Source: http://masscases.com/cases/sjc/337/337mass23.html
Timestamp: 2019-04-18 18:47:51+00:00

Document:
GLOUCESTER ICE AND COLD STORAGE CO. vs. ASSESSORS OF GLOUCESTER & others.
BILL IN EQUITY, filed in the Superior Court on February 28, 1957.
Harry Bergson, (Harry Bergson, Jr., with him,) for the plaintiff.
James H. Bagshaw, City Solicitor, for assessors of Gloucester and another.
Melvin I. Bernstein, (Carlton W. Wonson with him,) for Gloucester Community Pier Association, Inc.
(a) whether the premises occupied by it are taxable to it as real estate by the city of Gloucester, and (b) if such premises are taxable to Cold Storage, whether Cold Storage is entitled to have the taxes paid by it to the city reimbursed by its lessor, the defendant Gloucester Community Pier Association, Inc. (hereinafter called Association). Association leases from the Commonwealth the whole pier premises, of which those subleased by Cold Storage form a part. The same general situation was discussed in Dehydrating Process Co. of Gloucester, Inc. v. Gloucester, 334 Mass. 287. The facts are not in dispute.
The State Fish Pier was originally authorized by St. 1931, c. 311, Section 1, "[f]or the purpose of improving and developing Gloucester harbor for the promotion of the fish industry and the commercial facilities of . . . Gloucester." It was completed in 1938. On March 1, 1937, the Commonwealth executed a lease [Note 1] of the pier to Association for a term expiring in 1949, which in 1945 was extended to September 30, 1969.
Association is a nonprofit, "charitable" corporation formed in 1936 under the general law governing such corporations, G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 180, as contemplated by St. 1937, c. 29, Section 1, "for the purpose of administering said pier and its facilities without profit and in such manner that said pier and its facilities shall be available . . . to fishermen, fish dealers and the fishing industry generally." Originally, Association's members were all members of the Gloucester city administration as provided in c. 29. By St. 1954, c. 252, Section 1, the membership was changed to consist of "five . . . residents . . . of Gloucester, to be appointed by the mayor for terms of three years."
storage building on the premises to Cold Storage (a business corporation engaged in manufacturing ice and freezing and storing fish) for a term of ten years with a right of renewal for an additional twenty years. Cold Storage was required to pay rent and charges for water, sewer and electricity; to make its own charges for ice, freezing fish, or cold storage reasonable, competitive, and the same to all persons; and to offer its services to all proper persons without favoritism. The sublease imposed no express obligation on Cold Storage to pay taxes. [Note 3] In 1945, the sublease to Cold Storage was extended to September 30, 1969.
General Laws (Ter. Ed.) c. 59, Section 3A, as appearing in St. 1951, c. 667, Section 1, reads in part: "Real estate owned by or held in trust for the benefit of the commonwealth or a city or town, if used or occupied for other than public purposes, shall be taxed to the lessee or lessees thereof, or their assigns, or to the occupant or person in possession thereof, in the same manner and to the same extent as if the said lessee or lessees or their assigns or the occupant or person in possession were the owners thereof in fee, free of any trust. This section shall apply to real estate which shall have been acquired by virtue of the provisions of a will or deed, and held by the commonwealth or any city or town in trust for public charitable purposes, whether or not the same is subject to a duly recorded lease which provides that the lessee shall assume or pay all taxes assessed thereon." [Note 4] General Laws (Ter. Ed.) c. 59, Section 15, reads: "If a tenant paying rent for real estate is taxed therefore, he may retain out of his rent the taxes paid by him, or may recover the same in an action against his landlord, unless there is a different agreement between them."
estate taxes in the sum of $19,177.71 with respect to the premises leased by it from Association. Cold Storage paid the taxes with interest under protest. [Note 5] Cold Storage thereupon deducted (see Section 15, supra) the amount of the taxes so paid by it from the next rent payable by it to Association. Association has notified Cold Storage that the withholding of this amount from its rent is a breach of the sublease and threatens to evict Cold Storage. If all subtenants (whose subleases also impose on them no express obligation to pay taxes) of Association make similar deductions, Association will be unable to pay its rent to the Commonwealth. Cold Storage, fearing that termination of the principal lease from the Commonwealth to Association will terminate its sublease, seeks declaratory relief.
The trial judge found the material facts to be substantially as stated in the bill in equity, from which they have been summarized above. He ruled that Section 15 has no application to real estate, taxable under Section 3A, of the Commonwealth or a city; that Association "is really a part of the city of Gloucester"; [Note 6] and that the "Legislature did not intend that a tax could be assessed . . . and then have the city which imposed the tax immediately . . . obliged to return the amount of the tax to the taxpayer." He ordered a decree entered declaring that Cold Storage is not exempt from taxation under Section 3A and that it is "not entitled to withhold from . . . rent due . . . Association the amount paid . . . on account of real estate taxes assessed to it as occupant of the leased premises." Cold Storage appeals from the final decree thereafter entered.
under Section 3A. The property subleased to Cold Storage is land of the Commonwealth used for other than public purposes. The character of the use is not "determined by the activities of the holder of the principal lease," namely Association (see Dehydrating case at pages 291-292). As was said in Cabot v. Assessors of Boston, 335 Mass. 53, 65, "[a]lthough the maintenance of the pier as a facility was a proper public purpose to assist the important fishing industry, the use of the pier by the sublessees in their own businesses was held . . . not to be for a public purpose." It is for the Legislature to decide to what extent it will assist the execution of a public purpose. Here the Legislature has made no express provision for tax exemption of the pier in the hands of tenants operating for private profit, comparable to the specific tax exemption considered in the Cabot case (at pages 63-65), but has contented itself with assisting the fishing industry by the construction of basic facilities, leaving them taxable under Section 3A to private business occupants, even though such occupants directly and indirectly contribute to the accomplishment of the public purposes.
in 1922 with respect to property "owned by the city of Boston . . . if leased for business purposes." See St. 1922, c. 390, Section 1 [Note 9] and other earlier precedents mentioned below.
Mr. Justice Gray in Ammidown v. Freeland, 101 Mass. 303, 309, said, "It is within the province of the legislature to determine not only which party shall pay the amount of the tax to the government, but upon whom the burden shall finally rest, and also . . . to provide that the amount of the tax shall be paid by one party to the government and recovered by him from the other party or deducted upon a final settlement with him." See also Merchants National Bank v. Merchants National Bank, 318 Mass. 563, 572-574. "It is not always easy to determine where the ultimate burden of a tax . . . falls" (see United Shoe Machinery Corp. v. Gale Shoe Manuf. Co. 314 Mass. 142, 156), but it here must be decided whether the 1951 Legislature by Section 3A provided that the ultimate tax burden should rest (in the case of real estate of the Commonwealth used for other than public purposes) upon the lessee or occupant without right of reimbursement under Section 15 from any lessor. The cases just cited indicate that the Legislature has constitutional power to determine that the occupant shall bear the ultimate burden of the tax.
text) to land of the Commonwealth by St. 1951, c. 667, Section 1. After 1928 and prior to 1951, if Section 15 had been applied to land owned and leased (without an express provision for the payment of taxes by the lessee) by a city to a private business occupant, there would have been a strange result. The city would have assessed the tax to the business occupant, would then have collected the tax from the occupant, and, as an immediate consequence, would then have become liable to refund the amount of tax under Section 15 to the same occupant. It is persuasively argued that the 1928 Legislature could not have intended this futile circuity of payment and reimbursement. See Selectmen of Topsfield v. State Racing Commission, 324 Mass. 309, 314; Foley v. Lawrence, 336 Mass. 60, 64. See also Rossire v. Boston, 4 Allen 57, 59. Plainly, a determination that Section 15 was applicable to land taxable prior to 1951 under Section 3A would not have rendered Section 3A entirely meaningless, for it would still have had application in cases where leases from a city obligated the lessee to pay taxes. However, the language of Section 3A is broad enough for the section reasonably to be construed as a specific direction that the lessee or occupant of land taxable under the section bear the burden of the tax, [Note 10] notwithstanding the provisions of Section 15.
The fact that Section 3A was enacted long after the decision in Boston Molasses Co. v. Commonwealth, 193 Mass. 387, however, must be taken into account in considering the relation of Section 15 to Section 3A. The Boston Molasses Co. case involved a tax imposed under St. 1904, c. 385, Section 1. That statute provided that certain lands of the Commonwealth in South Boston known as the Commonwealth Flats "shall, if leased for business purposes, be taxed by the city of Boston to the lessees thereof, respectively, in the same manner as the lands and buildings thereon would be taxed to such lessees if they were the owners of the fee." The molasses company, as lessee of such land, sought reimbursement from the Commonwealth, its lessor, of the Boston taxes assessed upon and paid by the company. This court (at page 389) held that the Commonwealth, in making the lease, was acting in "the position of a private citizen" and that whether it must reimburse the molasses company "must depend in the first instance upon the terms of" the lease. The lease provided for the payment by the lessee of taxes assessed on buildings placed upon the property by the lessee but did not provide for the lessee's payment of further taxes upon the land and other structures. This court stated (at page 391) that the burden of these "further taxes lawfully assessed upon the leased property must, as between these parties, fall finally upon the lessor. The tax is a charge upon the owner by reason of his ownership, and must fall upon him so far as he has not guarded himself therefrom by the terms of his lease." It was stated that "the common law rule . . . `where the lease is silent upon the subject, imposes upon the lessor the obligation to pay the taxes upon the leased property.'" See Am. Law of Property, Section 3.76; McQuillin, Municipal Corporations (3d ed.) Sections 44.59, 44.71. The Boston Molasses Co. case has been cited in various cases, [Note 12] but none of them appears to control the present case.
In Boston v. Quincy Market Cold Storage & Warehouse Co. 312 Mass. 638, 645, it was said that "statutes providing to whom a tax on real estate shall be assessed and who shall be liable for its payment in the first instance do not determine upon whom the final liability is cast. . . . These statutes are for the convenience of the assessing and collecting officers." There is substantial ground, however, for regarding this last statement as not applicable to Section 3A for it is apparent that the amendments both in 1928 and 1951 were intended as substantive amendments of the law, permitting affirmatively the taxation of hitherto tax exempt property, not to the entities in whose hands it would be tax exempt but to its users for business purposes, who, if treated as if they "were the owners thereof in fee, free of any trust," might reasonably be expected to contribute to the support of government by an annual tax based upon their respective interests in real estate on the assessment date.
for their taxation (rather than exemption) is the user's business interest in them on the tax date rather than the property interest of the exempt owner.
The foregoing conflicting considerations bear upon the interpretation of Section 3A. If it were not for the Boston Molasses Co. case, we would feel (a) that Section 3A, as originally enacted in 1928 and as expanded in 1951, was intended by the Legislature to tax (and to impose the final burden of that tax upon) the user of property which except for Section 3A would be tax exempt, and (b) that Section 15 had no application whatsoever to occupants of lands of the Commonwealth or a city or town taxable under Section 3A. The legislative history (see footnotes 8, 11, supra) points strongly in that direction, as do the practical consequences of any other interpretation.
different from that stated in the Boston Molasses Co. case, the case has been accepted as law for half a century. Doubtless, some lessees have entered into leases in reliance upon it. It establishes, in a sense, a rule of property law, not lightly to be overruled. If the Legislature had intended to change a rule of such long standing (as we think it could have done) it would have been natural for it to provide in explicit terms that Section 15 and the common law rule mentioned in the Boston Molasses Co. case were not to apply to taxes assessed under Section 3A. Since it did not do so, we feel that we must hold that Section 15 does apply to such taxes.
If, as Cold Storage and Association appear to agree, the result of our holding will be that Association will be unable to pay its rent to the Commonwealth, then it may well be that termination of the main lease will cause termination of the sublease to Cold Storage, so that wholly new arrangements will be necessary. If so, Cold Storage may well have won a Pyrrhic victory. These matters, however, are not sufficiently presented on the present record to require us to consider them.
3. Paragraph 3 of the final decree is to be modified to provide that the plaintiff (Cold Storage) is entitled to withhold from the rent due the defendant Association the amount paid by the plaintiff on account of real estate taxes assessed to it as occupant of the leased premises. As so modified, the decree is affirmed. Costs are not to be allowed.
[Note 1] Association under its lease from the Commonwealth agreed to pay "all water or sewer rates and all annual taxes which may be lawfully assessed upon the premises leased." This provision was obviously only for the benefit of the Commonwealth and not for the benefit of Association's sublessees. It does not affect the issues here raised.
[Note 2] In 1947, the Commonwealth expanded the pier facilities somewhat. Cold Storage then assumed new obligations, not here relevant, with respect to the property subleased to it.
[Note 3] The absence of a provision in the sublease to Cold Storage, imposing upon the latter the burden of real estate taxes, is not significant. When that sublease was made in 1938, was extended in 1945, and was modified in 1947, the whole pier property (as land of the Commonwealth) was subject to no taxes, and such a provision was presumably omitted as irrelevant.
[Note 4] As originally passed by St. 1928, c. 111, Section 1, the italicized words "the commonwealth or" were omitted. They were inserted by St. 1951, c. 667, Section 1.
[Note 5] Action to recover the payment has been brought under G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 60, Section 98.
[Note 6] As we view the facts, Association was separate from the city as contemplated by St. 1937, c. 29, Section 1. Formed under the general charitable corporation law (G. L. c. 180), it was a separate corporate entity, even if it had some of the aspects of a special municipal "authority" in view of the essentially public function which it was designed to serve. Compare the urban redevelopment corporations considered in Opinion of the Justices, 334 Mass. 760, 762-763. Throughout this opinion, Association is dealt with as a separate corporate entity and not as a part of the city of Gloucester.
[Note 7] See Nichols, Taxation in Massachusetts (3d ed.) pages 271-275; Adams and Wadsworth, Hall's Massachusetts Law of Landlord and Tenant (4th ed.) Sections 77, 81, 82; Swaim, Crocker's Notes on Common Forms (7th ed.) Section 732.
[Note 8] This was based on 1928 House Bill No. 391 which, as presented, related only to "[r]eal estate . . . held by any city . . . in trust for public charitable purposes . . . if . . . the same is subject to a lease which provides that the lessee shall . . . pay all taxes assessed." It was revised in 1928 House Bill No. 976, to include a provision that real estate "owned by . . . a city . . . if used or occupied for other than public purposes, shall be taxed to the occupant or person in possession thereof to the same extent that other real estate is taxed" and to its final form by 1928 Senate Bill No. 251. The taxes imposed by the provision added by House Bill No. 976 did not depend upon any express arrangement in a lease for the lessee's or occupant's assumption of the tax burden. Indeed, in a separate paragraph of House Bill No. 976, the taxability of land held by a city upon a public charitable trust continued to depend on the existence of a provision in the lease of the land for business purposes putting the tax burden upon the lessee. The absence of such a provision with respect to other city land tended to show that with respect to such other land the lease provisions were of no importance. In the final draft of the bill, the terms of leases were expressly made irrelevant in the case of city land held in trust for public charitable purposes (see, however, footnote 14, infra).
[Note 9] In 1922, Boston had recently received by devise a substantial amount of real estate subject to long term leases which provided that the lessees must pay the taxes. The legislative history of this statute, which continued the power of the city to collect taxes from these lessees (and from certain other lessees), had some tendency to indicate that the ultimate burden of the tax would rest only on lessees whose leases provided that they must pay the tax. See 1922 House Doc. No. 1473. There is no indication that the legislative history of the 1922 act was ever considered in connection with the enactment of the 1928 statute. In Stoneman v. Boston, 263 Mass. 255, 260, which arose under the 1922 act, it was not necessary to decide whether Section 15 was applicable, because the lessee there involved was required by his lease to pay all taxes.
[Note 10] Except perhaps in cases where the lease provided expressly that the lessor should bear it.
[Note 11] The legislative history shows that the same meaning was intended. The 1951 legislation was recommended by the then commissioner of corporations and taxation in these words, "7. . . . When property of a city or town is used or occupied for other than public purposes, provision is made for taxation thereof to the lessee or occupant. It is recommended that similar provisions be made applicable to property of the Commonwealth." 1951 House Doc. No. 12, page 3. See accompanying bill in 1951 House Bill No. 19.
[Note 12] See Grasselli Chemical Co. v. Assessors of Boston, 281 Mass. 79, 81, which (like Boston Fish Market Corp. v. Boston, 224 Mass. 31, 33-36) involved St. 1909, c. 490, Part I, Section 12, relating to the Commonwealth Flats. In each case, there was a covenant to pay taxes by the assessed lessee, so the present question (where Cold Storage has given no such covenant) was not raised. See also Lovejoy v. Bailey, 214 Mass. 134, 156; Stony Brook Railroad v. Boston & Maine Railroad, 260 Mass. 379, 385 (specification in a lease of certain taxes to be paid by lessee means that others not mentioned are to rest on the lessor and that "the general rule is to be followed to the effect that taxes in the absence of agreement rest on the lessor and not on the lessee"; Stoneman v. Boston, 263 Mass. 255, 260 (see footnote 9, supra); Barry v. Frankini, 287 Mass. 196, 199 (statement of general rule as to burden of taxes between lessor and lessee, but in the particular case, the lessor had agreed to pay all taxes); Eastern Massachusetts Street Railway v. Boston Elevated Railway, 310 Mass. 659, 669 (general rule stated). Compare Pittsfield & North Adams Railroad v. Boston & Albany Railroad, 260 Mass. 390, 397.
[Note 13] Pertinent provisions of St. 1904, c. 385, Section 1. [Words not found in Section 3A italicized] "The lands of the Commonwealth . . . known as the Commonwealth Flats, shall, if leased for business purposes, be taxed by . . . Boston to the lessees thereof, respectively, in the same manner as the lands and buildings thereon would be taxed to such lessees if they were the owners of the fee, except that the payment of the tax shall not be enforced by any lien upon or sale of the lands . . .."
"Real estate owned by . . . the commonwealth . . . if used or occupied for other than public purposes, shall be taxed to the . . . lessees thereof, or their assigns, or to the occupant or person in possession thereof, in the same manner and to the same extent as if the . . . lessees or their assigns or the occupant or person in possession were the owners thereof in fee, free of any trust. . . . Payment of the aforesaid taxes shall not be enforced by any lien upon or sale of the . . . real estate . . .."
[Note 14] Association is not helped by the provision of Section 3A that the section "shall apply to real estate . . . held by the commonwealth or any city or town in trust for public charitable purposes, whether or not the same is subject to a duly recorded lease which provides that the lessee shall . . . pay all taxes assessed thereon" (emphasis supplied). This provision applies by its terms only to property held in trust and not to other property of the Commonwealth. Indeed the express inclusion of the provision with respect to trust property and its omission with respect to other State property (although possibly mere inadvertence) may give support to the applicability of Section 15. See Iannelle v. Fire Commissioner of Boston, 331 Mass. 250, 252-253.
[Note 15] St. 1909, c. 490, Part I, Section 12.
[Note 16] Counsel for Association by implication suggests that, in construing Section 3A, we should consider G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 59, Section 3D, inserted by St. 1956, c. 690, Section 1, which is expressed in much the same language as Section 3A. Presumably, the suggestion is that Section 3D is an instance (a) of clear indication of legislative intention to tax the lessee of property of the United States leased to others, where that is constitutionally possible, and (b) of a situation where no recovery by the lessee under Section 15 of a tax paid by it would be constitutionally possible. A statute passed in 1956 would be unlikely to give indication of the legislative intention in 1928 and 1951. We place no weight on the fact that the 1956 act followed the earlier language. It is not necessary for us here to consider the relation of Section 3D to Sections 11 and 15 and other provisions of c. 59. Various questions presented by Section 3D and related sections have already been pointed out in the Squantum Gardens, Inc. case, 335 Mass. 440, 446-453.

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