901, LLC v. Sup'v. of Assessments ( 2024 )


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  • 901, LLC v. Supervisor of Assessments of Baltimore City
    No. 0491, Sept. Term. 2023
    Opinion by Leahy, J.
    Taxation > Property Taxes > Exemptions > In General > Transfer of exemption or of
    property exempt
    Section 7-210(a) of Maryland Code (1985, 2019 Repl. Vol., 2023 Supp.), Tax-Property
    Article (“TP”), sets forth the general rule that property owned by the government is not
    subject to property tax if the property is “devoted to a governmental use or purpose[.]” TP
    § 7-210(a)(1). However, TP § 7-210(a) expressly instructs that TP § 6-102 contains
    exceptions to this general rule, including TP § 6-102(e), which provides that “the interest
    or privilege of a person in property that is owned” by the government “is subject to property
    tax as though the lessee or the user were the owner of the property, if the property is leased
    or otherwise made available to that person” by the government “with the privilege to use
    the property in connection with a business that is conducted for profit.” TP § 6-102(e).
    Accordingly, in the instant case, the appellant/lessee of government property was subject
    to real property taxation under TP § 6-102(e) where the lessee had the ability to use the
    leased property in connection with its for-profit business of subleasing/licensing the
    property to a variety of governmental, non-profit, for-profit, residential, and other end-
    users of the property. The fact that certain governmental subtenants used portions of the
    property for governmental uses or purposes within the meaning of TP § 7-210(a)(1) did
    not alter this result, because the application of TP § 7-210(a) is expressly subject to the
    provisions of TP § 6-102.
    Circuit Court for Baltimore City
    Case No. 24-C-21-000219
    REPORTED
    IN THE APPELLATE COURT
    OF MARYLAND
    No. 0491
    September Term, 2023
    901, LLC
    v.
    SUPERVISOR OF ASSESSMENTS OF
    BALTIMORE CITY
    Arthur,
    Leahy,
    Shaw,
    JJ.
    Opinion by Leahy, J.
    Filed: April 3, 2024
    Pursuant to the Maryland Uniform Electronic Legal
    Materials Act (§§ 10-1601 et seq. of the State
    Government Article) this document is authentic.
    2024.04.03
    11:08:43 -04'00'
    Gregory Hilton, Clerk
    Appellant, 901, LLC, claims that the Supervisor of Assessments of Baltimore City
    (the “Supervisor” or “Appellee”) erred in denying its applications, filed in 2017, for partial
    exemptions from property tax on real property that it has leased from the Maryland Transit
    Administration (“MTA”). The real property at issue—which is located across the street
    from the Joseph Meyerhoff Symphony Hall—includes 1010, 1030, and 1040 Park Avenue
    in Baltimore City, Maryland; throughout this opinion, we refer to these properties
    collectively as the “Property.” The Property is the product of a series of agreements
    between the MTA and Appellant’s predecessor-in-interest, Symphony Center, LLC
    (“Symphony Center”), to finance and construct the Property, and thereafter permit
    Symphony Center (and Appellant) to sublease/license the Property as part of a for-profit
    business.
    Appellant contends that it is entitled to partial exemptions from tax under Maryland
    Code (1985, 2019 Repl. Vol., 2023 Supp.), Tax-Property Article (“TP”), § 7-210(a),1
    because a government entity is the record owner of the Property and portions of the
    Property are used by various governmental subtenants for qualifying governmental uses or
    1
    Unless otherwise indicated, citations to the Tax-Property Article are to the current
    Code. While several substantive changes have been made to the applicable statutes since
    the date of finality in this case—January 1, 2017—these changes do not affect the outcome
    of this case. We will point out substantive changes when citing to the statutes.
    The Tax-Property Article defines “[d]ate of finality” as “January 1, when
    assessments become final for the taxable year next following.” TP § 1-101(i). The term
    “[a]ssessment[,]” as pertains to real property, is defined as “the phased-in full cash value
    or use value to which the property tax rate may be applied[.]” Id. § 1-101(c)(1). Under TP
    § 7-102, “[u]nless otherwise provided in the law establishing the exemption, when any
    property is exempted by law from property tax, the exemption is effective on the next date
    of finality after the effective date of the law.” Id. § 7-102.
    purposes.    The Supervisor denied Appellant’s applications, however, because the
    provisions of TP § 7-210(a) are expressly made subject to TP § 6-102, which provides, in
    subsection (e), that a lessee or user of government property is subject to property tax as if
    the lessee or user were the owner of the property if, among other things, the property is
    “leased or otherwise made available” to the lessee or user with the “privilege to use the
    property in connection with a business that is conducted for profit.” TP § 6-102(e).
    Because Appellant’s for-profit business involves subletting the leased Property to a variety
    of subtenants, the Supervisor determined that Appellant satisfied the conditions of TP § 6-
    102(e) and, accordingly, that Appellant’s request for exemption under TP § 7-210(a) would
    have to be denied.
    Appellant, however, maintains that because some of its subtenants are governmental
    entities, those portions of the Property are used for a qualifying governmental use or
    purpose under TP § 7-210(a)(1). Further, Appellant asserts that it does not have the
    “privilege to use” the Property under TP § 6-102(e)(2) because its subtenants are the end-
    users of the Property; in other words, Appellant argues that an intermediate use of real
    property, i.e., the business of leasing units of property to so-called end-users of the
    property, does not qualify as “use” of property under TP § 6-102(e)(2).
    The Maryland Tax Court relied on TP § 6-102(e) to affirm the decision of the
    Supervisor, and the Circuit Court for Baltimore City affirmed the decision of the Tax Court.
    Appellant presents two questions for our review:
    I.     “Did the Tax Court err in denying partial exemptions from real
    property tax for the Property, which is owned and used by tax-exempt
    organizations?”
    2
    II.     “Did the Tax Court violate the doctrine of stare decisis, principles of
    statutory construction, and public policy in denying partial
    exemptions from real property tax for the Property?”
    We consider both questions together because they concern the same fundamental
    issue—whether the Tax Court correctly determined that Appellant’s “privilege to use the
    property in connection with a business that is conducted for profit” makes Appellant
    “subject to property tax as though” Appellant was the owner of the Property for tax
    purposes by operation of TP § 6-102(e). As explained below, we hold that the Tax Court
    correctly determined that partial property tax exemptions under TP § 7-210(a) were
    unavailable to Appellant because, under TP § 6-102(e), Appellant is a lessee of qualifying
    government property with the privilege to use the property in connection with a business
    that is conducted for profit. 2
    BACKGROUND
    The underlying facts of this case are largely undisputed. As summarized by the
    Circuit Court for Baltimore City:
    The parties stipulated to the relevant facts in their Joint Stipulation of
    Facts submitted to the Tax Court. The Property at issue is located in midtown
    Baltimore adjacent to the MTA’s Cultural Center/State Center Light Rail
    Station and near the Joseph Meyerhoff Symphony Hall. According to the
    Baltimore City Land Records, the Property is owned by the MTA, an agency
    of the Maryland Department of Transportation. The MTA proposed a
    “transit-oriented mixed use redevelopment of the [P]roperty.” The MTA
    selected Symphony Center . . . to develop the Property following a
    2
    The Tax Court also considered, and rejected, Appellant’s contention that TP § 7-
    202(b) exempts portions of the Property subleased to non-profit entities from property tax.
    On appeal to this Court, Appellant’s brief does not appear to advance any argument that an
    exemption is available under TP § 7-202(b). Accordingly, we focus our attention on the
    Tax Court’s determination that, due to the operation of TP § 6-102(e), Appellant is not
    entitled to a partial exemption from property tax under TP § 7-210(a).
    3
    competitive bidding process. The MTA leased the Property to the Symphony
    Center on June 8, 2000, for a term of 91 years.
    The MTA approved Symphony Center’s Master Site Plan for the
    Property. The Master Site Plan includes four buildings: two office buildings
    at 1010 and 1040 Park Avenue, a parking garage at 1030 Park Avenue, and
    an apartment building at 1020 Park Avenue (collectively the
    “Improvements”). [901, LLC] does not claim a property tax exemption for
    any part of the apartment building. The MTA provided Symphony Center a
    $6.8 million grant “[i]n consideration of the various obligations undertaken”
    in constructing the parking garage. Pursuant to the Grant Agreement,
    Symphony Center is required to provide at least sixty parking spaces for “the
    tenants and occupants of governmental and commercial office buildings” on
    the Property.
    On October 24, 2000, [901, LLC] was formed by Symphony Center
    to develop the Property. [901, LLC] is a for-profit entity. On June 7, 2001,
    Symphony Center assigned the Ground Lease to [901, LLC]. [901, LLC]
    “expressly agree[d] to assume all of the obligations of [Symphony Center]
    under the Ground Lease and under all contracts, including the Grant
    Agreement. The assignment was made to “facilitate the development of the”
    Property. “[901, LLC] constructed [the] [I]mprovements on the Property.”
    On January 28, 2004, the MTA and [901, LLC] amended the Ground
    Lease. Before amending the Ground Lease, [901, LLC] could “sell, assign,
    transfer or convey, sublet or license the Property, or any part thereof” without
    the MTA’s prior written consent. [901, LLC] did need to provide the MTA
    prior written notice if [901, LLC] took any of these actions. Pursuant to the
    Amendment, “[901, LLC] may not subdivide the [Property], or sell, assign,
    transfer or convey, sublet or license the [Property], or any part thereof”
    without the MTA’s prior written consent, but [901, LLC] “can sublet or
    license retail spaces and office spaces within the Improvements” without the
    MTA’s consent or providing the MTA prior written notice. [901, LLC]
    subleases the Property to various for-profit, non-profit, and governmental
    subtenants. Upon the expiration of the Ground Lease, [901, LLC] will yield
    the Property to the MTA and have no right in or to the Property, including
    the Improvements.
    901, LLC v. Supervisor of Assessments of Balt. City, No. 24-C-21-000219, slip op. at 2-4
    (Balt. City Cir. Ct. Apr. 14, 2023) (first, third, eighth, tenth, eleventh, seventeenth, and
    eighteenth alterations supplied by the circuit court) (citations and footnote omitted).
    Appellant filed three applications for exemption for the Property (the
    4
    “Applications”) on May 25, 2017. Collectively, the Applications sought “an exemption of
    85.45% [for 1010 Park Avenue] because of the rentals to government agencies”; “an
    exemption of 39.97% [for 1040 Park Avenue] because of the rentals to the State and non-
    profit organizations”; and “an exemption of 55.85% [for 1030 Park Avenue] because of
    the lease of parking spaces in the garage to government and non-profit organizations.” In
    their joint stipulation of facts before the Maryland Tax Court, the parties agreed that as of
    January 1, 2017, 85.45% of the leasable space at 1010 Park Avenue was leased to
    “Governmental Subtenants and the Non-Profit Subtenants”; 3 as was 39.97% of the leasable
    space at 1040 Park Avenue. Meanwhile, 57.89% of the total parking spaces at 1030 Park
    Avenue 4 was “reserved for either” governmental or non-profit subtenants “that have offices
    in 1010 Park Avenue and 1040 Park Avenue or the [t]he University of Maryland Medical
    Center.”
    Appellee, the Supervisor of Assessments of Baltimore City, denied the Applications
    in November 2017. The Property Tax Assessment Board (“PTAB”) for Baltimore City
    affirmed in December 2018, and Appellant appealed to the Tax Court. 5
    The Tax Court affirmed the ruling of the PTAB on December 28, 2020, in an
    3
    The joint stipulation does not explain why it adds a reference to non-profit tenants
    where the application for 1010 Park Avenue mentions only “government agencies.”
    4
    As previously noted, the MTA provided Appellant’s predecessor in interest,
    Symphony Center, a $6.8 million grant towards the construction of the parking garage, in
    consideration for the various obligations imposed by the grant agreement.
    The Supreme Court of Maryland described the nature of the Tax Court in
    5
    Comptroller of Maryland v. FC-GEN Operations Investments LLC:
    (Footnote Continued)
    5
    amended memorandum and order, thus denying Appellant’s Applications. In the amended
    memorandum, the Tax Court acknowledged that Appellant “relies on TP §§ 7-202 and 7-
    210 to justify the exemption[s] it seeks” as those sections “exempt from property tax
    property titled to a non-profit or government, which is used for non-profit or government
    purposes, respectively.” However, the Tax Court declared that “adherence to the plain
    meaning of TP § 6-102(e) mandates a denial of” the Applications for exemptions for the
    government subleases, emphasizing that TP § 7-210 “specifically references TP § 6-
    102(e)[.]” Under TP § 6-102(e), the Tax Court explained, property tax is imposed on
    certain “lessee[s] or . . . user[s]” of government-owned property by deeming those entities
    the hypothetical owners of the property for tax purposes, “[u]nless exempted” by
    enumerated sections of the Code. The Tax Court clarified that the enumeration of specific
    exemptions under TP § 6-102(e) “mandates rejection of non-enumerated exemptions[,]”
    “Despite its name, the Tax Court is not a court; instead, it is an adjudicatory
    administrative agency in the executive branch of state government.”
    Furnitureland S., Inc. v. Comptroller, 
    364 Md. 126
    , 137 n.8, 
    771 A.2d 1061
    (2001); see also [Maryland Code (1988, 2010 Repl. Vol.), Tax-General
    Article (“TG”),] § 3-102. The Tax Court is created by statute. It consists of
    five judges who have jurisdiction to hear appeals of the final decisions
    relating to tax issues. TG § 3-103(a). Matters within the Tax Court’s
    jurisdiction include: “(1) the valuation, assessment, or classification of
    property; (2) the imposition of a tax; (3) the determination of a claim for
    refund; (4) the application for an abatement, reduction, or revision of any
    assessment or tax; or (5) the application for an exemption from any
    assessment or tax.” TG § 3-103. The Maryland Tax Court hears appeals
    from the final decisions of the State or local taxing authorities, including
    decisions of the Comptroller, property-tax assessment appeals boards, and
    local tax collectors. TG §§ 3-103, 13-510, 
    Md. Code Ann., Tax Prop. § 14
    -
    512 (2019 Repl. Vol., 2022 Supp.).
    
    482 Md. 343
    , 365-66 (2022) (footnote omitted).
    6
    and noted, “there is no exemption specified for sub-lessees using the property for
    government or non-profit purposes[.]” Appellant’s reliance on TP § 7-202(b) for the
    subleases to non-profit entities was “further flawed,” the Tax Court explained, because TP
    § 7-202(b) “conditions that exemption on the non-profit owning the property” rather than
    a government entity. 6 Accordingly, the Tax Court concluded that Appellant’s arguments
    fail under the plain meaning of the statutes. 7
    The Tax Court highlighted the Supreme Court of Maryland’s decision in Cordish
    Power Plant Limited Partnership v. Supervisor of Assessments for Baltimore City, 
    427 Md. 1
     (2012), in which the Court asserted that TP § 6-102(e) identifies hypothetical owners for
    tax purposes “for the convenience of the tax collector[.]” Cordish, 427 Md. at 12. The
    Tax Court found that it would be “inconsistent” with the purpose of TP § 6-102(e) to
    6
    Appellant had argued that, because portions of the Property are subleased/licensed
    to non-profit organizations, the conditions of TP § 7-202(b) had been satisfied to provide
    Appellant tax exemptions. Specifically, TP § 7-202(b) provides a property tax exemption
    if two conditions are satisfied. First, the property must be owned by either a non-profit or
    an entity that “holds the property for the sole benefit” of an otherwise qualifying nonprofit.
    TP § 7-202(b)(ii). Second, the property must be “necessary for and actually used
    exclusively for a charitable or educational purpose to promote the general welfare of the
    people” Maryland. TP § 7-202(b)(1)(i). As stated by the Tax Court in this case, however,
    “a State entity, the MTA, not a non-profit entity, owns the [P]roperty” and, accordingly,
    Appellant cannot obtain a partial exemption from property tax under TP § 7-202(b). It is
    not surprising, therefore, that Appellant does not challenge the Tax Court’s ruling covering
    Appellant’s Applications for property tax exemption under TP § 7-202(b), since there is no
    dispute that MTA, a government agency, is the record owner of the Property.
    7
    The Tax Court “reject[ed]” Appellant’s argument based on the statutory history of
    TP § 6-102(e); namely, that under the predecessor statute—former Article 81 of the
    Maryland Code (1957, 1961 Supp.), § 8(8)(e)—a lessee was required to “be in actual
    possession of the leased property” to be subject to property tax. We address the substance
    of this argument and former Article 81 § 8(8)(e) in our discussion.
    7
    require tax collectors “to not just consider [Appellant’s] status as a government lessee, but
    also the specific uses of the many offices and parking spaces th[at Appellant] sublets[,]” in
    addition to the need to subsequently “separately value[]” the “individual sublets . . . in the
    context of [their] proportional value to the aggregate valuation of the leasehold.” The Tax
    Court also expressed concern that granting the exemptions in the absence of “specific
    statutory authority” would lead to an “absurd result” by enabling Appellant and similarly
    situated entities who “engage in a for-profit real estate rental business” to “realize a tax
    advantage not available to other for-profit businesses leasing from the government.” The
    Tax Court elaborated that granting a tax exemption to landlords whose interest in property
    stems from a lease of government property, while denying exemptions to otherwise
    identical landlords whose interest stems from a lease of private property, would result in
    unfair competition.
    Moving on, the Tax Court explained that Appellant’s reliance on dicta from two of
    our reported decisions was misplaced because neither case was decided under TP § 6-
    102(e). (Construing Townsend Balt. Garage, LLC v. Supervisor of Assessments of Balt.
    City, 
    215 Md. App. 133
     (2013); and Supervisor of Assessments of Balt. Cnty. v. Greater
    Balt. Med. Ctr., Inc., 
    202 Md. App. 282
     (2011) (hereinafter “GBMC”)). More specifically,
    the Tax Court observed that both cases hinged on “a consideration of the [record]
    ownership of the improvements on the propert[ies]” at issue, rather than TP § 6-102(e).
    Finally, the Tax Court identified a 1929 decision by our Supreme Court, Grand
    Lodge of Maryland, K. P. v. City of Baltimore, 
    157 Md. 542
     (1929), for the proposition
    that “exemptions from taxation shall be strictly construed.” (Quoting Grand Lodge, 157
    8
    Md. at 546; other citation omitted). The Tax Court concluded that “an act of the General
    Assembly” would be required to grant Appellant the exemptions it sought and, accordingly,
    the court affirmed the decision of the PTAB.
    Appellant sought judicial review of the Tax Court’s decision in the Circuit Court
    for Baltimore City. Following a remote hearing, the court affirmed the decision of the Tax
    Court by memorandum opinion and separate order entered April 14, 2023. The circuit
    court judge reasoned, in pertinent part; “First, [901, LLC] leases the Property from the
    MTA, a State government agency, and thus satisfies TP § 6-102(e)(1). Second, [901, LLC]
    uses the Property in connection with its for-profit business of leasing real property, thus
    satisfying TP § 6-102(e)(2).” The court distinguished GBMC and Townsend by noting that,
    unlike in Townsend, Appellant “was not required to sublease any part of the Property to
    any specific subtenant, including the MTA”; and unlike GBMC, Appellant “did not
    relinquish its rights in the Property back to the MTA.”
    Appellant noted a timely appeal to this Court on April 28, 2023.
    DISCUSSION
    Imposition of Property Tax under TP § 6-102(e)
    a. Parties’ Contentions
    Appellant contends it is entitled to a partial exemption from property taxes under
    TP § 7-210(a) because a substantial portion of the Property is owned by the MTA and is
    devoted to a governmental use or purpose. This result, Appellant says, flows from basic
    tools of statutory construction, such as the plain meaning rule and the principle that related
    statutes ought to be construed together. According to Appellant, “mischief” will result
    9
    from any construction placed on the term “use”—as that word is used within TP § 6-
    102(e)—that does not focus on a given property’s end use, because a contrary construction
    would permit entities to avoid tax by strategically leasing government property to a tax-
    exempt entity (such as a non-profit) that then subleases the property to a for-profit business.
    In any case, Appellant claims that our analysis of TP § 6-102(e) is controlled by
    Townsend and GBMC. The operation of TP § 6-102(e) was squarely addressed by this
    Court in Townsend, Appellant opines, and the Tax Court flagrantly ignored the principles
    of stare decisis by disregarding Townsend. Appellant also claims that, although we did not
    construe TP § 6-102(e) in GBMC, in that case we did construe the term “use” to mean a
    property’s end use.
    Appellant states that under the predecessor to TP § 6-102(e), section 8(8)(e) of
    former Article 81, Maryland Code (1957, 1961 Supp.), 8 it would have been entitled to the
    partial exemptions because that statute provided that the “interest or privilege of a[] lessee”
    of government property was taxable “to the same extent as though the person in possession
    or the user thereof were the owner of such property” if the lessee maintained “the privilege
    to use or possess such property in connection with a business conducted for profit[.]” See
    Cordish, 427 Md. at 10-11 (reproducing excerpt of former Article 81). According to
    8
    Appellant refers to former Article 81, section 8(8)(e), as that statute was originally
    enacted by the General Assembly in 1961, and in its opening brief quotes Cordish, 427
    Md. at 10-11 to provide an excerpt of the statute. As we discuss in the body of this opinion,
    the statute was amended several times before ultimately being supplanted by TP § 6-102(e)
    of the Tax-Property Article in 1985. See Md.-Nat’l Cap. Park & Plan. Comm’n v. State
    Dep’t of Assessments & Tax’n, 
    110 Md. App. 677
    , 692 (1996).
    10
    Appellant, the phrase “in possession or the user” squarely focuses on the end use of the
    leased property, not any intermediary use.
    Finally, Appellant asserts that it is necessary to grant the partial exemptions in order
    to protect the future of public-private development projects. If the partial exemptions are
    not granted, Appellant asserts that “Appellant and other developers will either raise rents
    charged to exempt organizations, refuse to lease similar properties to these exempt causes,
    or, more likely, opt out of future public-private projects altogether.”
    The Supervisor urges us to affirm the decision of the Tax Court because “Section 6-
    102(e) [of the Tax-Property Article] applies with full force[.]”           According to the
    Supervisor, Appellant is “in fact us[ing] the [P]roperty in connection with” its “for-profit
    business of leasing real property[,]” which demonstrates that the requirements of TP § 6-
    102(e)(2) are satisfied. Partial exemptions under TP § 7-210(a) are not available to
    Appellant, the Supervisor says, because TP § 7-210(a) is expressly made subject to TP §
    6-102. The Supervisor rejects Appellant’s insistence that the term “use[,]” as employed by
    TP § 6-102(e), can refer solely to how an end-user utilizes the subject property. Such a
    construction, the Supervisor posits, would inhibit the State’s interest in convenient and
    efficient tax collection. (Citing Cordish, 427 Md. at 11). The Supervisor also asserts that
    interpreting “use” in TP § 6-102(e) to encompass for-profit leasing would not “interfere
    with[] the proper operation of other statutes.”
    The Supervisor insists that Appellant’s reliance on Townsend and GBMC is
    misplaced because “neither was decided under [TP] § 6-102(e) and both are factually
    distinguishable[.]” The Supervisor also contends that Appellant’s policy concerns lack
    11
    merit, because the imposition of tax under TP § 6-102(e) will merely “place [Appellant]
    on the same footing as any other for-profit lessor of property to the government”; and
    because it is “speculative” to conclude that “taxing the [P]roperty in this case . . . will
    discourage public-private partnerships and financing arrangements like those at issue
    here.”
    b. Standard of Review
    “The Tax Court is an adjudicatory administrative agency in the executive branch
    of state government.” Comptroller of Md. v. FC-GEN Operations Invs. LLC, 
    482 Md. 343
    ,
    358 (2022) (hereinafter “FC-GEN”) (citations omitted). “A decision of the Tax Court is
    subject to the same standards of judicial review as contested cases of other administrative
    agencies[.]” Id. at 358 (citation omitted). “When reviewing a decision of an administrative
    agency, this Court looks through the decisions of the circuit court . . . and evaluates the
    decision of the agency.” Id. at 359 (citation omitted).
    “A court’s role in reviewing an administrative agency adjudicatory decision is
    narrow[.]” Comptroller of Treasury v. Taylor, 
    465 Md. 76
    , 86 (2019) (quotation omitted).
    Our review “is limited to determining if there is substantial evidence in the record as a
    whole to support the agency’s findings and conclusions, and to determine if the
    administrative decision is premised upon an erroneous conclusion of law.” 
    Id.
     (quotation
    omitted). That said, “[w]e owe no deference when the agency’s conclusions are premised
    on an error of law.” Harford Cnty. People’s Couns. v. Bel Air Realty Assocs. Ltd. P’ship,
    
    148 Md. App. 244
    , 259 (2002) (citations omitted). The Supreme Court of Maryland
    recently clarified that, “where deference is owed to an agency in the context of the
    12
    interpretation and application of tax laws, the governmental agency to which deference is
    owed is the Comptroller, not the Tax Court.” FC-GEN, 482 Md. at 364; see also id. at 378
    (“The deference owed to an agency’s interpretation of a statute[] . . . is always tempered
    by the judicial branch’s constitutional duty to interpret the law.”); Clear Channel Outdoor
    Inc. v. Dir., Dep’t of Fin. of Balt. City, 
    244 Md. App. 304
    , 313 (2020) (“We review the Tax
    Court’s decisions of law de novo.”) (citation omitted), aff’d, 
    472 Md. 444
     (2021) (internal
    citations and quotations omitted), cert. denied, 
    142 S. Ct. 2692 (2022)
    . “An agency
    decision based on . . . statutory interpretation is a conclusion of law.” Kor-Ko Ltd. v. Md.
    Dep’t of the Env’t, 
    451 Md. 401
    , 412 (2017) (quotation omitted).
    c. Legal Framework
    “[I]t is useful to state the applicable provisions of statutory interpretation that guide
    our analysis.” FC-GEN, 482 Md. at 379. In construing the applicable provisions of the
    tax law:
    We read the plain meaning of the language of the statute “as a whole, so that
    no word, clause, sentence or phrase is rendered surplusage, superfluous,
    meaningless or nugatory.” Wheeling v. Selene Fin. LP, 
    473 Md. 356
    , 376,
    
    250 A.3d 197
     (2021) (quoting Koste v. Town of Oxford, 
    431 Md. 14
    , 25-26,
    
    63 A.3d 582
     (2013) (internal quotations omitted)). “Additionally, we neither
    add nor delete language so as to reflect an intent not evidenced in the plain
    and unambiguous language of the statute, and we do not construe a statute
    with forced or subtle interpretations that limit or extend its application.”
    Wheeling, 
    473 Md. at 376-77
    , 
    250 A.3d 197
     (quoting Lockshin v. Semsker,
    
    412 Md. 257
    , 274, 
    987 A.2d 18
     (2010)) (cleaned up). “If the language of the
    statute is unambiguous and clearly consistent with the statute’s apparent
    purpose, our inquiry as to legislative intent ends ordinarily and we apply the
    statute as written, without resorting to other rules of construction.” 
    Id. at 377
    , 
    250 A.3d 197
     (quoting Lockshin, 
    412 Md. at 275
    , 
    987 A.2d 18
    ). That
    said, as the Court recently reiterated in Wheeling,
    13
    [w]e, however, do not read statutory language in a vacuum, nor do we
    confine strictly our interpretation of a statute’s plain language to the
    isolated section alone. Rather, the plain language must be viewed
    within the context of the statutory scheme to which it belongs,
    considering the purpose, aim, or policy of the Legislature in enacting
    the statute. We presume that the Legislature intends its enactments to
    operate together as a consistent and harmonious body of law, and,
    thus, we seek to reconcile and harmonize the parts of a statute, to the
    extent possible consistent with the statute’s object and scope.
    Where the words of a statute are ambiguous and subject to more than
    one reasonable interpretation, or where the words are clear and
    unambiguous when viewed in isolation, but become ambiguous when
    read as part of a larger statutory scheme, a court must resolve the
    ambiguity by searching for legislative intent in other indicia,
    including the history of the legislation or other relevant sources
    intrinsic and extrinsic to the legislative process. In resolving
    ambiguities, a court considers the structure of the statute, how it
    relates to other laws, its general purpose, and the relative rationality
    and legal effect of various competing constructions.
    In every case, the statute must be given a reasonable interpretation,
    not one that is absurd, illogical, or incompatible with common sense.
    
    473 Md. at 377
    , 
    250 A.3d 197
     (quoting Lockshin, 
    412 Md. at 275-76
    , 
    987 A.2d 18
    ) (internal quotations omitted).
    Additionally, because we are tasked with interpreting a tax statute, “this
    Court recognizes that any ambiguity within the statutory language must be
    interpreted in favor of the taxpayer.” [Comptroller of the Treasury v.]
    Citicorp [Int’l Commc’ns, Inc.], 389 Md. [156,] 165, 
    884 A.2d 112
     [(2005)]
    (quoting Supervisor of Assessments of Anne Arundel County v. Hartge Yacht
    Yard, Inc., 
    379 Md. 452
    , 461, 
    842 A.2d 732
     (2004) (quoting Comptroller v.
    Clyde’s of Chevy Chase, Inc., 
    377 Md. 471
    , 484, 
    833 A.2d 1014
     (2003))).
    FC-GEN, 482 Md. at 379-81 (alteration in original). “With these principles in mind, we
    turn to the applicable provisions of the” Tax-Property Article. Id. at 381.
    Under TP § 6-101(a)(1), “[e]xcept as otherwise provided in this article, all property
    located in this State is subject to assessment and property tax and is taxable to the owner
    14
    of the property.” TP § 6-101(a)(1). The “owner of real property for tax assessment
    purposes” is “the record owner, as listed in the land records[.]” Townsend Balt. Garage,
    LLC v. Supervisor of Assessments of Balt. City, 
    215 Md. App. 133
    , 144 (2013) (quoting
    GBMC, 
    202 Md. App. 282
    , 292 (2011)).
    Property owned by federal, state and local government entities is generally not
    subject to property tax by virtue of TP § 7-210, which provides:
    (a) Except as otherwise provided in § 6-102 of this article and except as
    otherwise provided under this section, government-owned property is not
    subject to property tax, if the property:
    (1) is devoted to a governmental use or purpose; and
    (2) is owned by:
    (i) the federal government;
    (ii) the State;
    (iii) a county or a municipal corporation; or
    (iv) an agency or instrumentality of the federal government, the
    State, a county, or of a municipal corporation.
    (b) The exemption provided for the property owned by an agency or
    instrumentality in subsection (a)(2)(iv) of this section applies only to the
    extent that a law exempts the property.
    TP § 7-210 (headings omitted).
    As stated in TP § 7-210, the general rule that government-owned property is not
    subject to property tax, is subject to exceptions, including, as provided in TP § 6-102(e),
    which states:
    (e) Unless exempted under § 7-211, § 7-211.1, § 7-244, 7-246,[9] or § 7-501
    of this article, the interest or privilege of a person in property that is owned
    by the federal government, the State, a county, a municipal corporation, or
    an agency or instrumentality of the federal government, the State, a county,
    or a municipal corporation is subject to property tax as though the lessee or
    The reference, within TP § 6-102(e), to TP § 7-246, was added by the General
    9
    Assembly in 2021. 2021 Md. Laws, ch. 109, § 1 (S.B. 877).
    15
    the user of the property were the owner of the property, if the property is
    leased or otherwise made available to that person:
    (1) by the federal government, the State, a county, a municipal
    corporation, or an agency or instrumentality of the federal
    government, the State, a county, or a municipal corporation; and
    (2) with the privilege to use the property in connection with a business
    that is conducted for profit.
    TP § 6-102(e). See also TP § 8-113 (“Interests subject to property tax under [TP] § 6-102
    of this article shall be valued as if the lessee, person in possession, or user of the property
    were the owner of the property.”). As is pertinent to this case, by the plain text of TP § 6-
    102(e), a person or entity that leases property from the government will be subject to
    property tax if the person or entity obtains, by virtue of the lease, “the privilege to use the
    property in connection with a business that is conducted for profit.” TP § 6-102(e)(2).
    When interpreting the provisions of TP §§ 6-102 and 7-210, we are mindful that
    “[p]roperty tax exemptions provided under [Title 7 of the Tax Property Article] shall be
    strictly construed.” TP § 7-101.
    d. Analysis
    Appellant is not entitled to partial exemptions from property taxes under TP § 7-
    210(a) because, as instructed by the plain text of TP § 6-102(e), Appellant is the “lessee or
    the user of the property”; the Property was “leased” to Appellant by an
    “agency . . . of . . . the State”; and Appellant has “the privilege to use the property in
    connection with a business that is conducted for profit.” TP § 6-102(e) (emphasis added).
    Therefore, the Property “is subject to property tax as though [Appellant] were the owner
    of the property[.]” Id. Because TP § 7-210(a) is expressly made subject to the operation
    16
    of TP § 6-102, it is irrelevant that portions of the property at issue here would—but for TP
    § 6-102(e)—be exempt from property tax. We explain.
    To begin, we “read the plain meaning of the language of the statute ‘as a whole, so
    that no word, clause, sentence or phrase is rendered surplusage, superfluous, meaningless
    or nugatory.’” FC-GEN, 482 Md. at 379 (quoting Wheeling, 
    473 Md. at 376
    ).
    As previously stated, in Maryland the record owner of real property is generally
    subject to property tax. TP § 6-101(a) (“[P]roperty tax . . . is taxable to the owner of the
    property.”); see also Townsend, 
    215 Md. App. at 143
     (“[U]nder Maryland law, the record
    owner, as listed in the land records, is the owner of real property for tax assessment
    purposes.” (emphasis removed) (quoting GBMC, 
    202 Md. App. at 292
    )). However, under
    TP § 6-102(e), the “interest or privilege” of a “lessee or . . . user” of property that is owned
    by the government will be subject to property tax as if the person were the hypothetical
    owner of the property if the express exemptions do not apply and the property is “leased
    or otherwise made available to th[e] person”: 1) by a qualifying government entity under
    TP § 6-102(e)(1); and 2) “with the privilege to use the property in connection with a
    business that is conducted for profit.” TP § 6-102(e)(2) (emphasis added).
    In this case, there is no dispute that Appellant leased the Property from a qualifying
    government entity under TP § 6-102(e)(1). The critical inquiry is thus whether the Property
    was leased to Appellant with the “privilege to use” the Property “in connection with a
    business that is conducted for profit.” TP § 6-102(e)(2).
    17
    i. The “Privilege to Use”
    According to Appellant, the scope of TP § 6-102(e)(2) turns on the meaning of the
    word “use[,]” and this word must be read to refer to a property’s actual end-use, and not
    any intermediary use.      In addressing this contention, we begin by explaining why
    Appellant’s reliance on the statutory history of TP § 6-102(e) does not compel the
    conclusion that Appellant proposes.
    Section 6-102(e) is derived from the text of Section 8(8)(e) of former Article 81.
    As originally enacted by 1961 Md. Laws, ch. 884 (S.B. 78), Article 81 § 8(8)(e) provided,
    in pertinent part:
    Leaseholds and Other Limited Interests in Real . . . Property—No Leasehold
    or other limited interest in real . . . property shall be subject to taxation except
    the following which shall be subject to taxation in the same amount and to
    the same extent as though the person in possession or the user thereof were
    the owner of such property.
    ***
    (e) The interest or privilege of any lessee, bailee, pledgee, agent, or
    other person in possession of or using any real . . . property which
    is owned by the federal or state governments, and which is leased,
    loaned, or otherwise made available to any person, firm, corporation,
    association, or other legal entity, with the privilege to use or possess
    such property in connection with a business conducted for
    profit . . . shall be subject to taxation in the same amount and to the
    same extent as though the lessee or user were the owner of such
    property[.]
    1961 Md. Laws, ch. 884, at § 1 (S.B. 78) (bold emphasis added; other emphasis removed).
    This statutory language plainly contemplated that an entity may use, yet not possess,
    property subject to § 8(8)(e). The opposite is also true—an entity might possess (but not
    use) subject property. Indeed, an entity that leases property from the government for the
    purpose of subleasing that same property may be said to possess (but not use) the property
    18
    between the commencement of its lease with the government, but before the
    commencement of any sublease; and thereafter, to use (but no longer possess) pertinent
    portions of the property during the terms of any sublease, by renting the property to others
    for profit.
    Of course, Article 81 was eventually supplanted by the Tax-Property Article in
    1985. Md.-Nat’l Cap. Park & Plan. Comm’n v. State Dep’t of Assessments & Tax’n, 
    110 Md. App. 677
    , 692 (1996). We summarized the statute’s progression as follows:
    In 1968, the General Assembly redesignated § 8(8)(e) as § 8(6)(e) of Article
    81. That change did not last long, for in 1970, the General Assembly
    renumbered § 8(6)(e) as § 8(7)(e)[.] Chapter 526, Acts 1970. [In]
    1983 . . . subparagraph (e) [was divided] into sub-subparagraphs[.] Chapter
    640, Acts 1983. In 1985, the General Assembly repealed § 8(7)(e) of Article
    81, along with other sections and subsections, reenacted, and recodified them
    in the Tax–General and Tax–Property Articles. Chapter 8, Acts 1985.
    Id. Just prior to the creation of the Tax-Property Article, the text of Art. 81 § 8(7)(e)
    provided, in part:
    (7) No leasehold or other limited interest in real . . . property shall be subject
    to taxation except the following which shall be subject to taxation in the same
    amount and the same extent as though the person in possession or the user
    thereof were the owner of such property.
    (e)(1)(I) The interest or privilege of any lessee, bailee, pledgee, agent
    or other person in possession of or using any real . . . property which is
    owned by [an enumerated governmental entity] and which is leased, loaned,
    or otherwise made available to any . . . legal entity, with the privilege to use
    or possess such property in connection with a business conducted for
    profit . . . shall be subject to taxation in the same amount and to the same
    extent as though the lessee or user were the owner of such property[.]
    1983 Md. Laws, ch. 640, at 2041 (H.B. 990).
    19
    The Revisor’s Note to 1985 Md. Laws, ch. 8 (S.B. 1), as concerns the creation of
    TP § 6-102, states in pertinent part that:
    This section is new language derived without substantive change from the
    introductory language of former Art. 81, § 8(7) and from (a) through (e)(i),
    except for the exception in (e)(i).
    ***
    In subsection (a) of [TP § 6-102], the former reference to the “person in
    possession or the user” being treated as the owner is deleted as included in
    the introductory phrase “[e]xcept as otherwise provided in this section”.
    ***
    [I]n the introductory language of [TP § 6-102](e) of this section, the former
    reference to any “lessee, bailee, pledgee, agent or other person in possession
    of or using any real or personal property” is deleted as unnecessary since
    subsection (e) . . . is revised to provide for “the interest or privilege of a
    person in property . . . if the property is leased or otherwise made available
    to that person[.]”[]
    In [TP § 6-102](e)(2) . . . the former word “possess” is deleted in light of the
    use of the word “use”.
    1985 Md. Laws, ch. 8, at 124-25 (Revisory Note to TP 6-102).
    Like the former provisions of Article 81, the text of TP § 6-102(e) refers to the
    “lessee[s] or . . . user[s]” of property who have “leased” property from the government
    with “the privilege to use” said property in “connection with” a business conducted for
    profit. TP § 6-102(e). In the context of TP § 6-102(e), one may be a lessee of property
    without actively using it; for example, by taking possession of property pursuant to a lease
    but letting it sit vacant. One may also use property without actually possessing it; for
    example, a lessee who sublets leased property for profit. Although TP § 6-102, unlike
    former Article 81 § 8(8)(e), no longer employs the terms “possess” or “possession,” TP §
    8-113 expressly contemplates that TP § 6-102 may apply to a “lessee, person in possession,
    or user of . . . property[.]” TP § 8-113 (emphasis added).
    20
    After examining the term “use” and “user” as employed in TP § 6-102(e) against
    the language of its predecessor statute and within the context of the larger statutory scheme,
    we cannot credit Appellant’s central contention that the terms “use” and “user” refer only
    to a subject property’s end use or user. Indeed, Appellant’s argument would render the
    word “lessee” nugatory by ignoring the disjunctive “or” and, thus, add a new requirement
    that—to trigger TP § 6-102(e)—a lessee also have possession and/or physically use the
    property at the ground level. See TP § 6-102(e) (“lessee or the user” (emphasis added)); §
    8-113 (“lessee, person in possession, or user” (emphasis added)).
    Confining our focus, for the moment, to how the term “use” is employed by
    subsection (e)(2) of TP § 6-102, we emphasize that the term “use” is modified by the words
    “privilege to[.]” TP § 6-102(e)(2) (emphasis added); see also FC-GEN, 482 Md. at 379
    (stating the rule against surplusage). While the term “privilege” has multiple meanings in
    law, as pertinent here, “[a] privilege grants someone the legal freedom to do or not to do a
    given act.” Privilege, BLACK’S LAW DICTIONARY (11th ed. 2019) (emphasis added); see
    also           Privilege,            MERRIAM-WEBSTER,                 https://www.merriam-
    webster.com/dictionary/privilege, archived at https://perma.cc/LWA3-T46H (last visited
    March 20, 2024) (defining “privilege” in part as “a right or immunity granted as a peculiar
    benefit, advantage, or favor”). Simply put, a person may have the privilege to do something
    even if they never do it. With this context, it is clear that the term “use”—as employed by
    TP § 6-102(e)(2)—is not limited to a property’s actual use; instead, the phrase “privilege
    to use” encompasses the property’s permissible potential uses. Furthermore, there is no
    indication that the phrase refers only to a property’s end use. A landlord of a vacant
    21
    building has the “privilege” to “use” the vacant units “in connection with” their for-profit
    business (of leasing those units) regardless of how future tenants may in turn use the
    property.
    Here, none of the agreements pertaining to Appellant’s interest in the Property
    meaningfully restrict Appellant’s ability to use the Property (or portions thereof) in
    connection with its for-profit business, whether that use be leasing the Property to others, 10
    or operating its own for-profit business on the premises. Furthermore, Appellant has not
    pointed to any extraneous authority, such as a statute or local ordinance, that would
    preempt its ability to use the property this way. Accordingly, Appellant had “the privilege
    to use the property in connection with a business that is conducted for profit.” TP § 6-
    102(e). Appellant draws our attention to Supervisor of Assessments of Baltimore City v.
    Chase Associates, 
    306 Md. 568
     (1986), where our Supreme Court stated “use in the present
    context [of former Maryland Code (1957, 1980 Repl. Vol.), Article 81, § 232(8)(d)] refers
    to the nature of the activities pursued on the property.” 
    306 Md. at 577-78
     (citation
    omitted). According to Appellant, the Court’s construction of the term “use” in 
    Chase 10
    As correctly summarized by the circuit court, “[w]hile [Appellant] has a limited
    obligation to provide parking spaces for governmental and commercial tenants in the
    vicinity of the Property, there is no express requirement that specific parking spaces or
    office spaces be provided to specific tenants, nor is there an explicit guarantee of a lease
    back to the MTA. Petitioner is not restricted in subleasing spaces within the Property[.]”
    901, LLC v. Supervisor of Assessments of Balt. City, No. 24-C-21-000219, slip op. at 14
    (Balt. City Cir. Ct. Apr. 14, 2023). We also note that none of the agreements between
    Appellant (or Symphony Center) and MTA, dating back to the year 2000, mention or
    appear to contemplate any tax exemptions for subleases to government entities—and the
    record does not indicate that Appellant raised the issue of partial tax exemptions under TP
    § 7-210(a) until 2017.
    22
    Associates is emblematic of how that term should be understood throughout the Tax
    Property Article’s provisions pertaining to real property assessments. We disagree, but to
    explain why, additional context is necessary.
    In Chase Associates, the Court examined the meaning of the following statutory
    text:
    [A]ny property shall be reviewed, physically inspected, and
    revalued . . . in any year that:
    (1) [. . .]
    (2) A substantial change occurs in the use of the property[.]
    Id. at 570-71 (emphasis added) (quoting Art. 81, § 232(8)(d)). 11 The Court noted that, in
    applying Section 232(8)(d)(2) of Article 81, it was the practice of the Tax Court to
    “premise[] . . . its identification of change in use with change in value.” Id. at 576. The
    Court disagreed with this practice, stating:
    The purpose . . . of § 232(8)(d) was clearly to improve the accuracy with
    which a property’s assessed value reflects its current value throughout a
    triennial cycle. In implementing this purpose, however, the legislature chose
    not to provide generally that any change in value would precipitate mid-cycle
    reassessment, but rather to link reassessment to the occurrence of certain
    specified events, including a substantial change in use, likely to presage a
    change in value. The legislature’s reasons for drafting the statute in this
    manner may well have included lessening the tremendous administrative
    burden the more general provision would have created, and increasing the
    predictability and consistency with which the reassessment process would be
    invoked.
    To interpret “change of use” to include any event that might change the value
    of the property would stretch the word “use” well beyond the meaning it can
    bear, and would disregard the legislature’s deliberate choice of a specific
    The Chase Associates Court explained that “[b]y chapter 8 of the Acts of 1985,
    11
    the provisions of Article 81 governing real property taxation were recodified with
    amendments as part of the new Tax-Property Article” which “bec[a]me effective [on]
    February 1, 1986[.]” Chase Assocs., 
    306 Md. at
    570 n.1.
    23
    rather than a general drafting style. The ordinary meaning of use is simply
    the purpose or object to which something is applied. See Webster’s Third
    New International Dictionary 2523 (1971, unabridged). More specifically,
    use in the present context refers to the nature of the activities pursued
    on the property. [Citation omitted]. Although a change in use may occasion
    or coincide with a change in value, the concepts are entirely distinct, and the
    Tax Court erred in equating them for purposes of § 232(8)(d)(2).
    Id. at 577-78 (bold emphasis added). Accordingly, the Court determined that the Tax Court
    erred in finding a substantial change in use had occurred—for the purposes of Art. 81 §
    232(8)(d)(2)—where an apartment building was converted to a condominium regime on
    the theory that such conversions typically alter the value of the subject property. Id. at 576,
    578-79. As the Court explained, “[a] condominium regime is nothing more than a form of
    ownership of real property” and, while a condominium conversion “does constitute a
    change in form of ownership, it does not, of itself, constitute a change in the use of the
    property” because “the nature of the activities pursued on the . . . property remained
    unchanged following the . . conversion.” Id. at 578 (citations omitted).
    Thus in Chase Associates, the word “use” as applied in the context of former Article
    81 § 232(8)(d)(2) concerned substantial changes in the “nature of activities pursued” on a
    particular property. Id. (citation omitted). This is very different from a determination
    whether a given entity has the “privilege” to use property in a particular way under TP §
    6-102(e). Moreover, whereas TP § 6-102(e) expressly indicates that there may be a degree
    of separation between the subject property and a particular for-profit use of the property
    through the language “in connection with”; Article 81 § 232(8)(d)(2) contained no such
    language. Accounting for the context in which the term “use” appeared in former Article
    81 § 232(8)(d)(2) and the purpose of the statute as described by the Chase Associates Court,
    24
    it was plainly reasonable for the Court to declare that “use in the present context refers to
    the nature of the activities pursued on the property.” Chase Assocs., 
    306 Md. at 577-78
    (emphasis added) (citation omitted).
    Appellant also asserts that many of the exceptions to TP § 6-102(e), such as those
    found within TP § 7-211(a) and (b), would “make little sense if ‘use’ was not determined
    by the actual user of the property.” Appellant is correct that many of the exceptions to TP
    § 6-102(e), including TP § 7-211(a) and (b), turn on whether property is physically used in
    a particular way at the ground level. But the plain language of those statutes distinguishes
    the context in which the term “use” is employed from that in TP § 6-102(e).
    For example, TP § 7-211(b)(2), provides in pertinent part that:
    An interest of a person in property of the federal government, the State, a
    county, or a municipal corporation is not subject to property tax, if the
    property is used for a concession that: (i) is located in a public airport, park,
    market, or fairground[.]
    TP § 7-211(b)(2) (emphasis added).
    Contrary to Appellant’s contentions, the operation of TP § 7-211(b)(2) does not
    appear to turn on whether it is the original lessee or a sublessee of government property
    that uses the property “for a concession[.]” TP § 7-211(b)(2). Facially, a lessee of
    government property who meets the conditions of TP § 6-102(e) may nonetheless be
    exempt from property tax because a sublessee uses the property to establish a qualifying
    concession under TP § 7-211(b)(2). 12
    12
    Appellant asserts that a similar problem could arise under TP § 7-211(a)(3), which
    provides that: “An interest of a person in . . . real property of the federal government or of
    (Footnote Continued)
    25
    ii. The Townsend and GBMC Cases
    Elsewhere in its brief, Appellant stresses that the outcome of this case is controlled
    by Townsend Baltimore Garage, LLC v. Supervisor of Assessments of Baltimore City, 
    215 Md. App. 133
     (2013). We disagree, as the facts of Townsend are distinguishable from the
    instant case and, in any case, Townsend’s limited discussion of TP § 6-102(e) was dicta.
    We explain.
    In Townsend, the State of Maryland leased two parcels of land that it owned to a
    non-profit 501(c)(3) organization, UMB Health Sciences Research Park Corporation
    (“RPC”). Townsend, 
    215 Md. App. at 135
    . RPC subleased one of the parcels (“Parcel 1”)
    to Baltimore LSRP One Business Trust (“BLSRP”), a for-profit entity. 
    Id. at 135
    . BLSRP
    had agreed to finance and build “an office and laboratory building” on Parcel 1, and the
    sublease stipulated that, during the term of the sublease, BLSRP held “title to the
    improvements[.]” 
    Id. at 136
    . Parcel 1 was then subleased again, this time with BLSRP
    subleasing the premises to the State of Maryland for use by the University of Maryland,
    Baltimore (“University”). 
    Id.
     As stipulated by the parties, “85% of the office space [on
    Parcel 1] is used for University purposes.” 
    Id.
     (footnote omitted).
    the State is not subject to property tax if that property: (i) is situated on land that is owned
    by the federal government and located within the defined boundaries of a military
    installation; and (ii) is used for national defense purposes or for housing for military
    personnel and their families.” TP § 7-211(a)(3). Appellant’s contentions here are
    unpersuasive for identical reasons. Facially, TP § 7-211(a)(3)(ii)’s indication that property
    may be exempt from tax where the property is “used” for “housing” military families
    contemplates that an entity, in a similar position as Appellant, may lease property from the
    government and subsequently sublease that property to military families.                       A
    lessee/sublessor may thus satisfy the conditions of TP § 6-102(e), but be exempt from that
    statute’s operation by virtue of TP § 7-211(a)(3).
    26
    The other parcel (“Parcel 2”) was subleased by RPC to Townsend Baltimore
    Garage, LLC (“Townsend Garage”), another for-profit entity. Id. Townsend Garage had
    agreed to “finance and construct a parking garage on the land” and, according to the
    sublease, “title to the improvements shall be held” by Townsend Garage during the term
    of the sublease. Townsend, 
    215 Md. App. at 136
    . In turn, Townsend Garage licensed “150
    parking spaces to the State of Maryland for the use of UMB”; as stipulated by the parties
    on appeal, 25% of the garage was “used for University purposes.” 
    Id. at 136
    .
    The Townsend Court noted that there was never any doubt that these specific
    portions of the parcels would, in the end, be subleased/licensed back to the State for use by
    the University. Specifically: “appellants’ lease of the portions of the property that are the
    subject of this appeal was conditioned upon and restricted to use by the State for University
    purposes.” 
    Id.
     at 136 n.2 (emphasis added). In other words, both BLSRP and Townsend
    Garage subleased (or licensed) portions of the parcels back to the State for use by the
    University because they were required to do so.
    BLSRP and Townsend Garage sought partial exemptions from property tax for these
    portions of the parcels—the portions that they were required to sublease/license back to the
    State, for use by the University. 
    Id. at 135-36
    . The Tax Court, however, determined that
    BLSRP and Townsend Garage were subject to property tax because they “were the owners
    of the improvements [they] constructed upon the State’s land[,]” and the circuit court
    affirmed the decision of the Tax Court. 
    Id. at 134, 143
    .
    The Townsend Court highlighted that in GBMC, we instructed that “under Maryland
    law, the record owner, as listed in the land records, is the owner of real property for
    27
    tax assessment purposes.” Townsend, 
    215 Md. App. at 143
     (emphasis supplied by
    Townsend) (quoting GBMC, 
    202 Md. App. at 292
    ).               In both cases—Townsend and
    GBMC—the Supervisor relied on lease documents to conclude the lessees were the owners
    of the subject properties for tax purposes because the lease documents “referred to the for-
    profit entity as the owner of the improvements.” Id. at 145. But in both cases “there was
    no document of record that transferred record title in the improvements . . . to the for-profit
    entity” and, consequently, those entities had not become the owners of the properties at
    issue for the purposes of imposing property taxes. Id. See also TP § 6-101(a) (“Except as
    otherwise provided in this article, all property located in this State is subject to assessment
    and property tax and is taxable to the owner of the property.”). We reversed the judgment
    of the circuit court and remanded the matter with instructions for the circuit court to reverse
    the ruling of the Tax Court. Townsend, 
    215 Md. App. at 145
    .
    In Townsend we explained that “fee simple interest [in Parcels 1 and 2 was]
    undisputedly owned by the State” and that “in most cases, [property owned by the State is]
    exempt from property taxation” under TP § 7-210. Id. at 140. We also acknowledged that
    the plain text of TP § 7-210 made its terms subject to the provisions of TP § 6-102 and that,
    on appeal, the Supervisor of Assessments “assert[ed] . . . that the leasehold interests of the
    appellants [were] within the scope of . . . TP § 6-102(e)(2)[.]” Id. at 141-42. However, TP
    § 6-102(e) did not control the case-at-bar because the Tax Court’s decision did not rely on
    that section of the Code. We explained:
    The Supervisor asserts . . . that the leasehold interests of the appellants are
    within the scope of taxable interests covered by TP § 6-102(e)(2)
    because . . . the land is subleased to Townsend and BLSRP for use in
    28
    connection with businesses that are conducted for profit. We observe,
    however, that this does not appear to have been the rationale for the Tax
    Court’s ruling. Nor is it at all clear that the assertion withstands scrutiny.
    Although Townsend and BLSRP are both sublessees of the respective
    parcels, they are also lessors of the improved property, and the lessee under
    each of the subject agreements is the State of Maryland, for the use of the
    University System of Maryland on behalf of its constituent institution,
    University of Maryland, Baltimore. And the parties stipulated that the
    portions of the office building and parking garage that are the subject of the
    respective leases at issue in this appeal are being used for University
    purposes.
    But the Tax Court’s decision was not based upon TP § 6-102(e); instead,
    the Tax Court concluded as a matter of law that the appellants were the
    owners of the improvements the appellants constructed upon the State’s land.
    Although the appellants are treated as ‘owners’ for some purposes in the
    leasing documents, our holding in [GBMC, 
    202 Md. App. 282
     (2011)] makes
    it clear that it was error for the Supervisor [of Assessments] to treat the
    appellants as the owners for property tax purposes.
    Id. at 143 (bold emphasis added) (footnote omitted). See also Taylor, 
    465 Md. at 86
     (“We
    cannot uphold the Tax Court’s decision on grounds other than the findings and reasons set
    forth by the Tax Court.” (quotation omitted)).
    Because the Tax Court’s decision “was not based upon TP § 6-102(e)[,]” Townsend,
    
    215 Md. App. at 143
    , our discussion of TP § 6-102(e) was dicta. Furthermore, as
    distinguished from the instant case, the Townsend Court’s discussion of TP § 6-102(e)
    occurred against the backdrop that the appellants’ “lease of the portions of the property that
    [were] the subject of th[e] appeal was conditioned upon and restricted to use by the State
    for University purposes.” Townsend, 
    215 Md. App. at
    136 n.2. In any case, we did not
    reach this issue in Townsend, nor do we express any opinion about it today.
    29
    In Townsend, because “the State [was] the owner of the land and the improvements”
    on both Parcels 1 and 2, we held that the “stipulated percentage of th[e] improvements that
    are used for University purposes remains exempt from real property taxes.” Townsend,
    
    215 Md. App. at 145
    . Because this holding was not premised on the operation of TP § 6-
    102(e), and because the facts underlying the Court’s limited dicta pertaining to that
    subsection are distinguishable from the instant case, Appellant’s reliance on Townsend is
    unpersuasive. When placed in proper context, it is clear that Townsend was premised
    solely on TP § 7-210. Portions of Parcels 1 and 2 that were “restricted to use by the State
    for University purposes[,]” id. at 136 n.2, satisfied the requirement that property be
    “devoted to a governmental use or purpose[.]” TP § 7-210(a)(1). Subsection (a)(2) was
    also satisfied, because it remained “undisputed[]” that the State held the fee simple interest
    in both parcels and, critically, the Tax Court had not relied on TP § 6-102 to find that
    BLSRP or Townsend Garage must be treated as the hypothetical owners of the leased
    premises for tax purposes. Townsend, 
    215 Md. App. at 140, 143
    .
    Appellant’s reliance on GBMC is also misplaced.
    The pertinent facts of GBMC are as follows: GBMC, a nonprofit hospital, entered
    into a ground lease with BHI LLC (“BHI”), as part of a “structured lease and leaseback
    financing arrangement[.]” GBMC, 
    202 Md. App. at 286-87
     (quotation omitted). Under
    this arrangement, BHI built an office building and parking garage on GBMC’s land, and
    30
    thereafter subleased the improved property back to GBMC. 13 
    Id.
     The ground lease
    provided that, during its term, BHI would own and have title to these improvements. 
    Id. at 287
    . Seeking to avoid property tax on the leased portion of GBMC’s property, an agent
    employed by both BHI and GBMC “applied for a charitable property exemption on behalf
    of ‘B[HI] leased to GBMC’ with the Supervisor.” 
    Id. at 288
    . Assessors for the Maryland
    State Department of Assessments and Taxation denied the application, as did the Tax
    Appeals Board. 
    Id.
          The Tax Court, however, vacated the denial of the charitable
    exemption and remanded the case to the Tax Appeals Board, holding that “[f]or the
    purposes of Maryland real property tax exemption law, GBMC [wa]s clearly the record
    owner of both the land and the improvement[s], and, therefore, [wa]s entitled to the
    charitable exemption.” 
    Id. at 289
     (alterations in original). The circuit court affirmed the
    Tax Court’s determination, and the Supervisor noted an appeal to this Court. GBMC, 
    202 Md. App. at 289
    .
    The only issue on appeal was whether the Tax Court erred by determining GBMC
    was the owner of the office building and parking garage for property tax purposes, thus
    meeting the requirements of TP § 7-202(b)(1)(ii). Id. at 286. In the view of the Supervisor,
    various documents related to the structured lease and leaseback financing arrangement
    indicated BHI—not GBMC—was the owner of the improvements and, as a for-profit
    entity, BHI could not qualify for the charitable tax exemption. Id. at 289-90. We disagreed.
    13
    Once built, the building was “occupied for medical office use by for-profit and
    non-profit providers” and “[t]he garage [was] used for parking cars of visitors to that
    building and other nearby facilities.” GBMC, 
    202 Md. App. at 286-87
    .
    31
    Specifically, we explained that real property is taxable to the owner of the property
    and that, in Maryland, the “record owner” of land “as listed in the land records[] is the
    owner . . . for tax assessments purposes.” 
    Id. at 292
     (citations omitted). Ownership of
    improvements on land is also linked to the land records, because “improvements affixed to
    the land are considered part of the real property, and ownership of the improvements
    follows title to the land.” 
    Id. at 293
     (quotations omitted). Accordingly, “subject to express
    statutory exceptions that [were] not applicable” in GBMC, “for someone other than the
    record landowner to own the improvements on the land, there must be a recorded deed or
    other instrument of record showing a transfer of the title[.]” GBMC, 
    202 Md. App. at 293
    (citations omitted).
    Applying these precepts to the facts of the case, we determined that GBMC
    remained the record owner of the land and improvements for property tax purposes
    because, among the various documents related to the structured lease and leaseback
    financing arrangement that were recorded, none included “language . . . transferring
    GBMC’s record title ownership . . . to BHI[.]” 
    Id. at 300
    . Any “unrecorded documents”
    could “not compel a different conclusion” because Maryland law “require[d] all transfers
    in property ownership to be recorded.” 
    Id. at 300
    . 14 We therefore agreed with the Tax
    Court’s conclusion that “GBMC [was] the sole and exclusive owner of the improvements
    for Maryland real property tax purposes and for purposes of satisfying the ownership
    14
    In any case, the GBMC Court explained that various unrecorded documents
    related to the structured lease and leaseback financing arrangement evidenced, “at
    most . . . contractual ownership of the Improvements by BHI LLC; they do not show title
    or record ownership . . . by BHI[.]” GBMC, 
    202 Md. App. at 300
    .
    32
    requirement under the charitable exemption statute.” 
    Id. at 300
     (quoting the Tax Court’s
    below opinion).
    While we did discuss TP § 6-102(e) in GBMC, we clearly stated that TP § 6-102(e)
    was inapplicable because “neither GBMC nor BHI . . . is an agency of the State” as
    required by subsection (e)(1). Id. at 302. Moreover, our discussion of TP § 6-102(e)
    focused only on subsection (e)(1)—the requirement that the lessor be a qualifying
    governmental entity—and not subsection (e)(2), which concerns a lessee or user’s
    “privilege to use the property in connection with a business that is conducted for profit.”
    Id. at 301-02 (quoting TP § 6-102(e)).
    Clearly, GBMC’s discussion of TP § 6-102(e) is not particularly relevant to the
    instant case. Perhaps for that reason, Appellant’s brief instead draws our attention to
    GBMC’s discussion of TP § 6-102(d). However, like TP § 7-202, TP § 6-102(d) is not at
    issue here. Specifically, in GBMC the Supervisor also argued that BHI must be considered
    the owner for property tax purposes by operation of TP § 6-102(d), which provided, in
    pertinent part:
    Other interest in real property.—The following interests in real property are
    subject to property tax as though the person in possession or the user of the
    property were the owner of the property:
    (3) an interest of a mortgagor or grantor under a deed of trust.
    GBMC, 
    202 Md. App. at 304
     (quoting TP § 6-102(d) (1985, 2007 Repl. Vol.)). The
    Supervisor’s argument derived from the fact that BHI obtained the funds necessary to
    construct the improvements by obtaining a loan from a third-party lender, which was
    “evidenced by a Note and a Leasehold Deed of Trust” to the lender. Id. at 287 (quotation
    33
    omitted). We explained, however, that BHI was not a “grantor under a deed of trust” as
    that phrase is used in TP § 6-102(d)(3) because “BHI . . . never held record title to the
    Improvements, and therefore, could not have transferred the legal title to the Improvements
    as a grantor would under a deed of trust. . . . This is not the type of conveyance
    contemplated by [TP] § 6-102(d)(3).” Id. at 305.
    We also explained that BHI could not be considered to be the “person in possession
    or the user of the property” under TP § 6-102(d) because:
    [P]rior to entering the Leasehold Deed of Trust, BHI . . . and GBMC agreed
    in the Improvements Lease that: (1) BHI . . . would lease back all of its
    “right, title and interest” in the land and the Improvements to GBMC; (2)
    GBMC may “at all times peaceably and quietly have, hold and enjoy the
    [land and the Improvements] during the Term of this Lease free from any
    claim by, through, or under [BHI LLC];” and (3) GBMC was the only party
    who had “possession” of the land and Improvements. BHI LLC, therefore,
    is neither “the person in possession . . . of the property,” nor is the “user of
    the property,” as required by [TP] § 6-102(d)(3).
    Id. at 305 (second and third alterations in original). Appellant clutches to this portion of
    our discussion to claim that “[t]he GBMC Court specifically held that an intermediary for-
    profit developer/lessee, like [901, LLC], was ‘neither a person in possession of the land or
    Improvements, nor the user of such property.’” (Quoting GBMC, 
    202 Md. App. at 305
    (emphasis added)). Unlike GBMC, however, the documents pertaining to Appellant’s lease
    of the Property do not contain similar restrictions on Appellant’s possession or use of the
    property, or expressly mandate that Appellant must sublease the property to specific
    entities. See GBMC, 
    202 Md. App. at 305
     (describing requirements under improvements
    lease that BHI lease subject property back to GBMC). Furthermore, while TP § 6-102(d)
    34
    refers to a “person in possession or the user of . . . property[,]” TP § 6-102(d); subsection
    (e) refers to the “lessee or the user[.]” TP § 6-102(e) (emphasis added).
    iii. Public Policy
    We are not persuaded by Appellant’s assertion that subjecting it to property tax
    under TP § 6-102(e) is contrary to public policy because some or all of the incidence of the
    tax will be passed onto the government in the form of higher rents. Although in Townsend
    we stated, in dicta, that an “anomalous situation” would arise if property taxes under TP §
    6-102(e) were passed onto the government by virtue of “the lease . . . from BLSRP to the
    State [which] include[d] a provision that would obligate the State, as tenant, to pay [the
    taxes] as additional rent[,]” Townsend, 
    215 Md. App. at
    143 n.3, that dicta does not control
    here. Moreover, in Meade Heights, Inc. v. State Tax Commission, our Supreme Court
    stated that “[t]he government cannot complain if the tax, otherwise sustainable increases
    government costs by its economic incidence.” 
    202 Md. 20
    , 29 (1953) (citations omitted). 15
    Elsewhere, Appellant quotes from Mayor & City Council of Baltimore v. Boitnott,
    
    356 Md. 605
    , 619 (1999), for the proposition that TP § 6-102(e) will not apply unless the
    government has “forego[ne] certain incidents of ownership (e.g., use and possession) by
    leasing the property to a private entity.” (Quoting Boitnott, 
    356 Md. at 619
     (quoting the
    appellants’ brief)). It is clear, however, that in this case the MTA has forgone various
    incidents of ownership, including its right to possess and/or physically use the Property
    15
    In this case, Appellant notes that some of its governmental sublessees have agreed
    to pay stipulated portions of the property taxes assessed to the Property. The decision of a
    government agency to expressly agree—in a sublease—to pay a stipulated portion of any
    property tax assessed to Appellant has no bearing on our analysis.
    35
    without entering a sublease and paying rent. Even more problematic is Appellant’s
    implicit proposition that the MTA did not forego incidents of ownership related to units of
    the Property that were subleased to other government entities, such as the U.S. General
    Services Administration or the office of the late Congressman Elijah E. Cummings.
    Appellant also argues that, if the term “use” in TP § 6-102(e) does not refer solely
    to end-use, then “properties could be valued based not upon their actual usable value, but
    instead on whatever amorphous concept of ‘use’ some other party might ascribe.”
    Appellant appears to contend, through this complaint, that it is not desirable or feasible to
    assess the value of a building if the owner of the building intends to lease (or sublease)
    portions of the building to third parties. We are not persuaded that local taxing authorities
    are unable to assess the value of such buildings.
    Invoking public policy, Appellant contends that if it is subject to property tax under
    TP § 6-102(e), then “no for-profit developer could ever finance and develop government-
    owned land for use by the government and qualify for the exemption.” The issues
    presented by this case are not so sweeping. We do not decide, for example, whether a
    similar result would obtain where the government leases property to a for-profit developer
    with terms that substantially restrict the developer’s ability to sublease (or otherwise use)
    the property in connection with its for-profit business activities. In any case, Appellant has
    not pointed to any authority standing for the proposition that the purpose of TP §§ 7-210(a)
    or 6-102(e) is to exempt for-profit lessees/sublessors from property tax under the
    circumstances presented here.
    36
    Finally, we address Appellant’s assertion that going forward government entities,
    for-profit developers, and the non-profit sector will be incentivized to “perpetuate
    mischief” in order to avoid the operation of TP § 6-102(e). Specifically, Appellant
    contends that government entities will “execute a master lease or ground lease with another
    government entity or non-profit” that, in turn, will “sublease the property to a for-profit
    concern, for its own use or for further subletting to other for-profit concerns, all to avoid
    the application of Section 6-102(e).” We are not presented with those circumstances here
    and, even if we were, it is far from clear that such “mischief” would achieve its intended
    result.
    Conclusion
    For the above reasons, we affirm the decision of the Circuit Court of Baltimore City,
    and hold that the Supervisor, and in turn the PTAB and the Tax Court, correctly determined
    that partial property tax exemptions under TP § 7-210(a) were unavailable to Appellant
    because, under TP § 6-102(e), Appellant is a lessee of qualifying government property with
    the privilege to use the property in connection with a business that is conducted for profit.
    JUDGMENT OF THE CIRCUIT
    COURT OF BALTIMORE CITY
    AFFIRMED. COSTS TO BE PAID
    BY APPELLANT.
    37
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 0491-23

Judges: Leahy

Filed Date: 4/3/2024

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 4/3/2024