Peterson v. Dep't of Revenue ( 2020 )


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  •             FILE                                                           THIS OPINION WAS FILED
    FOR RECORD AT 8 A.M. ON
    IN CLERK’S OFFICE                                                        APRIL 16, 2020
    SUPREME COURT, STATE OF WASHINGTON
    APRIL 16, 2020
    SUSAN L. CARLSON
    SUPREME COURT CLERK
    IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
    RANDOLPH PETERSON,               )
    )
    Petitioner,  )       No. 97410-1
    )
    v.                        )
    )
    STATE OF WASHINGTON,             )
    DEPARTMENT OF REVENUE, a )
    state agency,                    )
    )
    Defendant,   )
    )
    )
    )
    PORT OF BENTON, a Washington )
    port district, and BNSF RAILWAY )
    COMPANY,                         )
    )
    Respondents, )
    )
    JASON MOUNT, JAMES               )
    SUMMEY, PEGGI DOGGETT,           )
    JENNIFER HARTSFIELD, and         )
    MANDI OUKROP,                    )
    )              April 16, 2020
    Filed ________________
    Petitioners. )
    _______________________________)
    1
    Peterson v. Dep’t of Revenue, et al., No. 97410-1
    GONZÁLEZ, J.— Many delegates to our state constitutional convention were
    suspicious of corporate influence on government. The constitution those delegates
    drafted establishes that no municipality may “give any money, or property, or loan
    its money, or credit to or in aid of any . . . corporation, except for the necessary
    support of the poor and infirm.” CONST. art. VIII, § 7.
    More than 70 years ago, two railroad companies helped the United States
    Atomic Energy Commission build a track to the Hanford Nuclear Reservation in
    return for the right to use the track without paying rent. After the nuclear reactors
    at Hanford were decommissioned, the United States transferred nearly 800 acres,
    including the track at issue, to the Port of Benton (Port), subject to existing
    agreements and potential reversion to the United States if certain conditions were
    not met.
    The Port has continued to honor the agreements and operate the railroad.
    The Port’s decision not to charge rent was challenged by a taxpayer, Randolph
    Peterson, as an unconstitutional gift of public funds. This challenge was dismissed
    at summary judgment. On the record before us we do not find a constitutional
    violation and affirm.
    FACTS
    During the Second World War, the War Department of the United States
    government used its eminent domain powers to acquire hundreds of square miles
    2
    Peterson v. Dep’t of Revenue, et al., No. 97410-1
    near the Columbia River in southeast Washington in order to build the Hanford
    Nuclear project. Hutchinson v. Port of Benton, 
    62 Wn.2d 451
    , 452, 
    383 P.2d 500
    (1963). In 1947, the Atomic Energy Commission and two railroads agreed to build
    the 5.4 mile railroad spur at issue to provide a second railroad track into the
    Hanford Nuclear Reservation. This track is now known as the Richland Trackage.
    BNSF Railway Company and Union Pacific Railroad Company are the successors
    in interest to the original contracting railroads. BNSF Ry. Co. v. Tri-City &
    Olympia R.R. Co., 
    835 F. Supp. 2d 1056
    , 1058 (E.D. Wash. 2011). In return for
    their assistance, the United States government gave the two railroads the right to
    use the Richland Trackage rent-free. Over the years, the parties modified the
    agreement in small ways, but throughout, the two railroads had the right to use the
    Richland Trackage without paying rent, and either the railroads or the United
    States could terminate the agreement with varying amounts of notice.
    Over the years, some of the land the United States seized during World War
    II was sold to the Port. Hutchinson, 
    62 Wn.2d at 452
    . In 1998, the United States
    Department of Energy, the successor to the War Department and the Atomic
    Energy Commission, concluded that about 800 acres of industrial property, 26
    facilities, and 16 miles of railroad track, including the Richland Trackage, near
    Hanford was surplus property and offered to give it to the Port. At the time, the
    property was valued at about $5.1 million. The Port and the Department of Energy
    3
    Peterson v. Dep’t of Revenue, et al., No. 97410-1
    entered into a detailed indenture1 outlining the conditions of the transfer. The
    existing agreements with Union Pacific and BNSF railroads were assigned to the
    Port in the indenture, with some modifications. Under these contracts, either side
    could cancel the agreement on six months’ notice. Depending on the
    circumstances, cancellation could trigger the United States’ reversionary interest in
    the property. 2
    Peterson, the plaintiff in this case, is the principal owner of the Tri-City
    Railroad Company (TRCY). In 2000, the Port leased some of its property,
    including the Richland Trackage and its interchange with the main line, to TRCY’s
    predecessor. TRCY operates a railroad, pays a leasehold tax, and maintains a
    portion of the rails running across the Port’s property. BNSF Ry. Co., 
    835 F. Supp. 1
     An indenture is “a writing containing a conveyance, contract or covenant between two or more
    persons.” J. KENDRICK KINNEY, A LAW DICTIONARY AND GLOSSARY 383 (1893). Unlike a
    traditional deed, it often contains the signatures of both parties. See also BLACK’S LAW
    DICTIONARY 919 (11th ed. 2019). Indentures are often used to memorialize a covenant running
    with the land in favor of a railroad and, like deeds, may be recorded. See, e.g., Williams v. Ind.
    Rail Rd. Co., 
    33 N.E.3d 1043
    , 1048 (Ind. Ct. App. 2015); Richmond, Fredericksburg & Potomac
    RR. Co. v. United States, 
    75 F.3d 648
    , 654 (Fed. Cir. 1996).
    2
    The indenture provides, in relevant part,
    The Railroad shall be used and maintained for the purposes for which it was conveyed,
    and if said Railroad ceases to be used or maintained for such purposes, all or any portion
    of the Railroad shall, in its then existing condition, at the option of Grantor, revert to the
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA. If Grantor notifies Grantee or its similarly situated
    successor(s) that rail service no longer is required, such reversionary interest shall
    terminate and Grantee shall be free to abandon or convert the use of any portion or all of
    the Railroad.
    CP at 92.
    4
    Peterson v. Dep’t of Revenue, et al., No. 97410-1
    2d at 1060. That same year, the Port directed TRCY to cancel Union Pacific’s
    right to access the interchange and the leased track. After negotiation, the parties
    reached an agreement, and Union Pacific continued to use the track and
    interchange. For some time, TRCY or its predecessors-in-interest charged a per-
    car fee for access to the Richland Trackage. 
    Id.
    In 2009, BNSF informed TRCY that it would no longer pay for access to the
    Richland Trackage. 
    Id.
     In response, TRCY physically blocked BNSF from using
    the track. 
    Id.
     Ultimately, a federal court found that BNSF had the right to use the
    Richland Trackage and enjoined TRCY from preventing access. Id. at 1062-64,
    1066.
    In 2016, Peterson, in his capacity as a taxpayer, brought this case against the
    Port and the Washington State Department of Revenue.3 Peterson alleged that
    these government agencies were failing to meet their obligations to collect taxes
    and that allowing the railroads to use the Richland Trackage rent-free violated
    article VIII, section 7 and article I, section 12 of our state constitution. Most
    relevantly, Peterson argued that rent-free use of the tracks amounted to an
    unconstitutional gift of public funds. Later, Peterson submitted an expert
    declaration that suggested the value of BNSF’s rent-free use of the tracks would be
    between $2,106,000 and $3,159,000 in 2017. In 2016, the property was valued at
    3
    The Department of Revenue has since been dismissed from the case.
    5
    Peterson v. Dep’t of Revenue, et al., No. 97410-1
    roughly $50 million, about $25 million of which appears to have been attributable
    to the Richland Trackage, its associated land, and its structures. BNSF and Union
    Pacific Railroad intervened on the Port’s side and five Port district taxpayers
    intervened on Peterson’s side.
    Peterson and the Port (among others) moved for summary judgment. After
    the summary judgment hearing, Judge James Dixon concluded that the United
    States Department of Energy’s 1998 gift transfer of land and improvements to the
    Port was adequate consideration for BNSF’s rent-free use of the Richland
    Trackage. The judge granted the Port’s motion, denied Peterson’s, and dismissed
    Peterson’s claims with prejudice. Peterson initially challenged dismissal on both
    article VIII, section 7 and article I, section 12 grounds. Br. of Appellants at 2. The
    Court of Appeals rejected both arguments. Peterson narrowed the issues on review
    to whether BNSF’s continued rent-free use of the Richland Trackage violates
    article VIII, section 7.
    ANALYSIS
    This case is here on review of summary judgment. Our review is de novo.
    Schroeder v. Excelsior Mgmt. Grp., LLC, 
    177 Wn.2d 94
    , 104, 
    297 P.3d 677
     (2013)
    (citing Dreiling v. Jain, 
    151 Wn.2d 900
    , 908, 
    93 P.3d 861
     (2004)). As the
    challenger, Peterson bears the burden of showing an unconstitutional gift of public
    funds. King County v. Taxpayers of King County, 
    133 Wn.2d 584
    , 597, 
    949 P.2d
                           6
    Peterson v. Dep’t of Revenue, et al., No. 97410-1
    1260 (1997) (quoting Gen. Tel. Co. of Nw. v. City of Bothell, 
    105 Wn.2d 579
    , 588,
    
    716 P.2d 879
     (1986)).
    The prohibition on gifts and loans was one of the most hotly debated issues
    at our state’s constitutional convention. ROBERT F. UTTER & HUGH D. SPITZER,
    THE WASHINGTON STATE CONSTITUTION 162 (2d ed. 2013). The convention was
    lobbied heavily, including by some delegates, to allow municipalities to subsidize
    corporations deemed to be for the public good, especially railroads. 
    Id.
    Ultimately, the lobby attempt failed, and our constitution prohibits gifts of public
    funds “except for the necessary support of the poor and infirm,” which is not at
    issue here. CONST. art VIII, § 7.4 By largely prohibiting gifts of public funds, “the
    framers intended to prevent the harmful ‘effects on the public purse of granting
    public subsidies to private commercial enterprises, primarily railroads.’” City of
    Tacoma v. Taxpayers of Tacoma, 
    108 Wn.2d 679
    , 701-02, 
    743 P.2d 793
     (1987)
    (quoting City of Marysville v. State, 
    101 Wn.2d 50
    , 55, 
    676 P.2d 989
     (1984)). Our
    founders did not want gifts and loans given to private parties, but “[t]hey were not
    4
    Two distinct provisions of our state constitution prohibit or limit gifts of public funds. Article
    VIII, section 5 restricts the State’s ability to give gifts and section 7 governs municipalities.
    “Although these two provisions are worded slightly differently, this court has held that they have
    identical meaning, as well as the same prohibitions and exceptions.” CLEAN v. State, 
    130 Wn.2d 782
    , 797, 
    928 P.2d 1054
     (1996) (citing City of Tacoma v. Taxpayers of Tacoma, 
    108 Wn.2d 679
    , 701 n.13, 
    743 P.2d 793
     (1987)). As a municipal corporation of the State of
    Washington, the Port is bound by our state constitution. See ch. 53.04 RCW.
    7
    Peterson v. Dep’t of Revenue, et al., No. 97410-1
    concerned about the nonspeculative transfer of money from one nonprofit
    government agency to another.” City of Marysville, 
    101 Wn.2d at 55
    .
    For the purposes of article VIII of our state constitution, “a gift is a transfer
    of property without consideration and with donative intent. ‘Receipt of valuable
    consideration assures that a transaction is not a gift.’” Gen. Tel. Co. of Nw., 
    105 Wn.2d at 588
     (footnote omitted) (quoting Louthan v. King County, 
    94 Wn.2d 422
    ,
    428, 
    617 P.2d 977
     (1980)). To determine whether a challenged transaction is in
    fact a gift of public funds,
    [f]irst, the court asks if the funds are being expended to carry out a
    fundamental purpose of the government? If the answer to that question is
    yes, then no gift of public funds has been made. The second prong comes
    into play only when the expenditures are held to not serve fundamental
    purposes of government. The court then focuses on the consideration
    received by the public for the expenditure of public funds and the donative
    intent of the appropriating body in order to determine whether or not a gift
    has occurred.
    CLEAN v. State, 
    130 Wn.2d 782
    , 797-98, 
    928 P.2d 1054
     (1996) (citing Citizens for
    Clean Air v. City of Spokane, 
    114 Wn.2d 20
    , 39, 
    785 P.2d 447
     (1990); Taxpayers,
    
    108 Wn.2d at 702
    ). As the trial court’s conclusion that the railroad services of
    BNSF are not a fundamental government service has not been challenged, we then
    turn to donative intent and consideration. See 
    id.
    The parties disagree on what constitutes evidence of donative intent and
    what consideration is relevant. Peterson argues that donative intent is apparent
    from the failure to charge rent, among other things, and that only the consideration
    8
    Peterson v. Dep’t of Revenue, et al., No. 97410-1
    paid by the railroad to the Port matters for our analysis. The Port argues that
    Peterson has offered no evidence of donative intent and that the United States
    government’s transfer of nearly 800 acres, 26 improvements, and 16 miles of track
    is adequate consideration.
    More specifically, Peterson contends that the Port’s donative intent is
    apparent in (1) its “deliberate hiding of its sweetheart arrangement with the
    railroads from the State Auditor,” (2) its “condon[ing]” the railroads’ decision not
    to pay track maintenance fees to his company, (3) its coordinated legal defense
    with BNSF, and (4) its decision not to charge rent. Pet’rs’ Suppl. Br. at 13-15, 18.
    Like the trial court, we do not find these facts sufficient to raise a question of
    donative intent. The assertion that the Port attempted to hide anything from the
    state auditor is simply not established in this record. Peterson asserts that the Port
    improperly failed to notify the state auditor during the 2012 and 2015 audits that
    the railroads were using the Richland Trackage rent-free and without paying a
    leasehold tax. As authority, he cites the deposition of the executive director of the
    Port, Scott Keller. Keller acknowledged that the Port had been audited, but
    nothing in his deposition suggests that the Port breached a duty to disclose the rent-
    free use of the tracks to the auditor, that leasehold tax was owed, or that there was
    any deliberate effort to conceal the arrangement. Further, the record itself belies
    any attempt to hide the indenture. Indentures are regularly recorded, and the
    9
    Peterson v. Dep’t of Revenue, et al., No. 97410-1
    header of the copy of the indenture, included in the clerk’s papers, suggests it had
    been filed with the federal court in 2010.5 This record does not support an
    inference that the Port attempted to hide anything from the auditor.
    Similarly, the fact that the Port did not insist the railroad pay track
    maintenance fees to Peterson’s company does not show an intent to make a gift.
    Nor does the fact that the Port and the railroad are coordinating their legal defense
    in this case. Only the fact that the Port has not charged rent gives us pause. Again,
    the Port took the Richland Trackage subject to many conditions, including the
    condition that it honor the agreements with the BNSF railroad. The United States
    clearly could have cancelled that agreement on six months’ notice. It is not so
    clear that the Port has the unfettered freedom to cancel as well. The indenture
    preserved a reversionary interest in the United States that could be triggered by a
    cancellation. At the very least, BNSF would have grounds to seek judicial review
    if the Port unilaterally attempted to terminate the contract, possibly leading to
    costly litigation. Thus, the real question is not whether abiding by the existing
    agreement is evidence of intent to give a gift: the question is whether honoring an
    agreement and failing to risk litigation is evidence of intent to give a gift. While
    we can imagine a case where the failure to cancel a contract could ripen into a gift
    5
    We note that the leasehold tax is imposed on the private lease of public property. RCW
    82.29A.030. While the issue is not before us, a cursory review of chapter 82.29A RCW suggests
    the railroads would not have owed tax on the rent they did not have to pay.
    10
    Peterson v. Dep’t of Revenue, et al., No. 97410-1
    of public funds when the municipality had the clear authority to cancel if, year
    after year, the private company reaped increasing benefits grossly disproportionate
    to the original consideration. This would be especially problematic if the
    agreement resulted in significant cost to the taxpayers.6 But there has been no
    showing of grossly inadequate consideration to the Port or significant cost to the
    taxpayers.7 Nothing in this record creates an inference of donative intent.
    Nor is the compensation so grossly inadequate as to suggest donative intent.
    Peterson contends that the 1998 transfer of land and improvements from the United
    States to the Port is irrelevant because the Port did not get the transfer from the
    railroads. He notes that in the baseball stadium cases, the baseball franchise itself
    paid rent to the municipality and tens of millions of dollars in construction costs in
    return for the use of the stadium. See Pet’rs’ Suppl. Br. at 9-10 (citing Taxpayers
    of King County, 
    133 Wn.2d at 598-601
    , and CLEAN, 
    130 Wn.2d at 798-99
    ).
    BNSF has only paid $50,000 to the Port this millennium.
    6
    We caution that it is not a gift of public funds to make an improvident deal. See Scott Paper Co.
    v. City of Anacortes, 
    90 Wn.2d 19
    , 26, 
    578 P.2d 1292
     (1978). In Scott Paper, for example, a city
    had contracted to provide water to a paper company for 25 years at a rate set by a formula. 
    90 Wn.2d at 22
    . Before the end of the contractual period, the cost of delivering water exceeded the
    contract price. 
    Id. at 26
    . The State argued that enforcing the contract amounted to a gift of the
    difference between the contract price and the cost of providing the water. 
    Id. at 31-32
    . We
    disagreed. We looked to the time the parties contracted, found that the city “fully expected to
    profit admirably from its agreements” at that time and found no violation of our state
    constitution. Scott Paper, 
    90 Wn.2d at 33
     (“[I]f intent to give a gift is lacking[,] the elements of
    a gift are not present, and article 8, section 7 does not apply.”).
    7
    Peterson has submitted a detailed declaration explaining the burden that modern trains impose
    on old tracks and the cost of deferred maintenance. Generously construed, it supports an
    inference that the rent-free use of the tracks will impose maintenance costs on Port taxpayers.
    11
    Peterson v. Dep’t of Revenue, et al., No. 97410-1
    We find no authority for the proposition that the consideration must come
    from the railroads. It is true that our past cases have usually concerned an alleged
    gift from the State or a municipality to a private party in exchange for (possibly
    inadequate) consideration from that private party. E.g., CLEAN, 
    130 Wn.2d 782
    (from the State and county to a baseball franchise); Citizens for Clean Air, 
    114 Wn.2d 20
     (from the city to a private municipal waste disposal company). But none
    of these cases require that the consideration be paid by the private party. Instead,
    these cases direct us to evaluate “the consideration received by the public for the
    expenditure of public funds.” CLEAN, 
    130 Wn.2d at
    798 (citing Citizens for Clean
    Air, 
    114 Wn.2d at 39
    ) (emphasis added). In this case, the consideration received
    was from the United States Department of Energy and, presently, is worth about
    $50 million. Peterson did not provide us with any evidence of the value of the
    rent-free use of the tracks in 1998, but assuming that value appreciated at the same
    rate (which is speculative), it was between $210,600 and $315,900 a year at the
    time. See CP at 1542. Peterson simply has not presented evidence that suggests
    the compensation received by the Port was inadequate, let alone grossly
    inadequate.
    The record does establish that the railroads have benefited from the fact that
    the Port has honored the agreements they had made with the United States
    government. However, the fact that a third party benefits is not sufficient to
    12
    Peterson v. Dep’t of Revenue, et al., No. 97410-1
    convert a lawful contract into a gift of public funds. See Taxpayers of King
    County, 
    133 Wn.2d at
    596 (citing Taxpayers, 
    108 Wn.2d at 705
    ); City of
    Marysville, 
    101 Wn.2d at 58
    . In City of Marysville, for example, we examined the
    benefits to third parties when a city purchased a private golf course, converted it to
    a public one, and continued to employ three club employees. 
    101 Wn.2d at 51
    . As
    city workers, the employees became members of the Public Employees’
    Retirement System (PERS). 
    Id.
     PERS administrators concluded that the three
    workers were entitled to service credit for their previous work at the golf course
    and billed the city accordingly. 
    Id.
     The city rejected the bill as an unconstitutional
    gift of public funds. 
    Id.
     We found that the legislature intended to offer service
    credit as an inducement for workers to stay on the job in such circumstances, and
    that the workers had “provided ample consideration for such benefits by remaining
    on the job after the acquisition.” 
    Id. at 58-59
    . Accordingly, there was no
    unconstitutional gift of public funds. 
    Id.
    While City of Marysville is only loosely on point, it does illustrate a situation
    where a political subdivision of the State assumed existing obligations and honored
    them at some cost to itself without violating article VIII, section 7. As the Port
    points out, Washington law allows the assumption of contracts except where
    assumption is specifically prohibited by law or would violate public policy. Puget
    13
    Peterson v. Dep’t of Revenue, et al., No. 97410-1
    Sound Nat’l Bank v. Dep’t of Revenue, 
    123 Wn.2d 284
    , 288, 
    868 P.2d 127
     (1994)
    (citing Schultz v. Werelius, 
    60 Wn. App. 450
    , 453, 
    803 P.2d 1334
     (1991)).
    In the alternative, Peterson argues that the existence of donative intent or
    grossly inadequate compensation should be treated as a question of fact, not law.
    Pet’rs’ Suppl. Br. at 13 n.8 (citing Casa del Rey v. Hart, 
    110 Wn.2d 65
    , 
    750 P.2d 261
     (1988); Matter of Estate of Little, 
    106 Wn.2d 269
    , 288, 
    721 P.2d 950
     (1986);
    Miebach v. Colasurdo, 
    102 Wn.2d 170
    , 
    685 P.2d 1074
     (1984); Buckerfield’s Ltd.
    v. B.C. Goose & Duck Farm Ltd., 
    9 Wn. App. 220
    , 
    511 P.2d 1360
     (1973)). We
    find these cases unhelpful.
    Little concerned whether a particular conveyance of real property was a gift
    or a sale, which would have triggered different consequences under intestacy law.
    Little, 
    106 Wn.2d at 288
    . That case turned on the deceased’s donative intent, not
    the donative intent of a municipal corporation. Miebach concerned whether
    Miebach was a bona fide purchaser given his at-least constructive knowledge of
    significant defects in a sheriff’s sale, including the gross inadequacy of the
    purchase price. Miebach, 
    102 Wn.2d at 175-76
    . While the court stated that
    whether Miebach was a bona fide purchaser for value was a mixed question of fact
    and law, it had no difficulty setting aside the sheriff’s sale and reversing the trial
    court’s decision quieting title in the purchaser on the record before it. 
    Id.
     at 181-
    82. Casa del Rey is substantially similar to Miebach. Buckerfield’s concerned
    14
    Peterson v. Dep’t of Revenue, et al., No. 97410-1
    whether a transfer of a boat within a family was a gift or an attempt to hide assets
    from creditors, which in part turned on whether there was donative intent on the
    part of the original owner. 
    9 Wn. App. at 221, 224
    . None of these cases help us
    decide whether, in this case, there is a material question of fact on the adequacy of
    compensation or the existence of donative intent.
    CONCLUSION
    The historical events that led up to this case are unusual. The Second World
    War and its aftermath drove the federal government to seize land and make deals it
    might not have otherwise made. But the trial court properly found that the Port did
    not make a gift of public funds when it accepted the land subject to existing
    contracts, and Peterson has not shown that the Port made a gift of public funds by
    continuing to honor those contracts. Accordingly, we affirm.
    15
    Peterson v. Dep't ofRevenue, et al., No. 97410-1
    WE CONCUR:
    16