Chattanooga Times Free Press

Jack Daniel's asks for reprieve from barrel tax,

- BY JONATHAN MATTISE

NASHVILLE — Jack Daniel’s is turning to state lawmakers to ensure that distillers aren’t subject to property tax on whiskey barrels in Tennessee, which the company said it hasn’t had to pay since at least the end of Prohibitio­n eight decades ago.

The whiskey giant is pushing a liquor barrel property tax exemption bill after an auditor for Moore County’s property assessor recently determined the company’s barrels are taxable. Paying that tax on around 2 million barrels would cost the Lynchburg, Tenn.-based company an additional $2.8 million this year, according to a legislativ­e fiscal review.

Ralph Cooper, a lobbyist for the Tennessee County Services Associatio­n, said the audit determined that Jack Daniel’s has not been self-reporting the barrels for personal property tax, as required.

But Jack Daniel’s contends that the barrels aren’t taxable because they aren’t equipment, they are part of the inventory. The barrels are sold and reused, often to age other spirits across the world. The state attorney general has been asked for an opinion on whether the barrel tax would be constituti­onal. Jack Daniel’s argues it isn’t.

Last week, Jack Daniel’s master distiller Jeff Arnett told a panel of lawmakers that the company isn’t looking to save money; it’s looking to avoid what amounts to a new tax on a growing, competitiv­e and highly taxed industry in Tennessee.

About 60 percent of the retail price customers pay for distilled spirits is due to taxes, Arnett said. And about half of Moore County’s operating budget comes from Jack Daniel’s, he added.

“For Jack Daniel’s, you could look at it and say, ‘Well, maybe we can afford to pay that,’ but this is an industry tax,” Arnett said in an interview. “And you have 30-plus distilleri­es (in Tennessee), some of them who have got their homes mortgaged to try to make a go of it.”

The Jack Daniel’s audit appears to fall under a state rule that calls for random audits and allows extra emphasis on accounts that are major, non-reporting, have significan­t changes or are suspected of improper reporting. A handful of other distillers said they recently have been asked for whiskey barrel counts as well.

Moore County Tax Assessor Darren Harrison referred questions to state lawmakers, saying the audit was conducted under a state requiremen­t.

Cooper, the counties associatio­n lobbyist, countered that the tax has “been here for years.”

“Here’s where the problem comes in. Somebody says, ‘This is a new tax on me’ when they get audited,” Cooper said at a legislativ­e meeting last week. “Personal property tax in the state of Tennessee is on a volunteer reporting basis.”

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