Navigating the Highway Transportation Excise Tax – Houston Tax Attorneys


Many of our tax laws are written in very broad language. This provides a significant advantage to the IRS, as the IRS can issue interpretive guidance to clarify these rules in a way that is easier to administer and, often, in ways that maximize tax revenue for the government.

This flexibility also aids IRS auditors in proposing adjustments during examinations. Even diligent taxpayers attempting to comply fully with the law can find themselves caught in this interpretive web.

Those who are new to working tax disputes often wonder why the IRS settles tax debts. The answer is often that the IRS has to be careful with disputes that could clarify the law. Tax disputes that result in more precise guidance can help taxpayers understand their obligations, but it also creates opportunities for taxpayers to restructure to minimize their taxes or even avoid the tax altogether.

The federal excise tax system provides a prime example of this dynamic. Excise taxes are specialized levies designed to either discourage certain activities or impose costs on specific types of transactions. There are a number of different types of excise taxes, such as the tire import excise tax. In this article, we’ll consider the highway transportation excise tax. The recent Rockwater, Inc. v. United States, No. 23-11893 (11th Cir. 2024), provides clearer guidance on when this excise tax applies.

Facts & Procedural History

The taxpayer in this case is a manufacturer of specialized trailers designed to dry and transport peanuts from farm fields to buying points. According to the court case, the trailers have unique design elements for peanut processing, including a perforated floor system for drying and specialized unloading mechanisms. The vehicles also incorporate standard highway equipment, such as DOT-compliant lighting and brakes.

This case started like most other tax disputes. The IRS conducted an audit. The IRS determined the trailers the taxpayer sold were subject to a 12% excise tax on their first retail sale. The taxpayer paid the taxes and filed a refund suit to recover the payment. The case addresses whether these particular types of trailers qualify as “off-highway transportation vehicles” that are exempt from the excise tax.

About the Transportation Excise Tax

The highway vehicle transportation excise tax is similar to a sales tax that is paid by the seller. It is a 12% tax on the first retail sale of truck trailer and semitrailer chassis and bodies.

This tax only applies to vehicles designed to perform a function of transporting a load over public highways, whether or not they are also designed to perform other functions. The term “public highway” includes any road, whether a federal highway, state highway, city street, or otherwise, that is not a private roadway. Given these rules, these vehicles are likely those that would already qualify the end-user for favorable tax treatment as qualified non-personal use vehicles.

Congress created an exemption for “off-highway transportation vehicles.” To be an off-highway vehicle, the vehicle has to meet two key requirements. First, the vehicle must be specially designed primarily for transporting loads other than over public highways. Second, due to this special design, the vehicle’s capability to transport loads over public highways must be “substantially limited or impaired.” The statute specifically states that a vehicle’s design is determined solely based on its physical characteristics.

Court Interpretations and Analysis

So this sets up the tax dispute in this case. So what is a highway transportation vehicle versus a non-highway transportation vehicle? For taxpayers who could be subject to this tax, avoiding the tax would result in a 12% tax savings. For some taxpayers, this amount could dictate whether the taxpayer is profitable or not.

The courts have considered several cases that touch on these tax rules. In these cases, the courts have focused on the physical characteristics of vehicles rather than their intended use. For example, in Worldwide Equipment v. United States, the Sixth Circuit examined coal-hauler dump trucks. The trucks had special engines, transmissions, and off-road tires that would overheat at highway speeds. The court found the trucks were non-highway vehicles given these physical limitations. In Florida Power & Light Co. v. United States, the Court of Federal Claims emphasized that the design for frequent off-road use alone was insufficient. The court concluded that the vehicle must be primarily designed for off-road use.

That brings us to the current court case. In Rockwater, the court found that the peanut trailers’ special features were specific to peanut drying rather than transportation. The presence of standard highway equipment and the absence of specific off-highway transportation features showed that the trailers were not primarily designed for off-highway use. The appellate court noted that the ability to operate at normal highway speeds without special permits further undermined the taxpayer’s claim that the vehicles were non-highway transportation vehicles.

While the taxpayer in this case lost the case, this court case creates a more concrete rule that taxpayers can follow and apply.

Avoiding the Excise Tax

Given that this excise tax only applies to vehicles that can travel unimpeded on highways at highway speeds, one can easily envision ways to avoid this excise tax.

For specialized equipment like the peanut trailers in this case, the manufacturer might be able to incorporate design elements that create legitimate highway limitations and thereby avoid this 12% tax. For example, using specialized off-road tires that are incompatible with extended highway travel, or designing weight distributions that require special permits for highway transport, could help qualify for the exemption. One could envision other arrangements that would also create genuine physical limitations that the end users may find acceptable.

Another approach might be to separate functions between different vehicle types. The manufacturer could create two vehicles instead of one–with one vehicle consisting of the peanut processing components and the other being the highway transportation part of the rig. Companies could use specialized equipment solely for off-highway operations and then transfer loads to separate highway-specific transport vehicles. This operational structure naturally separates highway and off-highway transport functions while potentially qualifying the specialized equipment for the exemption. Perhaps the manufacturer could go even further and charge a high price for the peanut processing components and provide the highway transportation part of the rig at minimal or no cost. Or alternatively, the taxpayer may have a different entity handle the sale of the highway transportation component.

Takeaway

Excise taxes like the highway transportation excise tax have the effect of preventing taxpayers from engaging in certain activities. With this tax, it is the sale of specialized equipment that includes components that, collectively, are able to travel down highways without significant limitations. As noted by this court case and in this article, the tax may be relatively easy to sidestep with enough creative tax planning. Creating genuine physical limitations on highway use through vehicle design, not just operational constraints, may be sufficient given the holding in this case.

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In most litigation, each party pays their own attorney fees regardless of who wins the case. This “American Rule” applies even when one party is clearly right and the other clearly wrong.

But litigation against the government, such as tax litigation, presents a unique inequity. When taxpayers are forced to defend against an incorrect IRS position, they effectively pay twice–once through their taxes that fund the IRS’s litigation costs (including the courts, government attorneys, and administrative proceedings), and again for their own defense. As taxpayers in this situation often ask: “Why should I have to pay for both sides of the litigation when I was right all along?”

The recent decision in Ankner v. United States, No. 2:2021cv00330 (M.D. Fla. Nov. 19, 2024) provides an opportunity to consider the rules for recovering attorneys’ fees from the IRS.

Facts & Procedural History

This case involved penalties assessed under Section 6700 against a group of companies that operated a captive insurance program.

The IRS has long challenged captive insurance programs. The IRS claimed this program didn’t qualify as “insurance” for tax purposes, making the tax deductions for their clients’ premium deductions improper. After a lengthy IRS audit and administrative process, the taxpayer filed suit in federal district court and the case proceeded to a jury trial.

The jury completely rejected the IRS’s position, finding that the taxpayer was not liable for any penalties and ordering refunds of all penalties previously paid. The taxpayer then filed a motion to recover their attorney fees under Section 7430. The taxpayer sought to recover $5,601 in administrative costs and $129,750 in litigation costs, which was the subject of this court opinion.

Attorney Fee Awards in Tax Litigation

Section 7430 allows courts to award reasonable administrative and litigation costs, including attorney fees, to prevailing parties in tax cases. However, there are some requirements.

First, there are limits on who can recover. Individual taxpayers must have a net worth under $2 million and business taxpayers have to have a net worth under $7 million and fewer than 500 employees.

Second, not all costs are recoverable. The hourly rate for attorney fees is capped at $125 (adjusted for inflation), though higher rates may be allowed in limited circumstances. But these rates are much lower than the prevailing rates for tax attorneys. Thus, even with an award of attorneys fees, the taxpayer is not going to be made whole.

Recoverable costs can include expert witness expenses, reasonable costs for studies and analysis, and court costs. These costs are also limited by timing. Administrative costs can be recovered from the earliest of: (1) the IRS Appeals Office decision, (2) the notice of deficiency, or (3) the first letter proposing a deficiency that allows for Appeals review. Litigation costs cover the period after court proceedings begin. This excludes time for the IRS audit or tax return submission or processing.

The “Substantially Justified” Defense

The biggest hurdle is often the “substantially justified” defense. Even if a taxpayer wins their case, they cannot recover fees if the IRS shows its position was “substantially justified.” This term means that the IRS had a reasonable basis in both law and fact.

Substantial justification means justified in substance or in the main — that is, justified to a degree that could satisfy a reasonable person. In other words, it means a reasonable basis both in law and fact. The courts have said that a party’s position can be substantially justified but incorrect, as long as a reasonable person could think that the position was correct.

This must be evaluated at two distinct points:

  • The administrative stage – when the IRS takes its position through Appeals
  • The litigation stage – when the IRS or Department of Justice attorneys handle the case

In Ankner, while the IRS conceded administrative costs (suggesting its position wasn’t justified at that stage), it successfully argued its litigation position was substantially justified because it was following established precedent at the time. The jury’s rejection of that position didn’t automatically make it unjustified.

This result is due to the procedure. The request for attorneys fees is submitted by a motion that is filed with the court. This was not a question submitted to the jury. This differs from state tax litigation practice in Texas, for example, where the jury decides both the merits and whether attorneys fees should be awarded. The Texas approach recognizes that the jury, having heard all the evidence, is best positioned to determine whether the government’s position was reasonable. This leads to more frequent fee awards, as juries who find the government’s position meritless are likely to also find it unreasonable. In Ankner, had the question been presented to the jury that had just rejected every aspect of the IRS’s case, the jury would have no doubt awarded attorneys fees to the taxpayer.

Strategic Use of Qualified Offers

One way around the “substantially justified” defense is making a “qualified offer” under Section 7430(g).

As shown in the recent Mann Construction v. United States case, even a $1 qualified offer can work. If the taxpayer makes a qualified offer that the IRS rejects, and then obtains a judgment for less than the offered amount, they can recover fees regardless of whether the IRS’s position was justified.

To be valid, a qualified offer must:

  • Be in writing
  • Specify the offered amount
  • Be designated as a “qualified offer”
  • Remain open until the earlier of: 90 days, trial date, or rejection
  • Be made after the 30-day letter but before 30 days pre-trial

Taxpayers should consider submitting qualified offers if they meet the net worth requirements noted above. This can put some pressure on the IRS to actually resolve the case expeditiously and, hopefully, in the taxpayer’s favor.

The Takeaway

This case shows that winning at trial doesn’t guarantee attorney fee recovery under Section 7430. The fact that this question is left to the judge, rather than the jury that heard all the evidence, makes it harder for taxpayers to recover their fees. Taxpayers need to carefully document their case from the administrative stage forward and consider making qualified offers to preserve their ability to recover fees. While jury verdicts remain important, the “substantially justified” standard means taxpayers must think strategically about fee recovery from the outset of their case. Making qualified offers early in the process, even nominal ones, may help secure fee recovery if successful.

Watch Our Free On-Demand Webinar

In 40 minutes, we’ll teach you how to survive an IRS audit.

We’ll explain how the IRS conducts audits and how to manage and close the audit.  



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