Mountain Water Co. v. State, Department of Revenue , 387 Mont. 394 ( 2017 )


Menu:
  •                                                                                               05/16/2017
    DA 16-0469
    Case Number: DA 16-0469
    IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF MONTANA
    
    2017 MT 117
    MOUNTAIN WATER COMPANY,
    Plaintiff and Appellee,
    v.
    STATE OF MONTANA, DEPARTMENT OF REVENUE,
    Defendant and Appellant.
    APPEAL FROM:           District Court of the First Judicial District,
    In and For the County of Lewis and Clark, Cause No. DDV 15-18
    Honorable Kathy Seeley, Presiding Judge
    COUNSEL OF RECORD:
    For Appellant:
    Daniel J. Whyte, Courtney Mathieson, Special Assistant Attorneys
    General, Department of Revenue, Helena, Montana
    For Appellee:
    Robert L. Sterup, Kyle A. Gray, Holland & Hart LLP, Billings,
    Montana
    For Amicus Curiae:
    Natasha Prinzing Jones, Scott M. Stearns, Randy J. Tanner, Boone
    Karlberg P.C., Missoula, Montana
    Submitted on Briefs: April 5, 2017
    Decided: May 16, 2017
    Filed:
    __________________________________________
    Clerk
    Justice Jim Rice delivered the Opinion of the Court.
    ¶1    Appellant Department of Revenue (Department) appeals from the entry of summary
    judgment by the First Judicial District Court, Lewis and Clark County, in favor of Appellee
    Mountain Water Company (“Mountain Water” or “Company”), declaring that the City of
    Missoula (City) shall be assessed and be responsible for property taxes accruing on
    Mountain Water’s property during the pendency of the City’s action to condemn the
    property, and that such taxes paid by Mountain Water must be refunded by the Department
    with applicable statutory interest. We reverse, and address the following issue:
    Did the District Court err in its interpretation of § 70-30-315, MCA, regarding
    proration of taxes in a condemnation proceeding?
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    ¶2    The parties and the District Court agreed that there were no conflicts of material
    fact. Mountain Water operates a water delivery system located in and around Missoula,
    which the City initiated an action to condemn, issuing a summons on April 2, 2014.
    The Fourth Judicial District Court issued a Preliminary Order of Condemnation under
    § 70-30-206, MCA, which this Court affirmed in City of Missoula v. Mt. Water Co., 
    2016 MT 183
    , 
    384 Mont. 193
    , 
    378 P.3d 1113
    . Compensation has been determined in the
    proceeding, but no final order of condemnation has been issued pursuant § 70-30-309,
    2
    MCA, and title to and possession of the subject property remains with Mountain Water and
    its affiliated entities.1
    ¶3      Following initiation of the condemnation action, Mountain Water requested that the
    Department agree the Company was no longer responsible for property taxes and that the
    City be deemed responsible, citing § 70-30-315, MCA, which provides, in toto:
    Proration of taxes. The condemnor must be assessed the condemnor’s pro
    rata share of taxes for the land being taken as of the date of possession or
    summons, whichever occurs first. The condemnor must be assessed for all
    taxes accruing after the date of possession or summons, whichever occurs
    first.
    The City objected, stating that responsibility for taxes would shift after a judgment
    awarding possession was entered. In a letter to the parties, the Department acknowledged
    that § 70-30-315, MCA, “may be subject to either of [their] interpretations,” but concluded
    that, while the statute raised the issue of proration of taxes, “it is not conclusive evidence
    that there has been or is a transfer of ownership interest from Mountain Water to the [C]ity
    of Missoula.” The Department thus determined to “change ownership records only upon
    receipt of a transfer certificate from the clerk and recorder, or upon completion of the forms
    from the parties reporting the transfer and after filing of a realty transfer certificate” under
    the Realty Transfer Act, codified in Title 15 of the Montana Code, and would not shift
    1
    On May 2, 2017, the City of Missoula filed an unopposed motion to stay appellate proceedings
    in B & E Corp v. City of Missoula, DA 16-0450, which states that the City and Mountain Water
    have agreed to settlement terms in the condemnation proceeding and the process of preparing a
    final written agreement is now underway. However, the motion indicates the parties “have not
    settled the separate matter related to Mountain Water’s payment of property taxes while the
    condemnation case has been pending,” that the proposed settlement will not resolve the issues in
    the case sub judice, and that the parties continue to stand by the arguments made herein.
    3
    responsibility for taxes from Mountain Water. The Department has continued to issue
    property tax assessments naming Mountain Water as the responsible entity for the property
    taxes throughout the condemnation action. Mountain Water has paid taxes under protest.
    ¶4     Pursuant to § 15-1-406, MCA, Mountain Water filed a declaratory action against
    the Department, seeking a determination that § 70-30-315, MCA, required assessment of
    property taxes against the City from and after the date of the condemnation summons. The
    Department answered, seeking approval of its interpretation of the statutes. The City, as
    explained in its amicus curiae brief filed in this appeal, did not seek to intervene in the
    District Court based upon its understanding that Mountain Water’s complaint was not
    requesting an order requiring payment of taxes by the City, but rather sought a refund of
    the taxes the Company had paid. The City notes that the Company’s complaint specifically
    requested an order “declaring that if Missoula takes possession of the subject properties by
    eminent domain, then Mountain Water is entitled to an Order directing refund of the
    property taxes paid by Mountain Water under protest.” (Emphasis added.)
    ¶5     Mountain Water’s motion for summary judgment was granted by the District Court,
    which reasoned as follows:
    [Section 70-30-315, MCA,] sets forth an exception to the general assessment
    statutes when eminent domain is involved. Otherwise there would be no
    point to the statute—the general provisions of Montana Code Annotated
    § 15-7-304(2) would [always] govern. . . . [T]he City of Missoula, as
    condemnor, must be assessed for all taxes accruing on the subject property
    after April 2, 2014. Property taxes paid by Mountain Water under protest for
    any period after April 2, 2014 shall be refunded by [the Department], together
    with interest as required by the provisions of Montana Code Annotated
    § 15-1-402.
    4
    ¶6     The Department appealed and the City moved to intervene before this Court,
    arguing that the assessment of taxes against the City was done in absentia and violated the
    City’s due process rights. The Court denied the City’s request to intervene, but granted its
    request to file an amicus curiae brief.
    STANDARD OF REVIEW
    ¶7     We review de novo a district court’s ruling on summary judgment, applying the
    criteria of M. R. Civ. P. 56(c)(3). Citizens for a Better Flathead v. Bd. of Cnty. Comm’rs,
    
    2016 MT 256
    , ¶ 10, 
    385 Mont. 156
    , 
    381 P.3d 555
    (citing Pilgeram v. GreenPoint Mortg.
    Funding, Inc., 
    2013 MT 354
    , ¶ 9, 
    373 Mont. 1
    , 
    313 P.3d 839
    ). We review a district court’s
    conclusions of law to determine whether they are correct. Citizens for a Better Flathead,
    ¶ 10 (citing Pilgeram, ¶ 9).
    DISCUSSION
    ¶8     Did the District Court err in its interpretation of § 70-30-315, MCA, regarding
    proration of taxes in a condemnation proceeding?
    ¶9     The Department argues that the District Court’s order to assess taxes against the
    City violates the City’s constitutional and statutory protections that exempt cities from
    property taxation, citing Article VIII, Section 5(1)(a) of the Montana Constitution (“The
    legislature may exempt from taxation . . . property of . . . municipal corporations . . . .”),
    and § 15-6-201(1)(a)(iv), MCA (“The following categories of property are exempt from
    taxation: . . . municipal corporations.”). The Department also argues it is bound by the
    Realty Transfer Act and accompanying regulations, which require that it assess Mountain
    Water for property it owns until a final order of condemnation is issued and recorded with
    5
    the clerk and recorder, citing § 15-7-304(2), MCA (“The department is not required to
    change any ownership records used for the assessment or taxation of real property unless
    the department has received a transfer certificate from the clerk and recorder and the
    transfer has been reported to the department as provided by rule.”), and Admin. R. Mont.
    42.20.204(1) (“The department shall not change to whom real property is assessed unless
    properly notified by means of an accurately prepared Realty Transfer Certificate . . . .”).
    The Department also argues that the District Court’s interpretation results in an “absurd”
    windfall to Mountain Water by allowing it to profit from use of the property while avoiding
    property taxes during the pendency of the condemnation action, and, further, that the
    protested taxes were paid to Missoula County, and thus, the Department is the incorrect
    agency to issue a refund. The Department states that, even if it possessed authority to
    refund the protested taxes, “those taxes constitute an asset and appear [to be] subject to
    condemnation.”
    ¶10    Mountain Water argues that the District Court properly interpreted § 70-30-315,
    MCA, according to its plain meaning, and properly concluded that it controls as the more
    specific statute for condemnation matters over the general tax provisions of the Realty
    Transfer Act. Mountain Water argues that although the statute grants a “small favoring of
    the condemnee,” it is not absurd, given the fact that “the condemnation power granted to
    the condemnor is so draconian.” Mountain Water argues that its request for an immediate
    refund was not challenged before the District Court and that the “technicality” of the
    County, not the Department, collecting the taxes is harmless. Finally, regarding the City’s
    6
    claimed exemption from taxation, Mountain Water argues that “[a]ssessment does not
    equate to payment” and that the City has all legal avenues to pursue once it is assessed the
    taxes, which is “an issue between the City and the State entirely separate from this appeal
    by the State against a private taxpayer.”
    ¶11    The City, as amicus curiae, argues that the District Court erred by ordering the
    Department to assess property taxes against the City because the City is tax-exempt. It
    argues that the District Court’s order violated the City’s due process rights because it
    ordered tax assessment against the City even though the City was not a party in the
    litigation. Finally, the City argues that the refund to Mountain Water ordered by the
    District Court, without ordering an accompanying refund to Mountain Water customers,
    will function as a windfall to Mountain Water because the property tax burden is a
    pass-through cost in the water rates approved by the Montana Public Service Commission
    and paid by water customers.
    ¶12    The parties’ arguments tend to read more into this very short statute than is actually
    there, and extrapolate beyond the precise purpose of the legislation. “In the construction
    of a statute, the office of the judge is simply to ascertain and declare what is in terms or in
    substance contained therein, not to insert what has been omitted or to omit what has been
    inserted.” Section 1-2-101, MCA. “[L]egislative intent is to be ascertained, in the first
    instance, from the plain meaning of the words used” by the Legislature. W. Energy Co. v.
    Mont. Dep’t of Revenue, 
    1999 MT 289
    , ¶ 11, 
    297 Mont. 55
    , 
    990 P.2d 767
    .
    7
    ¶13   Section 70-30-315, MCA, is entitled “Proration of taxes.” Senate Bill 269, the 1981
    eminent domain bill that created this section and the accompanying section regarding weed
    control, was entitled “An Act . . . Requiring Proration of Taxes and Weed Control.” 1981
    Mont. Laws 1105. Section 70-30-315, MCA, simply prorates property taxes. It prorates
    taxes “for the land being taken” as between the condemnor and the condemnee by
    designating the date from which the taxes will be assessed to the condemnor, which is “the
    date of possession or summons, whichever occurs first.” Thus, the Legislature has hereby
    adopted a different assessment date than the usual “General assessment day” for real
    property—which is midnight, January 1—as provided in § 15-8-201(2)(a), MCA. Section
    15-8-201(2)(a), MCA, requires the Department to annually “assess property to[] the person
    by whom it was owned or claimed or in whose possession or control it was” on midnight
    of January 1 of each year. In contrast, § 70-30-315, MCA, selects a different date for
    purposes of designating the person who shall be assessed the property taxes in
    condemnation situations, requiring the condemnor to be assessed earlier in time than the
    general tax statutes would normally require, thus effectuating a unique proration of taxes
    as between condemnation parties.
    ¶14   This conclusion is further illustrated by noting that the Legislature, when enacting
    § 70-30-315, MCA, did not address the Department’s assessment practices, including the
    Realty Transfer Act, which had previously been enacted in 1975, or the mechanics of
    payment, protest, grievance, refund, or reimbursement of property taxes, as provided in
    Article VIII, Section 7 of the Montana Constitution (“The [L]egislature shall provide
    8
    independent appeal procedures for taxpayer grievances about appraisals, assessments,
    equalization, and taxes.”), § 15-15-101, et seq., MCA (property tax appeals generally), and
    § 15-1-401, et seq., MCA (payment of taxes under protest). The Legislature did not here
    concern itself with the reality that the typical condemnor is a government entity that is
    exempt from paying property taxes, including the state, counties, cities, towns, and
    municipal corporations. See § 15-6-201(1)(a), MCA. The statute simply established a tax
    proration date that is more favorable to condemnees than under general law, and provided
    no additional or alternate process to accompany this simple adjustment.
    ¶15    “It is the general rule that a taking does not occur until: (1) legal title vests in the
    condemnor, (2) the condemnor enters into actual possession, or (3) the condemnor takes
    constructive possession either by causing damage to property or by depriving the owner of
    full beneficial use of his land.” City of Billings v. Hunt, 
    257 Mont. 99
    , 103, 
    847 P.2d 715
    ,
    717–18 (1993) (citing Stewart & Grindle, Inc. v. Alaska, 
    524 P.2d 1242
    , 1246 (Alaska
    1974)). Until a taking by one of these methods occurs, the property’s owner “remains
    responsible for expenses incidental to legal ownership.” City of 
    Billings, 257 Mont. at 103
    ,
    847 P.2d at 718. Expenses incidental to legal ownership include property taxes.
    ¶16    American Jurisprudence 2d provides commentary as follows:
    The Model Eminent Domain Code provides that the condemnor is required
    to pay or reimburse the owner for the prorated portion of property taxes
    allocable to a period after the date of vesting title in, or the effective date of
    possession of the property by, the condemnor, whichever is earlier.
    26 Am. Jur. 2d Eminent Domain § 277 (2014) (citing Model Eminent Domain Code
    § 211(a)(3)). The Montana Legislature has provided condemnees a potentially “better
    9
    deal” on property taxes than contemplated by the Model Eminent Domain Code. Instead
    of prorating taxes as of the time of possession or the vesting of property title in the
    condemnor, whichever is earlier, the Legislature, by enacting § 70-30-315, MCA, required
    that “property taxes become the responsibility of the condemnor,” City of 
    Billings, 257 Mont. at 103
    , 847 P.2d at 718, at the time of possession or service of the condemnation
    summons, whichever is earlier. While the statute may shift to the condemnor responsibility
    for an “incident of ownership”—property tax—that accrues prior to the condemnor’s
    taking of the property, it did nothing to alter the principle, as stated by the above authorities,
    that the obligation to pay the taxes does not transfer to the condemnor until the taking
    actually occurs. The owner “remains responsible” until then. City of 
    Billings, 257 Mont. at 103
    , 847 P.2d at 718. As the City’s counsel correctly explained in pre-litigation
    correspondence, § 70-30-315, MCA, “provides a measure for taxes to be assessed for
    property actually taken. Once taken, taxes are assessed to the condemnor ‘as of the date
    of possession or summons, whichever occurs first.’”            (Emphasis added.) Likewise,
    Mountain Water’s complaint acknowledged that “if Missoula takes possession of the
    subject properties by eminent domain, then Mountain Water is entitled to an Order
    directing refund of the property taxes paid by Mountain Water under protest.” (Emphasis
    added.) Thus, Mountain Water retains responsibility for actual payment of the property
    taxes for the period it possesses the property, until the taking occurs. This makes common
    sense: if a condemnation action is ultimately unsuccessful and the owner does not lose
    possession of the property, then the property tax obligation, along with the use and
    10
    enjoyment of the property, would have rightly remained with the owner during the
    litigation.
    ¶17    This understanding of § 70-30-315, MCA, and Mountain Water’s continuing
    possession of the property pending a final order of condemnation, resolves the
    Department’s current concern that it cannot “ceas[e] to assess Mountain Water on property
    it still owns.” Mountain Water continues to own and possess the property and to be
    responsible for the taxes until the transfer of title by entry of a final order, consistent with
    the Realty Transfer Act. However, as the discussion of Montana law herein illustrates, a
    taking can also be effectuated by a condemnor’s possession of property prior to the entry
    of a final order, City of 
    Billings, 257 Mont. at 103
    , 847 P. 2d at 717-18, which could trigger
    a condemnor’s obligation under § 70-30-315, MCA, to pay the property taxes. In that
    event, the Department would need to accommodate such a taking by assessing the
    property taxes, from the date of possession or summons, against the condemnor. See
    § 15-8-201(2)(a), MCA (“The department shall assess property to[] the person . . . in whose
    possession or control it was . . . .”).
    ¶18    Here, Mountain Water continues to possess the property and thus continues to be
    responsible for payment of property taxes. It is not entitled to a refund at this time. The
    District Court’s order of a refund to Mountain Water, and of assessment of property taxes
    against the City of Missoula, is reversed. The condemnation litigation will continue until
    a final order of condemnation is entered, effectuating a taking of the property by the City.
    Mountain Water may pursue appropriate remedies for refund, reimbursement or
    11
    compensation for the taxes it has paid since the date of the condemnation summons in the
    appropriate forums. Likewise, as Mountain Water acknowledges, the City retains all rights
    and avenues of relief to raise its defenses in appropriate forums as an entity claiming
    exemption from the payment of taxes, as well as its claim that any refund would constitute
    a windfall under the terms of Mountain Water’s regulatory authorization, thus ensuring the
    City’s right to due process.     We resolve today only the question before us—the
    interpretation and application of § 70-30-315, MCA.
    ¶19   Reversed.
    /S/ JIM RICE
    We concur:
    /S/ MIKE McGRATH
    /S/ MICHAEL E WHEAT
    /S/ BETH BAKER
    /S/ LAURIE McKINNON
    /S/ JAMES JEREMIAH SHEA
    /S/ DIRK M. SANDEFUR
    12