DocketNumber: Supreme Court Case 12SC819
Judges: Marquez, Boatright, Eid, Coats
Filed Date: 3/16/2015
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
Colorado Supreme Court Opinions || March 16, 2015 Colorado Supreme Court -- March 16, 2015
The Supreme Court of the State of Colorado 2015 CO 15
Supreme Court Case No. 12SC819 Petitioners:
Cantina Grill, JV; Airport Lounges, LLC, a Colorado limited liability company; Dos Amigos v. Respondents:
City & County of Denver County Board of Equalization, by and through its members Cary
Judgment Affirmed March 16, 2015
Attorneys for Petitioners: Denver, CO
Dean Neuwirth P.C. Denver, CO
Attorneys for Respondents: Denver, CO
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JUSTICE MÃRQUEZ delivered the Opinion of the Court. JUSTICE BOATRIGHT concurs in part and dissents in part. JUSTICE EID dissents, and JUSTICE COATS joins in the dissent.
¶1      We granted certiorari review to consider whether several food and beverage concessionaires at a city-owned airport hold taxable possessory interests under our three-prong test established in Board of County Commissioners v. Vail Associates, Inc., 19 P.3d 1263 (Colo. 2001). In Vail Associates, we held that a private possessory interest in tax-exempt government property1 is taxable if it exhibits significant incidents of private ownership that distinguish it from the governmentâs underlying tax-exempt ownership. Id. at 1279. We articulated three factors demonstrating such incidents of private ownership: (1) whether the possessory interest provides a revenue-generating capability independent of the government property owner; (2) whether the possessory interest owner is able to exclude others from making the same use of the interest; and (3) whether the possessory interest is of sufficient duration to realize a private benefit therefrom. Id. In this case, we also granted review to consider whether the concessionairesâ interests, if taxable, were properly valued under the possessory interest valuation provisions in section 39-1-103(17), C.R.S. (2014). ¶2      Relying on Vail Associates, the City and County of Denver (âCityâ) assessed property taxes on the concessionairesâ possessory interests in their airport concession spaces and valued those interests in accordance with section 39-1-103(17). The concessionaires protested the valuation and eventually filed suit in district court, arguing that their possessory interests do not meet the independence and exclusivity prongs of the Vail Associates test. The concessionaires also contested the Cityâs valuation. The trial court ruled that the concessionairesâ interests meet the Vail Associates test and adopted the valuation that the City presented at trial. ¶3      The court of appeals affirmed, concluding that the concessionairesâ interests were taxable under Vail Associates. Cantina Grill, JV v. City & Cnty. of Denver Bd. of Equalization, 2012 COA 154, ¶¶ 28â42, 292 P.3d 1144, 1150â52. It reasoned that the concessionaires could exclude others from using their particular concession spaces and that the concessionairesâ revenue came from the traveling public, not the City. Id. The court of appeals also affirmed the trial courtâs adoption of the Cityâs valuation. Id. at ¶¶ 43â54, 292 P.3d at 1152â53. ¶4      We affirm. We agree with the court of appeals that the concessionairesâ possessory interests in their concession spaces are taxable interests under the three-factor test established in Vail Associates. The concessionairesâ interests are sufficiently exclusive because the concessionaires have the right to exclude others from using their respective concession spaces to operate a concession business. In addition, the totality of the circumstances reflects that the concessionairesâ revenue-generating capability is independent of the City. Finally, the Cityâs valuation of the concessionairesâ interests is consistent with the General Assemblyâs possessory interest valuation scheme set forth in section 39-1-103(17) and is supported by the record. I. Facts and Procedural History ¶5      The petitioners (âConcessionairesâ) are holders of possessory interests in real property owned by the City. Concessionaires operate eleven restaurants and lounges at Denver International Airport (âDIAâ). The City owns the property and improvements at DIA. Because DIA is owned by the City, it is exempt from real property taxation. See Colo. Const. art. X, § 4. ¶6      Concessionaires obtained their possessory interests from the City through written concession agreements.2 The concession agreements grant Concessionaires the âright to occupy, improve, and use the Concession Spaceâ for food and beverage services âconsistent with and subject to all of the terms and provisions of [the] Agreement.â Under the agreements, the City reserves the right to grant other concessionaires the right to sell food and beverages in other locations at DIA. ¶7      In consideration for the possessory interests granted under the agreements, Concessionaires pay the greater of either: (1) a defined percentage of their monthly gross revenues, which may fluctuate monthly or seasonally; or (2) a minimum monthly guarantee, which is calculated by applying a fixed price per square foot to the total square footage of the space exclusively possessed by the Concessionaire. The City has the authority to reestablish rentals, fees, and charges, provided that the adjustments are ânondiscriminatory and reasonable in relation to the cost of providing, operating, and maintaining property, services and facilities of the airport system.â The concession agreements expressly provide that âthe City shall not be construed or held to be a partner, associate, or joint venturer of Concessionaire in the conduct of its business.â ¶8      Under the concession agreements, Concessionaires are required to supply sufficient goods and products to fully stock their concession spaces. Concessionaires are also responsible for the expenses associated with renovating their concession spaces; furnishing, installing, and maintaining ductwork and connections for heating and air conditioning, water, electricity, natural gas, and lighting; and providing janitorial and maintenance services for their concession spaces. ¶9      The concession agreements also impose certain operating restrictions on Concessionaires. For example, Concessionaires may use their concession spaces only for food and beverage services; they may not charge more than 110% of âstreet pricesâ charged in non-airport restaurants offering similar food and services in the Denver metropolitan area; they must obtain the Cityâs approval to change their menus or prices, or to stay open fewer than sixteen hours per day; and they must require their officers, contractors, agents, and employees to comply with all airport security regulations adopted by the City. Testimony at trial indicated that these restrictions flow from Concessionairesâ non-traditional location at the airport. ¶10      Beginning with the 2001 tax year, the City assessed Concessionairesâ concession spaces as taxable possessory interests in tax-exempt property, relying on this courtâs opinion in Board of County Commissioners v. Vail Associates, Inc., 19 P.3d 1263 (Colo. 2001). The City then valued those interests in accordance with section 39-1-103(17), C.R.S. (2014). ¶11      In July 2010, Concessionaires protested the notice of valuation regarding their concession spaces for that year and petitioned the City and County of Denver Board of Equalization to review the valuations. The Board denied Concessionairesâ petitions, and Concessionaires sought review in district court under section 39-8-108, C.R.S. (2014). ¶12      The case proceeded to a trial de novo in June 2011, and the trial court issued a written ruling that largely affirmed the valuation.3 Relevant here, the trial court concluded that Concessionairesâ possessory interests in tax-exempt property were subject to taxation under this courtâs three-factor test set forth in Vail Associates. The trial court also adopted the valuation that the City presented at trial. ¶13      On appeal, Concessionaires challenged, among other things, the trial courtâs conclusion that their possessory interests are taxable under the independence and exclusivity prongs of the Vail Associates test. Concessionaires further argued that even if their interests are taxable, the trial court erred in approving the Cityâs valuation. The court of appeals affirmed, concluding that Concessionairesâ possessory interests are sufficiently independent under the Vail Associates test because Concessionairesâ source of revenue is the traveling public, not the City. Cantina Grill, ¶¶ 33â36, 292 P.3d at 1150â51. The court also concluded that Concessionairesâ possessory interests meet the exclusivity factor of the Vail Associates test because Concessionaires can exclude others from using their particular concession spaces. Id. at ¶¶ 39â42, 292 P.3d at 1151â52. Finally, the court of appeals concluded that the record supported the trial courtâs adoption of the Cityâs valuation. Id. at ¶ 54, 292 P.3d at 1153. ¶14      We granted Concessionairesâ petition for a writ of certiorari to review the court of appealsâ opinion regarding the taxability of Concessionairesâ possessory interests under Vail Associates and the Cityâs valuation of those interests under section 39-1-103(17). II. Standard of Review ¶15      An assessorâs valuation of property for taxation is presumed to be correct. Arapahoe Cnty. Bd. of Equalization v. Podoll, 935 P.2d 14, 18 (Colo. 1997). Thus, to rebut that presumption, a taxpayer who challenges an assessment bears the burden of proving, by a preponderance of the evidence, that the assessorâs valuation is incorrect. Bd. of Assessment Appeals v. Sampson, 105 P.3d 198, 204 (Colo. 2005). When a party appeals a taxing authorityâs decision to the district court, the court conducts a trial de novo and enters its own findings of fact and conclusions of law. § 39-8-108(1), C.R.S. (2014); Podoll, 935 P.2d at 18. Appellate courts review the district courtâs factual findings for an abuse of discretion and its legal conclusions de novo. § 39-8-108(3); E-470 Pub. Highway Auth. v. 455 Co., 3 P.3d 18, 22 (Colo. 2000). III. Taxability of Concessionairesâ Possessory Interests ¶16      The first issue in this case is whether Concessionairesâ possessory interests in their concession spaces at DIA are taxable property even though the underlying real property is tax-exempt because it is owned by the City. We first discuss the principles that underlie taxation of possessory interests in tax-exempt property and relate these principles to the three-prong test set forth in Board of County Commissioners v. Vail Associates, Inc., 19 P.3d 1263, 1275 (Colo. 2001). We then apply the Vail Associates test to Concessionairesâ possessory interests. A. The Vail Associates Test ¶17      The Colorado Constitution requires uniform taxation of all real and personal property unless article X specifically exempts the property from taxation. Colo. Const. art. X, § 3(1)(a) (âEach property tax levy shall be uniform upon all real and personal property not exempt from taxation under this article located within the territorial limits of the authority levying the tax.â); id. § 6 (âAll laws exempting from taxation property other than that specified in this article shall be void.â); see also Mesa Verde Co. v. Montezuma Cnty. Bd. of Equalization (Mesa Verde III), 898 P.2d 1, 7 (Colo. 1995) (â[T]he general assembly may not exempt from taxation any property which is not specifically exempted in Article X of the Colorado Constitution.â); Denver Beechcraft, Inc. v. Bd. of Assessment Appeals of Colo., 681 P.2d 945, 948 (Colo. 1984) (same).4 ¶18      Article X exempts certain classes of property from taxation, including, as relevant here, âproperty . . . of the state, counties, cities, towns, and other municipal corporations and public libraries.â Colo. Const. art. X, § 4. Although not listed in article X, we have also long recognized that âproperty owned by the United States government may not be subjected to state taxation under the Supremacy Clause of the United States Constitution.â Vail Assocs., 19 P.3d at 1271 (quoting Mesa Verde III, 898 P.2d at 7). ¶19      Coloradoâs property tax statutes likewise reflect that all real and personal property is taxable, except that exempted by law. Section 39-1-102(16), C.R.S. (2014), states that taxable property âmeans all property, real and personal, not expressly exempted from taxation by law.â As relevant here, âreal propertyâ includes â[a]ll lands or interests in landsâ and â[i]mprovements.â § 39-1-102(14)(a), (c) (emphasis added). This statutory definition of âreal propertyâ has remained essentially unchanged for over a century. See ch. 3, sec. 13, 1901 Colo. Sess. Laws, 43, 45. ¶20      Generally, interests in real property that are less than fee ownership are assessed under the âunit assessment rule,â a rule of property taxation that requires all estates in a unit of real property to be assessed together and the real estate, as an entirety, to be assessed to the owner of the fee. City & Cnty. of Denver v. Bd. of Assessment Appeals, 848 P.2d 355, 358 (Colo. 1993).5 The rule prohibits assessments on multiple taxpayers holding different interests in a single property. See id. at 359. Thus, where there are taxable interests in property that are less than fee ownership, such as a leasehold interest, âboth the lessorâs interest and the lesseeâs interest are assessed simultaneously,â and the property is taxed to the fee owner âas though it was an unencumbered fee.â Id. Under this method, âtaxation of the whole is presumed to include taxation of the derivative parts, with the owner passing on the burden of taxation as the fee owner chooses.â Vail Assocs., 19 P.3d at 1278. ¶21      However, where the fee owner is the government and therefore not subject to taxation, âthe unit assessment rule operates to tax the private ownership interest in the land and improvements together in the absence of a fee owner who pays the full taxes.â Id. at 1279 (emphasis added). Section 39-1-107(4), C.R.S. (2014), now expressly provides that â[t]he property tax on a possessory interest in real or personal property that is exempt from taxation under this article shall be assessed to the holder of the possessory interest and collected in the same manner as property taxes assessed to owners of real or personal property.â6 ¶22      Our jurisprudence reflects that taxation of private possessory interests in government-owned land is both appropriate and required under article X of the Colorado Constitution and Coloradoâs property tax statutes where: (1) the private possessory interest is distinct from the governmentâs ownership interest; and (2) taxation of the private interest does not effectively constitute a tax on the governmentâs ownership interest.7 ¶23      For example, in Rummel v. Musgrave, 350 P.2d 825 (Colo. 1960), we held that a private possessory interest in producing uranium lands obtained under a lease with the United States was subject to taxation by the State. We first determined that â[t]he lease in question is separate property, vendible, subject to the consent of the lessor and inheritable.â Id. 826. Accordingly, the possessory interest was taxable unless the tax could be said to be upon the âseparate and distinct ownership of the federal government.â Id. Turning to whether taxation would be a tax on the governmentâs ownership interest, we concluded that âit is obvious that no burden is placed upon the United States Government in either a direct or indirect manner by the tax in question.â Id. at 827. Thus, we concluded that the State had properly levied and collected taxes on the possessory interests held by the mining company. ¶24      Similarly, in Mesa Verde Co. v. Board of County Commissioners (Mesa Verde I),495 P.2d 229, 234 (Colo. 1972), we held that a concessionaireâs possessory interest in the improvements it constructed to conduct its services for the public at Mesa Verde National Park were taxable even though the federal government retained title to the improvements. We first ascertained the concessionaireâs interest in the improvements by analyzing the concessionaireâs contract with the government as well as the partiesâ actions under the contract. Id. at 232â33. We noted, for example, that the contract provisions revealed âthe partiesâ intention to accord Mesa Verde Company a large amount of decisional authority and discretion with respect to its improvements,â id. at 232, and that the concessionaire normally paid âthe entire cost of constructing its improvementsâ and retained âall profits derived from its operations.â Id. at 233. We concluded that the concessionaireâs interests reflected âsignificant incidents of ownership.â Id. at 233. As such, we determined that the concessionaireâs interests were taxable. See id. We observed that strong policy considerations supported our decision to allow ad valorem taxation of the concessionaireâs improvements, noting that âwhere a party has the right to possession, use, enjoyment, and profits of the property, that party should not be permitted to use the bare legal title of the Government to avoid his fair and just share of state taxation.â Id. ¶25      After we decided Mesa Verde I, the General Assembly enacted a statute exempting certain private possessory interests from taxation, including interests in federal park land obtained under a lease or concession agreement. See Mesa Verde III, 898 P.2d at 6â7 (citing § 39-3-135(4)(c), C.R.S. (1994)). Despite this provision, the Montezuma County Assessor assessed Mesa Verde Companyâs use of, and possessory interest in, federal land for its concession at Mesa Verde National Park. Id. at 2.8 Mesa Verde challenged the assessment, contending it was exempt from property tax under the statute. The County argued that, to the extent the statute created an exemption for Mesa Verdeâs possessory interest, it violated article X of the Colorado Constitution. Id.  at 3. We agreed. ¶26      We determined that Mesa Verdeâs possessory rights under its concession agreement were âinterest[s] in landâ and âreal property,â and thus taxable under article X and the General Assemblyâs definition of taxable property in section 39-1-102(16). Id.  at 4â5. We then held that the statute exempting such possessory interests from taxation was unconstitutional because âthe general assembly may not exempt from taxation any property which is not specifically exempted in Article X of the Colorado Constitution.â Id. at 7. Finally, we held that state taxation of such possessory interests did not violate the Supremacy Clause because âthe federal governmentâs constitutional immunity from state taxation is not infringed when a state imposes a tax on private corporations and they are entities independent of the United States using property in connection with their own commercial activities for profit-making.â Id. at 9. ¶27      In 1996, in response to Mesa Verde III, the General Assembly again sought to exempt certain possessory interests from taxation. The General Assembly enacted section 39-3-136, declaring that certain possessory interests in tax-exempt property âshall not be subject to property taxation unless specific statutory provisions have been enacted that direct the taxation of such possessory interests.â Vail Assocs., 19 P.3d at 1272 (citing § 39-3-136(2), C.R.S. (2000)). Around the time of this enactment, the Eagle County Assessor assessed Vail Associates, Inc.âs possessory interests in land obtained under a special use permit from the U.S. Forest Service. The permit entitled Vail to occupy, use, and enjoy 12,590 acres of national forest land to operate the Vail ski resort. Id. at 1267. Vail challenged Eagle Countyâs assessment on the grounds that its possessory interest was exempt from taxation under section 39-3-136. Id. at 1267â68. In Vail Associates, we ultimately held that this legislation unconstitutionally exempted some private possessory interests in tax-exempt property from taxation, contrary to article X and our decision in Mesa Verde III. Id. at 1267. ¶28      We observed that âthe principal design of the constitutionâs revenue provisions is to subject all private real and personal property to the payment of its fair proportion of taxation necessary for governmental purposes, unless the property falls within a constitutionally stated category of exemption.â Id. at 1273. We also observed that the 1996 amendments to the property tax statutes did not alter the longstanding statutory definition of âreal propertyâ in section 39-1-102(14)(a), or otherwise redefine real or personal property to exclude possessory interests. Id. at 1275. We concluded that the statutory provision instead improperly exempted certain possessory interests from taxation in violation of the Colorado Constitutionâs requirement in article X that all real and personal property be taxed. Id. at 1278. ¶29      After concluding that the exemption in section 39-3-136 was unconstitutional, we discussed the necessary requirements for lawful taxation of a private possessory interest in tax-exempt government property. Id. at 1278â79. Drawing from our prior cases, we determined that âfor taxation to occur, the possessory interest in tax-exempt property must exhibit significant incidents of private ownership that distinguish it from the underlying tax-exempt ownership.â Id. at 1279. This is because the taxation of private possessory interests in government landsâwhich is permissibleâmust be distinguished from taxation of the governmentâs underlying ownership of the land. Id.  at 1278. We then articulated three factors demonstrating such incidents of private ownership: (1) whether the possessory interest provides a revenue-generating capability independent of the government property owner; (2) whether the possessory interest owner can exclude others from making the same use of the interest; and (3) whether the possessory interest is of sufficient duration to realize a private benefit therefrom. Id. at 1279. ¶30      Finally, applying this three-factor test, we concluded that Vailâs possessory interest under the special use permit was real property taxable under article X because Vail âowns a significant ownership interest in federal property from which it derives revenues for private benefit; it can exclude others from using the federal property it occupies for the same use, and its interest extends to the year 2031, a significant period of time for realizing its private benefit.â Id. at 1280. ¶31      In sum, Coloradoâs constitution and property tax statutes reflect that all real and personal property is taxable, except for property that is expressly exempted from taxation by law. Colo. Const. art. X, §§ 3(1)(a), 4, 6, 9, 10; § 39-1-102(16). Moreover, Colorado property tax statutes have long defined âreal propertyâ to include âinterests in landâ and â[i]mprovements.â § 39-1-102(14)(a), (c). Our case law reflects that a possessory interest in tax-exempt property is taxable where the interest exhibits significant incidents of private ownership that distinguish it from the underlying government ownership. The factors demonstrating significant incidents of private ownership ensure that the interest is indeed a taxable property interest under article X of the Colorado Constitution and the property tax statutes and, importantly, that taxation of the interest does not effectively constitute a tax on the governmentâs underlying ownership interest. B. Application ¶32      Concessionairesâ written concession agreements grant them the âright to occupy, improve, and useâ their respective concession spaces for food and beverage services âconsistent with and subject to all of the terms and provisions of [the] Agreement.â Concessionaires contend that their possessory interests in concession spaces at DIA are not taxable under the first two factors of this courtâs test in Vail Associates. Specifically, Concessionaires contend that: (1) their use and possession of the concession spaces are not sufficiently exclusive; and (2) their revenue-generating capability is not independent of the City. 1. Exclusivity ¶33      Concessionaires argue that their use is not exclusive because the concession agreements permit the City to grant other concessionaires the right to operate restaurants and sell food and beverages in other locations at DIA. We disagree. ¶34      The exclusivity factor of the Vail Associates test ensures that the interest to be taxed is indeed a property interest that is taxable under article X and the revenue statutes. To be taxable under article X of the Colorado Constitution, the possessory interest must be sufficiently exclusive to qualify as a real property interest as defined under the revenue statutes. In Vail Associates, we indicated that the exclusivity prong turns on âthe ability of the possessory interest owner to exclude others from making the same use of the interest.â 19 P.3d at 1279. We noted that although some degree of exclusivity is required for possessory interest taxation, âneither absolute control nor absolute exclusivity is required.â Id. at 1279 n.21 (quoting Power Res. Coop. v. Depât of Revenue, 996 P.2d 969, 973 (Or. 2000)). We also noted that âconcurrent uses of property are not necessarily inconsistent with exclusivity.â Id. (citing City of San Jose v. Carlson, 67 Cal. Rptr. 2d 719, 725 (Cal. Ct. App. 1997); ScottâFree River Expeditions, Inc. v. Cnty. of El Dorado, 250 Cal. Rptr. 504, 508 (Cal. Ct. App. 1988)). Therefore, we determined that even though Vail was operating under a special use permit that reserved the right of the Forest Service to allow uses by others that did not materially interfere with the ski resortâs uses under its permit, its interest was sufficiently exclusive because the ski resort could âexclude others from using the federal property it occupie[d] for the same use.â Id. at 1266, 1280. ¶35      Importantly, our analysis in Vail Associates focused on whether the ski resortâs use of the particular area it occupied was sufficiently exclusive. In other words, our inquiry regarding exclusivity did not turn on whether the Forest Service leased lands to other ski resorts on nearby government land. ¶36      Case law in the real property context supports the notion that exclusivity refers to the interest holderâs ability to exclude others from the same use of the particular area it occupies.9 In Bernhardt v. Hemphill, 878 P.2d 107, 113 (Colo. App. 1994), the court of appeals analyzed whether a real property interest was created through a time-share contract. In its analysis, the court of appeals focused on whether the contract entitled the time-share owner to the exclusive use of any particular unit. Id. The court of appeals held that the time-share contract did not transfer a real property interest because it did not provide the right to reserve âany particular unit, for any particular annual period.â Id. In contrast, a âtime-span estate,â which is legislatively recognized as a distinct interest in real property, includes, among other requirements, â[a]n exclusive right to possession and occupancy of the unit during an annually recurring period of time.â § 38-33-110(8)(b), C.R.S. (2014); see Bd. of Cnty Commârs v. Colo. Bd. of Assessment Appeals, 628 P.2d 156, 158 (Colo. App. 1981) (stating that section 38-33-110 is âa legislative recognition of the time share estate as a distinct interest in real propertyâ). ¶37      In this case, the concession agreements and testimony at trial established that each Concessionaire has the right to exclude others from using that Concessionaireâs particular concession space to operate a concession business. The concession agreements grant Concessionaires the âright to occupy, improve, and use the Concession Space consistent with and subject to all of the terms and provisions of [the] Agreement.â Nothing in the concession agreements allows the City to permit a second concessionaire the right to operate out of an existing Concessionaireâs location. Indeed, Concessionairesâ witness, who is a managing member of all the concessions at issue in this case, admitted at trial that only the particular Concessionaire âhas the right to occupy, use, improve, and generate revenue from that concession space.â Based on the concession agreements and testimony at trial, the trial court found that â[n]o other concessionaires have the right to use the [Concessionairesâ] concession spaces,â and âthe City does not permit anyone else to use those particular concession spaces to operate a business[].â ¶38      Concessionaires point to language in the concession agreements to argue that their interests are not exclusive: City reserves the right to grant to other concessionaires the right to operate restaurants and sell food and beverages in other locations in the Airport, and Concessionaire understands and agrees that its right to the permitted uses is not exclusive. (Emphasis added.) Testimony at trial established that under this provision, the City has permitted Concessionairesâ direct competitors to operate in areas near Concessionairesâ existing spaces. ¶39      We disagree that this language in the agreements is fatal to the taxability of Concessionairesâ interests. The provision permits the City to enter into agreements with other concessionaires to sell food and beverages at other locations at DIA. It does not permit the City to allow a second concessionaire to operate a concession out of an existing Concessionaireâs location. Because the exclusivity factor focuses on whether the interest holderâs use of a particular area it occupies is sufficiently exclusive, the interest holderâs inability to exclude competition from other locations is not probative of exclusivity. Therefore, we find Concessionairesâ reliance on this provisionunpersuasive. ¶40      In sum, the exclusivity factor in this case is met because Concessionaires have the right to exclude others from using each of their concession spaces to operate a concession business. That a competitor may operate a concession at a nearby location has no bearing on this factor. 2. Independence ¶41      Concessionaires argue that their revenue-generating capability is not independent of the City because of the extensive operating restrictions imposed on them under their concession agreements. The court of appeals rejected this argument, concluding that the independence prong of Vail Associates turns not on the level of control exercised by the government owner, but instead on the source of the possessory interest holderâs revenue and, more specifically, whether the government owner is the only or the dominant source of that revenue. Cantina Grill, ¶ 33, 292 P.3d at 1150â51. We disagree with the court of appeals that operating restrictions are irrelevant to the independence inquiry. See id. at ¶ 35, 292 P.3d at 1151. However, we conclude that the Cityâs operating restrictions in this case do not deprive Concessionaires of the independent revenue-generating capability of their concession spaces. ¶42      As discussed above, in considering the taxability of private possessory interests in tax-exempt land, care must be taken to ensure that the tax is indeed imposed on a private interest, rather than on the underlying government-owned property. Thus, a possessory interest is taxable only if âit provides a revenue-generating capability to the private owner independent of the government property owner.â Vail Assocs., 19 P.3d at 1279 (emphasis added). This factor ensures that the tax falls on the private interest, as distinguished from the government. See id. ¶43      In Vail Associates, we concluded that âVail owns a significant ownership interest in federal property from which it derives revenues for private benefit.â Id. at 1280. Although this statement acknowledged Vailâs ârevenue-generating capability,â it did not analyze the requisite degree of âindependenceâ from the government property owner. We discussed neither the source of the ski resortâs revenues nor any restrictions the government placed on the resortâs operations. ¶44      Because Vail Associates does not further define the independence factor, we look to other Colorado case law for additional guidance. This case law demonstrates that the degree of control exercised by the possessory interest holder, not merely its source of revenue, is relevant to determining whether the possessory interest holderâs revenue-generating capability is sufficiently independent from the government. ¶45      In Mesa Verde I, we upheld a property tax on improvements located on federally owned property used by Mesa Verde Company, a private concessionaire. 495 P.2d at 234. In upholding the tax, we emphasized that the contractual provisions reflected the partiesâ intent to accord Mesa Verde âa large amount of decisional authority and discretion with respect to its improvements.â Id. at 232. We observed, for example, that Mesa Verde had authority, subject to the governmentâs approval, to build improvements; to transfer, assign, encumber, or mortgage its possessory interest; and to charge the public appropriate rates in connection with its use. Id. We further observed that Mesa Verde was contractually required to provide all necessary maintenance and repairs on the improvements. Id. ¶46      By contrast, the concessionaire in Southern Cafeteria, Inc. v. Property Tax Administrator lacked sufficient independence from the federal government. 677 P.2d 362, 364â65 (Colo. App. 1983). In that case, Southern Cafeteria provided food service at the Denver Federal Center under a General Services Administration contract. Id. at 363. The court of appeals distinguished Southern Cafeteriaâs interest from the concessionaireâs interest in Mesa Verde I. Under Southern Cafeteriaâs contract, the federal government provided essentially all of the equipment necessary for the operation. Id. The government also maintained and repaired the building structures. Id. at 365. Finally, the government also controlled the pricing structure and fixed the amount of profit the cafeteria could realize. Id. at 363, 365. Under these circumstances, the court of appeals determined that Southern Cafeteria was not independent of the federal government and its interest under its concession agreement was not taxable. Id.  at 365. Importantly, the court of appeals rejected the property tax administratorâs argument that the assessment was lawful because Southern Cafeteria was not paid a fee but instead operated cafeterias and snack bars for a profit, meaning that its revenues did not come directly from the government. The court focused not on the source of the revenue but on the concessionaireâs lack of independence, finding no distinction between the government âpaying [a contractor] a fixed profit and fixing a ceiling on Southern Cafeteriaâs profits on its own operation.â Id. ¶47      The principles embodied in Mesa Verde I and Southern Cafeteria are reflected in section 39-1-103(17)(a)(III), C.R.S. (2014), which excludes management contracts from possessory interest taxation. Under section 39-1-103(17)(a)(III), the source of revenue is not dispositive as to whether a government contractor is statutorily exempt from possessory interest taxation. Rather, the exemption may apply either where the contractor operates the governmentâs property for a fee, or where the government controls the amount of profit the contractor can realize or sets the prices charged by the contractor. § 39-1-103(17)(a)(III)(C). This section also sets forth additional criteria, namely: (1) whether the government provides all funds to operate the property; (2) whether the government owns all of the property used in the operation of the property subject to the contract; (3) whether the government reserves the right to use the property; (4) whether the property is maintained and repaired at the expense of the government; and (5) whether the management contractor has no leasehold or similar interest in the property.10 § 39-1-103(17)(a)(III)(A), (B), (D), (E), (G). ¶48      Finally, case law we relied upon in Vail Associates in articulating the three-factor test supports the notion that the independence inquiry does not turn on the source of revenue alone. For instance, in California, the independence factor is âmeasured by the amount of routine control and supervision enjoyed by the user, with the recognition that the government owner necessarily retains ultimate control.â City of San Jose, 67 Cal. Rptr. 2d at 723 (internal quotation marks and citations omitted); see also Cal. Rev. & Tax Code § 107(a)(1) (defining independent as âthe ability to exercise authority and exert control over the management or operation of the property or improvementsâ), cited in Vail Assocs., 19 P.3d at 1279 n.21. If the government owner retains sufficient control, âthe user may be considered to be an agent, and the [governmentâs] immunity from taxation extends to the user.â City of San Jose, 67 Cal. Rptr. 2d at 723 (citations omitted). This agency approach is consistent with the United States Supreme Courtâs view that the Supremacy Clause bars taxation where âthe levy falls on the [federal government] itself, or on an agency or instrumentality so closely connected to the Government that the two cannot be realistically viewed as separate entities, at least insofar as the activity being taxed is concerned.â United States v. New Mexico, 455 U.S. 730, 735 (1982). ¶49      Thus, the independence factor, first articulated in Vail Associates, does not focus solely on the interest holderâs source of the revenue. Instead, we look to the totality of the circumstances to determine whether an interest holderâs revenue-generating capability is truly independent from the government, or whether the interest holder is merely an agent of the government, such that any tax on the interest holder would be a tax on the government. These circumstances include, but are not limited to: (1) whether the government pays a fee to the interest holder for its operation of the property in question; (2) whether the government controls the prices the interest holder can charge or restricts the profits the interest holder can generate; (3) whether the interest holder provides the supplies, equipment, and improvements necessary for the operation of the property; (4) whether the interest holder is responsible for the expense of maintaining and repairing the property; and (5) whether the interest holder has sufficient control and supervision of its operation.11See Mesa Verde I, 495 P.2d at 232; Southern Cafeteria, 677 P.2d at 363â65; see also § 39-1-103(17)(a)(III). ¶50      Applying this test to the facts here, we conclude that Concessionairesâ revenue-generating capability is sufficiently independent from the City that the independence factor is met. ¶51      First, Concessionairesâ revenue comes from the traveling public, and, in contrast to Southern Cafeteria, the City does control the amount of profit that Concessionaires can make. Concessionaires can set their own prices, subject to the Cityâs approval. Although the City restricts the prices to a maximum of 110% of âstreet prices,â this restriction protects the traveling public from price-gouging; its purpose is not to control Concessionairesâ profit. ¶52      Second, Concessionaires are responsible for the cost of supplies, equipment, and improvements for the operation of their concession spaces. The concession agreements require Concessionaires to âsupply sufficient goods and products to fully stock [their] concession spaces.â Concessionaires are also required by the agreements to install a water meter, electric meter, and gas meter, if required, at Concessionairesâ expense. Finally, the concession agreements require Concessionaires to renovate their concession spaces at their âsole cost and expense.â Such renovations include furniture, fixtures, and equipment. Though the improvements affixed to the realty become property of the City, private commercial leases similarly vest ownership of the improvements in the lessor upon termination. See, e.g., Highlands Ranch Univ. Park, LLC v. Uno of Highlands Ranch, Inc., 129 P.3d 1020, 1022 (Colo. App. 2005) (evaluating a lease that required lessee to construct building and that vested ownership in lessor upon termination). ¶53      Third, Concessionaires are responsible for the expense of maintaining and repairing their concession spaces. The concession agreements provide that Concessionaires are responsible for the expense of janitorial services and maintenance for the concession spaces, including redecoration, painting, and repair and replacement of the worn furnishings. Moreover, Concessionaires are responsible for casualty loss of the improvements, as provided by the concession agreements. ¶54      Finally, while the City imposes operating restrictions related to some aspects of Concessionairesâ operations, such as the price of their products, hours of operation, and menus, these operating restrictions do not deprive Concessionaires of control and supervision of their operations. Cf. United States v. Colorado, 460 F. Supp. 1184, 1186 (D. Colo. 1978) (noting that the government contractorâs âentire role or relationshipâ to the property it managed was defined by contract), affâd, 627 F.2d 217 (10th Cir. 1980), cited in Vail Assocs., 19 P.3d at 1279. Nor do the operating restrictions in this case convert Concessionaires into agents or partners of the City. Importantly, the concession agreements provide that âit is expressly understood and agreed that the City shall not be construed or held to be a partner, associate, or joint venture of Concessionaire.â Moreover, many of the terms concerning hours of operation and menus may be modified with the consent of the City. Concessionaires may even assign their concession agreements with City approval. This is similar to Mesa Verde I, where many of the concessionaireâs actions were subject to the governmentâs prior approval. 495 P.2d at 232. That the City maintains ultimate control over some aspects of Concessionairesâ operations is not dispositive because â[t]he governmental body that contracted with the user has the responsibility to safeguard the use of public property, and would be remiss if it did not retain ultimate control over such use, by grantees as well as by the public.â City of San Jose, 67 Cal. Rptr. 2d at 725 (internal quotation marks and citations omitted). ¶55      In sum, although we disagree with the court of appeals that operating restrictions are not relevant to the independence prong, we conclude that the independence factor is met in this case because the totality of the circumstances indicates that Concessionairesâ revenue-generating capability is independent from the City, such that Concessionaires are not merely the Cityâs agents, and a tax on Concessionairesâ possessory interest would not be effectively a tax on the government. C. Conclusion ¶56      Because Concessionairesâ interests are sufficiently exclusive and independent, and Concessionaires do not dispute that their interests are of sufficient duration, we conclude that Concessionairesâ interests exhibit significant incidents of ownership under the Vail Associates test. Therefore, Concessionairesâ possessory interests are taxable property under article X of the Colorado Constitution and the revenue statutes, even though the underlying government-owned land is tax-exempt. IV. Valuation of Concessionairesâ Possessory Interests ¶57      Concessionaires also contend that the trial court erred in approving the Cityâs valuation of their possessory interests. Specifically, Concessionaires dispute the determination of their âreasonably estimated future annual rents,â and they also argue that portions of their future rent should have been excluded from the valuation. ¶58      As relevant here, section 39-1-103(17), C.R.S. (2014),12 sets forth a two-step method for the valuation of taxable possessory interests in tax-exempt properties.13 First, to calculate the actual value of the possessory interest, the assessor must calculate the âpresent value of the reasonably estimated future annual rents or fees required to be paid by the holder of the possessory interest to the owner of the underlying real or personal property.â § 39-1-103(17)(a)(II)(A). The ârents or feesâ under this provision shall be the âactual contract rents or fees reasonably expected to be paid . . . unless it is shown that the actual contract rents or fees to be paid . . . are not representative of the market rents or fees paid for that type of real or personal property.â Id. Second, the assessor shall exclude rent and fees required to be paid for all rights other than the exclusive right to use and possess the property. § 39-1-103(17)(a)(II)(B). Relevant here, the statute indicates that the following are examples of such payments that shall be excluded: (1) â[n]onexclusive rights to use and possess . . . common areasâ; (2) ârights to conduct a businessâ; and (3) âreimbursement . . . of the reasonable costs of operating, maintaining, and repairing the land, improvements, or personal property to which the possessory interest pertains, regardless of whether such costs are separately stated, provided that the types of such costs can be identified with reasonable certainty from the documents granting the possessory interest.â Id. ¶59      At trial, a representative of the Cityâs assessor, qualified as an expert in valuation, testified that he used the minimum monthly guarantee as the basis to determine the âreasonably estimated future annual rents.â Under the concession agreements, Concessionaires pay the greater of either: (1) a defined percentage of their monthly gross revenues, which may fluctuate monthly or seasonally; or (2) a minimum monthly guarantee, which is calculated by applying a fixed price per square foot to the total square footage of the space exclusively possessed by the Concessionaire. The representative testified that he used the minimum monthly guarantee instead of the percentage of monthly gross revenues because, regardless of circumstances, Concessionaires would pay at least the minimum monthly guarantee in the future. The representative also determined that the only qualifying deduction or exclusion required under section 39-1-103(17)(a)(II)(B) was the value of Concessionairesâ non-exclusive occupancy of the common areas, like food court spaces. It was undisputed that the assessor excluded all rent that would be paid for common areas. The trial court ultimately adopted the representativeâs valuations of Concessionairesâ possessory interests. A. Reasonably Estimated Future Annual Rents or Fees ¶60      Concessionaires contend that the use of the minimum monthly guarantee was not an appropriate basis for determining the âreasonably estimated future annual rents or feesâ under section 39-1-103(17). Section 39-1-103(17)(a)(II)(A) provides that the âreasonably estimated future annual rents or feesâ are the âactual contract rents or fees reasonably expected to be paidâ unless it is âshownâ that they âare not representative of the market rents or fees paid for that type of real or personal property.â Concessionaires argue that the minimum monthly guarantee was neither the âactual contract rent . . . expected to be paidâ nor was it ârepresentative of market rents.â ¶61      First, Concessionaires argue that the minimum monthly guarantee was not representative of the âactual contract rents or fees reasonably expected to be paidâ because most Concessionaires historically paid the percentage of monthly gross revenues instead of minimum monthly guarantee. However, the representativeâs use of the minimum monthly guarantee, approved by the trial court, was a reasonable estimate of future rent because Concessionaires are obligated under their concession agreements to pay at least that amount. Though it also may have been reasonable for an assessor to estimate future rent based on historical payments of a percentage of monthly gross revenues, Concessionaires have not met their burden to prove that the use of the minimum monthly guarantee was an unreasonable estimate of future rent under their concession agreements. See Bd. of Assessment Appeals v. Sampson, 105 P.3d 198, 204 (Colo. 2005) (the taxpayer has the burden to show by a preponderance of the evidence that the valuations are incorrect). ¶62      Regardless, Concessionaires contend that the trial court erred in adopting the representativeâs valuation because the representative did not consider whether minimum monthly guarantee was ârepresentative of the market rentsâ for similar property. However, the trial court found, and the record supports, that the representative did inquire into the market rateâbut determined that the only comparable market consisted of the concessions at DIA. ¶63      Thus, the trial courtâs adoption of the representativeâs use of the minimum monthly guarantee as a basis for determining the âreasonably estimated future annual rents or feesâ is consistent with section 39-1-103(17) and is supported by the record. B. Exclusions ¶64      Concessionaires also contend that the valuation does not exclude portions of future rent that are for payments not associated with their exclusive use and occupancy of their concession spaces. Specifically, Concessionaires contend that a portion of their future rent should be excluded under section 39-1-103(17)(a)(II)(B) as payments for the right to conduct a business and as âreimbursementsâ to the City for the costs of operating and maintaining the airport. We disagree. ¶65      The concession agreements state that the âcompensationâ due under the agreements is âfor the rights and privileges herein granted by the City.â The rights granted under the agreements are âthe right to occupy, improve, and use the Concession Space.â Together, these provisions indicate that the rent (or compensation) due under the agreements is for the right to occupy, improve, and use the concession spacesânot for the right to conduct a business or for reimbursements for operating expenses. ¶66      Still, Concessionaires contend that a portion of their future rent should be excluded as a payment for the right to conduct a business. Section 39-1-103(17)(a)(II)(B) clarifies that excludable rent for the right to conduct a business should be determined in accordance with guidelines published by the administratorâwhich are contained in the Assessorâs Reference Library (âARLâ). In providing guidance on calculating exclusions from future rent, the ARL recognizes that possessory interest agreements are usually structured in such a way that the rent due under the agreement already âreflect[s] amounts after expenses and income exclusions are taken into account,â and, thus, no exclusion under section 39-1-103(17)(a)(II)(B) is usually necessary. 3 Assessorâs Reference Library 7.78 (rev. Mar. 2014) (emphasis in original). However, exclusions may be necessary when the rent due under the agreement is based on a percentage of revenue, i.e. percentage rent. Id. When percentage rent is used as the basis to calculate future rent, the ARL instructs assessors to compare the percentage rent to market rent to determine the amount attributable to business value. Id. at 7.79. Where percentage rent is higher than market rent, the difference should be excluded as rent for the right to conduct a business. Id. ¶67      In this case, the representative used the minimum monthly guaranteeânot a percentage of monthly gross revenuesâas the basis to value Concessionairesâ possessory interests. Consistent with the ARL guidelines, the representative testified that by using the minimum annual guarantee, he was certain that he had not captured any value for the right to conduct a business. Moreover, the representative also testified that the minimum monthly guarantee was representative of market rent. Thus, evidence presented at trial supports his assertion that no portion of that rent was attributable to payments for the right to conduct a business because the minimum monthly guarantee and market rent are essentially the same. We therefore conclude that the trial court did not err in adopting the representativeâs valuation that did not exclude any portion of future rent as a payment for the right to conduct a business. ¶68      Finally, Concessionaires argue that a portion of future rent is for âreimbursementsâ to the City for the costs of operating and maintaining the airport. Section 39-1-103(17)(a)(II)(B) requires an appraiser to exclude from valuation any fees that will be paid as âreimbursement to the owner of the underlying real or personal property of the reasonable costs of operating, maintaining, and repairing the land, improvements, or personal property to which the possessory interest pertains.â Such deductions, however, apply only where âthe types of such costs can be identified with reasonable certainty from the documents granting the possessory interest.â Id. ¶69      As Concessionaires conceded at trial, nothing in the concession agreements specifically identifies any reimbursement to the City for the costs of âoperating, maintaining, or repairingâ the airport. In fact, the concession agreements provide that the City shall maintain the terminal and concourses at its expense. ¶70      Nonetheless, Concessionaires argue that because the City can reestablish the minimum monthly guarantee under the concession agreements in reasonable relation to the cost of providing, operating, and maintaining the airport, such increases are reimbursementsâ for operating expenses. In support of this argument, Concessionaires rely on several letters from the City notifying them of such increases. The letters indicate that increases in facility costs contributed to these increases. However, the trial court found that the âpercentage increases of facility costs bear no obvious relation to the percentage increases in the minimum guaranteed amounts.â More importantly, nowhere do the concession agreements indicate that any portion of payment, including that attributed to a payment increase, constitutes a reimbursement to the City. Any City use of payments from Concessionaires to operate, maintain, and repair the airport does not transform such paymentâwhich the concession agreements state is for the âright to occupy, improve and use the Concession Spaceââinto a reimbursement for operating and maintaining the airport. ¶71      Therefore, we reject Concessionairesâ contention that some of their payment is excludable either as payment for the right to conduct a business or reimbursement to the City for operating expenses. The trial courtâs adoption of the Cityâs valuation is consistent with section 39-1-103(17)(a)(II)(B) and the administratorâs guidance in the ARL and is supported by the record. V. Conclusion ¶72      We hold that Concessionairesâ possessory interests in their concession spaces are taxable interests under article X of the Colorado Constitution and the property tax statutes because Concessionairesâ possessory interests meet the three-prong test established in Vail Associates. We conclude that Concessionairesâ interests are sufficiently exclusive because Concessionaires have the right to exclude others from their concession spaces to operate a concession business. Moreover, we conclude that the totality of the circumstances indicates that Concessionairesâ revenue-generating capability is independent of the City. ¶73      We also hold that the trial courtâs adoption of the Cityâs valuation is consistent with the General Assemblyâs possessory interest valuation scheme set forth in section 39-1-103(17), C.R.S. (2014), and is supported by the record. Accordingly, we affirm the judgment of the court of appeals, albeit on slightly different grounds. 1 The State Division of Taxation defines a possessory interest in public property as: âA private property interest in government-owned property or the right to the occupancy and use of any benefit in government-owned property that has been granted under lease, permit, license, concession, contract, or other agreement.â 3 Assessorâs Reference Library 7.70 (rev. Mar. 2014). Because we rely on the Divisionâs definition of âpossessory interestâ in the context of this case, we must analyze whether the particular âpossessory interestâ is sufficiently exclusive to determine whether it is taxable under Vail Associates. We note that, in the real property context, a possessory interest necessarily connotes an interest that is exclusive. Cf. Blackâs Law Dictionary 1353 (10th ed. 2014) (defining possessory interest as â[t]he present right to control property, including the right to exclude others, by a person who is not necessarily the ownerâ); Restatement (First) of Prop. § 7 (1936) (defining possessory interest as âa physical relation to the land of a kind which gives a certain degree of physical control over the land, and an intent so to exercise such control as to exclude other members of society in general from any present occupation of the landâ). 2 Although Concessionaires operate under separate concession agreements, they acknowledge that the agreements are virtually identical. Thus, we refer to the concession agreements collectively and quote the exemplar agreement submitted into evidence at trial as Exhibit 1. 3 The trial court did not affirm valuations for three specific locations that a representative of the City Assessor admitted at trial were improperly valued. The trial court adopted the City representativeâs amended valuation. 4 Corporations and corporate property are expressly subject to taxation. See Colo. Const. art. X, § 9 (âThe power to tax corporations and corporate property, real and personal, shall never be relinquished or suspended.â); id. § 10 (âAll corporations in this state, or doing business therein, shall be subject to taxation for state, county, school, municipal and other purposes, on the real and personal property owned or used by them within the territorial limits of the authority levying the tax.â). 5 This rule is established by section 39-1-106, C.R.S. (2014), which provides that â[f]or purposes of property taxation, it shall make no difference that the use, possession, or ownership of any taxable property is qualified, limited, not the subject of alienation, or the subject of levy or distraint separately from the particular tax derivable therefrom.â 6 The General Assembly added subsection (4) to section 39-1-107 after this court reiterated in Vail Associates, 19 P.3d at 1280, that possessory interests in otherwise tax-exempt property are taxable under the Colorado property tax scheme. See ch. 268, sec. 3, § 39-1-107(4), 2002 Colo. Sess. Laws 1008, 1008â09. 7 Our prior cases in this area involved taxation of possessory interests in federal government-owned land. As noted above, the Supremacy Clause of the United States Constitution bars taxation of the federal governmentâs ownership interest. Mesa Verde III, 898 P.2d at 8â9. The Colorado Constitution similarly bars taxation of âproperty . . . of the state, counties, cities, towns, and other municipal corporations and public libraries.â Colo. Const. art. X, § 4. 8 Thus, whereas Mesa Verde I concerned the concessionaireâs possessory interest in the improvements it had constructed to perform its services, Mesa Verde III concerned the concessionaireâs possessory interest in the real property (federal land) it occupied and used for its concession. 9 Because the revenue statutes define âreal propertyâ as including â[a]ll lands or interests in landsâ and â[i]mprovements,â § 39-1-102(14), we determine that our case law defining real property in other contexts is also illuminating on the issue of exclusivity. 10 Where the contractor uses the government property for a manufacturing process, section 39-1-103(17)(a)(III)(F) provides that whether the government owns all or substantially all of the personal property used in the process is also relevant. 11 We emphasize that a possessory interest is not taxable just because the interest holder has any revenue-generating capability independent of the government. Courts should apply the multi-factor test we lay out here to determine whether, under the totality of the circumstances, an interest holderâs revenue-generating capability is truly independent from the government. 12 In enacting section 39-1-103(17), the General Assembly provided that it would become effective only if this court determined that the Colorado Constitution requires taxation of possessory interests in tax-exempt property. Ch. 297, sec. 4, § 39-1-103(17), 1996 Colo. Sess. Laws 1849, 1852. Thus, section 39-1-103(17) became effective in 2001 when this court held in Vail Associates that the Colorado Constitution requires taxation of possessory interests in tax-exempt property. 13 This two-step methodology applies where the cost or income approach to appraisal is utilized. Section 39-1-103(17)(a)(II)(A) provides that âthe actual value of a possessory interest . . . shall be determined by appropriate consideration of the cost approach, the market approach, and the income approach to appraisal.â The trial court found that the assessor appropriately considered the market approach for the purposes of this provision, but determined that the unique market at DIA and the unique circumstances of the lease made the market approach inappropriate. This particular finding is undisputed. Therefore, because the market approach is not appropriate, the provisions governing the cost and income approach are applicable.  JUSTICE BOATRIGHT concurs in part and dissents in part. JUSTICE EID dissents, and JUSTICE COATS joins in the dissent.
JUSTICE BOATRIGHT, concurring in part and dissenting in part. ¶74      I agree with the majority that the concessionairesâ possessory interests satisfy the tripartite test for taxation announced in Board of County Commissioners v. Vail Associates, Inc., 19 P.3d 1263 (Colo. 2001). Yet I disagree with the majorityâs conclusion that the City properly valued the concessionairesâ interests for property tax purposes. In my view, the Cityâs âmass appraisalâ approach clashes with the statutory command to estimate the present value of future payments due under each concessionaireâs contract. See § 39-1-103(17)(a)(II)(A), C.R.S. (2014). Hence, I concur with the conclusion in Part III of the majorityâs opinion but respectfully dissent from Part IV. ¶75      By holding that the Colorado Constitution requires the taxation of possessory interests in tax-exempt property that exhibit âsignificant incidents of ownership,â Vail Associates carried the legislatureâs possessory interest taxation scheme into effect. 19 P.3d at 1280; ch. 297, sec. 4, § 39-1-103(17), 1996 Colo. Sess. Laws 1849, 1852 (providing a method for the valuation of possessory interests in tax-exempt land âif the Colorado supreme court holds that the Colorado constitution requiresâ such taxation). That taxation scheme is embodied in section 39-1-103(17), C.R.S. (2014). Section 103(17)(a) begins with the observation that âthe valuation of possessory interests in exempt properties is uncertain and highly speculative.â It then sets forth specific standards to allay the risk of unequal valuations. Id. The Assessorâs Reference Library (ARL) fleshes these standards out with guidelines that are binding on all assessors. Huddleston v. Bd. of Equalization, 913 P.2d 15, 18 (Colo. 1996). This case is our first opportunity to interpret the legislative scheme. ¶76      As the majority explains, section 39-1-103(17)(a)(II) prescribes a two-step method for the valuation of possessory interests under the cost or income approach to appraisal. The assessor must first determine âthe present value of the reasonably estimated future annual rents or fees required to be paidâ under the contract. § 39-1-103(17)(a)(II)(A). The assessor should use âthe actual contract rents or fees reasonably expected to be paid . . . unless it is shownâ that these âare not representative of the market rents or fees paid for that type of real or personal property, in which case the market rents or feesâ should be substituted. Id. Pursuant to section 103(17)(a)(II)(B), the assessor then subtracts any amounts âpaid for all rights other than the exclusive right to use and possess the . . . property.â For contracts that define rent as a percentage of revenue, the ARL recommends that the assessor compile current market rates for comparable properties. 3 Assessorâs Reference Library 7.79 (rev. Mar. 2014). If the percentage amount is higher, the ARL suggests that the difference should be excluded as the value of the business, as opposed to the value of the property. Id. In other words, the ARL bases the value of the possessory interest on the market rent whenever that value differs from actual rent. ¶77      The City calculated the present value of the concessionairesâ interests using the minimum monthly guaranteed rent described in the concession agreementsâ$56 per square foot for most. The Cityâs valuation expert testified that this value was a reasonable approximation of future payments because it was the rent floor set by the agreements. Although most concessionaires paid a higher amount equal to a percentage of their monthly gross revenues, none would ever pay less than the minimum monthly guarantee. The expert further testified that the minimum monthly guarantee represents the market rate at DIA because DIA is its own market. This approach dismisses as irrelevant data from other, similar airports. More significantly, it assumes a uniform value across the different neighborhoods at DIA. ¶78      That assumption is incorrect. Passenger traffic varies from concourse to concourse, and as a result, so does the value of real estate at DIA. According to trial testimony, about half of the passengers at DIA travel through the B Concourse. As a result, one concessionaire does five times as much business at its B Concourse location than at its (otherwise identical) location in the Main Terminal. This difference proves that a square foot of space on the B Concourse is worth more than a square foot of space in the Main Terminal. Instead of accounting for this variation, however, the City applied a uniform value across the different neighborhoods at DIA, which led to an incorrect valuation of the concessionairesâ interests. See Bd. of Assessment Appeals v. Sampson, 105 P.3d 198, 207 (Colo. 2005) (explaining that a taxpayer who can demonstrate that an assessment is incorrect is entitled to relief). ¶79      The statute required the City to make a âreasonabl[e] estimate[]â of future payments under the concession agreements as the basis for calculating the actual value of the concessionairesâ interests. § 39-1-103(17)(a)(II)(A). The Cityâs âmass appraisalâ approach did not comport with this requirement. The best estimate of future payments is past payments, and the record in this case established that most of the concessionaires paid a percentage of their monthly gross revenue, not the minimum monthly guarantee. See, e.g., City & Cnty. of Denver v. Bd. of Assessment Appeals, 848 P.2d 355, 360â61 (Colo. 1993) (â[A]ctual rent received [is] a factor in determining the value of the property . . . .â). Rather than assume that all concessionaires would pay the minimum monthly guarantee for the life of the agreements, the City should have estimated the actual value of the concessionairesâ interests based upon each concessionaireâs historic rent payments. ¶80      The statute also required the City to use comparable market rents to calculate the actual value of the concessionairesâ interests where âit is shownâ that actual rents are not representative of market rents. § 39-1-103(17)(a)(II)(A). It is thus incumbent on the assessor to inquire into the market rate and compare it to the actual contract rent. Especially where actual rent is a percentage of revenue, the ARL directs the assessor to research comparable properties because percentage rent likely comprises some value attributable to the business, which should be separated from the value of the property interest. The City circumvented this step with the facile assumption that the only comparable market for concessions at DIA was the concessions at DIA; therefore the actual rents paid by the concessionaires (approximated as the minimum monthly guarantee) equaled the market rent. This syllogism disregards the purpose of market comparison, which is to determine whether rents paid by the concessionaires at DIA were representative of rents for similar properties outside of DIA. The statute and the ARL required a more thorough inquiry from the City. Absent that inquiry, it is unclear whether market rents should have been substituted for actual rents to calculate the value of the concessionairesâ interests. ¶81      For the foregoing reasons, the Cityâs âmass valuationâ of the concessionairesâ interests based on the assumption that they would all pay the minimum monthly guarantee for the duration of their concession agreements departed from the statutory scheme and led to an incorrect valuation. To hew to the statute, the City should have calculated the actual contract rent for each concessionaire based on the percentage rent historically paid by that concessionaire, and compared that amount to the current market rate for similar properties. I would remand this case to the court of appeals with instructions to return it to the trial court for further proceedings to determine the value of the concessionairesâ interests according to the method set forth in section 103(17)(a)(II). I therefore respectfully dissent from Part IV of the majority opinion.
JUSTICE EID, dissenting. ¶82      The majority holds that the Concessionairesâ possessory interests are taxable because they meet the three-part test of Board of County Commissioners v. Vail Associates, Inc., 19 P.3d 1263 (Colo. 2001). I have no issue with the majorityâs recitation of the three factors, including the independence prong, which requires âan interest that provides a revenue-generating capability to the private owner independent of the government property owner.â Id. at 1279. The problem with the majorityâs opinion is that it simply applies the three-factor test without fleshing out what the test is meant to captureânamely, the âsignificant incidents of private ownershipâ that make the interest taxable in the first place. Id. In my view, an ownership interest is âsignificantâ when it is akin to âprivate ownership,â as was the case in Vail Associates. Id. at 1267, 1278â80 (finding the âoccupancy, use, and enjoyment of 12,590 acres of federal land . . . for the operation of its ski area through [the year 2031]â demonstrated âsignificant incidents of private ownershipâ and thus was taxable). Without a sense of what counts as a âsignificantâ ownership interest, application of the factors devolves into the simple identification of any evidence that the particular factor exists. For example, under the majorityâs approach, any evidence that the Concessionairesâ operations are independent of government controlâhowever meager that may beâis sufficient to meet the independence prong. In the end, the majorityâs analysis leads to the result that the legislature sought to avoidânamely, âthat the taxation of any possessory interest might lead to the taxation of all possessory interests, no matter how de minimis.â Id. at 1278. Because the majority simply applies the three-part test of Vail Associates without a sense of what counts as a âsignificantâ private ownership interest, I respectfully dissent from its opinion. ¶83      We derived the three-part test in Vail Associates from Mesa Verde Company v. Montezuma Board of County Commissioners (Mesa Verde I), 495 P.2d 229 (Colo. 1972), which involved the taxation of various facilities and improvements built on national park land since 1937 by the parkâs exclusive concessioner. The concessioner argued that the improvements were, like the land, owned by the federal government, and thus were tax exempt. Id. at 230. We rejected that position, concluding that the only thing that distinguished the concessionerâs interest in the improvements from full private ownership was the fact that the concessioner lacked âbare legal titleâ to them. Id. at 233. We noted that the contract between the concessioner and the government gave the concessioner âa possessory interest in all [improvements] consisting of all incidents of ownership, except legal title.â Id. at 230, 232 (emphasis added). â[I]t appears,â we continued, âthat the [concessioner] has full use of the improvements, as well as the right to operate these properties for private profit.â Id. at 233. In such cases, âwhere a party has the right to possession, use, enjoyment, and profits of the property,â it cannot avoid a âfair and just share of state taxation.â Id. (concluding that âall the evidence indicates that the most significant incidents of ownership are possessedâ by the concessioner). ¶84      We distilled this language from Mesa Verde I into the three-part test in Vail Associates: â(1) an interest that provides a revenue-generating capability to the private owner independent of the government property owner; (2) the ability of the possessory interest owner to exclude others from making the same use of the interest; and (3) sufficient duration of the possessory interest to realize a private benefit therefrom.â 19 P.3d at 1279 (citing Mesa Verde I, 495 P.2d at 233). But importantly, the factors grew out of the âsignificant incidentsâ of ownership that the concessioner possessed by contract in Mesa Verde Iânamely, âall incidents of ownershipâ except for legal title. 495 P.2d at 232. Similarly, Vailâs permit from the federal government âentitled Vail to the occupancy, use, and enjoyment of 12,590 acres of federal land . . . for operation of its ski area through . . . 2031ââthat is, all but legal title. 19 P.3d at 1267. Indeed, the fact that Vailâs interest was akin to private ownership was so obvious we hardly analyzed the interest. Id. at 1280 (simply stating, without analysis, that the three-part test was met); see also maj. op. ¶ 43 (noting that â[w]e discussed neither the source of the ski resortâs revenues nor any restrictions the government placed on the resortâs operationsâ). ¶85      In sum, when we spoke in Mesa Verde I and Vail Associates of significant incidents of ownership, we were talking about an interest analogous to private ownership. In both cases, the government owned the land, but the concessioner owned and substantially controlled the operations that took place on the land to such a degree as to be analogous to a private owner. Their interests were therefore taxable. ¶86      The possessory interests held by the Concessionaires in this case bear no resemblance to the interests at issue in Mesa Verde I and Vail Associates. The City controls virtually every aspect of the Concessionairesâ business. As the majority acknowledges, maj. op. ¶¶ 9, 51â54, it controls what products they can sell, what their menus must include, what they can charge for their products, what hours they must operate, whom they may hire, and what improvements they may make. In my view, the Concessionairesâ control of their business operations is not analogous to private ownership, and therefore their possessory interests do not display the requisite âsignificant incidents of private ownership.â Future cases might be closer and require difficult line drawing, but this is not one of them. ¶87      The majority applies the independence prong to these facts and concludes that âthe Cityâs operating restrictions in this case do not deprive Concessionaires of the independent revenue-generating capability of their concession spaces.â Id. at ¶ 41. In other words, as long as a concessioner has any independence to generate revenue, its interest is taxable. And as the majority later concludes, although the City controls âsomeâ aspects of their business, these operating restrictions do not âconvert Concessionaires into agents or partners of the City.â Id. at ¶ 54. This is simply the other side of the âany independenceâ coin: as long as a concessioner is not a government entity, any possessory interest it may hold must be taxable. But importantly, this is precisely the situation the legislature sought to avoidânamely, that the taxation of any possessory interest would lead to the taxation of all possessory interests, âno matter how de minimis.â Vail Associates, 19 P.3d at 1278. In Vail Associates, we expressly disavowed such a result, stating that â[o]ur decision does not reach so far.â Id. But today the majority has reached âso far.â ¶88      In the end, if a set of factors is applied without regard to the ultimate goal to be reached, the factors amount to nothing more than a list to be checked off and added up. But we have expressly disavowed this approach in other contexts, including, most recently, the set of factors to be considered in determining whether a defendantâs statements during custodial interrogation are voluntary. See, e.g., People v. Liggett, 2014 CO 72, ¶ 22, 334 P.3d 231, 237 (cautioning that a list of thirteen factors used to determine whether a defendantâs statements made during custodial interrogation were voluntary must be applied not as a mechanical checklist, but rather âto inform the ultimate inquiry, which is whether the policeâs conduct was coercive so as to overbear the defendantâs willâ) (citing People v. McIntyre, 2014 CO 39, ¶ 16, 325 P.3d 583, 587). Here, the ultimate inquiry is whether the possessory interest in question approximates private ownership such that it is taxable. ¶89      Under my analysis, it is unnecessary to reach the valuation question in this case. I note, however, that the âsignificant incidents of private ownershipâ question is related to the valuation component; if the ultimate taxable interest is not adequately developed and defined, difficulties in placing a value on that interest will follow. See maj. op. ¶¶ 57â71; conc. & dis. op. ¶¶ 77â81. Because I do not believe the Concessionairesâ possessory interests are taxable in the first instance, I respectfully dissent from the majorityâs opinion holding otherwise. I am authorized to state that JUSTICE COATS joins in this dissent. These opinions are not final. They may be modified, changed or withdrawn in accordance with Rules 40 and 49 of the Colorado Appellate Rules. Changes to or modifications of these opinions resulting from any action taken by the Court of Appeals or the Supreme Court are not incorporated here. Colorado Supreme Court Opinions || March 16, 2015 Back |
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