Pittsburgh, PA
The Wildcatter
(by Nik Tysiak)
Just a few cases to report this time.
Property Tax Assessment and Pipeline Valuation
The West Virginia Intermediate Court of Appeals in Lemley v. MarkWest Liberty Midstream & Resources, LLC, — S.E.2d —-(2025) established significant precedent for oil and gas transportation infrastructure taxation. The court affirmed the Office of Tax Appeals’ application of a 35% reduction in assessed value for 20-inch natural gas liquid pipelines due to economic obsolescence. The court held that external market forces beyond an operator’s control, including COVID-19 pandemic impacts, can justify substantial economic obsolescence adjustments when pipelines operate significantly below design capacity.
The decision recognized that beginning in 2018, MarkWest installed 20-inch NGL lines anticipating increased production that never materialized due to market conditions that lessened demand for NGLs and led to scaling back of planned natural gas processing facilities. The court found that calculations showing pipeline utilization at only 28%, 36%, and 47% of design capacity demonstrated that economic obsolescence was necessary to fairly value the pipelines. This represents a significant shift in how underutilized oil and gas transportation infrastructure may be assessed for property tax purposes.
The court also confirmed important procedural changes affecting oil and gas operators challenging property tax assessments. Effective January 1, 2023, the West Virginia Legislature transferred jurisdiction over contested property tax matters from county commissions to the Office of Tax Appeals, establishing OTA as an independent quasi-judicial agency with de novo hearing authority. Most significantly, the Legislature reduced the burden of proof for taxpayers from “clear and convincing evidence” to a “preponderance of the evidence” standard, representing a substantial reduction in the evidentiary burden for oil and gas operators disputing tax assessments. …