Justice Willett delivered the opinion of the Court.
Amid nationwide tobacco litigation in the 1990s, the State of Texas individually settled its lawsuit against several of the largest tobacco companies over smoking-related Medicaid costs. The multibillion dollar settlement principally requires the settling manufacturers to make annual payments of approximately $500 million to the State in perpetuity. In return, the State waived without limitation, among other things, any future reimbursement claims against the settling manufacturers.
In 2013, the Legislature passed House Bill 3536, which sought to recover the State's health care costs imposed by non-settling manufacturers' products through a tax on those manufacturers. This case concerns whether that taxation scheme violates the Equal and Uniform Clause of the Texas Constitution. We hold that it does not. Accordingly, we reverse the court of appeals' judgment and remand to that court for consideration of the non-settling manufacturers' remaining challenges to the tax.
In this case, we write against the backdrop of national tobacco litigation, a momentous era culminating in some of the largest and most extensive civil litigation settlements in American history. We begin with an overview of the tobacco liability claims of the 1990s before turning to the facts of this case.
This case arises in part from historic litigation that buffeted the tobacco industry in the last decade of the twentieth century. The Lone Star State was a significant player in that litigation. Just over twenty years ago, Texas sued several of the nation's leading tobacco companies, asserting violations of numerous state and federal fraud, racketeering, antitrust, conspiracy, and other laws.
Texas's claims were that these companies knowingly misrepresented their products as safe and targeted minors in their advertisements. More than 40 states filed similar suits against the tobacco industry. The companies' collective defense faltered, however, when one of the companies, Liggett, settled with Texas and several other states (the Liggett Settlement), agreeing in large part to cooperate with the states in their suits against the remaining defendants. As relevant here, Liggett agreed to make annual payments to the states, and the states waived their claims against Liggett. The Liggett Settlement led to settlement negotiations involving the remaining defendants that culminated in a nationwide settlement and state-specific settlements.
The Liggett Settlement prompted serious settlement discussions between the states and the remaining tobacco defendants. Shortly thereafter, the states and tobacco defendants executed a Memorandum of Understanding and Proposed Resolution (Proposed Resolution). The Proposed Resolution sought "to forge an unprecedented national resolution of the principal issues and controversies associated with the manufacture, marketing and sale of tobacco products in the United States." According to the Proposed Resolution, federal legislation would provide the vehicle for implementing the solution and ensuring "comprehensive regulation of the tobacco industry while preserving the right of individuals to assert claims for compensation."
The Proposed Resolution would primarily require the remaining defendants to make annual payments in perpetuity "to fund health benefits program expenditures and to establish and fund a tobacco products liability judgments and settlement fund." Those payments would total approximately $368.5 billion over the first 25 years. The payments would be adjusted for inflation and changes in the defendants' sales. The Proposed Resolution would also impose significant limitations on the defendants' marketing of their products. In return, the states would waive their claims against the defendants as well as future claims arising from the sale or use of tobacco products. The Proposed Resolution never became federal law, but it would serve as the blueprint for several settlements in the following months.
The Master Settlement Agreement (MSA) was the largest of the subsequent settlements, involving 46 states plus American territories and the District of Columbia (collectively, settling states). Under the MSA, the settling states released past, pending, and future claims against the remaining defendants (deemed "participating manufacturers") that sought "recovery for Medicaid and other public health expenses incurred in the treatment of smoking-induced illnesses." Tracking the Proposed Resolution, the MSA required the participating
Texas was not a party to the MSA. Instead, Texas and three other states — Minnesota, Mississippi, and Florida — reached individual settlements with the remaining tobacco defendants. For purposes of this case, the differences between these settlements are negligible. The Texas Comprehensive Settlement Agreement and Release (Comprehensive Settlement) accomplished much of what the Proposed Resolution would have accomplished, exemplified by the Comprehensive Settlement's constant invocation of the Proposed Resolution and the Proposed Resolution's attachment to the Comprehensive Settlement as an appendix. It stated that Texas and the remaining defendants (settling manufacturers) — Philip Morris, Inc., R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co., Brown & Williamson Tobacco Co., Lorillard Tobacco Co., and United States Tobacco Co. — desired to settle on terms "comparable to those contained in the Proposed Resolution, which terms will achieve for Texas immediately and with certainty the financial benefits it would receive pursuant to the Proposed Resolution."
The Comprehensive Settlement required the settling manufacturers to make initial payments to Texas of $725 million — Texas's 7.25% share of the $10 billion initial payment to the states set out in the Proposed Resolution. The Comprehensive Settlement also required the settling manufacturers to make annual payments in perpetuity. Adjusted by inflation and the settling manufacturers' market share and product sales, the payments may increase, decrease, and even end if a manufacturer stops selling tobacco products altogether. The Comprehensive Settlement stated that the initial payments "constitute[d] reimbursement for public health expenditures by the State of Texas." It further stated that "[a]ll other payments ... are in satisfaction of all of the State of Texas's claims for damages incurred by the State in the year of payment or earlier years, including those for reimbursement of Medicaid expenditures and punitive damages." Pursuant to a most-favored-nation provision, the amount of the payments corresponds to the amount required under the Minnesota settlement, which costs settling manufacturers approximately $0.64 per cigarette pack. The parties to this litigation do not dispute that the settling manufacturers' payments to the State result in annual revenue of approximately $500 million.
As in the MSA and Proposed Resolution, the Comprehensive Settlement prohibited the settling manufacturers from marketing to minors and required them to support programs created to reduce underage smoking. Further, the Comprehensive Settlement prevented the settling manufacturers from opposing any legislative or administrative initiatives to strengthen penalties for tobacco-product sales to minors and for minors in possession of those products.
In return, the Settlement secured robust immunity for the settling manufacturers, though they admitted no wrongdoing and disclaimed any liability. Texas released all past claims "that were or could have been made in this action or any comparable
But what of those tobacco manufacturers who are not parties to either the MSA or the state-specific settlements? The Proposed Resolution cautioned that its achievements "would be substantially undercut if certain companies were free to ignore the limitations it imposes, and were instead able to sell tobacco products at lower prices (because they were not making the payments described above) and through less restricted advertising and marketing activities." Following the Proposed Resolution's idea of imposing ongoing payments or escrow obligations on these non-settling manufacturers (NSMs), the MSA and individually settling states established similar methods of dealing with NSMs.
The MSA suggested, and every MSA state has enacted, an escrow statute that requires "non-participating manufacturers" to deposit annual fees. The statutes generally provide that the MSA states can recover a judgment or settlement against NSMs from those escrow accounts. But if any fees remain in the escrow accounts after 25 years, they may be returned with interest to the manufacturers who paid the fees. NSMs have challenged those statutes on due-process and equal-protection grounds, but every federal court to consider those challenges has rejected them.
Minnesota sought to achieve the same goal through a tax on NSMs. That tax currently equates to $.50 per cigarette pack. In 2006, the Minnesota Supreme Court considered the NSMs' challenge to that tax on equal-and-uniform grounds and rejected the challenge, upholding the tax as rational and reasonably related to its goals of recovering health care costs and reducing underage smoking.
In 2013, Texas followed suit. The Legislature passed House Bill 3536, which added Subchapter V to Chapter 161 of the Texas Health & Safety Code. Subchapter V imposes a tax,
The tax is approximately $0.55 per cigarette pack for NSMs who did not join the MSA, and $0.15 per cigarette pack for those NSMs who became subsequent participating manufacturers under the MSA. All taxes paid "shall apply on a dollar for dollar basis to reduce any judgment or settlement on a released claim brought against the manufacturer that made the payment."
Respondents in this case (collectively, the Coalition) are manufacturers, retailers, and distributors who are subject to this taxation scheme. The Coalition sued the Comptroller and Attorney General (the State), alleging that the tax is unconstitutional under the Equal and Uniform Clause of the Texas Constitution and the Equal Protection and Due Process Clauses of the United States Constitution. Specifically, the Coalition claimed that the tax classifications unconstitutionally discriminate against NSMs. The State filed a plea to the jurisdiction, claiming, among other things, that the Coalition had not pleaded viable constitutional claims. The trial court considered that plea along with competing motions for summary judgment. The court rejected the plea and the State's motion for summary judgment, and granted the Coalition's motion for summary judgment, declaring the tax unconstitutional under both the Texas Constitution and the United States Constitution.
The court of appeals affirmed by addressing only the Equal and Uniform Clause claim.
We granted the State's petition for review. The Coalition has agreed that its legal arguments "are the same for both the Texas Settlement Agreement and the Liggett Agreement." For ease of reference, we therefore proceed on that understanding, denoting both settlements as "the Settlement" and denoting the settling companies under both settlements collectively as
The Equal and Uniform Clause is succinct: "Taxation shall be equal and uniform."
No party questions the applicability of the presumption of constitutionality here. Instead, the parties dispute the formulation and application of the rational-basis standard. We therefore begin with a clarification of that standard and then apply it to the facts before us.
The parties primarily debate the correctness of the court of appeals' rendition of the rational-basis standard. The court of appeals emphasized that, in assessing the rationality of tax classifications, its "focus must be on the subject of the tax, not the entity being taxed."
We do not think the court of appeals' analysis can be read as generously as the Coalition suggests. In addition to its emphasis in the quotations above on the nature of the products, the court repeated that refrain at least two more times. The court stated that there was "no indication in this record that the taxed subject matter... differs even slightly when manufactured by [NSMs] versus [settling manufacturers]."
That constricted approach diverges from our settled precedent. We have made clear that, "[a]t least where non-property taxes are concerned, the Equal and Uniform Clause generally only prohibits unequal or multiform taxes that are imposed on members of the same class of taxpayers."
This is not to say that differences in taxpayers' products are wholly irrelevant to this inquiry. The Legislature may well find those differences helpful in distinguishing one taxpayer from another. For example, no reasonable person would dispute that an ice cream manufacturer could be classified differently than a computer manufacturer. On that understanding, we have previously mentioned a "[d]ifference[] in the commodities sold or services rendered" as a difference to which the Legislature may look in constructing tax classifications.
In the end, the Equal and Uniform Clause primarily suggests a question as simple as its text: Is the challenged tax classification rational and reasonably related to the purpose of the tax?
Applying that familiar standard, we have little trouble finding that this taxation scheme does not violate the Equal and Uniform Clause.
The Legislature's distinction between settling manufacturers and NSMs is rational on at least two grounds. First, no party disputes that the settling manufacturers shoulder a $500-million-per-year burden that NSMs do not bear. Asked directly about that distinction at oral argument, the Coalition's counsel candidly admitted, "Apart from [this] tax, [we] would not be paying anything" to the State. Second, the settling manufacturers function under operating restrictions to which NSMs are not subject. The Coalition says it operates under similar restrictions because it too is legally prohibited from using marketing tactics designed to entice youth. But the Settlement's operating restrictions go further than prohibiting certain marketing tactics. The Settlement prohibits the settling manufacturers from "challeng[ing] existing or proposed legislative or administrative initiatives insofar as they effectuate" objectives like strengthening civil penalties for sales of tobacco products to minors and for minors in possession of these products. That restriction would implicate serious First Amendment concerns if not for the settling manufacturers' agreement, and the Coalition has pointed us to no evidence in the record that its members are subject to a similar restriction.
Those distinctions establish sufficient differences in business operations to justify the non-settling-manufacturer and settling-manufacturer tax classifications. Our emphasis on businesses' burdens in Nestle indicates as much. There, we assessed different franchise-tax classifications and upheld them based on the different burdens the businesses could bear: "[T]he Legislature could certainly conclude that employers' burdens — like compensation, unemployment insurance, and vicarious liability — are greater than those for a business whose work is done by independent contractors."
The Legislature has also articulated legitimate purposes for the tax. The Legislature primarily aimed to "recover health care costs to the state imposed by non-settling manufacturers," and "prevent non-settling manufacturers from undermining this state's policy of reducing underage smoking by offering cigarettes and cigarette tobacco products at prices that are substantially below the prices of cigarettes and cigarette tobacco products of other manufacturers."
And finally, the tax classifications are reasonably related to the goals of recovering health care costs and reducing underage smoking. The parties have stipulated that all tobacco products impose health care costs on the State. And the Coalition recognizes that the payments under the Settlement, at least in part, reimburse the State for health care costs that flow from settling manufacturers' products. Because no similar reimbursement mechanism was in place for NSMs, it was logical for the
At bottom, the tax classifications do not violate the Equal and Uniform Clause.
The Coalition raises a number of objections to this taxation scheme. It first argues that a settlement may never be considered to classify and tax non-settling parties differently. It then argues that even if a settlement may be considered, the effect of this Settlement should not be considered because its perpetual restrictions on settling manufacturers are their punishment for past conduct, and it would be unconstitutional to subject NSMs to similar conditions when they were never sued and never settled. Its final argument is that the Legislature should have taxed all manufacturers, not only NSMs, if it truly wanted to recover health care costs. We find none of these arguments persuasive.
The Coalition's broadest argument is that "it is never reasonable to use a private settlement agreement to resolve litigation as a basis for discriminatory taxation."
This is not the first time we have been asked to consider the effect of a settlement in an Equal and Uniform Clause challenge. Our decision in Fort Worth Independent School District v. City of Fort Worth turned in part on such a consideration.
Bell later challenged the ordinance on the ground that it violated the Equal and Uniform Clause.
As with all other cases, that case is, of course, distinguishable on the facts — it dealt with ad valorem taxes, the settlement was a clear attempt to approximate tax liability, the underlying litigation giving rise to the settlement did not contain allegations of wrongdoing, and the property taxpayers not privy to the settlement were not necessarily "competitors" with Bell. All true enough. But as to the broader question of whether the Legislature may, at least in some circumstances, look to the effect of a settlement when establishing tax classifications, that case is not meaningfully distinguishable. Indeed, ours would be an exceedingly odd jurisprudence if it found the effect of a settlement not only constitutionally significant but also constitutionally sufficient to satisfy tax liability pursuant to the Equal and Uniform Clause, but a verboten consideration when the Legislature ponders whether to impose a tax at all. A fair reading of Fort Worth Independent School District does not compel that result.
And for good reason: We have time and again underscored that it is the
The Coalition complains that there is no workable test that would govern when the Legislature may properly consider a settlement — how wide-ranging must the settlement be? How important must the settlement be? To whom must the settlement be important? What purposes underlying the settlement are relevant in the Equal and Uniform Clause inquiry? All good questions that we need not answer today. Suffice it to say that in the mine run of cases, aside from tax-liability-approximation cases like Fort Worth Independent School District, settlements will be unlikely to so fundamentally transform an entity's business operation as to permit the Legislature's consideration. This case may well concern the most extreme settlement that we will ever consider, as evidenced by the State's acknowledgment that the Settlement accomplished changes that "neither legislation nor court judgments could have accomplished." We leave for another day whether it is the only settlement that the Legislature may duly consider.
The Coalition's fallback argument is that the effect of this Settlement is an inappropriate factor for the Legislature to consider because it serves as the settling manufacturers' punishment for their pre-1998 conduct. We were never accused of wrongdoing, we were never sued, and we never had an opportunity to settle, says the Coalition, and thus the settling manufacturers' punishment cannot be a rational basis for classifying NSMs differently. The State counters that the annual payments are not punitive, but are instead annual reimbursements to the State for ongoing health care costs imposed by the settling manufacturers' products.
From the outset, it is worth pausing to appreciate the sheer breadth of the Coalition's position. Its position is that for sempiternity (or at least until the settling manufacturers decide to stop selling tobacco products), the settling manufacturers will be punished for conduct that occurred during a finite, pre-1998 period in time. Fifty, five hundred, or even five thousand years from now, the settling manufacturers will still be making atonement, according to the Coalition. Never mind that the Settlement expressly disclaims any wrongdoing on the part of the settling manufacturers, that punishment-centered view of
We need not divine the role of those payments today, however, because this is an Equal and Uniform Clause challenge, not a contract-interpretation dispute. Contrary to the latter, which necessarily turns on establishing the correct interpretation of a contract, the former turns (as relevant here) on whether the Legislature's tax classification is rational. Rational-basis review does not require the Legislature to show that its understanding of the record before it is infallible. Of course, the Legislature may not rely on the preposterous, but at least where the contractual language provides firm support for the Legislature's interpretation, the Legislature cannot be said to have acted irrationally. This is the case here. The Settlement expressly provides that the State waived without limitation "any future claims for reimbursement for health care costs allegedly associated with use of or exposure to [the settling manufacturers'] Tobacco Products" in "consideration of the payments to be made by the Settling Defendants." From that language combined with the Settlement's endorsement of the Proposed Resolution's goal of accomplishing "unprecedented and comprehensive regulation of the tobacco industry," the Legislature "could certainly conclude" that the settling manufacturers, as distinct from NSMs, currently reimburse the State for ongoing health care costs associated with their products.
Moreover, as a matter of judicial restraint, we must not decide the meaning of those payments today. Though no party in this case has challenged the validity of the Settlement, a definitive description of the payments either way — reimbursement for health care costs or punishment — would prematurely place a thumb on the scales in any future litigation concerning the Settlement's validity. The Coalition's counsel admitted as much at oral argument, noting in response to a suggestion that any punishment for pre-1998 conduct must cease at some point, "If they want to litigate [over whether] the contract is valid, that would be the argument to be made." Without an actual challenge to the Settlement, without full briefing from all parties to the Settlement, and without complete vetting of the parties' potential arguments in the lower courts, we are ill-prepared to offer — and constitutionally prohibited from offering
The Coalition's remaining argument is that the Legislature should have
First, the Legislature believes (rationally so, as discussed above) that the State is already recovering from settling manufacturers the health care costs that flow from the settling manufacturers' products. It would be nigh irrational to demand these costs two times over. Our Constitution does not require the Legislature to err on the side of taxation.
Second, if the Legislature had enacted an across-the-board tax, it would have been forced to undermine at least one of its policy goals, which was to prevent underage smoking. The Legislature's theory was that, contrary to the settling manufacturers, NSMs had the distinct advantage of not bearing the health care costs of their products, thereby enabling them to offer their products at lower prices more attractive to youth. Reducing underage smoking, the theory goes, thus depends upon NSMs bearing the burden of the health care costs imposed by their products. But if the Legislature were forced to tax both settling manufacturers and NSMs, that tax would double the settling manufacturers' cost burden, while only subjecting NSMs to one layer of costs, potentially leaving unresolved one of the initial problems the Legislature set out to fix: The cost-burden disparity between settling manufacturers and NSMs, along with the concerns of that disparity's effect on underage smoking, would remain unchanged. It was therefore rational for the Legislature to decline to tax the settling manufacturers.
Our Equal and Uniform Clause caselaw explains that "only an extreme and clear case ... would justify an interference by the courts with the legislative action."
We therefore reverse the court of appeals' judgment and remand to the court of appeals for consideration of the Coalition's remaining challenges to the tax.