political subdivision thereof shall release taxpayer returns and return information pertaining to taxes imposed by this article, except:

 

(i) Information may be released to the governor or his designee, members of the board, to employees of the department of audit, the department of revenue, the consensus revenue estimating group and to the attorney general;

 

(ii) Upon prior notice to the taxpayer, information may be released by the department, upon written application, to any other governmental entity if the governmental entity shows sufficient reason to obtain the information for official business;

 

(iii) Information is admissible in court or administrative proceedings related to mineral taxes or government royalties.

 

(g) Any person receiving information pursuant to paragraph (f)(ii) of this section shall sign an agreement with the department to keep the information confidential.

 

(h) Units of production reported by the taxpayer and the taxpayer's taxable value are not confidential and may be released without qualification.

 

(j) Any person who negligently violates subsections (d) through (h) of this section is guilty of a misdemeanor and upon conviction shall be fined not more than one thousand dollars ($1,000.00). Any person who intentionally violates this section is guilty of a misdemeanor and upon conviction shall be fined not less than one thousand dollars ($1,000.00), but not more than five thousand dollars ($5,000.00) and imprisoned for not more than one (1) year.

 

(k) Repealed By Laws 2000, Ch. 68, 1.

 

39-14-403. Imposition.

 

(a) Taxable event. The following shall apply:

 

(i) There is levied a severance tax on the value of the gross product for the privilege of severing or extracting bentonite in the state. The severance tax imposed by this article may be in addition to other taxes, including but not limited to the ad valorem taxes imposed by W.S. 39-13-104.

 

(b) Basis of tax (valuation). The following shall apply:

 

(i) Bentonite shall be valued for taxation as provided in this subsection. Based upon the information received or procured pursuant to W.S. 39-14-407(a) or 39-14-408(a)(i), the department shall annually value the gross product for the preceding calendar year, in appropriate unit measures of all mines and mining claims from which valuable deposits are produced, at the fair market value of the product at the mouth of the mine where produced, after the mining or production process is completed;

 

(ii) In the event the bentonite is sold at or prior to the mouth of the mine without further movement or processing, the fair market value shall be the total mineral sales revenue received or receivable by the individual producer less amounts paid or payable by the producer for exempt royalty;

 

(iii) In the event the bentonite is not sold at the mouth of the mine by bona fide arms-length sale, or, except as hereafter provided, if the product of the mine is used without sale, the department shall determine the fair market value of bentonite in accordance with paragraph (iv) of this section;

 

(iv) The department shall determine the value of bentonite for severance and ad valorem tax purposes as follows:

 

(A) For bentonite sold away from the mouth of the mine, the taxable value shall be calculated by adding to each producer's actual direct cost of mining per unit, an allocation of indirect costs, overhead and profit, per unit, as determined by the method prescribed in subdivision (I) of this subparagraph plus nonexempt royalty and production taxes per unit:

 

(I) The allocation of indirect costs, overhead and profit, shall be determined initially and effective with the implementation of this section, by first calculating a bentonite industry wide percentage add-on factor, determined as prescribed in subdivision (II) of this subparagraph, and second by multiplying this initial industry factor times each producer's actual average direct mining costs to mine-mouth per unit, excluding royalty and production taxes. This add-on amount shall be computed prospectively for each producer each year as prescribed in subdivision (III) of this subparagraph;

 

(II) The industry factor shall initially be determined by an audit of 1989 production data conducted in accordance with the provisions of subdivision (IV) of this subparagraph. The initial industry factor shall be the same for all producers for 1990 which shall represent the base line year. The subsequent add-on factors for each producer will be determined each year as defined in subdivision (III) of this subparagraph;

 

(III) Subsequent adjustments to the add-on amount as initially determined under the provisions of subdivision (II) of this subparagraph and as subsequently determined under the provisions of this subdivision shall be recalculated each year with the base year being the initial year of this act. The recalculated add-on amount per unit for each producer shall be determined by multiplying the previous, or initial, add-on percentage amount by the difference between each individual bentonite producer's percentage increase or decrease in mining costs per unit from the percentage increase or decrease in sales price per unit and then adding this amount to the initial industry wide or previous percentage add-on factor. Sales price per unit for purposes of this formula shall be the weighted average sales price per unit for each producer based on the actual arms-length sales of milled bentonite used for taconite, foundry and drilling mud applications (including crushed and dried shipments), where user destinations are known to be in the United States and Canada. Packaged sales of bentonite in these three (3) categories shall be included after deducting the packaging premium. The packaging premium shall be calculated by subtracting the weighted average sales price per ton of bulk sales in these three (3) categories from the weighted average sales price per ton of package sales in these three (3) categories. If substantial arms-length transactions, which are at least five percent (5%) of total transactions in a particular category, do not exist for a producer in a specific targeted sales category, average pricing determined from arms-length transactions in that specific category by all producers shall be imposed. In no event shall the value of the bentonite product include any processing functions or operations regardless of where the processing is performed. As used in this subsection, direct mining costs include but are not limited to mining labor including mine foremen and supervisory personnel whose primary responsibility is extraction of bentonite, supplies used for mining, mining equipment, fuel, power and other utilities used for mining, maintenance of mining equipment, depreciation of mining equipment, reclamation, ad valorem property taxes on mining equipment, transportation of bentonite from the point of severance to the point of valuation and any other costs incurred prior to the point of valuation that are directly and specifically attributable to the mining operation. Royalty and production taxes shall be excluded from mine mouth cost for purposes of computation. In no event and under no circumstances shall the value of bentonite be less than the direct mining costs plus nonexempt royalty and production taxes;

 

(IV) At four (4) year intervals and for the base year the taxable value per unit for each producer shall be revised using the proportionate profits method. Each producer's add-on factor shall be adjusted to provide the taxable value equivalent to the value derived using the proportionate profits method with a direct cost ratio. The direct cost ratio shall be total direct mining costs divided by total direct mining, processing and transportation costs. The sales price per unit, as described in subdivision (III) of this subparagraph, shall exclude all royalties and production taxes. The taxable value shall be derived based on an audit of the most current completed year's data conducted in the producer's offices. Should the audit not be performed, the producer's factor shall be adjusted according to subdivision (III) of this subparagraph until the audit is performed, and then the revised factor shall be applied prospectively. Thereafter, the revised factor for each producer shall be adjusted according to subdivision (III) of this subparagraph.

 

(v) The value of the gross product shall be the fair market value of the product at the mouth of the mine where produced, after the mining or production process is completed;

 

(vi) Except as otherwise provided, the mining or production process is deemed completed when mineral product reaches the mouth of the mine. In no event shall the value of the mineral product include any processing functions or operations regardless of where the processing is performed;

 

(vii) Except as otherwise provided, if the product as defined in paragraph (vi) of this subsection is sold at the mouth of the mine, the fair market value shall be deemed to be the price established by bona fide arms-length sale.

 

(c) Taxpayer. The following shall apply:

 

(i) In the case of the gross product of all mines and mining claims produced under lease, the lessor is liable for the payment of ad valorem taxes on the product removed only to the extent of the lessor's retained interest under the lease, whether royalty or otherwise, and the lessee or his assignee is liable for all other property taxes due on production under the lease;

 

(ii) Any taxpayer paying the taxes imposed by this article on any valuable deposit may deduct the severance taxes paid from any amounts due or to become due to the interest owners of such valuable deposit in proportion to the interest ownership;

 

(iii) Any person extracting valuable products subject to this article and any person owning an interest in the valuable products to the extent of their interest ownership are liable for the payment of the severance taxes imposed by this article together with any penalties and interest.

 

39-14-404. Tax rate.

 

The total severance tax rate for bentonite shall be two percent (2%). The tax shall be distributed as provided in W.S. 39-14-411.

 

39-14-405. Exemptions.

 

There are no specific applicable provisions for exemptions for this chapter.

 

39-14-406. Licenses; permits.

 

There are no specific applicable provisions for licenses and permits for this chapter.

 

39-14-407. Compliance; collection procedures.

 

(a) Returns and reports. The following shall apply:

 

(i) Annually, on or before February 25 of the year following the year of production any person whose property is subject to W.S. 39-14-402(a) shall sign under oath and submit a statement listing the information relative to the property and affairs of the company as the department may require to assess the property;

 

(ii) All information and reports shall be notarized and signed by a person who has legal authority to bind the taxpayer;

 

(iii) For mines and mining claims, the department may presume that the property is located in the county in which production is reported by the taxpayer. The department shall not direct any county to provide relief for taxes paid on taxable valuation which was erroneously reported and certified to the wrong county unless the taxpayer files or is directed to file amended returns within two (2) years of the date of the original certification of the production. Unless there is evidence of bad faith or willful disregard of production circumstances, no taxpayer shall be required to pay taxes on production which was erroneously reported and certified to the wrong county if relief for taxes paid is not allowed under this provision;

 

(iv) Except as provided in paragraph (v) of this subsection, each taxpayer liable for severance taxes under W.S. 39-14-403 shall report monthly to the department. The monthly tax reports are due on or before the twenty-fifth day of the second month following the month of production. Reports shall be filed on forms prescribed by the department. The department may allow extensions for filing returns by regulation;

 

(v) If a taxpayer's liability for severance tax imposed under this article is less than thirty thousand dollars ($30,000.00) for the preceding calendar year, monthly reporting requirements are waived and the taxpayer shall report annually. The annual report is due on February 25 of the year following the year in which production occurred. If a taxpayer who reports annually accumulates an annual liability exceeding thirty thousand dollars ($30,000.00), that taxpayer shall commence reporting monthly as provided in paragraph (iv) of this subsection during the production year following the year in which the accumulated tax liability exceeded thirty thousand dollars ($30,000.00). It is the taxpayer's responsibility to notify the department concerning the change from annual to monthly reporting requirements or from monthly to annual reporting;

 

(vi) For mines and mining claims, the taxpayer shall report the location of the production to the county and tax district in which the mine or mining claim is located, based upon the actual taxable production produced by the mine in each county or tax district. Other reasonable methods of reporting the location of production may be approved by the department upon written request of the taxpayer or taxing jurisdiction.

 

(b) Payment. The following shall apply:

 

(i) Annually, on or before October 10 the county treasurer shall send a written statement in sealed envelopes of total tax due, itemized as to property description, assessed value and mill levies, to each taxpayer at his last known address. Failure to send notice, or to demand payment of taxes, does not invalidate any taxes due;

 

(ii) Ad valorem taxes provided by this act are due and payable at the office of the county treasurer of the county in which the taxes are levied. Fifty percent (50%) of the taxes are due on and after September 1 and payable on and after November 10 in each year and the remaining fifty percent (50%) of the taxes are due on and after March 1 and payable on and after May 10 of the succeeding calendar year except as hereafter provided. If the entire tax is paid on or before December 31, no interest or penalty is chargeable;

 

(iii) Except as provided in paragraph (iv) of this subsection, each taxpayer liable for a severance tax under W.S. 39-14-403(a) shall pay monthly tax payments to the department. The payment shall be determined by the taxpayer based on the value of the gross product produced and saved during the second preceding month, and tax computed on value at rates prescribed in this article. The monthly tax payments are due on or before the twenty-fifth day of the second month following the month of production. If the report the taxpayer is required to file shows tax due, the taxpayer shall pay the tax due when the report is filed. The department may allow extensions for paying taxes by regulation. The department may, if an extension is granted, request the payment of the reasonable estimate of ninety percent (90%) of the tax by the statutory due date, with the remaining tax remitted with the extended return;

 

(iv) If a taxpayer's liability for severance tax imposed under this article is less than thirty thousand dollars ($30,000.00) for the preceding calendar year, monthly payment requirements are waived and the taxpayer shall pay the tax annually. The annual payment is due on February 25 of the year following the year in which production occurred. If a taxpayer who pays annually accumulates an annual liability exceeding thirty thousand dollars ($30,000.00), that taxpayer shall commence remitting tax payments as provided in paragraph (iii) of this subsection during the production year following the year in which the accumulated tax liability exceeded thirty thousand dollars ($30,000.00). It is the taxpayer's responsibility to notify the department concerning the change from annual to monthly payment requirements or from monthly to annual payment.

 

(c) Timelines. Except as otherwise specifically provided, there are no specific applicable provisions for timelines for this article.

 

39-14-408. Enforcement.

 

(a) General. The following shall apply:

 

(i) If the statement provided by W.S. 39-14-407(a)(i) is not filed, the department shall value the property from the best information available. The department may use information other than contained in the statement provided by W.S. 39-14-407(a)(i) to determine the fair market value of the property provided by W.S. 39-14-402(a);

 

(ii) When a taxpayer producing valuable deposits fails to pay the taxes imposed by this article when due, the purchaser of the produced valuable deposit shall withhold and remit to the department the taxpayer's subsequently accruing taxes on the produced valuable deposit acquired by the purchaser. This provision is subject to the following conditions:

 

(A) The department shall notify the purchaser and taxpayer in writing on or before the first day of the production month for which subsequent taxes are due that the purchaser shall begin remitting taxes to the department as provided in W.S. 39-14-407(b)(iii);

 

(B) The department shall notify the purchaser in writing of the proper rates for calculating taxes due and the percentage of the produced valuable deposit subject to taxation by this article;

 

(C) The amount of tax paid by a purchaser to the department, as required by this subsection, shall offset and satisfy all claims for payments for the purchase of produced valuable deposits to the extent of the tax payment;

 

(D) This paragraph shall not apply under circumstances where the purchaser is required to continue payments due to legal proceedings;

 

(E) This paragraph shall not apply until after the purchaser has been notified in writing that subsequent accruing taxes will be payable by the purchaser.

 

(iii) Severance taxes due together with interest, penalties and costs shall be collectible by the department by appropriate judicial proceedings.

 

(b) Audits. The following shall apply:

 

(i) The department may employ examiners and obtain other technical services, to investigate and examine the books and records of any person paying taxes imposed under W.S. 39-13-101 through 39-13-111. The department shall notify the county assessor of any change in valuation as determined by audits, examinations or investigations establishing:

 

(A) Taxable volumes or values were not accurately reported;

 

(B) Clerical errors were made in determining taxable volumes or values;

 

(C) Taxable volumes or values for the year that production occurred were not calculated in compliance with Wyoming statutes or rules governing the determinations; or

 

(D) Additional payment for production was received and not reported whether such payment was received in the year of production or in subsequent years.

 

(ii) Effective until March 1, 1994, the department is authorized to rely on final audit findings under W.S. 9-2-2003, taxpayer amended returns or department review, and to certify mine product valuation amendments for production in calendar year 1985 and thereafter, to the county assessor of the county in which the property is located, to be entered upon the assessment rolls of the county and taxes computed and collected thereon subject to appeal under W.S. 39-14-409(b)(ii);

 

(iii) Commencing January 1, 2003, the department is authorized to rely on final audit findings, taxpayer amended returns or department review, and to certify mine product valuation amendments to the county assessor of the county in which the property is located, to be entered upon the assessment rolls of the county and taxes computed and collected thereon subject to appeal under W.S. 39-14-409(b)(ii), provided that the return is filed within three (3) years from the date the production should have been reported pursuant to W.S. 39-14-407(a)(i), and that the audit or review commenced within the time period as required by paragraph (vii) of this subsection. Commencement of an audit, completion of an audit, and final audit findings and final determination by the department being issued to the taxpayer shall not preclude the taxpayer from filing amended returns within the time period specified herein, and the amended returns may be audited within the time period stated in paragraph (vii) of this subsection;

 

(iv) The department is authorized to rely on final audit findings, taxpayer amended returns or department review, and to assess deficient severance tax payments, interest and penalty, if any, for the same periods governing mine product valuation amendments pursuant to paragraphs (ii) and (iii) of this subsection;

 

(v) All audits or department reviews, as applicable, pursuant to paragraphs (ii), (iii) and (iv) of this subsection are subject to the following conditions:

 

(A) Audits are commenced when the taxpayer receives written notice of the intended action;

 

(B) Prior to entering the premises of a taxpayer or third party, the taxpayer or third party shall be provided at least fourteen (14) days written notice;

 

(C) Audits are completed when the final findings are issued to the taxpayer by the department of audit;

 

(D) Unless otherwise agreed to in writing, audits shall be completed and the final audit findings issued to the taxpayer not later than the end of the month two (2) years after the audit is commenced and not sooner than one (1) year following the reporting date for ad valorem taxes;

 

(E) Any assessment or levy, including the assessment of a penalty and interest, if any, resulting from final audit findings or department review shall be issued within one (1) year following the completion of the audit or review;

 

(F) Upon receipt of department review findings, the taxpayer shall have sixty (60) days in which to submit a response.

 

(vi) Where there is evidence of gross negligence by the taxpayer in reporting and valuing production, an audit may examine prior years and issue assessments where gross negligence occurred. This section shall not apply to mine product valuation amendments to add the value of unreported production;

 

(vii) Audits shall commence within three (3) years and six (6) months immediately following the reporting date for ad valorem taxes and taxpayers shall keep accurate books and records of all production subject to taxes imposed by this article and determinations of taxable value as prescribed by W.S. 39-14-403(b) for a period of seven (7) years and make them available to department examiners for audit purposes. Amended returns filed with the department during the conduct of an audit prior to the issuance of the final audit findings may be made available by the taxpayer to the audit examiners. If the examination discloses evidence of gross negligence by the taxpayer in reporting and paying the tax, the department may examine all pertinent records for any reporting period without regard to the limitations set forth in paragraphs (vii) and (viii) of this subsection;

 

(viii) In order to examine relevant books or records of a taxpayer subject to a tax imposed by this article or to secure any information related to enforcement of this article, authorized representatives of the department may at any time during normal business hours enter premises of a taxpayer liable for a tax imposed by this article or the premises of any third party having information regarding that taxpayer's liability. Prior to entering the premises of a taxpayer or third party, the department shall provide fourteen (14) days written notice to the taxpayer and third party. Such examinations shall be completed and the written results thereof provided to the taxpayer by the end of the third calendar year following the calendar year in which the audit was commenced;

 

(ix) The state may employ auditors and obtain other technical assistance necessary to determine if the tax imposed by this article has been properly reported and paid.

 

(c) Interest. The following shall apply:

 

(i) The taxpayer is entitled to receive an offsetting credit for any overpaid gross product or severance tax identified by an audit that is within the scope of the audit period, without regard to the limitation period for requesting refunds. In calculating interest, the department or board of county commissioners shall first compute a net deficiency amount after subtracting any offsetting credit and then calculate any interest due;

 

(ii) Taxes are delinquent pursuant to paragraphs (iii) and (iv) of this subsection when a taxpayer or his agent knew or reasonably should have known that the total tax liability was not paid when due;

 

(iii) The balance of any ad valorem tax not paid as provided by W.S. 39-14-407(b)(ii) is delinquent after the day on which it is payable and shall bear interest at eighteen percent (18%) per annum until paid or collected;

 

(iv) Effective January 1, 1994, interest at an annual rate equal to the average prime interest rate as determined by the state treasurer during the preceding fiscal year plus four percent (4%) shall be added to all delinquent severance taxes on any mineral produced on or after January 1, 1994. To determine the average prime interest rate, the state treasurer shall average the prime interest rate for at least seventy-five percent (75%) of the thirty (30) largest banks in the United States. The interest rate on delinquent taxes shall be adjusted on January 1 of each year following the year in which the taxes first became delinquent. In no instance shall the delinquent tax rate be less than twelve percent (12%) nor greater than eighteen percent (18%) from any mineral produced on or after January 1, 1994. The interest rate on any delinquent mineral tax from any mineral produced before January 1, 1994, shall be eighteen percent (18%) per annum.

 

(d) Penalties. The following shall apply:

 

(i) The taxpayer is entitled to receive an offsetting credit for any overpaid gross product or severance tax identified by an audit that is within the scope of the audit period, without regard to the limitation period for requesting refunds. In calculating penalty, the department or board of county commissioners shall first compute a net deficiency amount after subtracting any offsetting credit and then calculate any penalty due;

 

(ii) If any person fails to file the report required by W.S. 39-14-407(a)(i) by the due date or any extension thereof, the department may impose a penalty equal to a total of one percent (1%) of the taxable value of the production from the well, mine or mining claim but not to exceed five thousand dollars ($5,000.00) for each calendar month or portion thereof that the report or information is late. If any person fails to file reports and other information required by rule of the department of revenue other than those required by W.S. 39-14-407(a)(iv) or 39-14-407(a)(i), the department may impose a penalty of up to one thousand dollars ($1,000.00). The department may waive penalties under this paragraph for good cause. Penalties imposed under this paragraph may be appealed to the state board of equalization;

 

(iii) If any person fails to make or file a return and remit the tax as required by W.S. 39-14-407(a)(iv), the department shall impose a penalty of five percent (5%) of the taxes due for each thirty (30) day period, or fraction thereof, elapsing between the due date of the return and the date filed, unless the person for good cause obtains from the department an extension of time for filing prior to the due date for filing. In no event shall the total penalty imposed by this subsection exceed twenty-five percent (25%) of the tax due. The department, for good cause, may waive a penalty imposed for failure to file a return for any one (1) month in a calendar year, provided that:

 

(A) The return was filed within five (5) business days following the due date, including an approved extension period; and

 

(B) The taxpayer requests the waiver in writing within fifteen (15) days after the return was filed, setting forth the reasons for the late filing.

 

(iv) If any part of a tax deficiency is due to negligence or intentional disregard of rules and regulations, there shall be added a penalty of five percent (5%) of the amount of the deficiency plus interest as provided by paragraph (c)(iv) of this section. The taxes, penalty and interest shall be paid by the taxpayer within ten (10) days after receipt of notice and demand by the department;

 

(v) The department may credit or waive penalties imposed by paragraphs (iii) and (iv) of this subsection as part of a settlement or for any other good cause.

 

(e) Liens. The following shall apply:

 

(i) Repealed By Laws 2002, Ch. 50, 2.

 

(ii) Repealed By Laws 2002, Ch. 50, 2.

 

(iii) Repealed By Laws 2002, Ch. 50, 2.

 

(iv) All taxes, fees, penalties and interest imposed under this article are an automatic and continuing lien in favor of the state of Wyoming. The lien is on all property in the state of Wyoming, real, tangible and intangible, including all after acquired property rights, future production and rights to property, of any person severing minerals in this state and who is liable under Wyoming law for the collection, payment or remittance of the severance tax and corresponding penalty or interest as of the date such taxes, fees, penalties or interest is due, and remains a lien until paid;

 

(v) A lien under this subsection is also a lien on all interests in the mineral estate from which the production was severed, and on all future production of the same mineral from the same leasehold, regardless of any change of ownership or change in the person extracting the mineral;

 

(vi) Any lien arising under this subsection is superior and paramount to all other liens, claims, mortgages or any other encumbrance of any kind except a lien, claim, mortgage or other encumbrance of record held by a bona fide creditor and properly perfected, filed or recorded under Wyoming law prior to the filing of a lien as provided by paragraph (viii) of this subsection;

 

(vii) The department may file a notice of lien at any time at its discretion, except no lien shall be enforced until the right of the taxpayer to file and properly perfect an appeal concerning the tax delinquent property before the state board of equalization has expired. A properly perfected appeal on the tax delinquent property before the state board of equalization or any subsequent properly perfected appeal on the same property to a district court or the supreme court shall stay enforcement of a lien filed by the department until such appeal has been exhausted or concluded;

 

(viii) In order to perfect a tax lien under this subsection, the department of revenue shall file a notice of the tax lien with the secretary of state. The notice of the tax lien shall contain:

 

(A) The name and last known address of the person or persons against whose property the lien is filed including, but not limited to, the person severing the mineral;

 

(B) The name and address of the department of revenue as the holder of the lien and the name of the contact person within the department;

 

(C) The amount of the tax, fees, penalties and interest owed the state of Wyoming;

 

(D) A statement that the amount of the unpaid tax, fees, penalties or interest is a lien on all property, real, tangible or intangible, including all after acquired property and rights to the property belonging to the person who severed the mineral and located within the state of Wyoming, as well as all interest in the mineral estate from which the production was severed and any future production from the same mineral leasehold.

 

(ix) No other action beyond that described in paragraph (viii) of this subsection shall be required to perfect a tax lien;

 

(x) The filing of the notice of the tax lien as described in paragraph (viii) of this subsection shall constitute record notice of the tax lien;

 

(xi) One (1) notice of the tax lien shall be deemed sufficient to cover all taxes, together with interest, fees and penalty of the same nature which may accrue after the filing of the notice;

 

(xii) Any tax lien created under this subsection and duly filed with the secretary of state shall survive the death or incapacitation of any person, and shall survive any other destruction or attempted destruction of any interest in property owned by any person liable under Wyoming law for the collection, payment or remittance of taxes, fees, penalties or interest to the state;

 

(xiii) In the event of foreclosure, the department of revenue shall be entitled to recover the costs of filing the lien, foreclosing on the lien and reasonable attorney's fees;

 

(xiv) All notice of tax liens shall be released within sixty (60) days after taxes, penalties and interest due are paid or collected;

 

(xv) Notwithstanding that the lien is a lien on all interests in the mineral estate from which the production was severed and on all future production from the same leasehold, the department may for good cause shown, release the lien on all property in this state, real, tangible and intangible, and settle delinquent taxes, interest and penalties to be collected against future production from that leasehold;

 

(xvi) The secretary of state is authorized and directed to maintain copies of all tax liens filed by the department of revenue pursuant to this chapter, and to maintain a data base of such tax liens and to provide copies to any person pursuant to the duties of the secretary of state as set forth in W.S. 9-1-301 et seq. All tax liens on file with any county in this state and in good standing on the effective date of this paragraph shall remain effective and in good standing. Within sixty (60) days of the effective date of this paragraph, the director of the department of revenue shall transmit to the secretary of state for filing copies of all tax liens that the director seeks to have in continuing effect. Upon the filing of a copy of the tax lien with the secretary of state, the tax lien shall continue to be fully effective until released by the department of revenue.

 

(f) Tax sales. There are no specific applicable provisions for tax sales for this article.

 

39-14-409. Taxpayer remedies.

 

(a) Interpretation requests. The following shall apply:

 

(i) The taxpayer may request a value determination from the department and propose a value determination method which may be used until the department issues a value determination. The taxpayer shall submit all available data relevant to its proposal and any additional information the department deems necessary. After the department issues its determination, the taxpayer shall make adjustments based upon the value established or request a hearing by the board;

 

(ii) A taxpayer may request and the department shall provide written interpretations of these statutes and rules. When requesting an interpretation, a taxpayer must set forth the facts and circumstances pertinent to the issue. If the department deems the facts and circumstances provided to be insufficient, it may request additional information. A taxpayer may act in reliance upon a written interpretation through the end of the calendar year in which the interpretation was issued, or until revoked by the department, whichever occurs last if the pertinent facts and circumstances were substantially correct and fully disclosed.

 

(b) Appeals. The following shall apply:

 

(i) Following determination of the fair market value of property the department shall notify the taxpayer by mail of the assessed value. The person assessed may file written objections to the assessment with the board within thirty (30) days of the date of postmark and appear before the board at a time specified by the board. The person assessed shall also file a copy of the written objections with the county treasurer of the county in which the property is located, who shall notify the county assessor and the board of county commissioners, with an estimate of the tax amount under appeal based upon the previous year's tax levy;

 

(ii) Mine product valuation amendments under this section may be appealed by the taxpayer to the board within thirty (30) days of the final administrative decision;

 

(iii) Any taxpayer who feels aggrieved by the valuation and taxes levied by this article may appeal to the board. The appeal does not relieve the taxpayer from paying the tax when due and payable nor does the payment invalidate the appeal. No restraining order or injunction shall be granted or issued by any court or judge to restrain or enjoin the collection of any tax, interest or penalty imposed by this article;

 

(iv) The state board of equalization shall perform the duties specified in article 15, section 10 of the Wyoming constitution and shall hear appeals from county boards of equalization and review final decisions of the department upon application of any interested person adversely affected, including boards of county commissioners for the purposes of this paragraph, under the contested case procedures of the Wyoming Administrative Procedure Act. Any interested person adversely affected by the adoption, amendment or repeal of a rule pursuant to W.S. 16-3-103(a) shall be afforded an opportunity for a hearing before the board;

 

(v) Any person including the state of Wyoming aggrieved by any order issued by the board, or any county board of equalization whose decision has been reversed or modified by the state board of equalization, may appeal the decision of the board to the district court of the county in which the property or some part thereof is situated.

 

(c) Refunds. The following shall apply:

 

(i) If a taxpayer has reason to believe that ad valorem taxes imposed by this article have been overpaid, a request for refund shall be filed with the department by submitting amended returns within three (3) years from the date the production should have been reported pursuant to W.S. 39-14-407(a)(i). Any refund granted shall be subject to modification or revocation upon audit;

 

(ii) If a taxpayer has reason to believe that taxes imposed by this article have been overpaid, a request for refund shall be filed with the department by submitting an amended return within three (3) years from the date the production should have been reported pursuant to W.S. 39-14-407(a)(i). Refunds of two thousand dollars ($2,000.00), or less may be applied to subsequent payments for taxes imposed by this article. Requests for refunds exceeding two thousand dollars ($2,000.00) shall be approved in writing by the department prior to the taxpayer receiving credit. All refunds granted are subject to modification or revocation upon audit;

 

(iii) Notwithstanding paragraphs (i) and (ii) of this subsection, the taxpayer is entitled to receive a refund of any overpaid ad valorem or severance tax identified by an audit regardless of whether a refund has been requested.

 

(d) Credits. The following shall apply:

 

(i) Any refund may, at the discretion of the board of county commissioners, be made in the form of credit against future tax payments for a period not to exceed five (5) years. Unless otherwise agreed to by the taxpayer, refunds in the form of credit against future tax payments shall be made in no less than equal annual amounts. The board of county commissioners shall not provide a credit for interest on the excess tax paid unless the taxes are paid under protest due to an appeal pending before the state board of equalization and the taxpayer prevails in the appeal;

 

(ii) The taxpayer is entitled to receive an offsetting credit for any overpaid gross product or severance tax identified by an audit that is within the scope of the audit without regard to the limitation period for requesting refunds;

 

(iii) If a taxpayer overpaid taxes imposed by this article, the department shall allow a credit in the amount of the overpayment to be taken on the taxpayer's subsequent monthly reports for the production year.

 

(e) Redemption. There are no specific applicable provisions for redemption for this article.

 

(f) Escrow. The following shall apply:

 

(i) If ad valorem taxes are paid under protest to the extent of and due to an appeal pending before the state board of equalization or any court of competent jurisdiction, the county treasurer shall deposit that protested amount under appeal in an interest bearing escrow account and withhold distribution until a final decision on the appeal peal has been rendered. To the extent the taxpayer prevails in the appeal, the county treasurer shall refund that amount under appeal, plus interest earned thereon, to the taxpayer within thirty (30) days from the day the final decision is rendered. If the taxpayer pays to the county an amount in excess of the protested amount under appeal, the excess shall be distributed as provided by law;

 

(ii) If severance taxes are paid under protest to the extent of and due to an appeal pending before the state board of equalization or any court of competent jurisdiction, the state treasurer shall deposit that protested amount under appeal in a separate interest bearing escrow account and withhold distribution until a final decision on the appeal has been rendered by the state board of equalization or the court. To the extent the taxpayer prevails in the appeal, the state treasurer shall refund that amount under appeal, plus interest earned thereon, to the taxpayer within thirty (30) days from the day the final decision is rendered. If the taxpayer pays to the state an amount in excess of the protested amount under appeal, the excess shall be distributed as provided by law;

 

(iii) This provision does not enlarge or curtail the ability of a taxpayer to appeal any department of revenue decision as otherwise provided for under this act.

 

39-14-410. Statute of limitations.

 

Except as otherwise provided in this article, there is no general statute of limitations for this article.

 

39-14-411. Distribution.

 

(a) As provided by W.S. 39-14-404, the total severance tax rate for bentonite shall be two percent (2%), and shall be deposited in the severance tax distribution account.

 

(b) All payments received pursuant to W.S. 39-14-407(b)(iii) shall be transferred to an account. The monies in this account shall be invested or deposited in accordance with W.S. 9-4-714 through 9-4-831, and any interest earned shall be credited to the general fund. The revenue under W.S. 39-14-407(b)(iii) shall be distributed in accordance with subsection (a) of this section, subject to the following and except as otherwise provided by law for fiscal year 1994:

 

(i) Revenues earned during each fiscal year shall be recognized as revenue during that fiscal year for accounting purposes;

 

(ii) Revenues which are earned and received during the first three (3) calendar quarters of the fiscal year shall be distributed within the first fifteen (15) days of October, January and April. For the last quarter of each fiscal year, revenues earned or received shall be distributed not later than June 30. In computing distributions for the last quarter, the state treasurer shall use the most recent consensus revenue estimating group estimates to the extent that earnings cannot be determined by June 30. Not later than September 15, the state treasurer shall compute the actual earnings for the last quarter of the preceding fiscal year and make adjustments to the October distributions in an amount equal to the difference between revenues earned and actual distributions for the preceding fiscal year.

 

ARTICLE 5 - URANIUM

 

39-14-501. Definitions.

 

(a) As used in this article:

 

(i) "Arm's-length market or sales price" means the transaction price determined in connection with a bona fide arm's length sale;

 

(ii) "Bona fide arm's-length sale" means a transaction in cash or terms equivalent to cash for specified property rights after reasonable exposure in a competitive market between a willing, well informed and prudent buyer and seller with adverse economic interests and assuming neither party is acting under undue compulsion or duress;

 

(iii) "Department review" means, but is not limited to, corrections of clerical errors or reconciliations of tax reports with reports required by other state or federal agencies;

 

(iv) "Mine product valuation amendment" means a valuation adjustment determination made by the department including special directives;

 

(v) "Mining or production" means drilling, blasting, loading, roadwork, overburden removal, pre-mouth of the mine reclamation, transportation from the point of severance to the mouth of the mine, and maintenance of facilities and equipment directly relating to any of the functions stated in this paragraph;

 

(vi) "Mouth of the mine" means the point at which a mineral is brought to the surface of the ground and is taken out of the pit, shaft or portal. For a surface mine, this point shall be the top of the ramp where the road or conveying system leaves the pit. For an in situ mine, the point shall be the wellhead;

 

(vii) "Processing" means crushing, sizing, milling, washing, drying, refining, upgrading, beneficiation, sampling, testing, treating, heating, separating, tailings or reject material disposal, compressing, storing, loading for shipment, transportation from the mouth of the mine to the loadout, transportation to market to the extent included in the price and provided by the producer, processing plant site and post-mouth of mine reclamation, maintenance of facilities and equipment relating to any of the functions stated in this paragraph, and any other function after severance that changes the physical or chemical characteristics or enhances the marketability of the mineral;

 

(viii) "Purchaser" means the first purchaser who acquires the produced valuable uranium deposit from the taxpayer for value;

 

(ix) "Severance tax" means an excise tax imposed on the present and continuing privilege of removing, extracting, severing or producing any mineral in this state;

 

(x) Beginning January 1, 1989, "taxable value" means one hundred percent (100%) of the fair market value of the gross product of minerals and mine products;

 

(xi) "Unreported production" means production volume for which no tax report was filed for the reporting period by the taxpayer or his agent;

 

(xii) "Value of the gross product" means fair market value as prescribed by W.S. 39-11-101(a)(vi), less any deductions and exemption allowed by Wyoming law or rules.

 

39-14-502. Administration; confidentiality.

 

(a) The department shall annually value and assess the gross product of all mines and mining claims at its fair market value for taxation.

 

(b) The department shall annually value the gross product for the preceding calendar year, in appropriate unit measures of all mines and mining claims from which valuable deposits are produced.

 

(c) Annually, on or before June 1, or as soon thereafter as the fair market value is determined, the department shall certify the valuation determined by the department to the county assessor of the county in which the property is located, to be entered upon the assessment rolls of the county.

 

(d) All taxpayer returns and return information shall be confidential and, except as authorized below, no current or former official, officer, employee or agent of the state of Wyoming or any political subdivision thereof shall disclose any such information obtained by him in connection with his service as an officer or employee.

 

(e) As used in this section, taxpayer returns and return information shall include, but not be limited to, all statements, reports, summaries and all other data and documents under audit or provided by the taxpayer in accordance with the provisions of W.S. 39-14-507(a) and related provision.

 

(f) Without written authorization from the taxpayer, no current or former official, officer, employee or agent of the state of Wyoming or any political subdivision thereof shall release taxpayer returns and return information pertaining to taxes imposed by this article, except:

 

(i) Information may be released to the governor or his designee, members of the board, to employees of the department of audit, the department of revenue, the consensus revenue estimating group and to the attorney general;

 

(ii) Upon prior notice to the taxpayer, information may be released by the department, upon written application, to any other governmental entity if the governmental entity shows sufficient reason to obtain the information for official business;

 

(iii) Information is admissible in court or administrative proceedings related to mineral taxes or government royalties.

 

(g) Any person receiving information pursuant to paragraph (f)(ii) of this section shall sign an agreement with the department to keep the information confidential.

 

(h) Units of production reported by the taxpayer and the taxpayer's taxable value are not confidential and may be released without qualification.

 

(j) Any person who negligently violates subsections (d) through (h) of this section is guilty of a misdemeanor and upon conviction shall be fined not more than one thousand dollars ($1,000.00). Any person who intentionally violates subsections (d) through (h) of this section is guilty of a misdemeanor and upon conviction shall be fined not less than one thousand dollars ($1,000.00), but not more than five thousand dollars ($5,000.00) and imprisoned for not more than one (1) year.

 

(k) Repealed By Laws 2000, Ch. 68, 1.

 

39-14-503. Imposition.

 

(a) Taxable event. The following shall apply:

 

(i) There is levied a severance tax on the value of the gross product for the privilege of severing or extracting uranium in the state. The severance tax imposed by this article may be in addition to other taxes, including but not limited to the ad valorem taxes imposed by W.S. 39-13-104.

 

(b) Basis of tax (valuation). The following shall apply:

 

(i) Uranium shall be valued for taxation as provided in this section;

 

(ii) The value of the gross product shall be the fair market value of the product at the mouth of the mine where produced, after the mining or production process is completed;

 

(iii) Except as otherwise provided, the mining or production process is deemed completed when mineral product reaches the mouth of the mine. In no event shall the value of the mineral product include any processing functions or operations regardless of where the processing is performed;

 

(iv) In the event the product as provided by paragraph (iii) of this subsection is sold at the mouth of the mine without further movement or processing, the fair market value shall be the price established by bona fide arms-length sale less exempt royalties;

 

(v) In the event the mineral product as provided by paragraph (iii) of this subsection is not sold at the mouth of the mine by a bona fide arms-length sale, or, except as otherwise provided, if the product of the mine is used without sale, the department shall determine the fair market value of uranium in accordance with paragraph (vi) or (vii) of this subsection;

 

(vi) The department shall calculate the fair market value of uranium by multiplying the individual producer's sales value of yellow cake less all royalties, ad valorem production taxes, and severance taxes multiplied by the industry factor. The industry factor shall be an average of all uranium producers' ratios of total mining costs to total mining and processing costs incurred to produce yellow cake calculated by the department. Nonexempt royalties, ad valorem production taxes and severance taxes shall then be added to determine taxable value. For purposes of this paragraph:

 

(A) Total mining costs for in situ mines include labor, including mine foremen and supervisory personnel whose primary function is the extraction of uranium, supplies, equipment depreciation and maintenance, fuel, power and other utilities, uranium transportation to the point of valuation, indirect costs related to extraction and any other costs incurred prior to the point of valuation that are specifically attributable to the installation of the well field, pumps used for extraction or injection, or any other extraction activity;

 

(B) Total mining costs for conventional surface and underground mines include labor, including mine foremen and supervisory personnel whose primary function is the extraction of uranium, supplies, equipment depreciation and maintenance, fuel, power and other utilities, uranium transportation to the point of valuation, indirect costs related to extraction and any other costs incurred prior to the point of valuation that are specifically attributable to the excavation and transportation of ore to the mine mouth;

 

(C) Total mining and processing costs include mining costs determined under subparagraph (A) or (B) of this paragraph plus mineral processing labor including plant foremen and supervisory personnel whose primary responsibility is processing uranium, supplies used for processing, processing plant and equipment depreciation, fuel, power and other utilities used for processing, maintenance of processing equipment, uranium transportation from the mouth of the mine to the point of shipment, indirect processing costs and any other costs incurred that are specifically attributable to the mining or processing of uranium up to the point of sale f.o.b. the mine;

 

(D) Indirect costs include but are not limited to allocations of corporate overhead, data processing costs, accounting, legal and clerical costs and other general and administrative costs which cannot be specifically attributed to an operational function without allocation. Indirect costs shall be allocated using methods in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles. Similar costs shall be allocated using the same method for each producer;

 

(E) The industry factor shall be recomputed at four (4) year intervals and will be based on an average of the four (4) prior years' cost data. The new ratio shall be effective prospectively.

 

(vii) In the event that unique or unusual circumstances exist such that the department or the taxpayer is unable to determine the value of the gross product of uranium from a mine or mining claim by application of the methods provided in this subsection, the taxpayer may petition the department for approval to use an alternate valuation method. The department shall approve or deny the use of an alternate valuation method and shall so inform the parties within forty-five (45) days of the date the petition is filed.

 

(c) Taxpayer. The following shall apply:

 

(i) In the case of the gross product of all mines and mining claims produced under lease, the lessor is liable for the payment of ad valorem taxes on the product removed only to the extent of the lessor's retained interest under the lease, whether royalty or otherwise, and the lessee or his assignee is liable for all other property taxes due on production under the lease;

 

(ii) Any taxpayer paying the taxes imposed by this article on any valuable deposit may deduct the severance taxes paid from any amounts due or to become due to the interest owners of such valuable deposit in proportion to the interest ownership;

 

(iii) Any person extracting valuable products subject to this article and any person owning an interest in the valuable products to the extent of their interest ownership are liable for the payment of the severance taxes imposed by this article together with any penalties and interest.

 

39-14-504. Tax rate.

 

(a) The total severance tax rate for uranium shall be four percent (4%). The tax shall be distributed as provided in W.S. 39-14-511 and is imposed as follows:

 

(i) Two percent (2%); plus

 

(ii) Two percent (2%).

 

39-14-505. Exemptions.

 

(a) All uranium production occurring after January 1, 1995, and before March 31, 2009, is exempt from the tax provided in W.S. 39-14-504, except there is levied upon the privilege of severing or extracting uranium an excise tax on the value of the gross product extracted beginning with the month that follows six (6) consecutive months at which the spot market price per pound of nonenriched uranium concentrate is at least fourteen United States dollars ($14.00) as determined by an average of the following international indexes or their successors quoting the monthly price of nonenriched uranium:

 

(i) Nuexco exchange value;

 

(ii) Nukem price range;

 

(iii) Ux U308 spot price.

 

(b) For purposes of subsection (a) of this section the spot market price of uranium used in this table is the price per pound on nonenriched uranium concentrate (U308). The excise tax in subsection (a) of this section, shall be applied in accordance with the following table:

 

Uranium Spot Market Price Tax Applied

 

$14.00 to $15.00 1%

 

$15.01 to $16.00 2%

 

$16.01 to $17.99 3%

 

$18.00 or more 4%

 

39-14-506. Licenses; permits.

 

There are no specific applicable provisions for licenses and permits for this chapter.

 

39-14-507. Compliance; collection procedures.

 

(a) Returns, reports. The following shall apply:

 

(i) Annually, on or before February 25 of the year following the year of production any person whose property is subject to W.S. 39-14-502(a) shall sign under oath and submit a statement listing the information relative to the property and affairs of the company as the department may require to assess the property;

 

(ii) All information and reports shall be notarized and signed by a person who has legal authority to bind the taxpayer;

 

(iii) For mines and mining claims, the department may presume that the property is located in the county in which production is reported by the taxpayer. The department shall not direct any county to provide relief for taxes paid on taxable valuation which was erroneously reported and certified to the wrong county unless the taxpayer files or is directed to file amended returns within two (2) years of the date of the original certification of the production. Unless there is evidence of bad faith or willful disregard of production circumstances, no taxpayer shall be required to pay taxes on production which was erroneously reported and certified to the wrong county if relief for taxes paid is not allowed under this provision;

 

(iv) Except as provided in paragraph (v) of this subsection, each taxpayer liable for severance taxes under W.S. 39-14-503 shall report monthly to the department. The monthly tax reports are due on or before the twenty-fifth day of the second month following the month of production. Reports shall be filed on forms prescribed by the department. The department may allow extensions for filing returns by regulation;

 

(v) If a taxpayer's liability for severance tax imposed under this article is less than thirty thousand dollars ($30,000.00) for the preceding calendar year, monthly reporting requirements are waived and the taxpayer shall report annually. The annual report is due on February 25 of the year following the year in which production occurred. If a taxpayer who reports annually accumulates an annual liability exceeding thirty thousand dollars ($30,000.00), that taxpayer shall commence reporting monthly as provided in paragraph (iv) of this subsection during the production year following the year in which the accumulated tax liability exceeded thirty thousand dollars ($30,000.00). It is the taxpayer's responsibility to notify the department concerning the change from annual to monthly reporting requirements or from monthly to annual reporting;

 

(vi) For mines and mining claims, the taxpayer shall report the location of the production to the county and tax district in which the mine or mining claim is located, based upon the actual taxable production produced by the mine in each county or tax district. Other reasonable methods of reporting the location of production may be approved by the department upon written request of the taxpayer or taxing jurisdiction.

 

(b) Payment. The following shall apply:

 

(i) Annually, on or before October 10 the county treasurer shall send a written statement in sealed envelopes of total tax due, itemized as to property description, assessed value and mill levies, to each taxpayer at his last known address. Failure to send notice, or to demand payment of taxes, does not invalidate any taxes due;

 

(ii) Ad valorem taxes provided by this act are due and payable at the office of the county treasurer of the county in which the taxes are levied. Fifty percent (50%) of the taxes are due on and after September 1 and payable on and after November 10 in each year and the remaining fifty percent (50%) of the taxes are due on and after March 1 and payable on and after May 10 of the succeeding calendar year except as hereafter provided. If the entire tax is paid on or before December 31, no interest or penalty is chargeable;

 

(iii) Except as provided in paragraph (iv) of this subsection, each taxpayer liable for a severance tax under W.S. 39-14-503(a) shall pay monthly tax payments to the department. The payment shall be determined by the taxpayer based on the value of the gross product produced and saved during the second preceding month, and tax computed on value at rates prescribed in this article. The monthly tax payments are due on or before the twenty-fifth day of the second month following the month of production. If the report the taxpayer is required to file shows tax due, the taxpayer shall pay the tax due when the report is filed. The department may allow extensions for paying taxes by regulation. The department may, if an extension is granted, request the payment of the reasonable estimate of ninety percent (90%) of the tax by the statutory due date, with the remaining tax remitted with the extended return;

 

(iv) If a taxpayer's liability for severance tax imposed under this article is less than thirty thousand dollars ($30,000.00) for the preceding calendar year, monthly payment requirements are waived and the taxpayer shall pay the tax annually. The annual payment is due on February 25 of the year following the year in which production occurred. If a taxpayer who pays annually accumulates an annual liability exceeding thirty thousand dollars ($30,000.00), that taxpayer shall commence remitting tax payments as provided in paragraph (iii) of this subsection during the production year following the year in which the accumulated tax liability exceeded thirty thousand dollars ($30,000.00). It is the taxpayer's responsibility to notify the department concerning the change from annual to monthly payment requirements or from monthly to annual payment.

 

(c) Timelines. Except as otherwise specifically provided, there are no general applicable provisions for timelines for this article.

 

39-14-508. Enforcement.

 

(a) General. The following shall apply:

 

(i) If the statement provided by W.S. 39-14-507(a)(i) is not filed, the department shall value the property from the best information available. The department may use information other than contained in the statement provided by W.S. 39-14-507(a)(i) to determine the fair market value of the property provided by W.S. 39-14-502(a);

 

(ii) When a taxpayer producing valuable deposits fails to pay the taxes imposed by this article when due, the purchaser of the produced valuable deposit shall withhold and remit to the department the taxpayer's subsequently accruing taxes on the produced valuable deposit acquired by the purchaser. This provision is subject to the following conditions:

 

(A) The department shall notify the purchaser and taxpayer in writing on or before the first day of the production month for which subsequent taxes are due that the purchaser shall begin remitting taxes to the department as provided in W.S. 39-14-507(b)(iii);

 

(B) The department shall notify the purchaser in writing of the proper rates for calculating taxes due and the percentage of the produced valuable deposit subject to taxation by this article;

 

(C) The amount of tax paid by a purchaser to the department, as required by this paragraph, shall offset and satisfy all claims for payments for the purchase of produced valuable deposits to the extent of the tax payment;

 

(D) This paragraph shall not apply under circumstances where the purchaser is required to continue payments due to legal proceedings;

 

(E) This paragraph shall not apply until after the purchaser has been notified in writing that subsequent accruing taxes will be payable by the purchaser.

 

(iii) Severance taxes due together with interest, penalties and costs shall be collectible by the department by appropriate judicial proceedings.

 

(b) Audits. The following shall apply:

 

(i) The department may employ examiners and obtain other technical services, to investigate and examine the books and records of any person paying taxes imposed under W.S. 39-13-101 through 39-13-111. The department shall notify the county assessor of any change in valuation as determined by audits, examinations or investigations establishing:

 

(A) Taxable volumes or values were not accurately reported;

 

(B) Clerical errors were made in determining taxable volumes or values;

 

(C) Taxable volumes or values for the year that production occurred were not calculated in compliance with Wyoming statutes or rules governing the determinations; or

 

(D) Additional payment for production was received and not reported whether such payment was received in the year of production or in subsequent years.

 

(ii) Effective until March 1, 1994, the department is authorized to rely on final audit findings under W.S. 9-2-2003, taxpayer amended returns or department review, and to certify mine product valuation amendments for production in calendar year 1985 and thereafter, to the county assessor of the county in which the property is located, to be entered upon the assessment rolls of the county and taxes computed and collected thereon subject to appeal under W.S. 39-14-509(b)(ii);

 

(iii) Commencing January 1, 2003, the department is authorized to rely on final audit findings, taxpayer amended returns or department review, and to certify mine product valuation amendments to the county assessor of the county in which the property is located, to be entered upon the assessment rolls of the county and taxes computed and collected thereon subject to appeal under W.S. 39-14-509(b)(ii), provided that the return is filed within three (3) years from the date the production should have been reported pursuant to W.S. 39-14-507(a)(i), and that the audit or review commenced within the time period as required by paragraph (vii) of this subsection. Commencement of an audit, completion of an audit, and final audit findings and final determination by the department being issued to the taxpayer shall not preclude the taxpayer from filing amended returns within the time period specified herein, and the amended returns may be audited within the time period stated in paragraph (vii) of this subsection;

 

(iv) The department is authorized to rely on final audit findings, taxpayer amended returns or department review, and to assess deficient severance tax payments, interest and penalty, if any, for the same periods governing mine product valuation amendments pursuant to paragraphs (ii) and (iii) of this subsection;

 

(v) All audits or department reviews, as applicable, pursuant to paragraphs (ii), (iii) and (iv) of this subsection are subject to the following conditions:

 

(A) Audits are commenced when the taxpayer receives written notice of the intended action;

 

(B) Prior to entering the premises of a taxpayer or third party, the taxpayer or third party shall be provided at least fourteen (14) days written notice;

 

(C) Audits are completed when the final findings are issued to the taxpayer by the department of audit;

 

(D) Unless otherwise agreed to in writing, audits shall be completed and the final audit findings issued to the taxpayer not later than the end of the month two (2) years after the audit is commenced and not sooner than one (1) year following the reporting date for ad valorem taxes;

 

(E) Any assessment or levy, including the assessment of a penalty and interest, if any, resulting from final audit findings or department review shall be issued within one (1) year following the completion of the audit or review;

 

(F) Upon receipt of department review findings, the taxpayer shall have sixty (60) days in which to submit a response.

 

(vi) Where there is evidence of gross negligence by the taxpayer in reporting and valuing production, an audit may examine prior years and issue assessments where gross negligence occurred. This section shall not apply to mine product valuation amendments to add the value of unreported production;

 

(vii) Audits provided by this article shall commence within three (3) years and six (6) months immediately following the reporting date for ad valorem taxes and taxpayers shall keep accurate books and records of all production subject to taxes imposed by this article and determinations of taxable value as prescribed by W.S. 39-14-503(b) for a period of seven (7) years and make them available to department examiners for audit purposes. Amended returns filed with the department during the conduct of an audit prior to the issuance of the final audit findings may be made available by the taxpayer to the audit examiners. If the examination discloses evidence of gross negligence by the taxpayer in reporting and paying the tax, the department may examine all pertinent records for any reporting period without regard to the limitations set forth in paragraphs (vii) and (viii) of this subsection;

 

(viii) In order to examine relevant books or records of a taxpayer subject to a tax imposed by this article or to secure any information related to enforcement of this article, authorized representatives of the department may at any time during normal business hours enter premises of a taxpayer liable for a tax imposed by this article or the premises of any third party having information regarding that taxpayer's liability. Prior to entering the premises of a taxpayer or third party, the department shall provide fourteen (14) days written notice to the taxpayer and third party. Such examinations shall be completed and the written results thereof provided to the taxpayer by the end of the third calendar year following the calendar year in which the audit was commenced;

 

(ix) The state may employ auditors and obtain other technical assistance necessary to determine if the tax imposed by this article has been properly reported and paid.

 

(c) Interest. The following shall apply:

 

(i) The taxpayer is entitled to receive an offsetting credit for any overpaid gross product or severance tax identified by an audit that is within the scope of the audit period, without regard to the limitation period for requesting refunds. In calculating interest, the department or board of county commissioners shall first compute a net deficiency amount after subtracting any offsetting credit and then calculate any interest due;

 

(ii) Taxes are delinquent pursuant to paragraphs (iii) and (iv) of this subsection when a taxpayer or his agent knew or reasonably should have known that the total tax liability was not paid when due;

 

(iii) The balance of any ad valorem tax not paid as provided by W.S. 39-14-507(b)(ii) is delinquent after the day on which it is payable and shall bear interest at eighteen percent (18%) per annum until paid or collected;

 

(iv) Effective January 1, 1994, interest at an annual rate equal to the average prime interest rate as determined by the state treasurer during the preceding fiscal year plus four percent (4%) shall be added to all delinquent severance taxes on any mineral produced on or after January 1, 1994. To determine the average prime interest rate, the state treasurer shall average the prime interest rate for at least seventy-five percent (75%) of the thirty (30) largest banks in the United States. The interest rate on delinquent taxes shall be adjusted on January 1 of each year following the year in which the taxes first became delinquent. In no instance shall the delinquent tax rate be less than twelve percent (12%) nor greater than eighteen percent (18%) from any mineral produced on or after January 1, 1994. The interest rate on any delinquent mineral tax from any mineral produced before January 1, 1994, shall be eighteen percent (18%) per annum.

 

(d) Penalties. The following shall apply:

 

(i) The taxpayer is entitled to receive an offsetting credit for any overpaid gross product or severance tax identified by an audit that is within the scope of the audit period, without regard to the limitation period for requesting refunds. In calculating penalty, the department or board of county commissioners shall first compute a net deficiency amount after subtracting any offsetting credit and then calculate any penalty due;

 

(ii) If any person fails to file the report required by W.S. 39-14-507(a)(i) by the due date or any extension thereof, the department may impose a penalty equal to a total of one percent (1%) of the taxable value of the production from the well, mine or mining claim but not to exceed five thousand dollars ($5,000.00) for each calendar month or portion thereof that the report or information is late. If any person fails to file reports and other information required by rule of the department of revenue other than those required by W.S. 39-14-507(a)(iv) or 39-14-507(a)(i), the department may impose a penalty of up to one thousand dollars ($1,000.00). The department may waive penalties under this paragraph for good cause. Penalties imposed under this paragraph may be appealed to the state board of equalization;

 

(iii) If any person fails to make or file a return and remit the tax as required by W.S. 39-14-507, the department shall impose a penalty of five percent (5%) of the taxes due for each thirty (30) day period, or fraction thereof, elapsing between the due date of the return and the date filed, unless the person for good cause obtains from the department an extension of time for filing prior to the due date for filing. In no event shall the total penalty imposed by this subsection exceed twenty-five percent (25%) of the tax due. The department, for good cause, may waive a penalty imposed for failure to file a return for any one (1) month in a calendar year, provided that:

 

(A) The return was filed within five (5) business days following the due date, including an approved extension period; and

 

(B) The taxpayer requests the waiver in writing within fifteen (15) days after the return was filed, setting forth the reasons for the late filing.

 

(iv) If any part of a tax deficiency is due to negligence or intentional disregard of rules and regulations, there shall be added a penalty of five percent (5%) of the amount of the deficiency plus interest as provided by paragraph (c)(iv) of this subsection. The taxes, penalty and interest shall be paid by the taxpayer within ten (10) days after receipt of notice and demand by the department;

 

(v) The department may credit or waive penalties imposed by paragraphs (iii) and (iv) of this subsection as part of a settlement or for any other good cause.

 

(e) Liens. The following shall apply:

 

(i) Repealed By Laws 2002, Ch. 50, 2.

 

(ii) Repealed By Laws 2002, Ch. 50, 2.

 

(iii) Repealed By Laws 2002, Ch. 50, 2.

 

(iv) All taxes, fees, penalties and interest imposed under this article are an automatic and continuing lien in favor of the state of Wyoming. The lien is on all property in the state of Wyoming, real, tangible and intangible, including all after acquired property rights, future production and rights to property, of any person severing minerals in this state and who is liable under Wyoming law for the collection, payment or remittance of the severance tax and corresponding penalty or interest as of the date such taxes, fees, penalties or interest is due, and remains a lien until paid;

 

(v) A lien under this subsection is also a lien on all interests in the mineral estate from which the production was severed, and on all future production of the same mineral from the same leasehold, regardless of any change of ownership or change in the person extracting the mineral;

 

(vi) Any lien arising under this subsection is superior and paramount to all other liens, claims, mortgages or any other encumbrance of any kind except a lien, claim, mortgage or other encumbrance of record held by a bona fide creditor and properly perfected, filed or recorded under Wyoming law prior to the filing of a lien as provided by paragraph (viii) of this subsection;

 

(vii) The department may file a notice of lien at any time at its discretion, except no lien shall be enforced until the right of the taxpayer to file and properly perfect an appeal concerning the tax delinquent property before the state board of equalization has expired. A properly perfected appeal on the tax delinquent property before the state board of equalization or any subsequent properly perfected appeal on the same property to a district court or the supreme court shall stay enforcement of a lien filed by the department until such appeal has been exhausted or concluded;

 

(viii) In order to perfect a tax lien under this subsection, the department of revenue shall file a notice of the tax lien with the secretary of state. The notice of the tax lien shall contain:

 

(A) The name and last known address of the person or persons against whose property the lien is filed including, but not limited to, the person severing the mineral;

 

(B) The name and address of the department of revenue as the holder of the lien and the name of the contact person within the department;

 

(C) The amount of the tax, fees, penalties and interest owed the state of Wyoming;

 

(D) A statement that the amount of the unpaid tax, fees, penalties or interest is a lien on all property, real, tangible or intangible, including all after acquired property and rights to the property belonging to the person who severed the mineral and located within the state of Wyoming, as well as all interest in the mineral estate from which the production was severed and any future production from the same mineral leasehold.

 

(ix) No other action beyond that described in paragraph (viii) of this subsection shall be required to perfect a tax lien;

 

(x) The filing of the notice of the tax lien as described in paragraph (viii) of this subsection shall constitute record notice of the tax lien;

 

(xi) One (1) notice of the tax lien shall be deemed sufficient to cover all taxes, together with interest, fees and penalty of the same nature which may accrue after the filing of the notice;

 

(xii) Any tax lien created under this subsection and duly filed with the secretary of state shall survive the death or incapacitation of any person, and shall survive any other destruction or attempted destruction of any interest in property owned by any person liable under Wyoming law for the collection, payment or remittance of taxes, fees, penalties or interest to the state;

 

(xiii) In the event of foreclosure, the department of revenue shall be entitled to recover the costs of filing the lien, foreclosing on the lien and reasonable attorney's fees;

 

(xiv) All notice of tax liens shall be released within sixty (60) days after taxes, penalties and interest due are paid or collected;

 

(xv) Notwithstanding that the lien is a lien on all interests in the mineral estate from which the production was severed and on all future production from the same leasehold, the department may for good cause shown, release the lien on all property in this state, real, tangible and intangible, and settle delinquent taxes, interest and penalties to be collected against future production from that leasehold;

 

(xvi) The secretary of state is authorized and directed to maintain copies of all tax liens filed by the department of revenue pursuant to this chapter, and to maintain a data base of such tax liens and to provide copies to any person pursuant to the duties of the secretary of state as set forth in W.S. 9-1-301 et seq. All tax liens on file with any county in this state and in good standing on the effective date of this paragraph shall remain effective and in good standing. Within sixty (60) days of the effective date of this paragraph, the director of the department of revenue shall transmit to the secretary of state for filing copies of all tax liens that the director seeks to have in continuing effect. Upon the filing of a copy of the tax lien with the secretary of state, the tax lien shall continue to be fully effective until released by the department of revenue.

 

(f) Tax sales. There are no specific applicable provisions for tax sales for this article.

 

39-14-509. Taxpayer remedies.

 

(a) Interpretation requests. The following shall apply:

 

(i) The taxpayer may request a value determination from the department and propose a value determination method which may be used until the department issues a value determination. The taxpayer shall submit all available data relevant to its proposal and any additional information the department deems necessary. After the department issues its determination, the taxpayer shall make adjustments based upon the value established or request a hearing by the board;

 

(ii) A taxpayer may request and the department shall provide written interpretations of these statutes and rules. When requesting an interpretation, a taxpayer must set forth the facts and circumstances pertinent to the issue. If the department deems the facts and circumstances provided to be insufficient, it may request additional information. A taxpayer may act in reliance upon a written interpretation through the end of the calendar year in which the interpretation was issued, or until revoked by the department, whichever occurs last if the pertinent facts and circumstances were substantially correct and fully disclosed.

 

(b) Appeals. The following shall apply:

 

(i) Following determination of the fair market value of property the department shall notify the taxpayer by mail of the assessed value. The person assessed may file written objections to the assessment with the board within thirty (30) days of the date of postmark and appear before the board at a time specified by the board. The person assessed shall also file a copy of the written objections with the county treasurer of the county in which the property is located, who shall notify the county assessor and the board of county commissioners, with an estimate of the tax amount under appeal based upon the previous year's tax levy;

 

(ii) Mine product valuation amendments under this section may be appealed by the taxpayer to the board within thirty (30) days of the final administrative decision;

 

(iii) Any taxpayer who feels aggrieved by the valuation and taxes levied by this article may appeal to the board. The appeal does not relieve the taxpayer from paying the tax when due and payable nor does the payment invalidate the appeal. No restraining order or injunction shall be granted or issued by any court or judge to restrain or enjoin the collection of any tax, interest or penalty imposed by this article;

 

(iv) The state board of equalization shall perform the duties specified in article 15, section 10 of the Wyoming constitution and shall hear appeals from county boards of equalization and review final decisions of the department upon application of any interested person adversely affected, including boards of county commissioners for the purposes of this subsection, under the contested case procedures of the Wyoming Administrative Procedure Act. Any interested person adversely affected by the adoption, amendment or repeal of a rule pursuant to W.S. 16-3-103(a) shall be afforded an opportunity for a hearing before the board;

 

(v) Any person including the state of Wyoming aggrieved by any order issued by the board, or any county board of equalization whose decision has been reversed or modified by the state board of equalization, may appeal the decision of the board to the district court of the county in which the property or some part thereof is situated.

 

(c) Refunds. The following shall apply:

 

(i) If a taxpayer has reason to believe that ad valorem taxes imposed by this article have been overpaid, a request for refund shall be filed with the department by submitting amended returns within three (3) years from the date the production should have been reported pursuant to W.S. 39-14-507(a)(i). Any refund granted shall be subject to modification or revocation upon audit;

 

(ii) If a taxpayer has reason to believe that taxes imposed by this article have been overpaid, a request for refund shall be filed with the department by submitting an amended return within three (3) years from the date the production should have been reported pursuant to W.S. 39-14-507(a)(i). Refunds of two thousand dollars ($2,000.00), or less may be applied to subsequent payments for taxes imposed by this article. Requests for refunds exceeding two thousand dollars ($2,000.00) shall be approved in writing by the department prior to the taxpayer receiving credit. All refunds granted are subject to modification or revocation upon audit;

 

(iii) Notwithstanding paragraphs (i) and (ii) of this subsection, the taxpayer is entitled to receive a refund of any overpaid ad valorem or severance tax identified by an audit regardless of whether a refund has been requested.

 

(d) Credits. The following shall apply:

 

(i) Any refund may, at the discretion of the board of county commissioners, be made in the form of credit against future tax payments for a period not to exceed five (5) years. Unless otherwise agreed to by the taxpayer, refunds in the form of credit against future tax payments shall be made in no less than equal annual amounts. The board of county commissioners shall not provide a credit for interest on the excess tax paid unless the taxes are paid under protest due to an appeal pending before the state board of equalization and the taxpayer prevails in the appeal;

 

(ii) The taxpayer is entitled to receive an offsetting credit for any overpaid gross product or severance tax identified by an audit that is within the scope of the audit without regard to the limitation period for requesting refunds;

 

(iii) If a taxpayer overpaid taxes imposed by this article, the department shall allow a credit in the amount of the overpayment to be taken on the taxpayer's subsequent monthly reports for the production year.

 

(e) Redemption. There are no specific applicable provisions for redemption for this article.

 

(f) Escrow. The following shall apply:

 

(i) If ad valorem taxes are paid under protest to the extent of and due to an appeal pending before the state board of equalization or any court of competent jurisdiction, the county treasurer shall deposit that protested amount under appeal in an interest bearing escrow account and withhold distribution until a final decision on the appeal has been rendered. To the extent the taxpayer prevails in the appeal, the county treasurer shall refund that amount under appeal, plus interest earned thereon, to the taxpayer within thirty (30) days from the day the final decision is rendered. If the taxpayer pays to the county an amount in excess of the protested amount under appeal, the excess shall be distributed as provided by law;

 

(ii) If severance taxes are paid under protest to the extent of and due to an appeal pending before the state board of equalization or any court of competent jurisdiction, the state treasurer shall deposit that protested amount under appeal in a separate interest bearing escrow account and withhold distribution until a final decision on the appeal has been rendered by the state board of equalization or the court. To the extent the taxpayer prevails in the appeal, the state treasurer shall refund that amount under appeal, plus interest earned thereon, to the taxpayer within thirty (30) days from the day the final decision is rendered. If the taxpayer pays to the state an amount in excess of the protested amount under appeal, the excess shall be distributed as provided by law;

 

(iii) This provision does not enlarge or curtail the ability of a taxpayer to appeal any department of revenue decision as otherwise provided for under this act.

 

39-14-510. Statute of limitations.

 

Except as otherwise provided in this article, there is no general statute of limitations for this article.

 

39-14-511. Distribution.

 

(a) As provided by W.S. 39-14-504(a), the total severance tax rate for uranium shall be four percent (4%). The taxes imposed by W.S. 39-14-504(a) shall be deposited into the severance tax distribution account.

 

(b) Repealed By Laws 2002, Ch. 62, 2.

 

(c) All payments received pursuant to W.S. 39-14-507(b)(iii) shall be transferred to an account. The monies in this account shall be invested or deposited in accordance with W.S. 9-4-714 through 9-4-831, and any interest earned shall be credited to the general fund. The revenue under W.S. 39-14-507(b)(iii) shall be distributed in accordance with subsections (a) and (b) of this section, subject to the following and except as otherwise provided by law for fiscal year 1994:

 

(i) Revenues earned during each fiscal year shall be recognized as revenue during that fiscal year for accounting purposes;

 

(ii) Revenues which are earned and received during the first three (3) calendar quarters of the fiscal year shall be distributed within the first fifteen (15) days of October, January and April. For the last quarter of each fiscal year, revenues earned or received shall be distributed not later than June 30. In computing distributions for the last quarter, the state treasurer shall use the most recent consensus revenue estimating group estimates to the extent that earnings cannot be determined by June 30. Not later than September 15, the state treasurer shall compute the actual earnings for the last quarter of the preceding fiscal year and make adjustments to the October distributions in an amount equal to the difference between revenues earned and actual distributions for the preceding fiscal year.

 

(d) For the period commencing after January 1, 1995, and ending before March 31, 2003, the taxes collected pursuant to W.S. 39-14-505(b) shall be deposited into the severance tax distribution account.

 

ARTICLE 6 - SAND AND GRAVEL

 

39-14-601. Definitions.

 

(a) As used in this article:

 

(i) "Arm's-length market or sales price" means the transaction price determined in connection with a bona fide arm's length sale;

 

(ii) "Bona fide arm's-length sale" means a transaction in cash or terms equivalent to cash for specified property rights after reasonable exposure in a competitive market between a willing, well informed and prudent buyer and seller with adverse economic interests and assuming neither party is acting under undue compulsion or duress;

 

(iii) "Department review" means, but is not limited to, corrections of clerical errors or reconciliations of tax reports with reports required by other state or federal agencies;

 

(iv) "Mine product valuation amendment" means a valuation adjustment determination made by the department including special directives;

 

(v) "Mining or production" means drilling, blasting, loading, roadwork, overburden removal, pre-mouth of the mine reclamation, transportation from the point of severance to the mouth of the mine, and maintenance of facilities and equipment directly relating to any of the functions stated in this paragraph;

 

(vi) "Mouth of the mine" means the point at which a mineral is brought to the surface of the ground and is taken out of the pit, shaft or portal. For a surface mine, this point shall be the top of the ramp where the road or conveying system leaves the pit. For an in situ mine, the point shall be the wellhead;

 

(vii) "Processing" means crushing, sizing, milling, washing, drying, refining, upgrading, beneficiation, sampling, testing, treating, heating, separating, tailings or reject material disposal, compressing, storing, loading for shipment, transportation from the mouth of the mine to the loadout, transportation to market to the extent included in the price and provided by the producer, processing plant site and post-mouth of mine reclamation, maintenance of facilities and equipment relating to any of the functions stated in this paragraph, and any other function after severance that changes the physical or chemical characteristics or enhances the marketability of the mineral;

 

(viii) "Purchaser" means the first purchaser who acquires the produced valuable sand or gravel deposit from the taxpayer for value;

 

(ix) "Severance tax" means an excise tax imposed on the present and continuing privilege of removing, extracting, severing or producing any mineral in this state;

 

(x) Beginning January 1, 1989, "taxable value" means one hundred percent (100%) of the fair market value of the gross product of minerals and mine products;

 

(xi) "Unreported production" means production volume for which no tax report was filed for the reporting period by the taxpayer or his agent;

 

(xii) "Value of the gross product" means fair market value as prescribed by W.S. 39-11-101(a)(vi), less any deductions and exemption allowed by Wyoming law or rules.

 

39-14-602. Administration; confidentiality.

 

(a) The department shall annually value and assess the gross product of all mines and mining claims at its fair market value for taxation.

 

(b) The department shall annually value the gross product for the preceding calendar year, in appropriate unit measures of all mines and mining claims from which valuable deposits are produced.

 

(c) Annually, on or before June 1, or as soon thereafter as the fair market value is determined, the department shall certify the valuation determined by the department to the county assessor of the county in which the property is located, to be entered upon the assessment rolls of the county.

 

(d) All taxpayer returns and return information shall be confidential and, except as authorized below, no current or former official, officer, employee or agent of the state of Wyoming or any political subdivision thereof shall disclose any such information obtained by him in connection with his service as an officer or employee.

 

(e) As used in this section, taxpayer returns and return information shall include, but not be limited to, all statements, reports, summaries and all other data and documents under audit or provided by the taxpayer in accordance with the provisions of W.S. 39-14-607(a) and related provision.

 

(f) Without written authorization from the taxpayer, no current or former official, officer, employee or agent of the state of Wyoming or any political subdivision thereof shall release taxpayer returns and return information pertaining to taxes imposed by this article, except:

 

(i) Information may be released to the governor or his designee, members of the board, to employees of the department of audit, the department of revenue, the consensus revenue estimating group and to the attorney general;

 

(ii) Upon prior notice to the taxpayer, information may be released by the department, upon written application, to any other governmental entity if the governmental entity shows sufficient reason to obtain the information for official business;

 

(iii) Information is admissible in court or administrative proceedings related to mineral taxes or government royalties.

 

(g) Any person receiving information pursuant to paragraph (f)(ii) of this section shall sign an agreement with the department to keep the information confidential.

 

(h) Units of production reported by the taxpayer and the taxpayer's taxable value are not confidential and may be released without qualification.

 

(j) Any person who negligently violates subsections (d) through (h) of this section is guilty of a misdemeanor and upon conviction shall be fined not more than one thousand dollars ($1,000.00). Any person who intentionally violates subsections (d) through (h) of this section is guilty of a misdemeanor and upon conviction shall be fined not less than one thousand dollars ($1,000.00), but not more than five thousand dollars ($5,000.00) and imprisoned for not more than one (1) year.

 

(k) Repealed By Laws 2000, Ch. 68, 1.

 

39-14-603. Imposition.

 

(a) Taxable event. The following shall apply:

 

(i) There is levied a severance tax on the value of the gross product for the privilege of severing or extracting sand and gravel in the state. The severance tax imposed by this article may be in addition to other taxes, including but not limited to the ad valorem taxes imposed by W.S. 39-13-104.

 

(b) Basis of tax (valuation). The following shall apply:

 

(i) Sand and gravel shall be valued for taxation as provided in this subsection. For purposes of this subsection, the term "sand and gravel" includes aggregates used in construction. Based upon the information received or procured pursuant to W.S. 39-14-607(a)(i) or 39-14-608(a)(i), the department shall annually value the gross product for the preceding calendar year, in appropriate unit measures of all mines and mining claims from which valuable deposits are produced, at the fair market value of the product at the mouth of the pit or quarry where produced, after the mining or production process is completed;

 

(ii) In the event the sand and gravel are sold at the mouth of the pit or quarry without further movement or processing, the fair market value shall be the price established by bona fide arms-length sale less exempt royalty;

 

(iii) In the event the sand and gravel are not sold at the mouth of the pit or quarry by a bona fide arms-length sale, or, except as otherwise provided, if the product of the pit or quarry is used without sale, the department shall determine the fair market value of sand and gravel in accordance with paragraph (iv) or (v) of this subsection;

 

(iv) For sand and gravel sold away from the mouth of the mine pursuant to a bona fide arms-length sale the department shall calculate the fair market value by multiplying the sales value of the sand and gravel less exempt royalties by twenty-five hundredths (0.25);

 

(v) For sand and gravel used without sale or not sold pursuant to a bona fide arms-length agreement the fair market value shall be the fair market value of sand and gravel which is comparable in quality, quantity, terms and conditions under which the sand and gravel is being used or sold;

 

(vi) The value of the gross product shall be the fair market value of the product at the mouth of the mine where produced, after the mining or production process is completed;

 

(vii) Except as otherwise provided, the mining or production process is deemed completed when the mineral product reaches the mouth of the mine. In no event shall the value of the mineral product include any processing functions or operations regardless of where the processing is performed;

 

(viii) Except as otherwise provided, if the product as provided in paragraph (vii) of this subsection is sold at the mouth of the mine, the fair market value shall be deemed to be the price established by bona fide arms-length sale.

 

(c) Taxpayer. The following shall apply:

 

(i) In the case of the gross product of all mines and mining claims produced under lease, the lessor is liable for the of ad valorem taxes on the product removed only to the extent of the lessor's retained interest under the lease, whether royalty or otherwise, and the lessee or his assignee is liable for all other property taxes due on production under the lease;

 

(ii) Any taxpayer paying the taxes imposed by this article on any valuable deposit may deduct the severance taxes paid from any amounts due or to become due to the interest owners of such valuable deposit in proportion to the interest ownership;

 

(iii) Any person extracting valuable products subject to this article and any person owning an interest in the valuable products to the extent of their interest ownership are liable for the payment of the severance taxes imposed by this article together with any penalties and interest.

 

39-14-604. Tax rate.

 

The total severance tax rate for sand and gravel shall be two percent (2%). The tax shall be distributed as provided in W.S. 39-14-611.

 

39-14-605. Exemptions.

 

There are no specific applicable provisions for exemptions for this chapter.

 

39-14-606. Licenses; permits.

 

There are no specific applicable provisions for licenses and permits for this chapter.

 

39-14-607. Compliance; collection procedures.

 

(a) Returns and reports. The following shall apply:

 

(i) Annually, on or before February 25 of the year following the year of production any person whose property is subject to W.S. 39-14-602(a) shall sign under oath and submit a statement listing the information relative to the property and affairs of the company as the department may require to assess the property;

 

(ii) All information and reports shall be notarized and signed by a person who has legal authority to bind the taxpayer;

 

(iii) For mines and mining claims, the department may presume that the property is located in the county in which production is reported by the taxpayer. The department shall not direct any county to provide relief for taxes paid on taxable valuation which was erroneously reported and certified to the wrong county unless the taxpayer files or is directed to file amended returns within two (2) years of the date of the original certification of the production. Unless there is evidence of bad faith or willful disregard of production circumstances, no taxpayer shall be required to pay taxes on production which was erroneously reported and certified to the wrong county if relief for taxes paid is not allowed under this provision;

 

(iv) Except as provided in paragraph (v) of this subsection, each taxpayer liable for severance taxes under W.S. 39-14-603 shall report monthly to the department. The monthly tax reports are due on or before the twenty-fifth day of the second month following the month of production. Reports shall be filed on forms prescribed by the department. The department may allow extensions for filing returns by regulation;

 

(v) If a taxpayer's liability for severance tax imposed under this article is less than thirty thousand dollars ($30,000.00) for the preceding calendar year, monthly reporting requirements are waived and the taxpayer shall report annually. The annual report is due on February 25 of the year following the year in which production occurred. If a taxpayer who reports annually accumulates an annual liability exceeding thirty thousand dollars ($30,000.00), that taxpayer shall commence reporting monthly as provided in paragraph (iv) of this subsection during the production year following the year in which the accumulated tax liability exceeded thirty thousand dollars ($30,000.00). It is the taxpayer's responsibility to notify the department concerning the change from annual to monthly reporting requirements or from monthly to annual reporting;

 

(vi) For mines and mining claims, the taxpayer shall report the location of the production to the county and tax district in which the mine or mining claim is located, based upon the actual taxable production produced by the mine in each county or tax district. Other reasonable methods of reporting the location of production may be approved by the department upon written request of the taxpayer or taxing jurisdiction.

 

(b) Payment. The following shall apply:

 

(i) Annually, on or before October 10 the county treasurer shall send a written statement in sealed envelopes of total tax due, itemized as to property description, assessed value and mill levies, to each taxpayer at his last known address. Failure to send notice, or to demand payment of taxes, does not invalidate any taxes due;

 

(ii) Ad valorem taxes provided by this act are due and payable at the office of the county treasurer of the county in which the taxes are levied. Fifty percent (50%) of the taxes are due on and after September 1 and payable on and after November 10 in each year and the remaining fifty percent (50%) of the taxes are due on and after March 1 and payable on and after May 10 of the succeeding calendar year except as hereafter provided. If the entire tax is paid on or before December 31, no interest or penalty is chargeable;

 

(iii) Except as provided in paragraph (iv) of this subsection, each taxpayer liable for a severance tax under W.S. 39-14-603(a) shall pay monthly tax payments to the department. The payment shall be determined by the taxpayer based on the value of the gross product produced and saved during the second preceding month, and tax computed on value at rates prescribed in this article. The monthly tax payments are due on or before the twenty-fifth day of the second month following the month of production. If the report the taxpayer is required to file shows tax due, the taxpayer shall pay the tax due when the report is filed. The department may allow extensions for paying taxes by regulation. The department may, if an extension is granted, request the payment of the reasonable estimate of ninety percent (90%) of the tax by the statutory due date, with the remaining tax remitted with the extended return;

 

(iv) If a taxpayer's liability for severance tax imposed under this article is less than thirty thousand dollars ($30,000.00) for the preceding calendar year, monthly payment requirements are waived and the taxpayer shall pay the tax annually. The annual payment is due on February 25 of the year following the year in which production occurred. If a taxpayer who pays annually accumulates an annual liability exceeding thirty thousand dollars ($30,000.00), that taxpayer shall commence remitting tax payments as provided in paragraph (iii) of this subsection during the production year following the year in which the accumulated tax liability exceeded thirty thousand dollars ($30,000.00). It is the taxpayer's responsibility to notify the department concerning the change from annual to monthly payment requirements or from monthly to annual payment.

 

(c) Timelines. Except as specifically provided, there are no general applicable provisions for timelines for this article.

 

39-14-608. Enforcement.

 

(a) General. The following shall apply:

 

(i) If the statement provided by W.S. 39-14-607(a)(i) is not filed, the department shall value the property from the best information available. The department may use information other than contained in the statement provided by W.S. 39-14-607(a)(i) to determine the fair market value of the property provided by W.S. 39-14-602(a);

 

(ii) When a taxpayer producing valuable deposits fails to pay the taxes imposed by this article when due, the purchaser of the produced valuable deposit shall withhold and remit to the department the taxpayer's subsequently accruing taxes on the produced valuable deposit acquired by the purchaser. This provision is subject to the following conditions:

 

(A) The department shall notify the purchaser and taxpayer in writing on or before the first day of the production month for which subsequent taxes are due that the purchaser shall begin remitting taxes to the department as provided in W.S. 39-14-607(b)(iii);

 

(B) The department shall notify the purchaser in writing of the proper rates for calculating taxes due and the percentage of the produced valuable deposit subject to taxation by this article;

 

(C) The amount of tax paid by a purchaser to the department, as required by this subsection, shall offset and satisfy all claims for payments for the purchase of produced valuable deposits to the extent of the tax payment;

 

(D) This paragraph shall not apply under circumstances where the purchaser is required to continue payments due to legal proceedings;

 

(E) This paragraph shall not apply until after the purchaser has been notified in writing that subsequent accruing taxes will be payable by the purchaser.

 

(iii) Severance taxes due together with interest, penalties and costs shall be collectible by the department by appropriate judicial proceedings.

 

(b) Audits. The following shall apply:

 

(i) The department may employ examiners and obtain other technical services, to investigate and examine the books and records of any person paying taxes imposed under W.S. 39-13-101 through 39-13-111. The department shall notify the county assessor of any change in valuation as determined by audits, examinations or investigations establishing:

 

(A) Taxable volumes or values were not accurately reported;

 

(B) Clerical errors were made in determining taxable volumes or values;

 

(C) Taxable volumes or values for the year that production occurred were not calculated in compliance with Wyoming statutes or rules governing the determinations; or

 

(D) Additional payment for production was received and not reported whether such payment was received in the year of production or in subsequent years.

 

(ii) Effective until March 1, 1994, the department is authorized to rely on final audit findings under W.S. 9-2-2003, taxpayer amended returns or department review, and to certify mine product valuation amendments for production in calendar year 1985 and thereafter, to the county assessor of the county in which the property is located, to be entered upon the assessment rolls of the county and taxes computed and collected thereon subject to appeal under W.S. 39-14-609(b)(ii);

 

(iii) Commencing January 1, 2003, the department is authorized to rely on final audit findings, taxpayer amended returns or department review, and to certify mine product valuation amendments to the county assessor of the county in which the property is located, to be entered upon the assessment rolls of the county and taxes computed and collected thereon subject to appeal under W.S. 39-14-609(b)(ii), provided that the return is filed within three (3) years from the date the production should have been reported pursuant to W.S. 39-14-607(a)(i), and that the audit or review commenced within the time period as required by paragraph (vii) of this subsection. Commencement of an audit, completion of an audit, and final audit findings and final determination by the department being issued to the taxpayer shall not preclude the taxpayer from filing amended returns within the time period specified herein, and the amended return may be audited within the time period stated in paragraph (vii) of this subsection;

 

(iv) The department is authorized to rely on final audit findings, taxpayer amended returns or department review, and to assess deficient severance tax payments, interest and penalty, if any, for the same periods governing mine product valuation amendments pursuant to paragraphs (ii) and (iii) of this subsection;

 

(v) All audits or department reviews, as applicable, pursuant to paragraphs (ii), (iii) and (iv) of this subsection are subject to the following conditions:

 

(A) Audits are commenced when the taxpayer receives written notice of the intended action;

 

(B) Prior to entering the premises of a taxpayer or third party, the taxpayer or third party shall be provided at least fourteen (14) days written notice;

 

(C) Audits are completed when the final findings are issued to the taxpayer by the department of audit;

 

(D) Unless otherwise agreed to in writing, audits shall be completed and the final audit findings issued to the taxpayer not later than the end of the month two (2) years after the audit is commenced and not sooner than one (1) year following the reporting date for ad valorem taxes;

 

(E) Any assessment or levy, including the assessment of a penalty and interest, if any, resulting from final audit findings or department review shall be issued within one (1) year following the completion of the audit or review;

 

(F) Upon receipt of department review findings, the taxpayer shall have sixty (60) days in which to submit a response.

 

(vi) Where there is evidence of gross negligence by the taxpayer in reporting and valuing production, an audit may examine prior years and issue assessments where gross negligence occurred. This section shall not apply to mine product valuation amendments to add the value of unreported production;

 

(vii) Audits provided by this article shall commence within three (3) years and six (6) months immediately following the reporting date for ad valorem taxes and taxpayers shall keep accurate books and records of all production subject to taxes imposed by this article and determinations of taxable value as prescribed by W.S. 39-14-603(b) for a period of seven (7) years and make them available to department examiners for audit purposes. Amended returns filed with the department during the conduct of an audit prior to the issuance of the final audit findings may be made available by the taxpayer to the audit examiners. If the examination discloses evidence of gross negligence by the taxpayer in reporting and paying the tax, the department may examine all pertinent records for any reporting period without regard to the limitations set forth in paragraphs (vii) and (viii) of this subsection;

 

(viii) In order to examine relevant books or records of a taxpayer subject to a tax imposed by this article or to secure any information related to enforcement of this article, authorized representatives of the department may at any time during normal business hours enter premises of a taxpayer liable for a tax imposed by this article or the premises of any third party having information regarding that taxpayer's liability. Prior to entering the premises of a taxpayer or third party, the department shall provide fourteen (14) days written notice to the taxpayer and third party. Such examinations shall be completed and the written results thereof provided to the taxpayer by the end of the third calendar year following the calendar year in which the audit was commenced;

 

(ix) The state may employ auditors and obtain other technical assistance necessary to determine if the tax imposed by this article has been properly reported and paid.

 

(c) Interest. The following shall apply:

 

(i) The taxpayer is entitled to receive an offsetting credit for any overpaid gross product or severance tax identified by an audit that is within the scope of the audit period, without regard to the limitation period for requesting refunds. In calculating interest, the department or board of county commissioners shall first compute a net deficiency amount after subtracting any offsetting credit and then calculate any interest due;

 

(ii) Taxes are delinquent pursuant to paragraphs (iii) and (iv) of this subsection when a taxpayer or his agent knew or reasonably should have known that the total tax liability was not paid when due;

 

(iii) The balance of any ad valorem tax not paid as provided by W.S. 39-14-607(b)(ii) is delinquent after the day on which it is payable and shall bear interest at eighteen percent (18%) per annum until paid or collected;

 

(iv) Effective January 1, 1994, interest at an annual rate equal to the average prime interest rate as determined by the state treasurer during the preceding fiscal year plus four percent (4%) shall be added to all delinquent severance taxes on any mineral produced on or after January 1, 1994. To determine the average prime interest rate, the state treasurer shall average the prime interest rate for at least seventy-five percent (75%) of the thirty (30) largest banks in the United States. The interest rate on delinquent taxes shall be adjusted on January 1 of each year following the year in which the taxes first became delinquent. In no instance shall the delinquent tax rate be less than twelve percent (12%) nor greater than eighteen percent (18%) from any mineral produced on or after January 1, 1994. The interest rate on any delinquent mineral tax from any mineral produced before January 1, 1994, shall be eighteen percent (18%) per annum.

 

(d) Penalties. The following shall apply:

 

(i) The taxpayer is entitled to receive an offsetting credit for any overpaid gross product or severance tax identified by an audit that is within the scope of the audit period, without regard to the limitation period for requesting refunds. In calculating penalty, the department or board of county commissioners shall first compute a net deficiency amount after subtracting any offsetting credit and then calculate any penalty due;

 

(ii) If any person fails to file the report required by W.S. 39-14-607(a)(i) by the due date or any extension thereof, the department may impose a penalty equal to a total of one percent (1%) of the taxable value of the production from the well, mine or mining claim but not to exceed five thousand dollars ($5,000.00) for each calendar month or portion thereof that the report or information is late. If any person fails to file reports and other information required by rule of the department of revenue other than those required by W.S. 39-14-607(a)(iv) or 39-14-607(a)(i), the department may impose a penalty of up to one thousand dollars ($1,000.00). The department may waive penalties under this paragraph for good cause. Penalties imposed under this paragraph may be appealed to the state board of equalization;

 

(iii) If any person fails to make or file a return and remit the tax as required by W.S. 39-14-607 the department shall impose a penalty of five percent (5%) of the taxes due for each thirty (30) day period, or fraction thereof, elapsing between the due date of the return and the date filed, unless the person for good cause obtains from the department an extension of time for filing prior to the due date for filing. In no event shall the total penalty imposed by this subsection exceed twenty-five percent (25%) of the tax due. The department, for good cause, may waive a penalty imposed for failure to file a return for any one (1) month in a calendar year, provided that:

 

(A) The return was filed within five (5) business days following the due date, including an approved extension period; and

 

(B) The taxpayer requests the waiver in writing within fifteen (15) days after the return was filed, setting forth the reasons for the late filing.

 

(iv) If any part of a tax deficiency is due to negligence or intentional disregard of rules and regulations, there shall be added a penalty of five percent (5%) of the amount of the deficiency plus interest as provided by paragraph (c)(iv) of this section. The taxes, penalty and interest shall be paid by the taxpayer within ten (10) days after receipt of notice and demand by the department;

 

(v) The department may credit or waive penalties imposed by paragraphs (iii) and (iv) of this subsection as part of a settlement or for any other good cause.

 

(e) Liens. The following shall apply:

 

(i) Repealed By Laws 2002, Ch. 50, 2.

 

(ii) Repealed By Laws 2002, Ch. 50, 2.

 

(iii) Repealed By Laws 2002, Ch. 50, 2.

 

(iv) All taxes, fees, penalties and interest imposed under this article are an automatic and continuing lien in favor of the state of Wyoming. The lien is on all property in the state of Wyoming, real, tangible and intangible, including all after acquired property rights, future production and rights to property, of any person severing minerals in this state and who is liable under Wyoming law for the collection, payment or remittance of the severance tax and corresponding penalty or interest as of the date such taxes, fees, penalties or interest is due, and remains a lien until paid;

 

(v) A lien under this subsection is also a lien on all interests in the mineral estate from which the production was severed, and on all future production of the same mineral from the same leasehold, regardless of any change of ownership or change in the person extracting the mineral;

 

(vi) Any lien arising under this subsection is superior and paramount to all other liens, claims, mortgages or any other encumbrance of any kind except a lien, claim, mortgage or other encumbrance of record held by a bona fide creditor and properly perfected, filed or recorded under Wyoming law prior to the filing of a lien as provided by paragraph (viii) of this subsection;

 

(vii) The department may file a notice of lien at any time at its discretion, except no lien shall be enforced until the right of the taxpayer to file and properly perfect an appeal concerning the tax delinquent property before the state board of equalization has expired. A properly perfected appeal on the tax delinquent property before the state board of equalization or any subsequent properly perfected appeal on the same property to a district court or the supreme court shall stay enforcement of a lien filed by the department until such appeal has been exhausted or concluded;

 

(viii) In order to perfect a tax lien under this subsection, the department of revenue shall file a notice of the tax lien with the secretary of state. The notice of the tax lien shall contain:

 

(A) The name and last known address of the person or persons against whose property the lien is filed including, but not limited to, the person severing the mineral;

 

(B) The name and address of the department of revenue as the holder of the lien and the name of the contact person within the department;

 

(C) The amount of the tax, fees, penalties and interest owed the state of Wyoming;

 

(D) A statement that the amount of the unpaid tax, fees, penalties or interest is a lien on all property, real, tangible or intangible, including all after acquired property and rights to the property belonging to the person who severed the mineral and located within the state of Wyoming, as well as all interest in the mineral estate from which the production was severed and any future production from the same mineral leasehold.

 

(ix) No other action beyond that described in paragraph (viii) of this subsection shall be required to perfect a tax lien;

 

(x) The filing of the notice of the tax lien as described in paragraph (viii) of this subsection shall constitute record notice of the tax lien;

 

(xi) One (1) notice of the tax lien shall be deemed sufficient to cover all taxes, together with interest, fees and penalty of the same nature which may accrue after the filing of the notice;

 

(xii) Any tax lien created under this subsection and duly filed with the secretary of state shall survive the death or incapacitation of any person, and shall survive any other destruction or attempted destruction of any interest in property owned by any person liable under Wyoming law for the collection, payment or remittance of taxes, fees, penalties or interest to the state;

 

(xiii) In the event of foreclosure, the department of revenue shall be entitled to recover the costs of filing the lien, foreclosing on the lien and reasonable attorney's fees;

 

(xiv) All notice of tax liens shall be released within sixty (60) days after taxes, penalties and interest due are paid or collected;

 

(xv) Notwithstanding that the lien is a lien on all interests in the mineral estate from which the production was severed and on all future production from the same leasehold, the department may for good cause shown, release the lien on all property in this state, real, tangible and intangible, and settle delinquent taxes, interest and penalties to be collected against future production from that leasehold;

 

(xvi) The secretary of state is authorized and directed to maintain copies of all tax liens filed by the department of revenue pursuant to this chapter, and to maintain a data base of such tax liens and to provide copies to any person pursuant to the duties of the secretary of state as set forth in W.S. 9-1-301 et seq. All tax liens on file with any county in this state and in good standing on the effective date of this paragraph shall remain effective and in good standing. Within sixty (60) days of the effective date of this paragraph, the director of the department of revenue shall transmit to the secretary of state for filing copies of all tax liens that the director seeks to have in continuing effect. Upon the filing of a copy of the tax lien with the secretary of state, the tax lien shall continue to be fully effective until released by the department of revenue.

 

(f) Tax sales. There are no specific applicable provisions for tax sales for this article.

 

39-14-609. Taxpayer remedies.

 

(a) Interpretation requests. The following shall apply:

 

(i) The taxpayer may request a value determination from the department and propose a value determination method which may be used until the department issues a value determination. The taxpayer shall submit all available data relevant to its proposal and any additional information the department deems necessary. After the department issues its determination, the taxpayer shall make adjustments based upon the value established or request a hearing by the board;

 

(ii) A taxpayer may request and the department shall provide written interpretations of these statutes and rules. When requesting an interpretation, a taxpayer must set forth the facts and circumstances pertinent to the issue. If the department deems the facts and circumstances provided to be insufficient, it may request additional information. A taxpayer may act in reliance upon a written interpretation through the end of the calendar year in which the interpretation was issued, or until revoked by the department, whichever occurs last if the pertinent facts and circumstances were substantially correct and fully disclosed.

 

(b) Appeals. The following shall apply:

 

(i) Following determination of the fair market value of property the department shall notify the taxpayer by mail of the assessed value. The person assessed may file written objections to the assessment with the board within thirty (30) days of the date of postmark and appear before the board at a time specified by the board. The person assessed shall also file a copy of the written objections with the county treasurer of the county in which the property is located, who shall notify the county assessor and the board of county commissioners, with an estimate of the tax amount under appeal based upon the previous year's tax levy;

 

(ii) Mine product valuation amendments under this section may be appealed by the taxpayer to the board within thirty (30) days of the final administrative decision;

 

(iii) Any taxpayer who feels aggrieved by the valuation and taxes levied by this article may appeal to the board. The appeal does not relieve the taxpayer from paying the tax when due and payable nor does the payment invalidate the appeal. No restraining order or injunction shall be granted or issued by any court or judge to restrain or enjoin the collection of any tax, interest or penalty imposed by this article;

 

(iv) The state board of equalization shall perform the duties specified in article 15, section 10 of the Wyoming constitution and shall hear appeals from county boards of equalization and review final decisions of the department upon application of any interested person adversely affected, including boards of county commissioners for the purposes of this subsection, under the contested case procedures of the Wyoming Administrative Procedure Act. Any interested person adversely affected by the adoption, amendment or repeal of a rule pursuant to W.S. 16-3-103(a) shall be afforded an opportunity for a hearing before the board;

 

(v) Any person including the state of Wyoming aggrieved by any order issued by the board, or any county board of equalization whose decision has been reversed or modified by the state board of equalization, may appeal the decision of the board to the district court of the county in which the property or some part thereof is situated.

 

(c) Refunds. The following shall apply:

 

(i) If a taxpayer has reason to believe that ad valorem taxes imposed by this article have been overpaid, a request for refund shall be filed with the department by submitting amended returns within three (3) years from the date the production should have been reported pursuant to W.S. 39-14-607(a)(i). Any refund granted shall be subject to modification or revocation upon audit;

 

(ii) If a taxpayer has reason to believe that taxes imposed by this article have been overpaid, a request for refund shall be filed with the department by submitting an amended return within three (3) years from the date the production should have been reported pursuant to W.S. 39-14-607(a)(i). Refunds of two thousand dollars ($2,000.00), or less may be applied to subsequent payments for taxes imposed by this article. Requests for refunds exceeding two thousand dollars ($2,000.00) shall be approved in writing by the department prior to the taxpayer receiving credit. All refunds granted are subject to modification or revocation upon audit;

 

(iii) Notwithstanding paragraphs (i) and (ii) of this subsection, the taxpayer is entitled to receive a refund of any overpaid ad valorem or severance tax identified by an audit regardless of whether a refund has been requested.

 

(d) Credits. The following shall apply:

 

(i) Any refund may, at the discretion of the board of county commissioners, be made in the form of credit against future tax payments for a period not to exceed five (5) years. Unless otherwise agreed to by the taxpayer, refunds in the form of credit against future tax payments shall be made in no less than equal annual amounts. The board of county commissioners shall not provide a credit for interest on the excess tax paid unless the taxes are paid under protest due to an appeal pending before the state board of equalization and the taxpayer prevails in the appeal;

 

(ii) The taxpayer is entitled to receive an offsetting credit for any overpaid gross product or severance tax identified by an audit that is within the scope of the audit without regard to the limitation period for requesting refunds;

 

(iii) If a taxpayer overpaid taxes imposed by this article, the department shall allow a credit in the amount of the overpayment to be taken on the taxpayer's subsequent monthly reports for the production year.

 

(e) Redemption. There are no specific applicable provisions for redemption for this article.

 

(f) Escrow. The following shall apply:

 

(i) If ad valorem taxes are paid under protest to the extent of and due to an appeal pending before the state board of equalization or any court of competent jurisdiction, the county treasurer shall deposit that protested amount under appeal in an interest bearing escrow account and withhold distribution until a final decision on the appeal has been rendered. To the extent the taxpayer prevails in the appeal, the county treasurer shall refund that amount under appeal, plus interest earned thereon, to the taxpayer within thirty (30) days from the day the final decision is rendered. If the taxpayer pays to the county an amount in excess of the protested amount under appeal, the excess shall be distributed as provided by law;

 

(ii) If severance taxes are paid under protest to the extent of and due to an appeal pending before the state board of equalization or any court of competent jurisdiction, the state treasurer shall deposit that protested amount under appeal in a separate interest bearing escrow account and withhold distribution until a final decision on the appeal has been rendered by the state board of equalization or the court. To the extent the taxpayer prevails in the appeal, the state treasurer shall refund that amount under appeal, plus interest earned thereon, to the taxpayer within thirty (30) days from the day the final decision is rendered. If the taxpayer pays to the state an amount in excess of the protested amount under appeal, the excess shall be distributed as provided by law;

 

(iii) This provision does not enlarge or curtail the ability of a taxpayer to appeal any department of revenue decision as otherwise provided for under this act.

 

39-14-610. Statute of limitations.

 

Except as otherwise provided in this article, there is no general statute of limitations for this article.

 

39-14-611. Distribution.

 

(a) As provided by W.S. 39-14-604, the total severance tax rate for sand and gravel shall be two percent (2%), and shall be deposited in the severance tax distribution account.

 

(b) All payments received pursuant to W.S. 39-14-607(b)(iii) shall be transferred to an account. The monies in this account shall be invested or deposited in accordance with W.S. 9-4-714 through 9-4-831, and any interest earned shall be credited to the general fund. The revenue under W.S. 39-14-607(b)(iii) shall be distributed in accordance with subsection (a) of this section, subject to the following and except as otherwise provided by law for fiscal year 1994:

 

(i) Revenues earned during each fiscal year shall be recognized as revenue during that fiscal year for accounting purposes;

 

(ii) Revenues which are earned and received during the first three (3) calendar quarters of the fiscal year shall be distributed within the first fifteen (15) days of October, January and April. For the last quarter of each fiscal year, revenues earned or received shall be distributed not later than June 30. In computing distributions for the last quarter, the state treasurer shall use the most recent consensus revenue estimating group estimates to the extent that earnings cannot be determined by June 30. Not later than September 15, the state treasurer shall compute the actual earnings for the last quarter of the preceding fiscal year and make adjustments to the October distributions in an amount equal to the difference between revenues earned and actual distributions for the preceding fiscal year.

 

ARTICLE 7 - OTHER VALUABLE DEPOSITS

 

39-14-701. Definitions.

 

(a) As used in this article:

 

(i) "Arm's-length market or sales price" means the transaction price determined in connection with a bona fide arm's length sale;

 

(ii) "Bona fide arm's-length sale" means a transaction in cash or terms equivalent to cash for specified property rights after reasonable exposure in a competitive market between a willing, well informed and prudent buyer and seller with adverse economic interests and assuming neither party is acting under undue compulsion or duress;

 

(iii) "Department review" means, but is not limited to, corrections of clerical errors or reconciliations of tax reports with reports required by other state or federal agencies;

 

(iv) "Mine product valuation amendment" means a valuation adjustment determination made by the department including special directives;

 

(v) "Mining or production" means drilling, blasting, loading, roadwork, overburden removal, pre-mouth of the mine reclamation, transportation from the point of severance to the mouth of the mine, and maintenance of facilities and equipment directly relating to any of the functions stated in this paragraph;

 

(vi) "Mouth of the mine" means the point at which a mineral is brought to the surface of the ground and is taken out of the pit, shaft or portal. For a surface mine, this point shall be the top of the ramp where the road or conveying system leaves the pit. For an in situ mine, the point shall be the wellhead;

 

(vii) "Processing" means crushing, sizing, milling, washing, drying, refining, upgrading, beneficiation, sampling, testing, treating, heating, separating, tailings or reject material disposal, compressing, storing, loading for shipment, transportation from the mouth of the mine to the loadout, transportation to market to the extent included in the price and provided by the producer, processing plant site and post-mouth of mine reclamation, maintenance of facilities and equipment relating to any of the functions stated in this paragraph, and any other function after severance that changes the physical or chemical characteristics or enhances the marketability of the mineral;

 

(viii) "Purchaser" means the first purchaser who acquires the produced valuable deposit from the taxpayer for value;

 

(ix) "Severance tax" means an excise tax imposed on the present and continuing privilege of removing, extracting, severing or producing any mineral in this state;

 

(x) Beginning January 1, 1989, "taxable value" means one hundred percent (100%) of the fair market value of the gross product of minerals and mine products;

 

(xi) "Transportation to market provided by the producer" means the costs incurred for any movement of a mineral which is performed by the producer beyond the point of loading for shipment to the customer, commonly referred to as the loadout, completed by the employees of the producer using equipment owned by the producer;

 

(xii) "Unreported production" means production volume for which no tax report was filed for the reporting period by the taxpayer or his agent;

 

(xiii) "Value of the gross product" means fair market value as prescribed by W.S. 39-11-101(a)(vi), less any deductions and exemption allowed by Wyoming law or rules.

 

39-14-702. Administration; confidentiality.

 

(a) The department shall annually value and assess the gross product of all mines and mining claims at its fair market value for taxation.

 

(b) The department shall annually value the gross product for the preceding calendar year, in appropriate unit measures of all mines and mining claims from which valuable deposits are produced.

 

(c) Except as otherwise provided, in the event the product as defined in W.S. 39-14-703(b)(ii) is not sold at the mouth of the mine by bona fide arms-length sale, or if the product of the mine is used without sale, the department shall determine the fair market value by application of recognized appraisal techniques.

 

(d) Annually, on or before June 1, or as soon thereafter as the fair market value is determined, the department shall certify the valuation determined by the department to the county assessor of the county in which the property is located, to be entered upon the assessment rolls of the county.

 

(e) All taxpayer returns and return information shall be confidential and, except as authorized below, no current or former official, officer, employee or agent of the state of Wyoming or any political subdivision thereof shall disclose any such information obtained by him in connection with his service as an officer or employee.

 

(f) As used in this section, taxpayer returns and return information shall include, but not be limited to, all statements, reports, summaries and all other data and documents under audit or provided by the taxpayer in accordance with the provisions of W.S. 39-14-707(a) and related provision.

 

(g) Without written authorization from the taxpayer, no current or former official, officer, employee or agent of the state of Wyoming or any political subdivision thereof shall release taxpayer returns and return information pertaining to taxes imposed by this article, except:

 

(i) Information may be released to the governor or his designee, members of the board, to employees of the department of audit, the department of revenue, the consensus revenue estimating group and to the attorney general;

 

(ii) Upon prior notice to the taxpayer, information may be released by the department, upon written application, to any other governmental entity if the governmental entity shows sufficient reason to obtain the information for official business;

 

(iii) Information is admissible in court or administrative proceedings related to mineral taxes or government royalties.

 

(h) Any person receiving information pursuant to paragraph (g)(ii) of this section shall sign an agreement with the department to keep the information confidential.

 

(j) Units of production reported by the taxpayer and the taxpayer's taxable value are not confidential and may be released without qualification.

 

(k) Any person who negligently violates subsections (e) through (j) of this section is guilty of a misdemeanor and upon conviction shall be fined not more than one thousand dollars ($1,000.00). Any person who intentionally violates subsections (e) through (j) of this section is guilty of a misdemeanor and upon conviction shall be fined not less than one thousand dollars ($1,000.00), but not more than five thousand dollars ($5,000.00) and imprisoned for not more than one (1) year.

 

(m) Repealed By Laws 2000, Ch. 68, 1.

 

39-14-703. Imposition.

 

(a) Taxable event. The following shall apply:

 

(i) There is levied a severance tax on the value of the gross product for the privilege of severing or extracting other valuable deposits, oil shale or any other fossil fuel in the state. The severance tax imposed by this article may be in addition to other taxes, including but not limited to the ad valorem taxes imposed by W.S. 39-13-104.

 

(b) Basis of tax (valuation). The following shall apply:

 

(i) Other valuable deposits shall be valued for taxation as provided in this section based upon the information received or procured pursuant to W.S. 39-14-707(a) and except as otherwise provided, the department shall annually value the gross product for the preceding calendar year, in appropriate unit measures of all mines and mining claims from which valuable deposits are produced. The value of the gross product shall be the fair market value of the product at the mouth of the mine where produced, after the mining or production process is completed;

 

(ii) Except as otherwise provided, the mining or production process is deemed completed when the mineral product reaches the mouth of the mine. In no event shall the value of the mineral product include any processing functions or operations regardless of where the processing is performed;

 

(iii) Except as otherwise provided, if the product as provided in paragraph (ii) of this subsection is sold at the mouth of the mine, the fair market value shall be deemed to be the price established by bona fide arms-length sale;

 

(iv) Except as otherwise provided, in the event the product as provided in paragraph (ii) of this subsection is not sold at the mouth of the mine by bona fide arms-length sale, or if the product of the mine is used without sale, the department shall determine the fair market value by application of recognized appraisal techniques.

 

(c) Taxpayer. The following shall apply:

 

(i) In the case of the gross product of all mines and mining claims produced under lease, the lessor is liable for the of ad valorem taxes on the product removed only to the extent of the lessor's retained interest under the lease, whether royalty or otherwise, and the lessee or his assignee is liable for all other property taxes due on production under the lease;

 

(ii) Any taxpayer paying the taxes imposed by this article on any valuable deposit may deduct the severance taxes paid from any amounts due or to become due to the interest owners of such valuable deposit in proportion to the interest ownership;

 

(iii) Any person extracting valuable products subject to this article and any person owning an interest in the valuable products to the extent of their interest ownership are liable for the payment of the severance taxes imposed by this article together with any penalties and interest.

 

39-14-704. Tax rate.

 

The total severance tax rate for other valuable deposits shall be two percent (2%). The tax shall be distributed as provided in W.S. 39-14-711.

 

39-14-705. Exemptions.

 

There are no specific applicable provisions for exemptions for this article.

 

39-14-706. Licenses; permits.

 

There are no specific applicable provisions for licenses and permits for this article.

 

39-14-707. Compliance; collection procedures.

 

(a) Returns and reports. The following shall apply:

 

(i) Annually, on or before February 25 of the year following the year of production any person whose property is subject to W.S. 39-14-702(a) shall sign under oath and submit a statement listing the information relative to the property and affairs of the company as the department may require to assess the property;

 

(ii) All information and reports shall be notarized and signed by a person who has legal authority to bind the taxpayer;

 

(iii) For mines and mining claims, the department may presume that the property is located in the county in which production is reported by the taxpayer. The department shall not direct any county to provide relief for taxes paid on taxable valuation which was erroneously reported and certified to the wrong county unless the taxpayer files or is directed to file amended returns within two (2) years of the date of the original certification of the production. Unless there is evidence of bad faith or willful disregard of production circumstances, no taxpayer shall be required to pay taxes on production which was erroneously reported and certified to the wrong county if relief for taxes paid is not allowed under this provision;

 

(iv) Except as provided in paragraph (v) of this subsection, each taxpayer liable for severance taxes under W.S. 39-14-703 shall report monthly to the department. The monthly tax reports are due on or before the twenty-fifth day of the second month following the month of production. Reports shall be filed on forms prescribed by the department. The department may allow extensions for filing returns by regulation;

 

(v) If a taxpayer's liability for severance tax imposed under this article is less than thirty thousand dollars ($30,000.00) for the preceding calendar year, monthly reporting requirements are waived and the taxpayer shall report annually. The annual report is due on February 25 of the year following the year in which production occurred. If a taxpayer who reports annually accumulates an annual liability exceeding thirty thousand dollars ($30,000.00), that taxpayer shall commence reporting monthly as provided in paragraph (iv) of this subsection during the production year following the year in which the accumulated tax liability exceeded thirty thousand dollars ($30,000.00). It is the taxpayer's responsibility to notify the department concerning the change from annual to monthly reporting requirements or from monthly to annual reporting;

 

(vi) For mines and mining claims, the taxpayer shall report the location of the production to the county and tax district in which the mine or mining claim is located, based upon the actual taxable production produced by the mine in each county or tax district. Other reasonable methods of reporting the location of production may be approved by the department upon written request of the taxpayer or taxing jurisdiction.

 

(b) Payment. The following shall apply:

 

(i) Annually, on or before October 10 the county treasurer shall send a written statement in sealed envelopes of total tax due, itemized as to property description, assessed value and mill levies, to each taxpayer at his last known address. Failure to send notice, or to demand payment of taxes, does not invalidate any taxes due;

 

(ii) Ad valorem taxes provided by this act are due and payable at the office of the county treasurer of the county in which the taxes are levied. Fifty percent (50%) of the taxes are due on and after September 1 and payable on and after November 10 in each year and the remaining fifty percent (50%) of the taxes are due on and after March 1 and payable on and after May 10 of the succeeding calendar year except as hereafter provided. If the entire tax is paid on or before December 31, no interest or penalty is chargeable;

 

(iii) Except as provided in paragraph (iv) of this subsection, each taxpayer liable for a severance tax under W.S. 39-14-703 shall pay monthly tax payments to the department. The payment shall be determined by the taxpayer based on the value of the gross product produced and saved during the second preceding month, and tax computed on value at rates prescribed in this article. The monthly tax payments are due on or before the twenty-fifth day of the second month following the month of production. If the report the taxpayer is required to file shows tax due, the taxpayer shall pay the tax due when the report is filed. The department may allow extensions for paying taxes by regulation. The department may, if an extension is granted, request the payment of the reasonable estimate of ninety percent (90%) of the tax by the statutory due date, with the remaining tax remitted with the extended return;

 

(iv) If a taxpayer's liability for severance tax imposed under this article is less than thirty thousand dollars ($30,000.00) for the preceding calendar year, monthly payment requirements are waived and the taxpayer shall pay the tax annually. The annual payment is due on February 25 of the year following the year in which production occurred. If a taxpayer who pays annually accumulates an annual liability exceeding thirty thousand dollars ($30,000.00), that taxpayer shall commence remitting tax payments as provided in paragraph (iii) of this subsection during the production year following the year in which the accumulated tax liability exceeded thirty thousand dollars ($30,000.00). It is the taxpayer's responsibility to notify the department concerning the change from annual to monthly payment requirements or from monthly to annual payment.

 

(c) Timelines. Except as otherwise specifically provided, there are no general applicable provisions for timelines for this article.

 

39-14-708. Enforcement.

 

(a) General. The following shall apply:

 

(i) If the statement provided by W.S. 39-14-707(a)(i) is not filed, the department shall value the property from the best information available. The department may use information other than contained in the statement provided by W.S. 39-14-707(a)(i) to determine the fair market value of the property provided by W.S. 39-14-702(a);

 

(ii) When a taxpayer producing valuable deposits fails to pay the taxes imposed by this article when due, the purchaser of the produced valuable deposit shall withhold and remit to the department the taxpayer's subsequently accruing taxes on the produced valuable deposit acquired by the purchaser. This provision is subject to the following conditions:

 

(A) The department shall notify the purchaser and taxpayer in writing on or before the first day of the production month for which subsequent taxes are due that the purchaser shall begin remitting taxes to the department as provided in W.S. 39-14-707(b)(iii);

 

(B) The department shall notify the purchaser in writing of the proper rates for calculating taxes due and the percentage of the produced valuable deposit subject to taxation by this article;

 

(C) The amount of tax paid by a purchaser to the department, as required by this paragraph, shall offset and satisfy all claims for payments for the purchase of produced valuable deposits to the extent of the tax payment;

 

(D) This paragraph shall not apply under circumstances where the purchaser is required to continue payments due to legal proceedings;

 

(E) This paragraph shall not apply until after the purchaser has been notified in writing that subsequent accruing taxes will be payable by the purchaser.

 

(iii) Severance taxes due together with interest, penalties and costs shall be collectible by the department by appropriate judicial proceedings.

 

(b) Audits. The following shall apply:

 

(i) The department may employ examiners and obtain other technical services, to investigate and examine the books and records of any person paying taxes imposed under W.S. 39-13-101 through 39-13-111. The department shall notify the county assessor of any change in valuation as determined by audits, examinations or investigations establishing:

 

(A) Taxable volumes or values were not accurately reported;

 

(B) Clerical errors were made in determining taxable volumes or values;

 

(C) Taxable volumes or values for the year that production occurred were not calculated in compliance with Wyoming statutes or rules governing the determinations; or

 

(D) Additional payment for production was received and not reported whether such payment was received in the year of production or in subsequent years.

 

(ii) Effective until March 1, 1994, the department is authorized to rely on final audit findings under W.S. 9-2-2003, taxpayer amended returns or department review, and to certify mine product valuation amendments for production in calendar year 1985 and thereafter, to the county assessor of the county in which the property is located, to be entered upon the assessment rolls of the county and taxes computed and collected thereon subject to appeal under W.S. 39-14-709(b)(ii);

 

(iii) Commencing January 1, 2003, the department is authorized to rely on final audit findings, taxpayer amended returns or department review, and to certify mine product valuation amendments to the county assessor of the county in which the property is located, to be entered upon the assessment rolls of the county and taxes computed and collected thereon subject to appeal under W.S. 39-14-709(b)(ii), provided that the return is filed within three (3) years from the date the production should have been reported pursuant to W.S. 39-14-707(a)(i), and that the audit or review commenced within the time period as required by paragraph (vii) of this subsection. Commencement of an audit, completion of an audit, and final audit findings and final determination by the department being issued to the taxpayer shall not preclude the taxpayer from filing amended returns within the time period specified herein, and the amended returns may be audited within the time period stated in paragraph (vii) of this subsection;

 

(iv) The department is authorized to rely on final audit findings, taxpayer amended returns or department review, and to assess deficient severance tax payments, interest and penalty, if any, for the same periods governing mine product valuation amendments pursuant to paragraphs (ii) and (iii) of this subsection;

 

(v) All audits or department reviews, as applicable, pursuant to paragraphs (ii), (iii) and (iv) of this subsection are subject to the following conditions:

 

(A) Audits are commenced when the taxpayer receives written notice of the intended action;

 

(B) Prior to entering the premises of a taxpayer or third party, the taxpayer or third party shall be provided at least fourteen (14) days written notice;

 

(C) Audits are completed when the final findings are issued to the taxpayer by the department of audit;

 

(D) Unless otherwise agreed to in writing, audits shall be completed and the final audit findings issued to the taxpayer not later than the end of the month two (2) years after the audit is commenced and not sooner than one (1) year following the reporting date for ad valorem taxes;

 

(E) Any assessment or levy, including the assessment of a penalty and interest, if any, resulting from final audit findings or department review shall be issued within one (1) year following the completion of the audit or review;

 

(F) Upon receipt of department review findings, the taxpayer shall have sixty (60) days in which to submit a response.

 

(vi) Where there is evidence of gross negligence by the taxpayer in reporting and valuing production, an audit may examine prior years and issue assessments where gross negligence occurred. This section shall not apply to mine product valuation amendments to add the value of unreported production;

 

(vii) Audits provided by this article shall commence within three (3) years and six (6) months immediately following the reporting date for ad valorem taxes and taxpayers shall keep accurate books and records of all production subject to taxes imposed by this article and determinations of taxable value as prescribed by W.S. 39-14-703(b) for a period of seven (7) years and make them available to department examiners for audit purposes. Amended returns filed with the department during the conduct of an audit prior to the issuance of the final audit findings may be made available by the taxpayer to the audit examiners. If the examination discloses evidence of gross negligence by the taxpayer in reporting and paying the tax, the department may examine all pertinent records for any reporting period without regard to the limitations set forth in paragraphs (vii) and (viii) of this subsection;

 

(viii) In order to examine relevant books or records of a taxpayer subject to a tax imposed by this article or to secure any information related to enforcement of this article, authorized representatives of the department may at any time during normal business hours enter premises of a taxpayer liable for a tax imposed by this article or the premises of any third party having information regarding that taxpayer's liability. Prior to entering the premises of a taxpayer or third party, the department shall provide fourteen (14) days written notice to the taxpayer and third party. Such examinations shall be completed and the written results thereof provided to the taxpayer by the end of the third calendar year following the calendar year in which the audit was commenced;

 

(ix) The state may employ auditors and obtain other technical assistance necessary to determine if the tax imposed by this article has been properly reported and paid.

 

(c) Interest. The following shall apply:

 

(i) The taxpayer is entitled to receive an offsetting credit for any overpaid gross product or severance tax identified by an audit that is within the scope of the audit period, without regard to the limitation period for requesting refunds. In calculating interest, the department or board of county commissioners shall first compute a net deficiency amount after subtracting any offsetting credit and then calculate any interest due;

 

(ii) Taxes are delinquent pursuant to paragraphs (iii) and (iv) of this subsection when a taxpayer or his agent knew or reasonably should have known that the total tax liability was not paid when due;

 

(iii) The balance of any ad valorem tax not paid as provided by W.S. 39-14-707(b)(ii) is delinquent after the day on which it is payable and shall bear interest at eighteen percent (18%) per annum until paid or collected;

 

(iv) Effective January 1, 1994, interest at an annual rate equal to the average prime interest rate as determined by the state treasurer during the preceding fiscal year plus four percent (4%) shall be added to all delinquent severance taxes on any mineral produced on or after January 1, 1994. To determine the average prime interest rate, the state treasurer shall average the prime interest rate for at least seventy-five percent (75%) of the thirty (30) largest banks in the United States. The interest rate on delinquent taxes shall be adjusted on January 1 of each year following the year in which the taxes first became delinquent. In no instance shall the delinquent tax rate be less than twelve percent (12%) nor greater than eighteen percent (18%) from any mineral produced on or after January 1, 1994. The interest rate on any delinquent mineral tax from any mineral produced before January 1, 1994, shall be eighteen percent (18%) per annum.

 

(d) Penalties. The following shall apply:

 

(i) The taxpayer is entitled to receive an offsetting credit for any overpaid gross product or severance tax identified by an audit that is within the scope of the audit period, without regard to the limitation period for requesting refunds. In calculating penalty, the department or board of county commissioners shall first compute a net deficiency amount after subtracting any offsetting credit and then calculate any penalty due;

 

(ii) If any person fails to file the report required by W.S. 39-14-707(a)(i) by the due date or any extension thereof, the department may impose a penalty equal to a total of one percent (1%) of the taxable value of the production from the well, mine or mining claim but not to exceed five thousand dollars ($5,000.00) for each calendar month or portion thereof that the report or information is late. If any person fails to file reports and other information required by rule of the department of revenue other than those required by W.S. 39-14-707(a)(iv) or 39-14-707(a)(i), the department may impose a penalty of up to one thousand dollars ($1,000.00). The department may waive penalties under this paragraph for good cause. Penalties imposed under this paragraph may be appealed to the state board of equalization;

 

(iii) If any person fails to make or file a return and remit the tax as required by W.S. 39-14-707, the department shall impose a penalty of five percent (5%) of the taxes due for each thirty (30) day period, or fraction thereof, elapsing between the due date of the return and the date filed, unless the person for good cause obtains from the department an extension of time for filing prior to the due date for filing. In no event shall the total penalty imposed by this subsection exceed twenty-five percent (25%) of the tax due. The department, for good cause, may waive a penalty imposed for failure to file a return for any one (1) month in a calendar year, provided that:

 

(A) The return was filed within five (5) business days following the due date, including an approved extension period; and

 

(B) The taxpayer requests the waiver in writing within fifteen (15) days after the return was filed, setting forth the reasons for the late filing.

 

(iv) If any part of a tax deficiency is due to negligence or intentional disregard of rules and regulations, there shall be added a penalty of five percent (5%) of the amount of the deficiency plus interest as provided by paragraph (c)(iv) of this section. The taxes, penalty and interest shall be paid by the taxpayer within ten (10) days after receipt of notice and demand by the department;

 

(v) The department may credit or waive penalties imposed by paragraphs (iii) and (iv) of this subsection as part of a settlement or for any other good cause.

 

(e) Liens. The following shall apply:

 

(i) Repealed By Laws 2002, Ch. 50, 2.

 

(ii) Repealed By Laws 2002, Ch. 50, 2.

 

(iii) Repealed By Laws 2002, Ch. 50, 2.

 

(iv) All taxes, fees, penalties and interest imposed under this article are an automatic and continuing lien in favor of the state of Wyoming. The lien is on all property in the state of Wyoming, real, tangible and intangible, including all after acquired property rights, future production and rights to property, of any person severing minerals in this state and who is liable under Wyoming law for the collection, payment or remittance of the severance tax and corresponding penalty or interest as of the date such taxes, fees, penalties or interest is due, and remains a lien until paid;

 

(v) A lien under this subsection is also a lien on all interests in the mineral estate from which the production was severed, and on all future production of the same mineral from the same leasehold, regardless of any change of ownership or change in the person extracting the mineral;

 

(vi) Any lien arising under this subsection is superior and paramount to all other liens, claims, mortgages or any other encumbrance of any kind except a lien, claim, mortgage or other encumbrance of record held by a bona fide creditor and properly perfected, filed or recorded under Wyoming law prior to the filing of a lien as provided by paragraph (viii) of this subsection;

 

(vii) The department may file a notice of lien at any time at its discretion, except no lien shall be enforced until the right of the taxpayer to file and properly perfect an appeal concerning the tax delinquent property before the state board of equalization has expired. A properly perfected appeal on the tax delinquent property before the state board of equalization or any subsequent properly perfected appeal on the same property to a district court or the supreme court shall stay enforcement of a lien filed by the department until such appeal has been exhausted or concluded;

 

(viii) In order to perfect a tax lien under this subsection, the department of revenue shall file a notice of the tax lien with the secretary of state. The notice of the tax lien shall contain:

 

(A) The name and last known address of the person or persons against whose property the lien is filed including, but not limited to, the person severing the mineral;

 

(B) The name and address of the department of revenue as the holder of the lien and the name of the contact person within the department;

 

(C) The amount of the tax, fees, penalties and interest owed the state of Wyoming;

 

(D) A statement that the amount of the unpaid tax, fees, penalties or interest is a lien on all property, real, tangible or intangible, including all after acquired property and rights to the property belonging to the person who severed the mineral and located within the state of Wyoming, as well as all interest in the mineral estate from which the production was severed and any future production from the same mineral leasehold.

 

(ix) No other action beyond that described in paragraph (viii) of this subsection shall be required to perfect a tax lien;

 

(x) The filing of the notice of the tax lien as described in paragraph (viii) of this subsection shall constitute record notice of the tax lien;

 

(xi) One (1) notice of the tax lien shall be deemed sufficient to cover all taxes, together with interest, fees and penalty of the same nature which may accrue after the filing of the notice;

 

(xii) Any tax lien created under this subsection and duly filed with the secretary of state shall survive the death or incapacitation of any person, and shall survive any other destruction or attempted destruction of any interest in property owned by any person liable under Wyoming law for the collection, payment or remittance of taxes, fees, penalties or interest to the state;

 

(xiii) In the event of foreclosure, the department of revenue shall be entitled to recover the costs of filing the lien, foreclosing on the lien and reasonable attorney's fees;

 

(xiv) All notice of tax liens shall be released within sixty (60) days after taxes, penalties and interest due are paid or collected;

 

(xv) Notwithstanding that the lien is a lien on all interests in the mineral estate from which the production was severed and on all future production from the same leasehold, the department may for good cause shown, release the lien on all property in this state, real, tangible and intangible, and settle delinquent taxes, interest and penalties to be collected against future production from that leasehold;

 

(xvi) The secretary of state is authorized and directed to maintain copies of all tax liens filed by the department of revenue pursuant to this chapter, and to maintain a data base of such tax liens and to provide copies to any person pursuant to the duties of the secretary of state as set forth in W.S. 9-1-301 et seq. All tax liens on file with any county in this state and in good standing on the effective date of this paragraph shall remain effective and in good standing. Within sixty (60) days of the effective date of this paragraph, the director of the department of revenue shall transmit to the secretary of state for filing copies of all tax liens that the director seeks to have in continuing effect. Upon the filing of a copy of the tax lien with the secretary of state, the tax lien shall continue to be fully effective until released by the department of revenue.

 

(f) Tax sales. There are no specific applicable provisions for tax sales for this article.

 

39-14-709. Taxpayer remedies.

 

(a) Interpretation requests. The following shall apply:

 

(i) The taxpayer may request a value determination from the department and propose a value determination method which may be used until the department issues a value determination. The taxpayer shall submit all available data relevant to its proposal and any additional information the department deems necessary. After the department issues its determination, the taxpayer shall make adjustments based upon the value established or request a hearing by the board;

 

(ii) A taxpayer may request and the department shall provide written interpretations of these statutes and rules. When requesting an interpretation, a taxpayer must set forth the facts and circumstances pertinent to the issue. If the department deems the facts and circumstances provided to be insufficient, it may request additional information. A taxpayer may act in reliance upon a written interpretation through the end of the calendar year in which the interpretation was issued, or until revoked by the department, whichever occurs last if the pertinent facts and circumstances were substantially correct and fully disclosed.

 

(b) Appeals. The following shall apply:

 

(i) Following determination of the fair market value of property the department shall notify the taxpayer by mail of the assessed value. The person assessed may file written objections to the assessment with the board within thirty (30) days of the date of postmark and appear before the board at a time specified by the board. The person assessed shall also file a copy of the written objections with the county treasurer of the county in which the property is located, who shall notify the county assessor and the board of county commissioners, with an estimate of the tax amount under appeal based upon the previous year's tax levy;

 

(ii) Mine product valuation amendments under this section may be appealed by the taxpayer to the board within thirty (30) days of the final administrative decision;

 

(iii) Any taxpayer who feels aggrieved by the valuation and taxes levied by this article may appeal to the board. The appeal does not relieve the taxpayer from paying the tax when due and payable nor does the payment invalidate the appeal. No restraining order or injunction shall be granted or issued by any court or judge to restrain or enjoin the collection of any tax, interest or penalty imposed by this article;

 

(iv) The state board of equalization shall perform the duties specified in article 15, section 10 of the Wyoming constitution and shall hear appeals from county boards of equalization and review final decisions of the department upon application of any interested person adversely affected, including boards of county commissioners for the purposes of this subsection, under the contested case procedures of the Wyoming Administrative Procedure Act. Any interested person adversely affected by the adoption, amendment or repeal of a rule pursuant to W.S. 16-3-103(a) shall be afforded an opportunity for a hearing before the board;

 

(v) Any person including the state of Wyoming aggrieved by any order issued by the board, or any county board of equalization whose decision has been reversed or modified by the state board of equalization, may appeal the decision of the board to the district court of the county in which the property or some part thereof is situated.

 

(c) Refunds. The following shall apply:

 

(i) If a taxpayer has reason to believe that ad valorem taxes imposed by this article have been overpaid, a request for refund shall be filed with the department by submitting amended returns within three (3) years from the date the production should have been reported pursuant to W.S. 39-14-707(a)(i). Any refund granted shall be subject to modification or revocation upon audit;

 

(ii) If a taxpayer has reason to believe that taxes imposed by this article have been overpaid, a request for refund shall be filed with the department by submitting an amended return within three (3) years from the date the production should have been reported pursuant to W.S. 39-14-707(a)(i). Refunds of two thousand dollars ($2,000.00), or less may be applied to subsequent payments for taxes imposed by this article. Requests for refunds exceeding two thousand dollars ($2,000.00) shall be approved in writing by the department prior to the taxpayer receiving credit. All refunds granted are subject to modification or revocation upon audit;

 

(iii) Notwithstanding paragraphs (i) and (ii) of this subsection, the taxpayer is entitled to receive a refund of any overpaid ad valorem or severance tax identified by an audit regardless of whether a refund has been requested.

 

(d) Credits. The following shall apply:

 

(i) Any refund may, at the discretion of the board of county commissioners, be made in the form of credit against future tax payments for a period not to exceed five (5) years. Unless otherwise agreed to by the taxpayer, refunds in the form of credit against future tax payments shall be made in no less than equal annual amounts. The board of county commissioners shall not provide a credit for interest on the excess tax paid unless the taxes are paid under protest due to an appeal pending before the state board of equalization and the taxpayer prevails in the appeal;

 

(ii) The taxpayer is entitled to receive an offsetting credit for any overpaid gross product or severance tax identified by an audit that is within the scope of the audit without regard to the limitation period for requesting refunds;

 

(iii) If a taxpayer overpaid taxes imposed by this article, the department shall allow a credit in the amount of the overpayment to be taken on the taxpayer's subsequent monthly reports for the production year.

 

(e) Redemption. There are no specific applicable provisions for redemption for this article.

 

(f) Escrow. The following shall apply:

 

(i) If ad valorem taxes are paid under protest to the extent of and due to an appeal pending before the state board of equalization or any court of competent jurisdiction, the county treasurer shall deposit that protested amount under appeal in an interest bearing escrow account and withhold distribution until a final decision on the appeal has been rendered. To the extent the taxpayer prevails in the appeal, the county treasurer shall refund that amount under appeal, plus interest earned thereon, to the taxpayer within thirty (30) days from the day the final decision is rendered. If the taxpayer pays to the county an amount in excess of the protested amount under appeal, the excess shall be distributed as provided by law;

 

(ii) If severance taxes are paid under protest to the extent of and due to an appeal pending before the state board of equalization or any court of competent jurisdiction, the state treasurer shall deposit that protested amount under appeal in a separate interest bearing escrow account and withhold distribution until a final decision on the appeal has been rendered by the state board of equalization or the court. To the extent the taxpayer prevails in the appeal, the state treasurer shall refund that amount under appeal, plus interest earned thereon, to the taxpayer within thirty (30) days from the day the final decision is rendered. If the taxpayer pays to the state an amount in excess of the protested amount under appeal, the excess shall be distributed as provided by law;

 

(iii) This provision does not enlarge or curtail the ability of a taxpayer to appeal any department of revenue decision as otherwise provided for under this act.

 

39-14-710. Statute of limitations.

 

Except as otherwise provided in this article, there is no general statute of limitations for this article.

 

39-14-711. Distribution.

 

(a) As provided by W.S. 39-14-704, the total severance tax rate for other valuable deposits shall be two percent (2%), and shall be deposited in the severance tax distribution account.

 

(b) All payments received pursuant to W.S. 39-14-707(b)(iii) shall be transferred to an account. The monies in this account shall be invested or deposited in accordance with W.S. 9-4-714 through 9-4-831, and any interest earned shall be credited to the general fund. The revenue under W.S. 39-14-707(b)(iii) shall be distributed in accordance with this section, subject to the following and except as otherwise provided by law for fiscal year 1994:

 

(i) Revenues earned during each fiscal year shall be recognized as revenue during that fiscal year for accounting purposes;

 

(ii) Revenues which are earned and received during the first three (3) calendar quarters of the fiscal year shall be distributed within the first fifteen (15) days of October, January and April. For the last quarter of each fiscal year, revenues earned or received shall be distributed not later than June 30. In computing distributions for the last quarter, the state treasurer shall use the most recent consensus revenue estimating group estimates to the extent that earnings cannot be determined by June 30. Not later than September 15, the state treasurer shall compute the actual earnings for the last quarter of the preceding fiscal year and make adjustments to the October distributions in an amount equal to the difference between revenues earned and actual distributions for the preceding fiscal year.

 

ARTICLE 8 - SEVERANCE TAX DISTRIBUTIONS

 

39-14-801. Severance tax distributions; distribution account created; formula.

 

(a) There is created the severance tax distribution account into which shall be credited revenues from severance taxes as provided by law. Interest on earnings from funds in the account shall be credited to the general fund.

 

(b) Before making distributions from the severance tax distribution account under subsections (c) through (e) of this section, an amount equal to two-thirds (2/3) of the amount of tax collected under W.S. 39-14-104(a)(i) and (b)(i) and 39-14-204(a)(i) for the same period shall be deposited into the permanent Wyoming mineral trust fund except that for the fiscal year 2010 these funds shall be deposited as follows:

 

(i) Fifty percent (50%) to the permanent Wyoming mineral trust fund; and

 

(ii) Fifty percent (50%) to the permanent Wyoming mineral trust fund reserve account created by W.S. 9-4-719(b).

 

(c) [LUST] Before making distributions from the severance tax distribution account under subsections (d) and (e) of this section, an amount equal to the amount of tax collected under W.S. 39-17-104(a)(iii) and 39-17-204(a)(ii) for the same period shall be distributed to the corrective action account created by W.S. 35-11-1424 and to the financial responsibility account created by W.S. 35-11-1427 in an inverse proportion to the amount in the two (2) accounts.

 

(d) After making distributions under subsections (b) and (c) of this section, distributions under subsection (e) of this section shall be made from the severance tax distribution account. The amount of distributions under subsection (e) of this section shall not exceed one hundred fifty-five million dollars ($155,000,000.00) in any fiscal year. To the extent that distributions under subsection (e) of this section would exceed that amount in any fiscal year, the excess shall be credited:

 

(i) One-third (1/3) to the general fund; and

 

(ii) Two-thirds (2/3) to the budget reserve account.

 

(e) Deposits into the account created by subsection (a) of this section shall be distributed as follows, subject to subsections (b) through (d) of this section:

 

(i) To the general fund, sixty-two and twenty-six hundredths percent (62.26%);

 

(ii) To water development account I under W.S. 41-2-124(a)(i), twelve and forty-five hundredths percent (12.45%);

 

(iii) To water development account II under W.S. 41-2-124(a)(ii), two and one tenth percent (2.1%);

 

(iv) To the highway fund, four and thirty-three hundredths percent (4.33%), except that if the total unencumbered revenues within the state park road account created by W.S. 24-14-102 are less than five hundred thousand dollars ($500,000.00) on July 1, 2001 or on July 1 of any even-numbered year thereafter, the state treasurer shall first distribute revenues to that account in an amount equal to five hundred thousand dollars ($500,000.00) less the total unencumbered revenues in the account on July 1 of that year;

 

(v) To counties, seventy-eight hundredths percent (0.78%), subject to the following formula:

 

(A) Fifty percent (50%) of the funds distributed under this paragraph shall be distributed to the counties in the same proportion that the population of the county bears to the population of the state; and

 

(B) Fifty percent (50%) of the funds distributed under this subsection shall be distributed to the counties based upon the inverse of the assessed valuation of each county as computed under subparagraph (vii)(C) of this subsection.

 

(vi) To counties, three and one-tenth percent (3.1%), each county to receive an amount in the proportion which the population of the county bears to total state population;

 

(vii) To the road construction and maintenance funds of the various counties as provided by W.S. 24-2-110, two and nine-tenths percent (2.9%), except that each county's share of funds under this subsection shall be computed as follows:

 

(A) One-third (1/3) shall be distributed to each county in the ratio that the population of the county bears to total state population;

 

(B) One-third (1/3) shall be distributed to each county in the ratio that the mileage of county roads in the county bears to total county roads in Wyoming;

 

(C) One-third (1/3) shall be distributed to each county as follows:

 

(I) Arrange the assessed valuation of each county in descending order by county;

 

(II) Calculate the county percentages of assessed valuation relative to total state valuation;

 

(III) Calculate the inverse of the county percentage of total state assessed valuation by dividing one (1) by the percentage computed in subdivision (C)(II) of this paragraph;

 

(IV) Compute each county share by dividing each inverse calculated under subdivision (III) of this subparagraph by the total sum of the inverses calculated under subdivision (III) of this subparagraph.

 

(viii) To cities and towns, nine and twenty-five hundredths percent (9.25%), each city or town to receive an amount in the proportion which the population of the city or town bears to the population of all cities and towns in Wyoming;

 

(ix) To the capital construction account, two and thirty-three hundredths percent (2.33%), to be expended for the purposes specified in W.S. 9-4-604(k)(ii);

 

(x) To the water development account III, five-tenths of one percent (.5%), to be expended for the purposes specified in W.S. 41-2-124(d).

 

39-14-802. Clean coal research account created; funds deposited; use of funds.

 

(a) There is created the clean coal research account into which shall be deposited revenues as provided by law. Interest on earnings from funds in the account shall be credited to the account.

 

(b) Deposits into the account created by subsection (a) of this section shall only be expended pursuant to W.S. 21-17-121(f). Funds deposited in the account shall not be expended until a dollar for dollar match has been provided from nonstate of Wyoming public funds. Notwithstanding W.S. 9-2-1008 or 9-4-207, unexpended funds shall not revert.

 

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