Court Opinion

ID: 9845259
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-09-24 03:17:56.817316+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:15:57.685515
License: Public Domain

MlKELL, Judge.
The City of Atlanta (“the City”) appeals from an order of the superior court ruling that it must pay ad valorem taxes to Clayton County (“the County”) for property it leased to the United States Postal Service at Hartsfield-Jackson International Airport. The City asserts the trial court misinterpreted the applicable statutes and failed to consider a contract between the City and the County in which *85the City agreed to pay money to the County as property tax substitution. For the reasons set forth below, we affirm.
1. As the parcel at issue is located outside the territorial limits of the City, OCGA§ 48-5-41 (a) (1) (B) (i) governs whether the City must pay taxes. This Code section provides that, in general, all public property is exempt from ad valorem property taxes. OCGA § 48-5-41 (a) (1) (A). However, public property located outside a political subdivision’s territorial limits is not exempt from taxation unless it has been “[developed by grading or other improvements to the extent of at least 25 percent of the total land area and facilities are located on the property which are actively used for a public or governmental purpose.” (Emphasis supplied.) OCGA § 48-5-41 (a) (1) (B) (i).
As the parties agree that the parcel at issue was 25 percent developed, we must only consider whether the parcel was “actively used for a public or governmental purpose.” OCGA§ 48-5-41 (a) (1) (B) (i). The General Assembly provided us with guidance on this issue in OCGA § 6-3-21, which provides:
Any lands acquired, owned, leased, controlled, or occupied by counties, municipalities, or other political subdivisions for the purpose or purposes enumerated in Code Section 6-3-20 shall be and are declared to be . . . for public, governmental, and municipal purposes; provided, however, that with respect to facilities located on such lands, which lands are located outside of the territorial limits of the political subdivision that leases such lands and which are leased to . . . private parties, the interests created in such private parties, for the purpose of ad valorem taxation only, are declared not to be used for public, governmental, or municipal purposes and said resulting interests . . . are subject to ad valorem taxation; provided, further, that the underlying fee interest in such property which remains vested in the county, municipality, or other political subdivision shall be deemed to be used for public, governmental, and municipal purposes.
(Emphasis supplied.)
According to the dissent, we should examine only the last emphasized clause and conclude that the parcel was exempt from taxation. This we cannot do because the reference to “such property” in this clause is clearly and unambiguously subject to the requirement at the beginning of this Code section that the lands be “acquired, owned, leased, controlled, or occupied by counties, municipalities, or other political subdivisions for the purpose or purposes enumerated in Code Section 6-3-20.”
*86Where a statute is susceptible of one and only one construction, this court can not adopt a different construction merely to relieve [the] parties of some real or imagined hardship; but if the law is valid, we can only apply it in the form into which it was finally adopted as a statute by the lawmaking body.
(Citation and punctuation omitted.) State Revenue Comm. v. Nat. Biscuit Co., 179 Ga. 90, 100 (175 SE 368) (1934). A court cannot by construction “add to, take from, or vary the meaning of unambiguous words in a statute.” Brooks v. Brooks, 185 Ga. 549, 554 (195 SE 869) (1938). Moreover, even if we were to construe any alleged ambiguity in the statute, we would be required to apply the rule “that all tax exemptions are to be strictly construed since taxation is the rule and exemption is the exception.” Leggett v. Macon Baptist Assn., 232 Ga. 27, 28 (205 SE2d 197) (1974).
Because we find that the statute is plain and unambiguous, we must examine the following language of OCGA § 6-3-20 (a):
Counties, municipalities, and other political subdivisions are authorized, separately or jointly, to acquire, establish, construct, expand, own, lease, control, equip, improve, maintain, operate, regulate, and police airports and landing fields for the use of aircraft, either within or without the geographical limits of such counties, municipalities, and other political subdivisions, and may use for such purpose or purposes any available property that is owned or controlled by such counties, municipalities, or other political subdivisions.
(Emphasis supplied.) Thus, resolution of this case turns on whether the City acquired, leased, or owned the parcel for the purpose of “airports and landing fields for the use of aircraft.”1 In Clayton County Bd. of Tax Assessors v. City of Atlanta, 164 Ga. App. 864 (298 SE2d 544) (1982), we determined that this language “encompasses all property reasonably and uniformly used for the public convenience and welfare to facilitate the effective operation of the air transportation facility.” Id. at 868 (2).
In this case, the trial court properly concluded that the parcel at issue does not fall within the scope of the definition outlined in *87Clayton County, supra. The record shows that on January 1,2001, the parcel was used by the Postal Service as a mail sorting and transfer facility.2 As an annex to a newer mail facility also located at the airport and built in 1998, it was referred to as the “old postal facility.”3 In 2000, the City had begun negotiating with the Postal Service to buy out the remaining term of its lease on the annex. In October 2002, the Postal Service agreed to allow the City to buy its lease. The City took possession in late 2002 and demolished the annex in 2003.
We find that while it was economical and convenient for the Postal Service to have an onsite annex to its newer facility, the Postal Service’s use of the annex did not “facilitate the effective operation of the airport.” Instead, it facilitated the effective operation of the Postal Service. Moreover, the City’s subsequent purchase of the Postal Service’s lease and demolition of the annex demonstrates that the annex did not facilitate the effective operation of the airport. The trial court did not err by concluding the City was not entitled to the exemption embodied in OCGA § 48-5-41 (a) (1) (B) (i).
The dissent asserts that we should not engage in this analysis because the General Assembly amended OCGA § 6-3-21 to include the last clause about a public purpose presumption after we issued our opinion in Clayton County, supra, and in answer to it. See Roberts v. Eastern Air Lines, 257 Ga. 273, 275 (357 SE2d 585) (1987). While this is true, the amendment does not do what the dissent suggests. Instead, “[t]he Act as amended simply says that any interest that is created in private parties on lands located outside of the territorial limits of the political subdivision granting the interest is subject to ad valorem tax.” Id. Thus, the amendment was an answer to Division 1 of Clayton County, supra, in which we held that a private party with a usufruct interest, as opposed to a lease for years, could not be taxed. Id. at 864, 865-867 (1).
In Division 2 of Clayton County, we interpreted the requirement in OCGA § 6-3-21 that the lands be leased “for the purpose or purposes enumerated in Code Section 6-3-20.” Based on our interpretation, we found that the City’s parcel at issue was used for this purpose and exempt from taxation. Thus, at the time the General Assembly amended OCGA § 6-3-21, it was aware of our interpretation of the language “for the purpose or purposes enumerated in Code Section 6-3-20” and did not alter it. As a result, it is not reasonable to *88conclude that this portion of our opinion in Clayton County, supra, has been legislatively overruled.
2. In its remaining enumeration of error, the City contends that the trial court erred by failing to consider an agreement for the payment of “property tax substitution” between the City and the County. It cites a March 16, 2000 Intergovernmental Agreement between the City and the County in support of this enumeration. However, it fails to elaborate how this contract impacts the taxation of the particular parcel at issue in this appeal. The agreement required the City to pay money to the County to compensate it for lost tax revenues as a result of the airport expansion project. However, the City’s first lease with the United States Postal Service for the parcel at issue began in 1979. Thus, this parcel could not have been subject to a later agreement on compensation for lost tax income as a result of an airport expansion in 2000.
As the City failed to demonstrate how the 2000 agreement impacts the parcel at issue here, we find no merit in this enumeration.

Judgment affirmed.

Andrews, P. J., Blackburn, P. J., Ruffin, P. J., Eldridge and Adams, JJ., concur. Barnes, J., dissents.

 We find no merit in the City’s argument that we should look to the definition of airport in OCGA § 6-3-20.1 because that definition is limited to that particular section governing foreign ownership or control of airports.

 The tax year at issue is 2002. The record is unclear as to the precise use on January 1, 2002.

 We do not address whether the City should pay ad valorem taxes for any fee interest it holds on the parcel where the new mail facility is located.