Court Opinion

ID: 2723622
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2014-09-04 15:03:36.470812+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T10:03:00.810046
License: Public Domain

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             DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA COURT OF APPEALS

                        Nos. 12-CV-1690 & 12-CV-1691

                      DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA, APPELLANT,

                                      V.

                       17M ASSOCIATES, LLC, APPELLEE.

                         Appeals from the Superior Court
                           of the District of Columbia
                        (CVT-10601-10, CVT-10802-10)

                     (Hon. John M. Campbell, Trial Judge)
(Argued October 22, 2013                            Decided September 4, 2014)

      James C. McKay, Jr., Senior Assistant Attorney General for the District of
Columbia, with whom Irvin B. Nathan, Attorney General, Todd S. Kim, Solicitor
General, and Donna M. Murasky, Deputy Solicitor General, were on the brief, for
appellant.
      Stanley J. Fineman, with whom Scott B. Cryder was on the brief, for
appellee.
      Before BECKWITH, EASTERLY, and MCLEESE, Associate Judges.
      BECKWITH, Associate Judge: Appellant District of Columbia contends that

the Superior Court erred in deferring to a decision of the Board of Real Property

Assessments and Appeals (BRPAA) that found appellee 17M Associates LLC

(17M) exempt from the possessory interest tax codified at D.C. Code § 47-1005.01
                                          2

(b) (2012 Repl.).1 The District also claims that the Superior Court further erred in

finding, on the merits, that 17M‟s Lease Agreement with the District exempted

17M from the tax. We hold that the Lease Agreement did not exempt 17M from

the tax and that BRPAA acted ultra vires in concluding that it did. We therefore

reverse the judgment of the Superior Court and remand the case for further

proceedings.

                                 I.     Background

      On December 14, 1982, the District executed a Lease Agreement with 17M,

under which the District “demised” (that is, leased) “certain parcels of land located

on M Street between 16th and 17th Streets, Northwest” to 17M for eighty years.

17M built “Improvements” on the land, including commercial office buildings.2

Section 19.01 of the Lease Agreement was titled “Taxes on Improvements” and

required 17M to pay “all taxes, assessments, duties, impositions, and burdens

assessed, charged or imposed, upon the Improvements.”3 Section 19.02, which is

      1
          All subsequent statutory references are also to D.C. Code (2012 Repl.).
      2
         The Lease Agreement defines “Improvements” to include “any structures,
landscaping or site improvements reflected in the Final Plans and to be constructed
or placed on the Demised Premises.”
      3
          The taxes that 17M pays on the improvements are not at issue in this
appeal.
                                          3

central to the present dispute, was titled “New Taxes on Improvements” and

required 17M to “pay any new tax of a nature not presently in effect but which

may be hereafter levied, assessed, or imposed upon the District or the Demised

Premises, if such tax shall be based on or arise out of the ownership, use or

operation of the Improvements.”

      In 2000, the Council of the District of Columbia sought to close a “present

loophole in the District‟s tax laws,” D.C. Council, Comm. on Fin. & Revenue

Report on Bill 13-586, the “Tax Clarity Act of 2000” (Sept. 28, 2000) at 17

[hereinafter Committee Report], by enacting a possessory interest tax on lessees

who lease certain government-owned, and therefore tax-exempt,4 real property but

who are not themselves “exempt or immune from income taxation” and are not

using the property “for an exempt or immune purpose.” D.C. Code § 47-1005.01

(b).5 The measure taxed the “leasehold interest, possessory interest, beneficial

interest, or beneficial use of the lessee or user of the real property.” Id. The tax is
      4
         D.C. Code § 47-1005.01 (b) applies to real property “which is exempt or
immune from real property taxation under § 47-1002 (1) through (3) or the law of
the United States or the District of Columbia.” D.C. § 47-1002 (1) through (3)
cover: “(1) Property belonging to the United States, unless the taxation of same
has been authorized by Congress; (2) Property belonging to the District of
Columbia and used for governmental purposes (as determined by the Mayor),
unless otherwise provided by law; (3) Property belonging to foreign governments
and used for legation purposes.”
      5
          Tax Clarity Act of 2000, D.C. Law 13-305 (effective June 9, 2001).
                                          4

paid in the same manner and assessed at the same rate as a real property tax, but is

imposed on the lessee or user and not on the property itself. D.C. Code § 47-

1005.01 (f)(3).6 The new tax would permit the District “to tax possessory interests

in immune property which cannot at the present time be taxed.”          Committee

Report, at 16. The Report cited the Old Post Office Pavilion and Union Station as

examples “where businesses have possessory interests in the property that go

untaxed in the District, but would be taxed in the majority of jurisdictions,

including Maryland and Virginia.” Committee Report, at 16-17. The tax may not

be imposed when doing so “would cause the District of Columbia to breach a pre-

existing agreement or other legal obligation.” D.C. Code § 47-1005.01 (c)(2).

      In March 2006, the District sent 17M a Notice of Proposed Possessory

Interest Assessment for Tax Year 2007, describing the property as being in “Tax

Class 2” and assessing its value for purposes of the possessory interest tax at

$24,670,490. The District had not previously levied the tax against 17M. 17M

      6
          D.C. Code § 47-1005.01 (f)(3) provides in part:
       “Tax assessed under this section shall be a personal liability of a lessee or
user of real property and billed to the lessee or user. Payments of tax shall be
applied in the same manner as payments of real property tax. The tax due under
this section shall not give rise to a lien against the real property.”
                                        5

appealed to BRPAA7 (after its First Level Appeal with the District of Columbia

Office of Tax and Revenue (OTR) went unanswered), arguing that imposition of

the tax breached its Lease Agreement with the District. OTR responded that

BRPAA lacked jurisdiction to decide the case and that the lease did not in any

event bar the tax.   In a written decision dated September 21, 2007, BRPAA

claimed “jurisdiction to determine whether the District of Columbia is precluded

from imposing the possessory interest tax against petitioner as it is a matter of

classification of the property.”   On the merits, it reasoned that “[t]he lease

agreement explicitly describes 17M‟s tax obligations and also contemplates future

new tax obligation, but none of these describe the possessory tax as one such

obligation.” Because “the possessory tax is not an included tax obligation” in the

Lease Agreement, BRPAA concluded that imposing the tax “violates the pre-

existing lease within the meaning of D.C. Code § 47-1005.01 (c)(2).” The District

filed a motion for rehearing with BRPAA pursuant to 9 DCMR § 2019; BRPAA

held an additional hearing but did not issue a decision. OTR thereafter ignored

BRPAA‟s order “to reclassify the status of the subject property” as exempt from

the possessory interest tax and proceeded to assess the tax against 17M for Tax

      7
         BRPAA has since been replaced by the Real Property Tax Appeals
Commission. D.C. Code § 47-825.01a; Real Property Tax Appeals Commission
Establishment Act of 2010, D.C. Law 18-363 (effective Apr. 8, 2011).
                                          6

Years 2007, 2008, 2009, and 2010.8 17M appealed each assessment to BRPAA

and on November 4, 2010, filed a petition in the Superior Court pursuant to D.C.

Code § 47-3303 arguing that imposition of the possessory interest tax violated

Section 19.02 of the Lease Agreement. 17M also argued in Superior Court that

BRPAA‟s decision on Tax Year 2007 “is binding upon the District for subsequent

tax years.”9

      The trial court granted summary judgment to 17M for Tax Year 2007 in a

March 16, 2012, order, and for Tax Years 2008, 2009, 2010, and 201110 in a

      8
          The District had no right to appeal BRPAA‟s decision, see D.C. Code
§ 47-825.01 (f-1)(1)(A) (stating only that an “owner” may appeal), but the District
could have filed a petition for a writ of mandamus, rather than unilaterally ignoring
BRPAA‟s decision based on its belief that BRPAA lacked jurisdiction. A writ of
mandamus may be “directed to a Superior Court judge or a District of Columbia
officer,” D.C. App. R. 21, and may be appropriate in “exceptional circumstances
amounting to a judicial usurpation of power.” In re M.O.R., 851 A.2d 503, 509
(D.C. 2004) (internal quotation marks omitted).
      9
          BRPAA‟s position on the case changed from year to year. At the time
17M filed in Superior Court, BRPAA had not issued decisions on Tax Years 2008
and 2010. It had issued a decision for Tax Year 2009, finding that it lacked
jurisdiction to decide whether the Lease Agreement barred imposition of the tax
and stating that “the issue is better suited for decision in the D.C. Superior Court.”
After proceedings in the Superior Court commenced, but before the Superior Court
issued its decisions, BRPAA again changed its position, this time finding, with
respect to Tax Years 2007 through 2011, that it did have jurisdiction and that the
Lease Agreement did not bar imposition of the tax.
      10
           17M had filed an additional petition in the Superior Court appealing the
District‟s assessment of the possessory interest tax for Tax Year 2011.
                                         7

September 11, 2012, order. In the March 16, 2012, order, the court gave three

reasons for finding that “BRPAA did properly exercise jurisdiction”: first, “the

statute directs appeals from the Possessory Interest Tax to the BRPAA”; second,

“the District‟s own notice of proposed Possessory Interest Tax directs recipients to

file their appeal first with the assessor, then with the BRPAA”; and third,

BRPAA‟s exercise of jurisdiction “avoid[s] a circumstance where there would be

no appeal from imposition of the tax.” In its September 11, 2012, order, the trial

court granted summary judgment to 17M for the tax years since 2007, “for the

reasons stated in Part III-A of [17M‟s] Memorandum of Points and Authorities.”

Part III-A explained that BRPAA‟s decision for Tax Year 2007 applied by its

terms to subsequent tax years. The trial court, which had heard arguments from

both parties on the merits, then “further ordered” that 17M was exempt from the

possessory interest tax “pursuant to D.C. Code § 47-1005.01 (c)(2)”—which bars

imposition of the tax when it “would cause the District of Columbia to breach a

pre-existing agreement or other legal obligation.” The District appealed.

   II.      Whether BRPAA Had Jurisdiction To Decide if 17M Was Exempt

         D.C. Code § 47-1005.01 (f)(2) provides that a lessee or user disputing a

possessory interest tax assessment “may appeal from a notice of proposed assessed

value and real property classification in the same manner and under the same
                                          8

conditions as an owner under [D.C. Code] § 47-825.01.” BRPAA‟s enabling

statute, D.C. Code § 47-825.01, provides that a taxpayer may petition BRPAA “for

an administrative review of the real property‟s assessed value or its classification

that shall be in effect for the tax year at issue.” D.C. Code § 47-825.01 (f-1)(1)(A).

BRPAA ordinarily hears disputes regarding real property taxes, but D.C. Code

§ 47-1005.01 directs disputes involving the possessory interest tax to BRPAA

presumably because the possessory interest tax is calculated at the same rate and in

the same manner as a real property tax. D.C. Code § 47-1005.01 (f)(2) & (h).

      17M argues that “real property classification,” as used in these statutes

establishing BRPAA‟s jurisdiction, includes a lessee or user‟s exemption status—

that is, whether the lessee or user is “classified” as exempt or non-exempt from the

possessory interest tax. BRPAA, too, believed that the legality of the assessment

was a “matter of classification of the property,” so that its jurisdiction included

authority to decide whether “application of [the possessory interest tax] would

cause the District of Columbia to breach a pre-existing agreement or other legal

obligation.” D.C. Code § 47-1005.01 (c)(2).

      The parties agree that our review of this question of statutory interpretation
                                          9

is de novo.11 Focusing on the statute‟s plain language while considering “the

specific context in which that language is used, and the broader context of the

statute as a whole,” O’Rourke v. District of Columbia Police & Firefighters’ Ret.

& Relief Bd., 46 A.3d 378, 383 (D.C. 2012), we conclude that “real property

classification” does not refer to a taxpayer‟s exemption status but to the “classes of

taxable real property” defined for Tax Years 2007 to 2010 in D.C. Code § 47-813

(c-7). That statute defines Class 1 Property (“residential real property that is

improved and used exclusively for nontransient residential dwelling purposes”),

Class 2 Property (“improved commercial real property”), and Class 3 Property

(“all real property which cannot be classified as Class 1 Property or Class 2

Property”). For example, in this case, OTR‟s Notice of Proposed Possessory

Interest Assessment for Tax Year 2007 described the leased property as Tax Class

2. Each class is taxed at a different rate, usually involving a certain amount per

$100 of assessed value. D.C. Code § 47-812. “The rate of tax under § 47-812, for

the applicable classification under § 47-813,” determine the taxpayer‟s liability.

D.C. Code § 47-1005.01 (h).

      11
         Even assuming that an expert administrative agency would be entitled to
deference regarding its assessment of the scope of its jurisdiction, see generally
City of Arlington, Tex. v. FCC, 133 S. Ct. 1863, 1868-75 (2013), such deference
would not likely be warranted in this case where, without adequate explanation,
BRPAA reversed (and then re-reversed) itself both on the jurisdictional question
and on the merits. See supra note 9.
                                         10

      The type of expertise required of BRPAA members supports our view that

“real property classification,” as used in BRPAA‟s enabling statute, does not

encompass a taxpayer‟s status as “exempt” or “non-exempt” from the possessory

interest tax. BRPAA “members shall be persons who have knowledge of the

valuation of property, real estate transactions, building costs, accounting, finance,

or statistics.” D.C. Code § 47-825.01 (a)(1)(C). BRPAA members need not be

attorneys, though attorneys “with real estate experience” are eligible to serve, as

are “District certified general real estate appraisers, District licensed residential

real estate appraisers, certified public accountants, mortgage bankers, licensed

District real estate brokers, or persons possessing significant real property

experience.” D.C. Code § 47-825.01 (a)(1)(A). In other words, BRPAA members

would be qualified to decide disputes over a property‟s assessed value or its

classification under D.C. Code § 47-813—that is, qualified to determine how, but

not whether, a tax applies.

      We do not agree with the trial court that the term “classification” must

encompass exemption status “to avoid a circumstance where there would be no

appeal from imposition of the tax.” A taxpayer may dispute its liability for the

possessory interest tax—an in personam tax—by filing an appeal with the Superior

Court under D.C. Code § 47-3303, which authorizes appeals from “any personal
                                         11

property . . . tax.”12 Under D.C. Code § 47-3304, both the taxpayer and the District

may appeal the Superior Court‟s decision to the Court of Appeals. This scheme is

at odds with D.C. Code § 47-825.01 (j-1), which empowers an “owner,” but not the

District, to appeal BRPAA decisions to the Superior Court. It would be illogical if

the District could appeal when the Superior Court determined a lessee‟s tax-

exempt status but not when BRPAA made the same determination, with the choice

of forum solely within the taxpayer‟s discretion. This incongruity further indicates

that BRPAA‟s jurisdiction does not include the legality of an assessment—only the

amount.

      We conclude that BRPAA exceeded its jurisdiction when it determined that

17M was exempt from assessment of the possessory interest tax. The trial court

then erred in deferring to BRPAA‟s decision on Tax Year 2007 because “[t]he

purported exercise of jurisdiction beyond that conferred upon the agency by the

legislature is ultra vires and a nullity.” District Intown Props., Ltd. v. District of

Columbia Dep’t of Consumer & Regulatory Affairs, 680 A.2d 1373, 1379 (D.C.

1996). “An administrative agency is a creature of statute and may not act in excess

      12
          17M does not agree that the possessory interest tax is a personal property
tax, and therefore capable of being appealed under D.C. Code § 47-3303. But the
possessory interest tax is, in fact, a personal property tax, as the next section
explains.
                                         12

of its statutory authority.” Id. “„When [the legislature] passes an Act empowering

administrative agencies to carry on governmental activities, the power of those

agencies is circumscribed by the authority granted.‟”        President & Dirs. of

Georgetown Coll. v. District of Columbia Bd. of Zoning Adjustment, 837 A.2d 58,

68 (D.C. 2003) (brackets in original) (quoting Stark v. Wickard, 321 U.S. 288, 309

(1944)).

       III.    Whether the Lease Agreement Bars Imposition of the Tax13

      “Decisions of the Superior Court in civil tax cases are reviewable in the

same manner as other decisions of the court in civil cases tried without a jury.”

D.C. Code § 47-3304. We review a grant of summary judgment de novo, applying

the same standard as the trial judge. 1137 19th St. Associates, Ltd. P’ship v.

District of Columbia, 769 A.2d 155, 161 (D.C. 2001). Summary judgment may be

granted only if “there are no genuine issues of material fact in dispute and the

moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Id. (quotation marks

omitted).     We follow “an „objective‟ law of contracts, meaning „the written
      13
          Because the trial court heard arguments from both parties on the merits
and “further ordered,” “pursuant to D.C. Code § 47-1005.01 (c)(2),” that 17M was
exempt from the tax, we reject 17M‟s argument that the court did not rule on the
merits. We also reject 17M‟s claim that the trial court lacked “jurisdiction” over
the merits. 17M cited D.C. Code § 47-3303 as a basis for jurisdiction in its petition
in the Superior Court; that provision directs the court to “hear and determine all
questions arising on appeal.”
                                         13

language embodying the terms of an agreement will govern the rights and

liabilities of the parties [regardless] of the intent of the parties at the time they

entered into the contract, unless the written language is not susceptible of a clear

and definite undertaking, or unless there is fraud, duress, or mutual mistake.‟”

Dyer v. Bilaal, 983 A.2d 349, 354-355 (D.C. 2009) (quoting DSP Venture Grp.,

Inc. v. Allen, 830 A.2d 850, 852 (D.C. 2003)).

      As noted, the statute prohibits the District from imposing the possessory

interest tax when doing so “would cause the District of Columbia to breach a pre-

existing agreement or other legal obligation.” D.C. Code § 47-1005.01 (c)(2). In

this case, according to 17M, that “pre-existing agreement” is Section 19.02 of the

Lease Agreement, entitled “New Taxes on Improvements,” which provides that

17M “shall . . . pay any new tax of a nature not presently in effect but which may

be hereafter levied, assessed, or imposed upon the District or the Demised

Premises, if such tax shall be based on or arise out of the ownership, use or

operation of the Improvements.” 17M reads “if” in this section as “only if” and

argues that “17M is only responsible for the tax if it is „based on or arise[s] out of

the ownership, use or operation of the Improvements.‟” 17M further contends—

and the District appears not to dispute —that the possessory interest tax does not

“arise out of the ownership, use or operation of the Improvements” because it

“applies to 17M‟s interest in the land underlying the Improvements, not [to] the
                                          14

Improvements” themselves.

      The District argues that “if” may not properly be read as “only if” but says

that we need not reach that issue because Section 19.02 is simply inapplicable. In

the view of the District, Section 19.02 addresses new taxes “imposed upon the

District or the Demised Premises,” whereas the possessory interest tax is “imposed

upon 17M.” 17M responds that the possessory interest tax is, in fact, imposed

upon the “Demised Premises.” The parties thus frame the issue in similar terms:

If the “Demised Premises,” as defined in the Lease Agreement, do not include the

possessory interests taxed under D.C. Code § 47-1005.01 (b), then Section 19.02

does not apply.    And if Section 19.02 does not apply, then no “pre-existing

agreement” prohibits imposition of the tax.

      The possessory interests taxed under D.C. Code § 47-1005.01 (b) consist of

“the leasehold interest, possessory interest, beneficial interest, or beneficial use of

the lessee or user of the real property.” D.C. Code § 47-1005.01 (b). The Lease

Agreement defines the Demised Premises as the District-owned land, “the

improvements, ways, easements, air and surface rights . . . appertaining” that land,

and “all the estate, right, title, interest and claims, either at law or in equity, or

otherwise whatsoever, of the District in, to or out of said parcels of land.” 17M

interprets this definition to mean that the District demised “all „estates‟ or
                                         15

„interests‟ the District had in the underlying land” to 17M and “[t]hus, any „estate‟

or „interest‟ 17M has in the District owned land is by definition part of the

„Demised Premises.‟” 17M contends that its possessory interests “must necessarily

be part of the „Demised Premises‟ since the only rights 17M has in this land are

those that were demised by the District in the Lease Agreement.” The District

claims that it could not have demised—that is, leased—the possessory interests of

17M when it demised the interests “of the District.”

      Our common law and statutory law dictate that a lessee‟s possessory

interest, although an interest in real property, is ultimately a species of personal

property.14 “[T]here can be no question under the common law in force in this

District that a leasehold interest in lands is personal property.” Bean v. Reynolds,

15 App. D.C. 125, 130 (D.C. Cir. 1899). The common law was codified in the

1901 Code of the District of Columbia and is now codified at D.C. Code § 42-504,

which states that “estates for years shall be chattels real.” “A „chattel real‟ is an

interest in real estate having the character of immobility, which is less than a

      14
          Our decision in 1137 19th Street Associates, Ltd. Partnership v. District
of Columbia, 769 A.2d 155, 169 (D.C. 2001), that “a lease is „real property‟ for
purposes of the [Tax Recordation] Act,” is not to the contrary. We decided that
case based on the Act‟s own definition of “real property,” which “broadly includes
„every estate or right . . . in lands, tenements, or hereditaments located in whole or
in part within the District.‟” Id. at 168 (quoting D.C. Code § 45-921 (4) (1981)).
                                          16

freehold and is personal property.” 63C Am. Jur. 2d Property § 20.15

      The possessory interest tax at issue here, in which the assessment “shall be a

personal liability of a lessee or user of real property” and “shall not give rise to a

lien against the real property,” D.C. Code § 47-1005.01 (f)(3), resembles the state

“tax on private lessees and users of tax-exempt property who use such property in

a business conducted for profit” that the Supreme Court upheld in United States v.

City of Detroit, 355 U.S. 466, 469 (1958). The Court explained that “[a]ny taxes

due under the statute are the personal obligation of the private lessee or user,” and

that “[t]he owner is not liable for their payment nor is the property itself subject to

any lien if they remain unpaid.” Id. “A tax for the beneficial use of property, as

distinguished from a tax on the property itself, has long been a commonplace in

this country.” Id. at 470; see also United States v. New Mexico, 455 U.S. 720, 732

(1982). Like the possessory interest in this case, the possessory interest taxed in

City of Detroit was no less the personal property of the lessee simply because it

      15
           See also BLACK‟S LAW DICTIONARY 286 (10th ed. 2014) (“The most
important chattel real is an estate for years in land, which is considered a chattel
because it lacks the indefiniteness of time essential to real property.”); 73 C.J.S.
Property § 34 (“„Personal property‟ includes „chattels real,‟ which are property
interests arising out of, or dependent on, real estate. . . . „Chattels real‟ are to be
distinguished on the one hand from things which have no concern with the realty,
such as mere movables and rights connected with them, which are „chattels
personal,‟ and on the other hand from a freehold, which is realty.”).
                                          17

was “measured by the value of the property.”16 355 U.S. at 470.

      Because a lessee‟s possessory interest in property is a species of personal

property, we read the “leasehold interest, possessory interest, beneficial interest, or

beneficial use of the lessee or user of the real property,” D.C. Code § 47-1005.01

(b), as distinct from the interests “of the District” that the District conveyed to 17M

as part of the Demised Premises. The District could not have demised 17M‟s

possessory interest to 17M as the District did not have 17M‟s possessory interest to

demise; it had, instead, only its own. Thus in describing 17M‟s liability for new

taxes imposed on the District or the Demised Premises, Section 19.02 does not

control 17M‟s liability for its own possessory interest and beneficial use of the

Demised Premises. The Lease Agreement, in addition, does not indicate that 17M

would only be liable for expressly authorized taxes. Cf. District of Columbia v.

Cato Inst., 829 A.2d 237, 240 (D.C. 2003) (explaining with respect to real property

taxes that it is “„firmly established‟” that “„exemptions from taxation are to be

construed strictly against the party claiming an exemption‟” (quoting Nat’l Med.

Ass’n v. District of Columbia, 611 A.2d 53, 55 (D.C. 1992))).

      16
           In City of Detroit, the Supreme Court reasoned that “it seems obvious
enough that use of exempt property is worth as much as use of comparable taxed
property during the same interval” and concluded that “it was not an impermissible
subterfuge but a permissible exercise of its taxing power for Michigan to compute
its tax by the value of the property used.” 355 U.S. at 470.
                                        18

      We conclude that the trial court erred when it granted summary judgment to

17M on the ground that assessing the possessory interest tax against 17M “would

cause the District of Columbia to breach a pre-existing agreement or other legal

obligation.” D.C. Code § 47-1005.01 (c)(2). The judgment of the Superior Court

is reversed and the case is remanded for proceedings consistent with this opinion.

                                                   So ordered.