Upper Republican NRD v. Dundy Cty. Bd. of Equal. ( 2018 )


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  • Nebraska Supreme Court Online Library
    www.nebraska.gov/apps-courts-epub/
    08/24/2018 01:09 AM CDT
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    UPPER REPUBLICAN NRD v. DUNDY CTY. BD. OF EQUAL.
    Cite as 
    300 Neb. 256
    Upper R epublican Natural R esources District and
    Steve Yost, appellees, and FEM, Inc., and M & L
    Cattle Company, appellees and cross-appellants,
    v. Dundy County Board of Equalization,
    appellant and cross-appellee.
    ___ N.W.2d ___
    Filed June 15, 2018.    No. S-17-814.
    1.	 Taxation: Judgments: Appeal and Error. An appellate court reviews
    Nebraska Tax Equalization and Review Commission decisions for error
    appearing on the record of the commission.
    2.	 ____: ____: ____. When reviewing a Nebraska Tax Equalization and
    Review Commission judgment for errors appearing on the record, the
    inquiry is whether the decision conforms to the law, is supported by com-
    petent evidence, and is neither arbitrary, capricious, nor unreasonable.
    3.	 Administrative Law. An administrative agency’s decision is arbitrary
    when it is made in disregard of the facts or circumstances without some
    basis which would lead a reasonable person to the same conclusion;
    administrative agency action taken in disregard of the agency’s own
    substantive rules is also arbitrary and capricious.
    4.	 Taxation: Appeal and Error. Questions of law arising during appellate
    review of Nebraska Tax Equalization and Review Commission decisions
    are reviewed de novo.
    5.	 Constitutional Law: Due Process. The determination of whether
    the procedures afforded to an individual comport with constitutional
    requirements for procedural due process presents a question of law.
    6.	 Taxation. Neb. Rev. Stat. § 77-5016(8) (Cum. Supp. 2018) provides that
    for questions other than taxable value, the Nebraska Tax Equalization
    and Review Commission’s power is limited to questions that are both
    (1) raised in the proceeding before the commission and (2) a basis for
    the order, decision, determination, or action appealed from.
    7.	 Appeal and Error. An appellate court ordinarily considers only those
    errors assigned and discussed in the briefs, but may notice plain error.
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    8.	 Appeal and Error: Words and Phrases. Plain error is error plainly
    evident from the record and of such a nature that to leave it uncorrected
    would result in damage to the integrity, reputation, or fairness of the
    judicial process.
    9.	 Taxation: Property: Public Purpose. Property can be used by a pub-
    lic entity in more than one way and for more than one public purpose,
    and all public purpose uses should be considered together in evaluat-
    ing whether any private use of the property is merely incidental in the
    analysis under Neb. Rev. Stat. § 77-202(1)(a) (Cum. Supp. 2012) of the
    extent to which the property is used or being developed for use for a
    public purpose.
    Appeal from the Tax Equalization and Review Commission.
    Affirmed in part, vacated in part, and in part reversed and
    remanded with directions.
    Jeanelle R. Lust, Richard C. Reier, and Carly L. Bahramzad,
    of Knudsen, Berkheimer, Richardson & Endacott, L.L.P.,
    for appellant.
    Todd R. McWha, of Waite, McWha & Heng, and Lindsay
    E. Pedersen for appellees FEM, Inc., and M & L Cattle
    Company.
    Joel E. Burke, of Burke & Pribbeno, L.L.P., for appellee
    Upper Republican Natural Resources District.
    Heavican, C.J., Miller-Lerman, Cassel, and Stacy, JJ., and
    Luther and O’Gorman, District Judges.
    O’Gorman, District Judge.
    I. NATURE OF CASE
    This is an appeal by the Dundy County Board of Equalization
    (Board) from the decision of the Tax Equalization and Review
    Commission (TERC). The central issue in this appeal is the
    tax exempt status of land purchased by the Upper Republican
    Natural Resources District (NRD) as part of a ground water
    integrated management plan. The NRD retired irrigated acres
    and converted them to grassland to achieve soil conservation
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    and range management objectives. The NRD leased much
    of that grassland for grazing. The parties dispute the extent
    to which the lease was at fair market value for a public pur-
    pose, as described by Neb. Rev. Stat. § 77-202(1)(a) (Cum.
    Supp. 2012). The parties also dispute the scope, under Neb.
    Rev. Stat. § 77-5016(8) (Cum. Supp. 2016), of the questions
    properly before the TERC; whether due process allowed for
    any tax assessment to the lessees if they lacked notice of the
    proceedings before the Board; and whether it is legally per-
    missible, under Neb. Rev. Stat. § 77-202.11 (Reissue 2009), to
    assess property tax to a public entity that has leased land for a
    nonpublic purpose.
    II. BACKGROUND
    1. Purchase and Lease Agreements
    In order to comply with the Republican River Compact
    and to meet other water management objectives, in 2011,
    the NRD paid approximately $10 million to purchase from
    FEM, Inc., approximately 4,080 acres of agricultural land,
    3,262 of which were certified irrigated acres. Under the terms
    of the purchase agreement, FEM retained the right to lease
    back the property, but once the NRD had decertified the
    irrigated acres, FEM’s use of the land was limited to graz-
    ing and use of certain fixtures. During the years pertinent to
    this appeal, the land had been converted from irrigated land
    to native grassland. FEM exercised its right to lease back the
    entirety of the FEM property and, as allowed by the terms
    of the lease, subleased the land to M & L Cattle Company
    (M&L), the company through which FEM conducts its cattle
    operations (M&L and FEM together are referred to herein
    as “lessees”).
    The lease agreement between the NRD and FEM provides
    that the NRD “shall pay all real estate taxes and personal prop-
    erty attributable to fixtures located on the property.”
    In 2013, the NRD purchased an additional 3,200 certified
    irrigated acres from Maurice Wilder, for $8,050,000. The land
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    was contiguous to the FEM parcels and was also acquired in
    order to carry out the objectives of the management plan.
    Both properties were located in Dundy County, Nebraska.
    2. Assessor Notice of
    Taxable Status
    In 2013, the Dundy County assessor sent the NRD notices
    of taxable status for 12 FEM parcels and 6 Wilder parcels. The
    notices stated that the reason the assessor determined the par-
    cels to be taxable was because they were not being used for a
    public purpose.1 The notices did not state that the assessor had
    determined that any of the parcels were being leased at less
    than fair market value.
    The notices advised the NRD that if the property was leased
    to another entity and the NRD “d[id] not intend to pay the
    taxes as allowed under subsection (4) of section 77-202.11,
    [the NRD] must immediately forward this notice to the lessee.”
    The NRD did not forward the notices to the lessees, and the
    lessees did not have actual notice of the assessment.
    The assessor similarly determined the parcels nonexempt in
    2014 and 2015. The NRD similarly failed to forward notices
    of the 2014 and 2015 assessments to the lessees, who lacked
    actual knowledge thereof.
    3. Protests to Board
    The NRD protested the 2013 through 2015 assessments to
    the Board. The NRD had apparently paid assessments by the
    assessor for 2012, when the land was still being utilized by the
    lessees as irrigated farmland. The NRD did not object to the
    2013 through 2015 assessments against it on the ground that
    it was legally impermissible to assess property tax against a
    public entity leasing public land. The NRD argued simply that
    the property was exempt from taxation, because it was being
    used for a public purpose. The lessees did not have notice of
    1
    See § 77-202(1)(a).
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    the NRD’s protests and were not parties to the proceedings
    before the Board.
    Following a hearing, the Board determined that all 18 par-
    cels were nonexempt, taxable property for the years 2013
    through 2015. The Board stated as the basis for its decision
    that the surface and buildings were not being used for a public
    purpose. The Board was not presented with and did not pass
    upon the issue of whether the lease was at fair market value.
    4. A ppeal to TERC
    The NRD timely appealed to the TERC. The NRD stated in
    its appeal form that it was appealing the Board’s determination
    that the property was not used for a public purpose. Again,
    the NRD did not raise any issue of whether the lessees, rather
    than the NRD, should be assessed tax liability in the event the
    TERC rejected its contention that the parcels were for a public
    use. The lessees received notice of the appeal, but they were
    not originally made parties.
    (a) Necessary Parties
    The TERC issued an order to show cause whether it had
    jurisdiction to determine the tax-exempt status of any leased
    parcel without all lessees as parties. The NRD argued at the
    show cause hearing that the lessees were not necessary parties,
    because the question presented to the TERC was limited to the
    NRD’s tax liability. But the TERC ultimately concluded that
    any determination of whether the property was used for a pub-
    lic purpose would have implications for lessee tax obligations.
    Therefore, the TERC decided that it lacked some necessary
    parties to the appeal.
    Though the informal hearing on the merits had already been
    held, the TERC vacated the hearing. The NRD, upon an order
    to disclose, stated that M&L was the missing necessary party
    to the proceedings. The TERC scheduled a new hearing and,
    pursuant to its authority under Neb. Rev. Stat. § 77-5015.01
    (Cum. Supp. 2016), served notice to M&L. Upon a joint
    stipulation of the Board, the NRD, FEM, and M&L, the TERC
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    determined the issues based on the exhibits and transcript of
    the prior hearing.
    (b) Evidence and
    Arguments Presented
    At the informal hearing, the NRD and the Board were
    given the opportunity to present evidence and argument.2 The
    underlying facts related to the use of the property were not in
    dispute. Instead, the parties disputed how those facts applied
    to the concept of public purpose as set forth in the statutes.
    Neither party presented argument as to whether the lease was
    at fair market value.
    The Board conceded that there was some public purpose
    served by the NRD’s ownership of the parcels, but argued that
    in determining whether the predominant use was for a public
    purpose, the TERC should focus on the use of the surface of
    the land and not the use or nonuse of the water underneath.
    The assessor explained that in determining the parcels were
    agricultural and not predominantly for a public use, she was
    “looking at the surface and the surface only.” She also found it
    pertinent in her assessment that the NRD was not specifically
    required by law to purchase land as the means of complying
    with its legal duties.
    The NRD responded that its use of the land should include
    the use or nonuse of the water rights, because ownership of
    the overlying land was essential to that purpose. Moreover, the
    NRD’s ownership of the land brought into play important statu-
    tory duties of soil conservation and range and wildlife manage-
    ment, as set forth in Neb. Rev. Stat. § 2-3229 (Reissue 2012),
    which were furthered by the grazing.
    (i) Management Plan
    Dr. Jasper Fanning, general manager of the NRD, testified
    at the hearing. Fanning explained that the impetus behind the
    NRD’s purchase of the parcels was to carry out the goals of
    2
    See Neb. Rev. Stat. § 77-5015 (Cum. Supp. 2016).
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    the NRD’s integrated management plan, which involved both
    the retirement of irrigated acres to reduce use and the estab-
    lishment of a well field for controlled augmentation of stream-
    flow during dry periods. Fanning explained that this combina-
    tion of retirement and augmentation was a more reliable tool
    for ground water management than simply retiring irrigated
    acres and letting the water flow naturally into the streams dur-
    ing wetter periods.
    The integrated management plan was directed primarily
    at compliance with the Republican River Compact. Fanning
    explained that the location put the NRD at the forefront of
    compliance. The augmentation aspect of the plan also sought
    to benefit local water users by increasing the amount of water
    that could be allotted to each irrigated acre.
    Fanning explained that the integrated management plan
    required a sizable property, since the amount of water a prop-
    erty owner can reasonably use is related to the area of overlying
    land. The property would also have to have a lot of irrigation
    to retire, in order to balance the supply and use. The property
    had to be a certain distance from the river to be able to use the
    land’s aquifer as storage for the augmentation part of the plan.
    Finally, the land would have to have high-capacity wells.
    (ii) Purchases and
    Implementation of Plan
    The NRD discovered the FEM property listed for sale on the
    open market, and it was “ideal for what the district needed.”
    Fanning explained that the fact that the parcels were available
    in the open market “allowed us to purchase those at market
    cost and not have to go out and condemn property from mul-
    tiple landowners to try to put the project together.”
    Before the purchase by the NRD, the FEM parcels were
    being used for irrigated agriculture. By January 2013, the
    FEM parcels were decertified. By the relevant taxation
    period, the NRD had decertified all the FEM parcels and had
    completed construction of miles of pipeline underneath the
    FEM parcels.
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    Fanning explained that the ground water aquifer under the
    FEM parcels acted as a storage vessel. The NRD could then
    discharge that water at a creek on the adjoining landowner’s
    property as needed in order to “retime natural flows to the
    river from all the other upland irrigation pumping that occurs
    throughout the district.” The NRD utilized wells already on
    the land and formerly for irrigation to monitor the water
    depth and record the impact of pumping for the augmenta-
    tion project.
    Fanning testified that while the NRD could conceivably
    have purchased solely the right to use the water on the FEM
    parcels, this would not have served its augmentation purposes.
    The NRD also considered the purchase of water rights to be a
    risk, since the NRD would not have the land ownership that
    would justify the reasonable use needed for the integrated man-
    agement plan. Moreover, the purchase price of the land from
    FEM with the leaseback was less than the purchase price of
    water rights alone would have been.
    With regard to the leaseback provision of the purchase
    agreement, Fanning explained that FEM insisted upon the
    leaseback as a condition of the sale, and it reduced the pur-
    chase price of the FEM parcels.
    In 2013, the NRD determined that due to declining water
    levels, it needed to acquire additional certified irrigated acres
    in order to balance water use. This led to the purchase of
    the Wilder parcels. There were no augmentation wells on
    the Wilder parcels, but the retirement of the irrigated acres
    adjacent to the FEM well field would allow for the infiltra-
    tion of Wilder water onto the FEM parcels. This, in turn,
    would allow the NRD larger use for pumping water on the
    FEM property.
    (iii) Soil Conservation and Range
    and Wildlife Management
    Fanning explained that as the owner of the land, the NRD
    was required to carry out its soil conservation and other duties
    set forth in § 2-3229. The soil conservation also protected the
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    water quality in that area. While the NRD purchased the prop-
    erty primarily as an augmentation project, Fanning pointed out
    that the NRD was a multipurpose natural resources district and
    that it was “not going to turn [the properties] into wasteland
    and watch it blow away.”
    The NRD worked with Nebraska’s Game and Parks
    Commission, which considered the acquired parcels part of the
    biologically unique Sand Sage Prairie area. With a large grant
    from the Nebraska Environmental Trust, the NRD reseeded the
    parcels with a mix of native grasses, forbs, and sand sage to
    fit that biologically unique landscape. According to Fanning, it
    was one of the largest conversions of irrigated land to native
    grasslands ever undertaken in Nebraska.
    The NRD understood that the parcels were going to “require
    significant mowing unless we want to fill every fence within
    20 or 30 miles full of tumbleweeds.” The alternative to mow-
    ing was grazing. Fanning described that mowing would cost
    the NRD $1 to $12 an acre. In contrast, the NRD could
    receive $5 or $6 an acre for the same weed control through a
    lease allowing someone to seasonally graze cattle on the land.
    Grazing, Fanning explained, had the additional advantage of
    incorporating the seed through “hoof action.”
    Three FEM parcels had improvements other than wells and
    underground pipelines. Fanning testified that these improve-
    ments were used primarily by the lessees for the lessees’
    agricultural or commercial purposes. One parcel contained
    seven grain bins and a 1-acre farmsite. One parcel contained
    three mobile homes, scales and a scale house, 12 grain bins, a
    garage, a livestock shed, two vertical tanks, a 1-acre farmsite,
    and a 4-acre homesite. And one parcel contained an old air-
    plane hangar and a 2.07-acre farmsite.
    With respect to the Wilder parcels, the NRD did not retire
    the certified irrigated acres and reseed with grassland dur-
    ing the first year of acquisition. At the time of acquisition, it
    was too late in the season to do so. Rather, the NRD deter-
    mined that the best course of action for its ultimate goal of
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    planting native grasses was to plant sorghum and a ground
    cover first. The NRD did not harvest the crop, but planted it
    to add organic matter to the soil and to prevent soil erosion.
    The NRD irrigated the sorghum, but Fanning emphasized that
    this use was a reduction from the parcels’ historical, fully
    irrigated use.
    The NRD planted native grasses the following year, in
    2014, and retired the Wilder irrigated acres. One of the Wilder
    parcels contained a house, a machine shed, 10 grain bins, a
    scale house, a scale, a dryer, two vertical tanks, two anhy-
    drous tanks, and a 1-acre homesite. All of these improvements
    were unusable. While the Wilder parcels had a lessee who
    was grazing cattle on the land at the time of purchase, those
    parcels were no longer leased after May 1, 2013. By the tax
    levy date of October 15, 2013, none of the Wilder parcels
    were leased.
    (iv) Rents
    Under the lease portion of the purchase agreement with
    FEM, the NRD could evaluate each year how many cattle
    were allowed to graze, in order to serve the NRD’s purposes
    without overgrazing the property. When asked if the lease
    had a base rate for grazing, based upon animal units per acre,
    Fanning responded:
    Yeah, we knew that the lease was going to be variable —
    or the real world is going to be variable in the number of
    cows that they’d be able to graze, so the lease essentially
    sets out a grazing rate based on kind of what their fair
    market value was at the time for grazing a cow/calf pair,
    and then it’s adjusted based on the number of animals
    that we determined they can actually run.
    The FEM lease also established a rent of 5 cents per bushel of
    all grain the lessees brought onto the property.
    During the relevant tax years, after the NRD retired the
    irrigated acres and the lessees were limited to grazing and
    use of fixtures, the total annual income derived from the
    leaseback agreement with FEM was approximately $57,000.
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    Fanning explained that by retiring the irrigated acres and
    turning them into grassland, the NRD reduced the market
    value of the land from “a $4,000 piece of irrigated prop-
    erty . . . into something that’s worth 5- or 600 bucks.” And
    Fanning pointed out that the NRD’s yearly rental income
    under the lease was less than its monthly electricity bill for
    the augmentation project.
    (c) Posthearing Briefs
    The NRD and the Board submitted posthearing briefs. The
    lessees did not. In its posthearing brief, the NRD argued that
    the parcels were predominantly used for the public purposes
    of ground water management, compact compliance, soil ero-
    sion control, and other public purposes under the NRD’s statu-
    tory authority.
    The Board asserted in its posthearing brief that “[t]he nar-
    row question before the Commission is whether 6,640 acres
    of real property owned [by the NRD] are exempt from taxa-
    tion in 2013 because the property is ‘used or being developed
    for use . . . for a public purpose,’” although the Board also
    pointed out that the NRD had never adduced “independent”
    evidence on the fair market value of the lease. The Board con-
    cedes in this appeal that the “narrow question before TERC
    was whether 6,640 acres of real property owned by [the NRD]
    were exempt from taxation because the property is ‘used or
    being developed for use . . . for a public purpose.’”3
    (d) TERC’s Decision
    Pursuant to 350 Neb. Admin. Code, ch. 15, § 003.07 (2009),
    the TERC examined separate and distinct use portions of the
    properties and divided them broadly into three groups: the
    FEM parcels with improvements, the FEM parcels without
    improvements (except wellheads and underground pipes), and
    the Wilder parcels.
    3
    Brief for appellant at 5.
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    (i) FEM Parcels Without
    Improvements
    The TERC determined that the nine FEM parcels without
    surface improvements were simultaneously used for multiple
    purposes, but that, considering the factors set forth in 350
    Neb. Admin. Code, ch. 15, § 003.07A (2009), the predominant
    use was for public purposes. The TERC found that the cattle
    grazing assisted in the NRD’s long-term and ongoing develop-
    ment of a project plan for the purposes of compliance with the
    Republican River Compact, management of water use, range
    management, and the control of soil erosion. The TERC also
    found that in order to achieve its plan, the NRD had expended
    significant resources in purchasing the parcels, converting
    wellheads, and planting natural grassland. The NRD received a
    comparatively small $40,000 per year in grazing rental income
    from the lease. At the same time, the TERC noted that the
    cattle grazing under the lease supported the NRD’s primary use
    by reducing costs that the NRD would otherwise have incurred
    to mow the grasses. Finally, the TERC found that the NRD’s
    public purpose use of the parcels was year round, while the
    cattle grazing was seasonal.
    Having concluded that the nine FEM parcels without
    improvements were leased for a public purpose, the TERC
    turned to the issue of whether they were leased at fair market
    value. The TERC found sufficient evidence of fair market
    value in Fanning’s testimony that the lease of the grazed acres
    was based upon the fair market value of a grazing lease per
    cow-calf pair. The TERC noted that there was no evidence to
    the contrary.
    (ii) Wilder Parcels
    The TERC found that all six Wilder parcels were used
    for the public purposes of soil conservation, development of
    wildlife habitat, and range management. The TERC grouped
    both the parcels with and the parcels without improvements
    together. The TERC explained that none of the improve-
    ments on the Wilder parcels—except, apparently, the irrigation
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    equipment—had any value. The improvements were unusable
    and merely incidental to the NRD’s use of the parcels.
    The TERC determined that the Wilder parcels should not be
    considered leased property, even for 2013, because the lease
    terminated before the levy date on October 15, 2013. And
    under 350 Neb. Admin. Code, ch. 15, § 003.11A (2009), when
    the tax status of real property owned by a public entity changes
    after January 1, but before the levy date, the county assessor is
    required to modify its determination of the tax status as of the
    levy date. The TERC found that the planting of the sorghum
    and use of the irrigation equipment to grow the sorghum were
    for soil conservation and suppression of weeds until grasslands
    could be planted.
    (iii) FEM Parcels
    With Improvements
    With respect to the three FEM parcels with improvements,
    the TERC concluded that the entirety of the parcel with the
    airplane hangar and 2.07-acre farmsite was nonexempt and that
    only those portions of the other two parcels with the improve-
    ments were nonexempt.
    In finding the one parcel nonexempt and portions of the two
    parcels nonexempt, the TERC reasoned first that the NRD had
    failed to adduce evidence that the portion of the lease associ-
    ated with the use of improvements, other than wellheads or
    other fixtures used to provide water for the cattle, was at fair
    market value. The TERC reasoned second that the property
    was not used predominantly for a public purpose.
    Cattle were grazed on the remaining portions of those two
    parcels. For the portions without improvements, the TERC
    applied the same reasoning it applied to the FEM parcels with-
    out improvements.
    (iv) Responsible Party for
    Nonexempt Parcels
    Having concluded that one parcel was nonexempt and por-
    tions of two parcels were nonexempt, the TERC believed it
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    necessary to then determine which party or parties held the
    obligations to pay the tax for the nonexempt property.
    Citing § 77-202.11(4), the TERC stated that a governmental
    subdivision is permitted to operate as a tax collector, collect-
    ing the tax on behalf of the county through monthly rental
    payments, which it in turn pays to the county. But the TERC
    believed the governmental subdivision was not permitted by
    law to “assume the tax liability.” Citing to § 77-202.11(3), the
    TERC concluded, “There is no set of circumstances under the
    statute where the actual tax liability shifts to the state or its
    governmental subdivisions.”
    In the lease agreement, the NRD agreed to pay all prop-
    erty taxes. And the TERC specifically found that the NRD
    intended to exercise its authority granted by § 77-202.11(4), to
    voluntarily pay any applicable tax and collect it as part of the
    rent. Nevertheless, citing to § 77-202.11(1), the TERC decided
    that “[r]egardless of the contract, or even in the event that the
    [NRD] exercises its discretion to voluntarily pay the tax and
    collect it from FEM . . . , the ultimate responsibility for the
    property taxes lies with the lessee, FEM . . . .”
    The TERC explained that while the NRD was allowed to
    voluntarily pay the tax, but collect it from the lessee through
    rents, the NRD was not permitted to assume its lessee’s prop-
    erty tax liability. Otherwise, the NRD would effectively collect
    taxes from all taxpayers in the district to pay for its lessee’s
    tax liability.
    The TERC accordingly concluded that property taxes for the
    nonexempt portions of the FEM parcels with improvements
    should not be assessed to the NRD. The TERC turned to the
    question of whether it could assess the tax to FEM.
    (v) Due Process for Lessees
    The TERC concluded that FEM’s due process rights were
    violated by lack of notice of the proceedings before the Board.
    Though the TERC determined that no statutory notice provi-
    sions were violated, it concluded that FEM was deprived of
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    participation in a contested hearing before the Board. Such
    lack of participation was meaningful, the TERC concluded,
    because the Board has a lower standard of review of an asses-
    sor’s determination than the standard of review in the appeal
    before the TERC of the Board’s decision. In the proceeding
    before the Board, FEM would have had the burden to dem-
    onstrate by a preponderance of the evidence that the asses-
    sor was incorrect.4 In contrast, under § 77-5016(9), when the
    TERC acts as an appellate body, there is a presumption that
    the board of equalization acted upon sufficient competent evi-
    dence, which presumption must be rebutted on appeal before
    the TERC by clear and convincing evidence.5
    The TERC pointed out that it was bound to exercise the
    appellate standard of review set forth in § 77-5016(9), and the
    TERC could identify no authority to remand the matter back to
    the Board to correct the due process violation. The TERC con-
    cluded that due to the due process violation, it lacked authority
    to assign tax liability to FEM. The TERC also found that the
    tax liabilities of FEM in relation to the nonexempt parcels or
    portions of parcels were “void.”
    III. ASSIGNMENTS OF ERROR
    The Board timely filed a petition for review 6 by the
    Nebraska Court of Appeals, and we moved the case to our
    docket. The Board seeks an order reversing the TERC’s deci-
    sion that (1) the unimproved FEM parcels and the Wilder
    parcels were exempt, (2) portions of the improved FEM parcel
    were exempt, (3) tax liability cannot be assessed to the NRD,
    and (4) tax liabilities of FEM are void. The Board asks this
    court to remand the cause to the TERC to assess tax liability
    to the NRD or FEM.
    4
    See Cain v. Custer Cty. Bd. of Equal., 
    291 Neb. 730
    , 
    868 N.W.2d 334
          (2015).
    5
    See id.
    6
    See Neb. Rev. Stat. § 77-5019 (Cum. Supp. 2016).
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    In its appellate brief, the Board assigns that the TERC
    unlawfully determined that (1) certain unimproved FEM par-
    cels were leased for a public purpose at fair market value
    and were therefore exempt, (2) those portions of improved
    FEM parcels were exempt, (3) the Wilder parcels were used
    for a public purpose and exempt, (4) the property taxes of
    non­exempt portions of the FEM parcels could be assessed to
    neither the NRD nor FEM, (5) FEM’s due process rights were
    violated, (6) the TERC lacked authority to assign the tax liabil-
    ity for the nonexempt portions of the FEM parcels to FEM,
    and (7) the tax liabilities of FEM were void.
    The lessees assign in their brief on cross-appeal that the
    TERC erred in determining that (1) it had subject matter juris-
    diction to decide if any taxes could be assessed to the NRD or
    assigned to the lessees, (2) the lease agreement was in conflict
    with § 77-202.11, and (3) the lessees’ failure to receive direct
    notice of the assessor’s determination that the property was
    not exempt did not violate due process.
    IV. STANDARD OF REVIEW
    [1] We review TERC decisions for error appearing on the
    record of the commission.7
    [2] When reviewing a TERC judgment for errors appearing
    on the record, the inquiry is whether the decision conforms to
    the law, is supported by competent evidence, and is neither
    arbitrary, capricious, nor unreasonable.8
    [3] An administrative agency’s decision is arbitrary when
    it is made in disregard of the facts or circumstances with-
    out some basis which would lead a reasonable person to the
    same conclusion; administrative agency action taken in dis-
    regard of the agency’s own substantive rules is also arbitrary
    and capricious.9
    7
    Cain v. Custer Cty. Bd. of Equal., 
    298 Neb. 834
    , 
    906 N.W.2d 285
    (2018);
    § 77-5019(5).
    8
    Id.
    9
    See 
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    [4] Questions of law arising during appellate review of the
    TERC’s decisions are reviewed de novo.10
    [5] The determination of whether the procedures afforded
    to an individual comport with constitutional requirements for
    procedural due process presents a question of law.11
    V. ANALYSIS
    In its appeal from the TERC’s decision, the Board argues
    that all the parcels had a predominantly agricultural use
    instead of a predominantly public use. The Board also argues
    that the TERC erred in concluding the lease was at fair market
    value. Both the Board and the lessees assert that the TERC
    erred in concluding that the NRD cannot be assessed any
    tax in these appeals and in even addressing that issue, which
    the Board and the lessees assert was not properly before the
    TERC. The Board and the lessees disagree whether the TERC
    erred in concluding that assessing the tax to the TERC would
    violate FEM’s due process rights. Neither the NRD nor the
    lessees contest the TERC’s decision that one FEM parcel
    and portions of two other FEM parcels with improvements
    were nonexempt.
    1. Scope of Questions Before TERC
    As a threshold matter, we must determine what issues were
    properly before the TERC, because that governs what issues
    are properly presented in this appeal. The TERC was acting
    as an intermediate appellate body. In an ordinary civil case, an
    appellate court will not consider an issue on appeal that was
    not presented to or passed upon by the trial court, because a
    trial court cannot commit error in resolving an issue never
    presented and submitted to it for disposition.12 Statutes govern
    the scope of review by the TERC, and, as an administrative
    10
    
    Id. 11 Id.
    12
    See Brown v. Jacobsen Land & Cattle Co., 
    297 Neb. 541
    , 
    900 N.W.2d 765
          (2017).
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    body, it only has that power that has been granted to it by
    the Legislature.13
    Section 77-5016(8) provides that “[t]he [TERC] may deter-
    mine any question raised in the proceeding upon which an
    order, decision, determination, or action appealed from is
    based.” Additionally, under § 77-5016(8), “[t]he [TERC] may
    consider all questions necessary to determine taxable value
    of property as it hears an appeal or cross appeal.” Neb. Rev.
    Stat. § 77-5017(1) (Cum. Supp. 2016) states that in resolving
    an appeal or petition, the TERC may “make such orders as are
    appropriate for resolving the dispute but in no case shall the
    relief be excessive compared to the problems addressed.” Neb.
    Rev. Stat. § 77-5018(1) (Cum. Supp. 2016) provides that the
    TERC “may issue decisions and orders which are supported
    by the evidence and appropriate for resolving the matters
    in dispute.”
    Accordingly, in an appeal from the TERC’s decision deny-
    ing tax exempt status under § 77-202(1)(c) to an assisted liv-
    ing facility, we held in Bethesda Found. v. Buffalo Cty. Bd.
    of Equal.14 that only the question of whether the facility was
    used for charitable purposes was before us on appeal. The
    other element of exempt status under § 77-202(1)(c), i.e., that
    the facility be owned by a charitable organization, was not
    before us. That question was not before us because it was not
    a contested issue before the Board:
    Since the issue was not presented to the [board of equal-
    ization], it could not be presented to TERC, and TERC
    had no power to reach the issue sua sponte. The appeal
    is restricted to questions raised before the [b]oard. TERC
    has no authority to consider questions not raised before a
    county board of equalization.15
    13
    
    Id. 14 Bethesda
    Found. v. Buffalo Cty. Bd. of Equal., 
    263 Neb. 454
    , 
    640 N.W.2d 398
    (2002).
    15
    
    Id. at 458,
    640 N.W.2d at 402.
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    Likewise, in several cases decided when district courts acted
    as the intermediate appellate body reviewing decisions of a
    county board of equalization, we held that the district court
    lacked the power to consider questions that were not raised
    before the county board of equalization.16 Neb. Rev. Stat.
    § 77-1511 (Reissue 1996) controlled appeals from decisions
    by a county board of equalization and provided that the district
    court shall hear and determine “all questions raised before the
    county board of equalization.”
    In Nebraska State Bar Found. v. Lancaster Cty. Bd. of
    Equal.,17 we said that the parties disputing the merits of
    whether the subject property was exempt under provisions
    relating to state-owned property had overlooked the “impor-
    tant and dispositive procedural point in [the] case.” The
    important and dispositive point, we explained, was that the
    issue of such exemption was not raised before the board
    of equalization.18 We explained that in the application filed
    with the county assessor, the issue presented was whether
    the subject property fell under charitable and educational
    exemptions. The discussion at the hearing before the board
    of equalization likewise focused on whether the property was
    owned by a charitable organization and was used for chari-
    table purposes. Finally, the board’s decision disallowed the
    educational and charitable exemption and did not address any
    other exemption.19
    16
    See, Nebraska State Bar Found. v. Lancaster Cty. Bd. of Equal., 
    237 Neb. 1
    , 
    465 N.W.2d 111
    (1991); Gordman Properties Co. v. Board of Equal.,
    
    225 Neb. 169
    , 
    403 N.W.2d 366
    (1987); Reichenbach Land & Loan Co. v.
    Butler County, 
    105 Neb. 209
    , 
    179 N.W. 1015
    (1920); Reimers v. Merrick
    County, 
    82 Neb. 639
    , 
    118 N.W. 113
    (1908); Arcadian Fertilizer v. Sarpy
    Cty. Bd. of Equal., 
    7 Neb. Ct. App. 499
    , 
    583 N.W.2d 353
    (1998).
    17
    Nebraska State Bar Found. v. Lancaster Cty. Bd. of Equal., supra note 
    16, 237 Neb. at 19
    , 465 N.W.2d at 122.
    18
    See 
    id. 19 See
    id.
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    We described the statutory limitation of the scope of the
    appeal from a county board of equalization as jurisdictional.20
    We said that where there was no jurisdiction at the intermedi-
    ate appellate tribunal to consider an issue, we likewise lacked
    the power to adjudicate its merits.21 We also pointed out that
    in Reichenbach Land & Loan Co. v. Butler County,22 we had
    described that it is the public policy of the state that the county
    board of equalization should have an opportunity to pass on
    the question for ultimate decision before the public revenues
    become involved in protracted or vexatious litigation.
    [6] Section 77-5016(8) provides that for questions other than
    taxable value, the TERC’s power is limited to questions that
    are both (1) raised in the proceeding before the TERC and (2) a
    basis for the order, decision, determination, or action appealed
    from. Thus, in this case, the TERC lacked the power to address
    questions that were not raised in the proceeding before the
    TERC or that were not questions upon which the Board’s deci-
    sion was based. When the TERC addresses questions outside
    the scope of its limited statutory authority, its decision in that
    respect must be vacated.
    This case began when the assessor gave the NRD notice
    that she had determined the parcels were taxable because they
    were not being used for a public purpose. Though it may be the
    burden on the party seeking the exemption to prove tax exempt
    status, the assessor initially frames the issues that the party
    seeking the exemption must respond to. More importantly, the
    parties raised before the Board solely the question of whether
    the parcels were being used for a public purpose. And the
    Board determined they were not being used for a public pur-
    pose, without addressing any other issue. The assessment by
    the Board was against the NRD.
    20
    See 
    id. 21 See
    id.
    22
    Reichenbach 
    Land & Loan Co. v. Butler County, supra note 16. See
    Nebraska State Bar Found. v. Lancaster Cty. Bd. of Equal., supra note 16.
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    Finally, on appeal to the TERC, the only issue raised by the
    parties was whether the parcels were being used for a public
    purpose. Indeed, the Board expressly stated that the only issue
    presented was whether the land was being used for a public
    purpose. The NRD did not contest its liability for the taxes
    in the event the TERC determined the parcels were not being
    used for a public purpose. And the Board did not argue as an
    alternative ground to affirm the nonexempt determination that
    the lease was not for fair market value.
    In deciding whether to affirm or reverse the Board’s deci-
    sion, the TERC erred in considering questions beyond whether
    the parcels were being used for a public purpose. Not only
    was it unfair for the TERC to decide issues that the parties
    had no notice were being litigated; doing so was outside of
    the TERC’s appellate jurisdiction as set forth by § 77-5016(8).
    The TERC also violated the mandate of § 77-5017(1) that it
    shall in no case provide relief excessive compared to the prob-
    lems addressed.
    [7,8] Though the parties dispute only the TERC’s power to
    decide the issue of whether the NRD could be assessed any
    tax for nonexempt property, we find plain error in the TERC’s
    consideration of the fair market value of the lease. An appellate
    court ordinarily considers only those errors assigned and dis-
    cussed in the briefs, but may notice plain error.23 Plain error is
    error plainly evident from the record and of such a nature that
    to leave it uncorrected would result in damage to the integrity,
    reputation, or fairness of the judicial process.24
    Neither the issue of assessment to the NRD nor the issue
    of fair market value was the basis for the Board’s order. And,
    as discussed, § 77-5016(8) limits the TERC’s review to ques-
    tions upon which the Board’s decision was based. Furthermore,
    neither the issue of assessment to the NRD nor the issue of
    fair market value was an issue raised in the proceeding before
    23
    See Cain v. Custer Cty. Bd. of Equal., supra note 4.
    24
    
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    the TERC. And § 77-5016(8) also limits the jurisdiction of the
    TERC to the questions raised before it.
    Thus, we vacate the TERC’s decision inasmuch as it
    addressed whether the parcels were leased at fair market value,
    whether the NRD could be assessed the tax on the one FEM
    parcel and the portions of the two FEM parcels it found non-
    exempt, and whether to assess this tax to the lessees would
    violate due process.
    Without deciding the merits, we reverse that portion of the
    TERC’s decision concerning FEM’s due process rights. The
    lessees’ due process rights in this case were only potentially
    affected when the TERC elected to declare sua sponte any
    assessment against the NRD void, and we have vacated that
    portion of the TERC’s decision.
    We affirm the TERC’s decision that one FEM parcel is non-
    exempt and that portions of two other FEM parcels are non­
    exempt, to the extent that the TERC reasoned the land was not
    being used for a public purpose. The nonexempt status of such
    property is not assigned as error, and we find no plain error
    in the TERC’s conclusion that the property was nonexempt
    for the alternative reason that it was not being used predomi-
    nantly for a public purpose.
    Because the TERC lacked the statutory authority to decide
    in this case that it was improper to assess tax liability to the
    NRD, it should have simply affirmed the assessment against
    the NRD as to any property it affirmed to be nonexempt. We
    therefore reverse, and remand with directions for the TERC to
    affirm the Board’s order as to the parcel and portions of parcels
    it found nonexempt.
    The only issue remaining in this appeal is whether the TERC
    was correct that the parcels it found to be exempt were being
    used for a public purpose.
    2. Use for Public Purpose
    The Nebraska Constitution, article VIII, § 2, provides that
    the property of the state and its governmental subdivisions
    is exempt from taxation to the extent the property is used for
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    a public purpose. This has been codified in § 77-202(1)(a),
    which states in part that “[p]roperty of the state and its gov-
    ernmental subdivisions [shall be exempt from property taxes]
    to the extent used or being developed for use by the state or
    governmental subdivision for a public purpose.”
    Section 77-202(1)(a)(ii)(B) then defines public purpose in
    relevant part as use of the property “to carry out the duties
    and responsibilities conferred by law with or without con-
    sideration.” Section 77-202(1)(a)(ii) also states in part that
    “[p]ublic purpose does not include leasing of property to a
    private party unless the lease of the property is at fair market
    value for a public purpose.”
    Under 350 Neb. Admin. Code, ch. 15, § 002.01 (2009),
    “[p]ublic purpose does not include the leasing of property to
    a private party for purposes other than a public purpose,” and
    that regulation elaborates that “[i]ncome generated for the state
    or governmental subdivision, either through leases or other
    receipts, will not convert a nonpublic use of a property to a
    tax exempt public purpose use.” Agency regulations, properly
    adopted and filed with the Nebraska Secretary of State, have
    the effect of statutory law.25
    We have held that the primary or dominant use of the prop-
    erty, and not an incidental use, is controlling in determining
    whether property is exempt from taxation.26 Likewise, 350
    Neb. Admin. Code, ch. 15, § 003.06 (2009), explains: “When
    the assessor or county board of equalization determines the
    use of property pursuant to this regulation, the dominant or
    primary use of property shall be considered, such that any
    incidental use for other purposes shall not effect the tax status
    of the property.” Similarly, § 003.07 provides in relevant part:
    “When a parcel of governmentally owned property is used for
    several purposes simultaneously, the determination of taxable
    25
    City of Omaha v. Kum & Go, 
    263 Neb. 724
    , 
    642 N.W.2d 154
    (2002).
    26
    City of York v. York Cty. Bd. of Equal., 
    266 Neb. 305
    , 
    664 N.W.2d 452
          (2003).
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    status should be based on the predominant use of the prop-
    erty. The predominant use of the property is the primary or
    dominant use.”
    Finally, § 003.07A states that in the analysis of mixed use
    parcels, a number of factors may be considered in determin-
    ing the predominant use, including whether (1) “the use of the
    property assists the government entity in meeting a long term
    or ongoing purpose,” (2) “the governmental entity has spent
    significant money in making the property ready for its public
    purpose use in comparison with any revenue generated by its
    nonpublic use,” and (3) “the public purpose use is ongoing
    throughout the year as opposed to the seasonal nature of its
    nonpublic use.”
    Generally, statutes exempting property from taxation should
    be strictly construed, and one contending that property is
    exempt must clearly show that it is within the exemption pro-
    vided by statute.27 This does not mean, however, that there
    should not be a liberal construction of the language used in
    order to carry out the expressed intention of the Legislature,
    but, rather, that the property which is claimed to be exempt
    must come clearly within the provisions granting such exemp-
    tion.28 Also, we must apply the plain language of the statutes
    when they are unambiguous.29
    The policy behind limiting exempt status to leases utilized
    for public purposes is a balance of interests. On the one hand,
    the public should not have to subsidize a private party’s prof-
    itmaking use at an unfair competitive advantage because the
    public entity can offer the tax exempt land at a lower rate.30
    27
    See Berean Fundamental Church Council, Inc. v. Board of Equalization,
    
    186 Neb. 431
    , 
    183 N.W.2d 750
    (1971).
    28
    See Doane College v. County of Saline, 
    173 Neb. 8
    , 
    112 N.W.2d 248
          (1961).
    29
    See Pfizer v. Lancaster Cty. Bd. of Equal., 
    260 Neb. 265
    , 
    616 N.W.2d 326
          (2000).
    30
    See Annot., 
    54 A.L.R. 3d 402
    , § 3 (1973).
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    Furthermore, if the leased property were exempt without
    limitation to leases for a public use, exempt entities would be
    tempted to acquire and rent property for the sole purpose of
    generating income, thereby acquiring revenues in excess of
    those permitted through legal taxation.31
    On the other hand, if a lease to a private party is for a pub-
    lic purpose other than simply creating revenue, taxation of the
    leased property would not inure to any public advantage, since
    the tax debtor would also be the tax creditor.32 The exemption
    from taxation of public property used for a public purpose
    avoids the burden of collecting tax revenues from, and disburs-
    ing them to, the same public entity.33
    Courts addressing similar constitutional and statutory
    schemes generally hold that a lease is for a public purpose
    when it procures performance of the exempt function for
    which the owner would or might have used the property if
    not leased, regardless of whether private interests of the les-
    see are also served by such use.34 Two cases from other juris-
    dictions have specifically addressed use by a lessee of land
    acquired for the public purpose use of its aquifer or to prevent
    soil erosion.
    In Whitehouse v. Tracy,35 the court found that a lease to a
    farmer for his own profit was exclusively for a public pur-
    pose. The land was owned by the local government in order to
    31
    See Pbgh. Sch. Dist. v. Allegheny County, Aplnt., 
    347 Pa. 101
    , 
    31 A.2d 707
          (1943).
    32
    See Cleveland v. Carney, 
    172 Ohio St. 189
    , 
    174 N.E.2d 254
    (1961).
    33
    See 
    id. 34 See,
    e.g., First Unitarian Soc. v. Hartford, 
    66 Conn. 368
    , 
    34 A. 89
    (1895);
    Central Baptist Church of Miami, Fla. v. Dade County, 
    216 So. 2d 4
    (Fla.
    1968); People ex rel. Korzen v. Amer. Airlines, 
    39 Ill. 2d 11
    , 
    233 N.E.2d 568
    (1967); Adams Co. v. Diocese of Natchez, 
    110 Miss. 890
    , 
    71 So. 17
          (1916); Davis v. Congregation Agudas Achim, 
    456 S.W.2d 459
    (Tex. Civ.
    App. 1970); Hanover County v. Trustees, 
    203 Va. 613
    , 
    125 S.E.2d 812
          (1962); State v. Kittle et al., 
    87 W. Va. 526
    , 
    105 S.E. 775
    (1921).
    35
    Whitehouse v. Tracy, 
    72 Ohio St. 3d 178
    , 
    648 N.E.2d 503
    (1995).
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    utilize the ground water underneath the surface, in a well field
    that pumped water to the village residents.36 The government
    was renting the surface of the land to the farmer for the sole
    purpose of saving mowing and maintenance expenses that it
    would otherwise incur under its general obligations as owner
    of the property.37 The court held that the private use was suf-
    ficiently incidental to the public purpose of the property.38
    Although the court found it significant that there was no lease,
    and that the government maintained full control over the prop-
    erty, the statutory scheme apparently lacked applicable provi-
    sions specifically for leased property.39
    In City of Osceola v. Board,40 land adjoining an artificial
    lake constituting part of a city’s waterworks was acquired as a
    watershed to prevent soil wash from filling the lake. The land
    was withdrawn from cultivation and seeded with grass. The
    city leased the land to a private entity for pasture. The court
    found that despite this fact, the land was exempt as devoted
    entirely to public use and not for profit.41 The court explained
    that the grass needed to be either cut or pastured in order to
    properly maintain it. The city’s rental for pasturing, the court
    explained, was simply an economical way of meeting the city’s
    maintenance obligations for the grassland.42
    The following three Nebraska cases involving the city of
    York and the York County Board of Equalization are also rel-
    evant to the case at bar. We held in each of these cases that
    leased public property was used for a public purpose and there-
    fore was tax exempt. In each case, the property was leased to
    a private party who utilized the surface for his or her private
    36
    See 
    id. 37 See
    id.
    38
    See 
    id.
    39
    See 
    id.
    40
    City 
    of Osceola v. Board, 
    188 Iowa 278
    , 
    176 N.W. 284
    (1920).
    41
    See 
    id. 42 See
    id.
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    agricultural operations. We held in each case that such surface
    agricultural use was merely incidental to predominant public
    purposes of the property.
    City of York v. York Cty. Bd. of Equal.43 (York I) involved city-
    owned land required by the Federal Aviation Administration
    to be a buffer zone around an airport. That federal agency
    also had applicable regulations regarding erosion control. To
    maintain the land as a buffer zone and to control erosion, the
    city could either seed and maintain the land on its own or
    lease the land for agricultural use. The city elected to lease
    the land, since that was a more economical means of carrying
    out its duties of maintaining the land and weed control. The
    revenue from the lease was used to support the airport’s oper-
    ating expenses.44
    The TERC had found the property to be nonexempt on the
    ground that the lessees were using the land for private pur-
    poses and in direct competition with other agricultural lessees
    not so fortunate as to be leasing public lands. We reversed,
    stating in York I that the TERC erred on the legal question
    of whether the lease served a public purpose, which question
    we reviewed de novo on the record. We held that the lessee’s
    agricultural use was incidental to the primary public purposes
    of maintaining the area as a buffer zone and ensuring that the
    buffer zone was properly maintained.45
    In City of York v. York County Bd. of Equal.46 (York II), lots
    were acquired by the city for the purpose of resale as part of
    an industrial park meant to attract industry to the community.
    The lots were being leased for agricultural use until appro-
    priate buyers could be found.47 The agricultural lease was
    43
    City of York v. York Cty. Bd. of Equal., 
    266 Neb. 297
    , 
    664 N.W.2d 445
          (2003).
    44
    See 
    id. 45 See
    id.
    46
    York, 
    supra note 26.
    47
    See 
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    s­ubject to the sale of the property for industrial use, though
    no resale was imminent.48
    We held in York II that the primary use of the lots was for
    a public purpose and that the agricultural use by the lessee
    was incidental. We noted that the industrial park was part of
    a comprehensive plan for community development. We also
    considered the fact that the revenue from the lease, $100 per
    acre, was small in proportion to the investment of the city of
    $13,500 per acre to improve the lots for industrial use.
    Lastly, in City of York v. York County Bd. of Equal.49
    (York III), we held that 44 acres acquired as part of the local
    solid waste agency’s long-term waste management and water
    monitoring planning were for public use, despite the agency’s
    lease of the surface for the lessee’s agricultural operations.
    The property was located adjacent to a landfill, and the agency
    contemplated it would need to use soil from the land in
    approximately 30 years. But the more immediate reason for
    the acquisition of the property was for water monitoring. Three
    wells placed on the land for such purpose were located along
    the property line.50
    We concluded in York III that the use of the property by
    the lessee as irrigated cropland was merely incidental to the
    public purposes of waste management and water monitor-
    ing. We observed that long-term planning was necessary to
    ensure adequate capacity. We also observed that the income
    of $135 per acre from the lease was small compared to the
    $216,191 that the agency paid to acquire the land. We said
    that “[t]he fact that the [local agency] derives income from
    the leased property does not change its primary purpose.”51
    48
    See 
    id. 49 City
    of York v. York Cty. Bd. of Equal., 
    266 Neb. 311
    , 
    664 N.W.2d 456
          (2003).
    50
    See 
    id. 51 Id.
    at 
    316, 664 N.W.2d at 460
    .
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    We concluded that the TERC’s decision that the land was used
    primarily for nonpublic, agricultural purposes did not conform
    to the law.52
    [9] We reject any assertion by the Board that the public use
    to be considered in determining the predominant use of the
    property is limited to one purpose for which the property was
    primarily acquired, to the exclusion of other public purposes
    incident to ownership of property. Public purpose is defined
    in relevant part as carrying out the duties and responsibilities
    conferred by law.53 As this language indicates, and York III
    illustrates, those duties and responsibilities are, or the usage
    to carry out those duties and responsibilities is, not necessar-
    ily singular. It would be illogical to read the statutory scheme
    as making property taxable when it serves several public pur-
    poses, but tax exempt when it serves only one. Property can
    be used by a public entity in more than one way and for more
    than one public purpose, and all public purpose uses should
    be considered together in evaluating whether any private use
    of the property is merely incidental in the analysis under
    § 77-202(1)(a) of the extent to which the property is used or
    being developed for use for a public purpose.
    As for the Board’s focus on the reason for acquisition, noth-
    ing in the statutory scheme indicates that the relevant public
    purpose use must be tied to the reason for acquisition. It would
    be contrary to public policy to discourage public uses that were
    not contemplated at the time of purchase. Presumably, a public
    entity ought to use exempt, publicly owned land for as much
    public benefit as possible.
    We also find no merit to any contention by the Board
    that the lessees’ uses on the surface are the only activities
    considered in the analysis of whether the leased property is
    tax exempt as predominantly used for a public purpose. In
    52
    See York III, supra note 49.
    53
    See § 77-202(1)(a)(ii)(B).
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    York III, we found the property exempt where the lessee was a
    farmer who cultivated the surface of the property, even though
    the only public purpose uses were of the property’s under-
    ground wells and its development for future use of the soil (to
    a significant depth).
    We find no reason to treat underground uses—in this case
    the use of the aquifer, wells, and pipeline system—differently
    from any other use of the property. As the NRD points out, use
    of the ground water is a derivative right immediately depen-
    dent on ownership of the surface over it.54 We have thus held
    in other contexts that the ground water is part of the “prop-
    erty” at issue under the exemption statutes.55 The right to use
    the ground water “does not float in a vacuum of abstraction
    but exists only in reference to and results from ownership of
    the overlying land.”56 We have thus said, “[I]t is clear that the
    right to use ground water is an attribute of owning fee simple
    title to land overlying a source of ground water and is insepa-
    rable from the land to which it applies.”57
    Accordingly, in our analysis of the public purposes for
    which the subject property was used, we give weight to the
    NRD’s continual use of the underground aquifer, pipelines, and
    wells, to carry out the NRD’s statutory duties of water manage-
    ment. The duties and responsibilities of the NRD are set forth
    in § 2-3229, which specifically describes programs to control
    water supply and conservation.
    We held in Estermann v. Bose,58 in the context of condem-
    nation, that an easement sought by a joint water manage-
    ment entity to comply with the Republican River Compact by
    54
    See Sorensen v. Lower Niobrara Nat. Resources Dist., 
    221 Neb. 180
    , 
    376 N.W.2d 539
    (1985).
    55
    
    Id. at 191,
    376 N.W.2d at 548.
    56
    
    Id. at 191,
    376 N.W.2d at 547.
    57
    
    Id. at 191,
    376 N.W.2d at 548.
    58
    Estermann v. Bose, 
    296 Neb. 228
    , 
    892 N.W.2d 857
    (2017).
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    augmenting waterflows to a creek and offsetting surface water
    depletions was for a public purpose. And we said that use of
    the surface by private irrigators was merely incidental to the
    overriding public purpose of the project. In evaluating the pre-
    dominance of the augmentation use in the public purpose anal-
    ysis, we observed that the failure to comply with the compact
    could expose the state of Nebraska to significant liability.59
    Likewise here, the water management use of the property is
    significant not only in its physical scope, but also in its benefit
    to the public.
    But that is not the only public use of the property. We fur-
    ther consider in our predominant use analysis the fact that the
    NRD implemented a plan on the property for the large-scale
    reseeding of the Sand Sage Prairie area. This is also encom-
    passed by the duties and responsibilities conferred by law
    upon the NRD. Described in § 2-3229 is the NRD’s purpose to
    develop and execute programs of soil erosion prevention and
    control, soil conservation, development and management of
    fish and wildlife habitat, and range management.
    The NRD developed and continuously maintains the ecolog-
    ically unique surface prairie as part of its public purposes set
    forth in § 2-3229. As steward of this prairie, the NRD has an
    ongoing responsibility to control weeds that could destroy the
    public’s investment in this biologically diverse landscape. As
    steward of the property, the NRD also has a responsibility to
    prevent the nuisance for the community that would result from
    a failure to control weeds. The lessees’ grazing of the prairie
    performs, in a more economical way, an exempt function that
    the NRD would otherwise have to perform itself. We agree
    with the TERC that the lessees’ activities are “for a public pur-
    pose,” as required by § 77-202(1)(a)(ii).
    While the lessees also serve their own interests through the
    grazing lease and grain storage, the evidence demonstrates
    59
    See 
    id. - 287
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    that these private purposes are merely incidental to the impor-
    tant public purposes for which the NRD uses the property.
    Besides the predominance of public uses already described,
    relevant to this conclusion—as described in York II, York III,
    and § 003.07A—is the comparatively minor income from the
    lease in relation to the multimillion-dollar investment in the
    property’s acquisition and conversion to its current public uses.
    The evidence was undisputed that the lease income was minor
    even in comparison to the ongoing operations costs of the aug-
    mentation project.
    The NRD is not making a profit from the lease and thereby
    acquiring revenues in excess of those permitted through legal
    taxation. Also, we observe that under the factors weighing
    in favor of exempt status set forth in § 003.07A, the NRD’s
    public purpose uses are ongoing throughout the year, while the
    grazing is seasonal.
    For all the foregoing reasons, we affirm, in our de novo
    review of the record,60 the decision of the TERC insofar as
    it concluded property was exempt because it was predomi-
    nantly used for a public purpose. We agree with the TERC
    that the property was used for the public purposes of water
    management and the development and maintenance of the
    prairie. We also agree that these uses were the predominant
    use of the property. The sorghum cover crop on the Wilder
    property in 2013 and the lessees’ grazing activities served the
    public purposes associated with the prairie project. Any pri-
    vate use by the lessees is incidental to the public purposes of
    the property.
    VI. CONCLUSION
    We affirm the TERC’s determination that the Wilder par-
    cels, 10 FEM parcels, and portions of two FEM parcels were
    used for a public purpose and therefore exempt. We vacate
    60
    See Harold Warp Pioneer Village Found. v. Ewald, 
    287 Neb. 19
    , 
    844 N.W.2d 245
    (2013).
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    those parts of the TERC’s opinion addressing issues other than
    whether the property was used for a public purpose. We reverse
    the TERC’s decision and remand the cause with directions for
    the TERC to affirm the Board’s tax assessment to the NRD of
    the property that the TERC found nonexempt.
    A ffirmed in part, vacated in part, and in part
    reversed and remanded with directions.
    Funke, J., participating on briefs.
    Wright, J., not participating.
    Cassel, J., concurring.
    I fully understand the social impact to Dundy County and its
    citizens of exempting at least 6,640 acres from the property tax
    rolls. The county’s land area comprises only 920 square miles.1
    Thus, of approximately 588,800 acres, the decision removes
    over 1 percent from the tax roll. Taxes are lost that would have
    funded school districts and other local needs. Effectively, this
    compels the remaining property taxpayers to pay more. And
    other projects for Republican River Compact compliance may
    be looming to imperil even more of the area’s tax base.
    I join the court’s decision, because I believe it faithfully
    follows existing law. Perhaps another provision of current law,
    not invoked by the parties before us, is available to address
    this problem. But only the Legislature is empowered to deter-
    mine whether current law is adequate or whether the law
    should be changed to balance the competing public interests
    differently.
    1
    Nebraska Blue Book 2016‑17 at 843.