Court Opinion

ID: 4647979
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2020-12-30 20:01:42.611024+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:01:10.224966
License: Public Domain

Filed 12/30/20
                        CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

       IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

                           FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

                                  DIVISION FOUR

 LETTERMAN DIGITAL ARTS LTD.,
           Plaintiff and Appellant,
                                             A156315
 v.
 CITY AND COUNTY OF                          (City & County of San Francisco
 SAN FRANCISCO et al.,                       Super. Ct. No. CGC-16-555649)
           Defendants and Respondents.

       Letterman Digital Arts, Ltd. (Letterman), a lessee and sublessor of
property in the Presidio of San Francisco (the Presidio), appeals the dismissal
of its complaint against the City and County of San Francisco and Jose
Cisneros, treasurer and tax collector of San Francisco (collectively, the city),
to recover a refund of gross receipts taxes and business registration fees
imposed on rents it received from tenants of the subleased property.
Letterman contends that imposition of the tax and fee violates the tax
exemption provision in section 103(c)(9) of the Presidio Trust Act. 1 We
conclude that the trial court properly sustained without leave to amend the
city’s demurrer because the tax and fee do not contravene the provisions of
the federal statute.

       1The Presidio Trust Act is codified in the appendix to title 16 United
States Code section 460bb. All further undesignated statutory references are
to the Presidio Trust Act. We refer to the tax provision at issue as section
103(c)(9).

                                         1
                                BACKGROUND

      1. Taxing Power Within the Presidio as a Federal Enclave

      The Presidio, formerly a military base and now a National Park site, is
located in the Golden Gate National Recreation Area in San Francisco. The
Presidio is an exclusive federal enclave under the United States
Constitution’s Enclave Clause, article I, section 8, clause 17. California ceded
the Presidio to the federal government in 1897. (Stats. 1897, ch. 56, § 1,
p. 51.) California reserved only the right to serve and execute civil and
criminal process. (Standard Oil Co. v. California (1934) 291 U.S. 242, 244.) A
state or local government cannot exercise its police or taxing powers in an
exclusive federal enclave except to the extent the state reserves those powers
at the time the land is ceded, or the federal government later permits. (See
U.S. Const., art. 1, § 8, cl. 17; Coso Energy Developers v. County of Inyo (2004)
122 Cal. App. 4th 1512, 1519–1522; Sen.Rep. No. 1625, 76th Cong., 3d. Sess.,
p. 2 (1940).2)
      Prior to 1940 San Francisco had no authority to impose a tax of any
kind in the Presidio. But in 1940 Congress enacted the Buck Act (4 U.S.C.
§§ 105–110.), which authorizes states and local jurisdictions to impose income
taxes on activities in federal areas, or on residents of such federal areas, to
the same extent and with the same effect as though such land was not a
federal area.3 For purposes of the Buck Act, “income tax” means “any tax

      2The trial court granted Letterman’s request to take judicial notice of
the Senate Report. Although Letterman does not renew its request on appeal,
we likewise take judicial notice of the Senate Report. (Evid. Code, §§ 452,
459, subd. (a); Scott v. JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A. (2013) 214 Cal. App. 4th
743, 752.)
      3   The statute, 4 United States Code section 106(a), provides: “No person

                                        2
levied on, with respect to, or measured by, net income, gross income, or gross
receipts.” (4 U.S.C. § 110(c).) The Buck Act thus empowers San Francisco to
impose a tax on gross receipts earned within the Presidio.

      2. The Presidio Trust Act

      In enacting the Presidio Trust Act in 1996, Congress created the
Presidio Trust as a wholly-owned government corporation to manage the
Presidio. (§ 103(a).) Under the Presidio Trust Act, the trust must fulfill the
dual statutory purposes of preserving the historic and natural character of
the Presidio and its cultural and recreational resources and making the
Presidio financially self-sustainable. (§ 101(5), (6), (7); see Presidio Historical
Assn. v. Presidio (9th Cir. 2016) 811 F.3d 1154, 1157.) The Presidio Trust Act
exempts the trust from certain federal laws and regulations. (See, e.g.,
§ 104(b) [exempting trust from procurement requirements].) It also contains
the tax exemption at issue in this case, section 103(c)(9). As originally
enacted, section 103(c)(9) read, “The Trust and all properties administered by
the Trust shall be exempt from all taxes and special assessments of every
kind by the State of California, and its political subdivisions, including the
City and County of San Francisco.” (Pub.L. No. 104–333 (Nov. 12, 1996) 110
Stat. 4093.) As a wholly-owned government corporation, legislation was not

shall be relieved from liability for any income tax levied by any State, or by
any duly constituted taxing authority therein, having jurisdiction to levy such
a tax, by reason of his residing within a Federal area or receiving income
from transactions occurring or services performed in such area; and such
State or taxing authority shall have full jurisdiction and power to levy and
collect such tax in any Federal area within such state to the same extent and
with the same effect as though such area was not a Federal area.”

                                         3
and necessary to exempt the trust itself from taxation.4 Legislation was
necessary, however, to exempt taxation of privately held possessory interests.
(See California State Teachers’ Retirement System v. County of Los Angeles
(2013) 216 Cal. App. 4th 41, 56 [“ ‘ “Privately held possessory interests in
property owned by the federal government, the state, and municipalities are
subject to taxation. [Citation.] Because a large proportion of California land
was (and is) in public ownership, taxation of possessory interests is an
important source of local government revenue.” ’ ”].) In 2000, section 103(c)(9)
was amended to read: “The Trust and all properties administered by the
Trust and all interest created under leases, concessions, permits and other
agreements associated with the properties shall be exempt from all taxes and
special assessments of every kind by the State of California, and its political
subdivisions, including the City and County of San Francisco.” (Italics
added.) The meaning of the italicized language added by the 2000
amendment is at issue in this case.5

      3. The Tax and Fees at Issue and Letterman’s Refund Claims

      Under article 12, section 953, subdivision (a) of the San Francisco
Business and Tax Regulations Code, “every person engaging in business

      4As an instrumentality of the federal government, the trust would be
exempt from state and local taxation even in the absence of section 103(c)(9).
(See Indian Motocycle Co. v. United States (1931) 283 U.S. 570, 575
[Constitution impliedly prohibits state taxation of federal governmental
instrumentalities]; see also 4 U.S.C. § 107(a) [expressly stating that the Buck
Act does not authorize states to levy taxes on the federal government or its
instrumentalities].)
      5 We grant the city’s request to take judicial notice of the original
version of section 103(c)(9), and comments made during a debate in the
House of Representatives on the Senate’s amendments to the Presidio Trust
Act in 2000, as did the trial court. (Evid. Code, § 459, subd. (a).)

                                       4
within the City shall pay an annual gross receipts tax.” The city characterizes
the tax as “a privilege tax imposed upon persons engaging in business within
the City for the privilege of engaging in a business or occupation in the City.”
(Id., subd. (b).) In addition, the city requires that each business pay an
annual registration fee, which is measured by its gross receipts. (S.F. Bus. &
Tax Regs. Code, art. 12, § 855, subd. (e)(1).
      In September 2015, Letterman paid the city a business registration fee
of $12,501 for July 2015 through June 2016. In February 2016, Letterman
paid the city $45,001.02 ($15,199.00 for 2014 and $29,002.02 for 2015) in
gross receipt taxes and $6,877.50 in further business registration fees for
July 2015 through June 2016. In May 2016, Letterman paid $12,501 in
business registration fees for July 2016 through June 2017. Letterman
submitted claims to the city for refunds of these payments. Letterman
asserted that its receipts are exempt under section 103(c)(9) “because they
are rents earned by subletting real property leased from the Presidio Trust.”
The city denied the claims.
      In February 2017, Letterman filed the operative complaint against the
city for refunds of the taxes and fees it paid in the amount of $76,880.52, plus
interest from the date of payment. The complaint attached copies of the
claims for refund and the city’s denial of the claims. Letterman asserted
three causes of action based on alleged violations of the due process and
commerce clauses of the United States Constitution and the Presidio Trust
Act. As alleged, the trust leased property in the Presidio to Letterman, which
in turn subleased the property to third parties, such as financial services
businesses, investment firms, software firms, and nonprofit entities.
Letterman earns rent from subleasing the property. With respect to its third
cause of action for violation of the Presidio Trust Act, Letterman alleged that

                                        5
“[t]axing [its] receipts earned by subletting real property pursuant to the
written lease with, and authorization to do business by, the Presidio Trust is
taxing an interest created under a lease of property of the Presidio . . . , in
violation of the Presidio Trust Act.”

      4. The City’s Demurrer and the Trial Court’s Ruling

      The city filed a demurrer asserting that Letterman failed to allege facts
sufficient to state each cause of action. As relevant here, the city argued, and
continues to maintain, that Letterman’s third cause of action for violation of
section 103(c)(9) fails because “[a] tax on gross receipts does not become a tax
on an ‘interest’ created under a lease simply because [Letterman] earns its
money from rental payments.” The city claims that an “interest created under
leases . . . associated with the properties,” as used in section 103(c)(9), refers
to possessory interests, not the privilege of engaging in a business or the
right to receive rent from sublessees of the property it leases from the trust.
It contends further that Letterman’s interpretation of section 103(c)(9) as a
prohibition on the taxation of its rental income conflicts with the Buck Act.
      Letterman opposed the demurrer, arguing that the phrase “all interest
created under leases . . . associated with the properties” in section 103(c)(9)
includes the right to receive rent from subleases of the leased property. Since
the exemption is from “all taxation and special assessments of every kind,”
Letterman claims its receipts are exempt from the city’s gross receipts tax
and business registration fee. Letterman argues, “there is no reason to
assume Congress would not have overridden the Buck Act” and “[a]s the more
recent and specific provision, the Presidio Trust Act would control.”
      The trial court overruled the city’s demurrer as to the first cause of
action and sustained it as to the second and third causes of action without
leave to amend. With respect to the third cause of action, the court concluded

                                         6
that “San Francisco’s gross receipts tax and business registration fee do
not constitute taxation of [Letterman’s] ‘interest’ created under a lease.
(See, e.g., U S. v. Wells Farg .Bank (1988) 485 U.S. 351, 355; Northern
Commercial Co v. Territory of Alaska (9th Cir. 1923) 289 F. 786, 787;
Brunton v. Superior Court of Los Angeles County (1942) 20 Cal. 2d 202,
207; Tin Tin Corp. v. Pacific Rim Park, LLC (2009) 170 Cal. App. 4th 1220,
1228; City and County of San Francisco. v. Flying Dutchman Park, Inc.
(2004) 122 Cal. App. 4th 74, 78; City of Berkeley v. Cukierman (1993) 14
Cal. App. 4th 1331, 1336, fn. 2, 1340-1341.) Because the Buck Act permits
taxes measured by gross receipts, [Letterman’s] construction of Section
103(c)(9) of the Presidio Trust Act treats it as an implied repeal of the Act.
The Court disagrees that Congress intended to repeal the Buck Act as to
the Presidio when it enacted the Presidio Trust Act. The original language
of Section 103(c)(9) prohibited the taxation of the Presidio Trust or any
property administered by the Trust. (P.L. 104-333, 110 Stat. 4100,
November 12, 1996, § 103(c)(9).) This language was consistent with, not
contrary to, the Buck Act, because the Buck Act did not permit the
taxation of any instrumentality of the United States (4 U.S.C. § 107) or
authorize the collection of property taxes (id. §§ 105, 106); moreover, the
amended language on which [Letterman] relies was added as part of what
were described as ‘technical or clarifying’ amendments. (145 Cong. Rec.
815146-02, § 15146, 1999 WL 1050489; 146 Cong. Rec. H409-02, H409,
2000 WL 158365.)”
      The parties stipulated to dismissal of the first and second causes of
action, judgment was entered for the city, and this timely appeal by
Letterman followed.

                                       7
                                   DISCUSSION

1. Standard of Review

      “ ‘ “On appeal from an order of dismissal after an order sustaining a
demurrer, our standard of review is de novo.” ’ ” (Los Altos El Granada
Investors v. City of Capitola (2006) 139 Cal. App. 4th 629, 650.) In reviewing
the complaint, “we must assume the truth of all facts properly pleaded by the
plaintiffs, as well as those that are judicially noticeable.” (Howard Jarvis
Taxpayers Assn. v. City of La Habra (2001) 25 Cal. 4th 809, 814.) Where the
issue of substantive law presents a question of statutory interpretation, our
review likewise is de novo. (See People v. Arroyo (2016) 62 Cal. 4th 589, 593.)

2. Section 103(c)(9) exempts a lessee of property in the Presidio only from the
payment of property taxes.

      The parties agree that the lease from the Presidio Trust to Letterman,
and the subleases from Letterman to its tenants, create possessory interests
that section 103(c)(9) exempts from the payment of property taxes. Letterman
contends that the exemption from the payment of state and local taxes on “all
interest” under the leases extends as well to the “interest” in collecting rent.
We agree with the city that this argument is largely a play on words. The
term “interest” as used in section 103(c)(9) refers to property, or possessory,
interests, and not to the rights that the property interest conveys. The
statute exempts Letterman and its sublessees from the payment of property
taxes but not from payment of taxes levied on gross receipts from use of the
property. This is so despite the fact that it is the lease that creates the right
to sublet and collect the rents.
      The distinction between a property tax and an excise or gross receipts
tax is well recognized under both federal and state law. In United States v.
Wells Fargo Bank (1988) 485 U.S. 351, the United States Supreme Court held

                                        8
that an exemption from the payment of “all taxation now or hereafter
imposed by the United States” did not exempt certain promissory notes from
the payment of estate taxes. The court explained, “an exemption of property
from all taxation ha[s] an understood meaning: the property was exempt
from direct taxation, but certain privileges of ownership, such as the right to
transfer the property, could be taxed. Underlying this doctrine is the
distinction between an excise tax, which is levied upon the use or transfer of
property even though it might be measured by the property's value, and a tax
levied upon the property itself. The former has historically been permitted
even where the latter has been constitutionally or statutorily forbidden.” (Id.
at p. 355.)
      This basic distinction between the taxation of property and taxation of
the right to earn income derived from a possessory interest in the property, or
an excise tax, has been recognized and enforced in the numerous federal and
state cases cited by the trial court. (Northern Commercial Co v. Territory of
Alaska, supra, 289 F. at p. 787 [“Property taxes are taxes assessed on all
property of a certain class in proportion to its value on a specified date. It
is assessed at a stated period and collected at an appointed time. An
excise tax, as the term itself indicates, is a sum cut out of that which is
received or enjoyed by the person subjected thereto. It includes every tax
imposed upon the privilege of performing an act or engaging in a business
or occupation.”]; Brunton v. Superior Court of Los Angeles County, supra,
20 Cal.2d at pp. 206-207 [license fee for operation of oil well “is not a tax
upon the value of the property . . . but a tax upon the privilege of drilling
for oil. It is settled that a privilege tax is not a property tax within the
meaning of this and other sections of the Constitution”]; Tin Tin Corp. v.
Pacific Rim Park, LLC, supra, 170 Cal.App.4th at p. 1229 [distinguishing

                                       9
between “assessments against real property interests” and “the privilege
of doing business [citation] or the income generated by the conduct of the
business”]; City and County of San Francisco. v. Flying Dutchman Park,
Inc., supra, 122 Cal.App.4th at p. 88 [“[A]n important distinction is made
between the taxation of real estate ownership on an ad valorem basis, and
a tax on the use of that real property. It has long been recognized that a
tax on the separate use of the property, known as an excise tax, is
permissible, and does not constitute double taxation.”]; City of Berkeley v.
Cukierman, supra, 14 Cal.App.4th at p. 1341 [“property tax and excise tax
can be imposed simultaneously”].)
      Thus, the State Board of Equalization has recognized that
section 103(c)(9) prohibits the taxation of possessory interests in the Presidio,
with no suggestion that the exemption applies to any other taxes payable by
Presidio tenants. (SBE Property Tax Annot., 660.0092, Jan. 30, 2002.) The
board’s opinion summarizes: “(i) the Presidio property was ceded to the
federal government for military purposes prior to 1939, (ii) the Presidio
property is no longer used for military purposes, and (iii) not only has
Congress not consented to state and local assessment of privately held
possessory interests in Presidio property, but it has enacted legislation
specifically precluding the assessment and taxation of such interests. As a
consequence, such privately held possessory interests in Presidio real
property are exempt from state and local property taxation.”6
      Letterman argues that the 2000 amendment to section 103(c)(9),
adding the phrase “and all interest created under leases, concessions, permits

      6State Board of Equalization annotations “are ‘ “not controlling upon
the courts,” ’ but do ‘ “constitute a body of experience and informed judgment
to which courts and litigants may properly resort for guidance.” ’ ” (Dyanlyn
Two v. County of Orange (2015) 234 Cal. App. 4th 800, 811.)

                                       10
and other agreements associated with the properties,” would be superfluous if
not construed to refer to more than possessory interests that were exempted
from taxation before the amendment was added. Not so. As explained above,
section 103(c)(9) was enacted to exempt from taxation privately held interests
in property owned by the federal government. (See, ante, p. 3 & fn. 4.) Read
literally, however, the property tax exemption for “all properties
administered by the Trust” might not be read to apply to Letterman’s
possessory interest in the property or to the possessory interests of its
subtenants. The 2000 amendment clarified that their interests in the
property were included in the exemption.
      While it may be unnecessary to rely on the legislative history to
interpret the plain meaning of the statute, that history does confirm that the
2000 amendment was not intended to override the Buck Act or to create
additional tax exemptions. The amendment was among “a number of
technical and clarifying amendments” included in the “Omnibus Parks
Technical Corrections Act of 2000,” in title I thereof, entitled “Technical
Corrections to Division I.” (Pub.L No. 106-176 (Mar. 10, 2000) 114 Stat. 23.)
As explained by Congressman Hansen when the bill amendments were
discussed in the House of Representatives, the bill in which the amendment
is included “is a noncontroversial bill that makes a number of technical
corrections to the Omnibus Parks and Public Lands Management Act of 1966
and to other laws related to parks and public land management.”7 (145 Cong.
Rec. S15146-02, S151465; 146 Cong. Rec. H409, H409.)

      7 The amendment to section 103(c)(9) was twelfth of thirteen technical
clarifications to the title and division in which the Presidio Trust Act
appears. As examples of the nature of the clarifications made by the bill, the
changes immediately preceding and following the amendment to

                                       11
      It may be true, as Letterman argues, that relieving tenants of the
obligation to pay local income taxes might eventually and indirectly permit
the Presidio trust to increase the rent charged to its tenants, thus advancing
the objective of self-sustainability of the Presidio. But there is not a word
anywhere in the legislative history to suggest that the 2000 amendment was
designed to advance that objective. There is not even a hint that the
amendment was intended to expand the exemption from the taxation of
property interests to “interests” of another kind, such as the right to do
business, to sublease the property, or to receive rent or other income from use
of the property. Legislative history aside, tax exemptions are to be construed
narrowly. (Bingler v. Johnson (1969) 394 U.S. 741, 752; see also Alpha
Therapeutic Corp. v. County of Los Angeles (1986) 179 Cal. App. 3d 265, 270
[“exemptions are to be narrowly construed” and “doubt about the applicability

section 103(c)(9) were the following: “(11) Section 103(c)(2) (110 Stat. 4099) is
amended by striking ‘consecutive terms’ and inserting ‘consecutive terms,
except that upon the expiration of his or her term, an appointed member
may continue to serve until his or her successor has been appointed’.
[¶] (12) . . . [¶] (13) Section 104(d) (110 Stat. 4102) is amended as follows‒
[¶] by inserting ‘(1)’ after ‘FINANCIAL AUTHORITIES.’‒; [¶] by striking
‘(1) The authority’ and inserting ‘(A) The authority’; [¶] by striking ‘(A) the
terms’ and inserting ‘(i) the terms’; [¶] by striking ‘(B) adequate’ and inserting
‘(ii) adequate’; [¶] by striking ‘(C) such guarantees’ and inserting ‘(iii) such
guarantees’; [¶] by striking ‘(2) The authority’ and inserting ‘(B) The
authority’; [¶] by redesignating paragraphs (3) and (4) as paragraphs (2) and
(3) respectively; [¶] in paragraph (2) (as redesignated by this section)‒ [¶] by
striking ‘The authority’ and inserting ‘The Trust shall also have the
authority’; [¶] by striking ‘after determining that the projects to be funded
from the proceeds thereof are creditworthy and that a repayment schedule
is established and only’; and [¶] by inserting after ‘and subject to such terms
and conditions,’ the following ‘including a review of the creditworthiness of the
loan and establishment of a repayment schedule,’; and [¶] in paragraph (3)
(as redesignated by this section) by inserting before ‘this subsection’ the
following ‘paragraph (2) of.’ ”

                                       12
of an exemption is resolved against that exemption”].) An expansion of the
exemption as Letterman urges would negate the provisions of the Buck Act,
which authorizes the imposition of state and local taxes on gross receipts
earned by private parties in the federal enclave. Such an implicit repeal of
other legislation is not countenanced. (See Epic Systems Corp. v. Lewis (2018)
138 S. Ct. 1612, 1617 [“There is a ‘stron[g] presum[ption]’ that disfavors
repeals by implication and that ‘Congress will specifically address’
preexisting law before suspending the law’s normal operations in a later
statute.”]; Medical Board v. Superior Court (2001) 88 Cal. App. 4th 1001, 1005
[“Implied repeals may be found only where ‘ “there is no rational basis for
harmonizing the two potentially conflicting statutes [citation], and the
statutes are ‘. . . so inconsistent that the two cannot have concurrent
operation.’ ” ’ ”].) An exemption of a tax liability will not be implied. (United
States v. Wells Fargo Bank, supra, 485 U.S. at p. 354 [noting “the settled
principle that exemptions from taxation are not to be implied; they must be
unambiguously proved”].)
      Moreover, were section 103(c)(9) read to exempt a lessee of Presidio
property from payment of the city’s gross receipt tax and business
registration fee, the provision unquestionably would conflict with the
provisions of the Buck Act. There would be no occasion to consider the
principles applicable to the resolution of conflicting statutory provisions,
however, because the antecedent principle is that the statutes should be
interpreted to avoid the conflict if reasonable to do so. (Morton v. Mancari
(1974) 417 U.S. 535, 551 [“ ‘When there are two acts upon the same subject,
the rule is to give effect to both if possible.’ ”]; Fair v.Bakhtiari (2006) 40
Cal. 4th 189, 199 [related statutes are construed “so as to harmonize their
requirements and avoid anomaly”].) There is no conflict between

                                         13
section 103(c)(9) and the Buck Act if section 103(c)(9) is construed in the
common-sense manner of exempting the holders of possessory interests in the
Presidio only from payment of a property tax.
      The cases cited by Letterman in support of its interpretation of the
word “interest” as it is used in section 103(c)(9) are singularly inapposite.
Russello v. United States (1983) 464 U.S. 16, 17, interpreted the phrase “any
interest [the defendant] has acquired . . . in violation of [18 U.S.C.] section
1962” for the purpose of applying the forfeiture provision of the Racketeer
Influenced and Corrupt Organizations (RICO) chapter of the Organized
Crime Control Act of 1970 (18 U.S.C. § 1961 et seq.). The issue in the case
was “whether profits and proceeds derived from racketeering constitute an
‘interest’ within the meaning of this statute and are therefore subject to
forfeiture.” (464 U.S. at p. 20.) Cook v. City of Buena Park (2005) 126
Cal. App. 4th 1, 6, questioned whether a landlord had a “protected life, liberty,
or property interest” for the purpose of asserting a due process claim against
application of a statute requiting him to undertake eviction proceedings
against a tenant. DFS Group L.P. v. County of San Mateo (2019) 31
Cal. App. 5th 1059, 1088, questioned whether the exclusive right to sell
merchandise at duty-free shops in San Francisco Airport may be considered
in determining the value of its possessory interest in its airport locations for
property tax purposes (and held that it may not). County of Los Angeles v.
County of Los Angeles Assessment Appeals Bd. (1993) 13 Cal. App. 4th 102,
112, considered a similar question (and reached a similar conclusion) with
respect to car-rental companies at several Los Angeles area airports. Watson
Cogeneration Co. v. County of Los Angeles (2002) 98 Cal. App. 4th 1066,
1070, considered whether it was proper to consider the actual income stream
resulting from an above-market price government-facilitated power purchase

                                        14
agreement in the property tax valuation of an independent power plant
developed and operating under that agreement (and held that it was).
American Sheds, Inc. v. County of Los Angeles (1998) 66 Cal. App. 4th 384,
389, considered whether, in valuing certain landfill property for the purpose
of the real property tax, it was proper to include the value of intangibles,
including operating permits and ‘business enterprise’ value (and held that it
was).
        None of these cases have the slightest bearing on whether an
exemption from taxation of specified properties and of “all interest created
under leases . . . associated with the properties” can be understood as an
exemption from the taxation of gross receipts received from renting the
properties. None supports conflating a property interest with the rights
conveyed by that interest. Letterman argues that if the Congressional intent
had been to limit the 2000 amendment to the exemption of possessory or
property interests, “possessory” or “property” would have been inserted before
the word “interest.” We consider it far more likely that no such word was
included simply because it is unnecessary; in context it is apparent that the
reference is only to an interest in the property. Moreover, even were the right
to receive rent considered an “interest” conveyed by the lease, that would not
mean that the rental income, or gross receipts, is such an interest. In no case
cited by Letterman or disclosed by our own research has taxation of rental
income ever been held to constitute taxation of an interest under a lease.
        Nor do any of the numerous cases cited by Letterman for the
proposition that “all” means all shed any light on the question. (E.g., Lee v.
O’Hara (1967) 57 Cal. 2d 476, 478.) Nor does the breadth of an “exempt[ion]
from all taxation of every kind,” as Letterman points to in Illinois Central

                                       15
Railroad Co. v. Emerson (1921) 299 Ill. 328, 3348 and other cases. The broad
language in section 103(c)(9), “shall be exempt from all taxes and special
assessments of every kind,” confirms, perhaps unnecessarily,9 that the
Presidio trust is exempt from the payment of taxes of every kind. The 2000
amendment clarifies that no tax may be imposed on Presidio property,
regardless of who holds the possessory interest in the property. But
section 103(c)(9), which begins, “The Trust and all properties administered by
the Trust,” does not purport to exempt any other party from the payment of
an otherwise applicable tax other than a tax on the property itself.

                                DISPOSITION

      The judgment is affirmed.

                                            POLLAK, P. J.

I CONCUR:

BROWN, J.

      8Ironically, the full provision in the Illinois Central case read, “the said
corporation is hereby exempted from all taxation of every kind, except as
herein provided for” and the operative document there did require other
payments to the state.
      9 See Prime Time International Company v. U.S. Department of
Agriculture (D.C. Cir. 2014) 753 F.3d 1339, 1342 [“ ‘[S]ometimes Congress . . .
drafts [statutory] provisions that appear duplicative of others . . . simply, in
Macbeth’s words, to make assurance double sure.’ ”]; United States v. Carona
(9th Cir. 2011) 660 F.3d 360, 369 [“[S]tatutes often contain overlapping
provisions. The term ‘belt and suspenders’ is sometimes used to describe the
common tendency of lawyers to use redundant terms to make sure that every
possibility is covered.”].

                                       16
STREETER, J., Concurring and Dissenting.
      The question we address in this case is whether the federal tax
exemption embodied in section 103(c)(9) of the Presidio Trust Act
(section 103(c)(9)) extends to rents collected under a sublease authorized by
the terms of a lease administered by the Presidio Trust (the Trust) in the
City and County of San Francisco (the City).
      Letterman’s argument that it does centers on the statutory phrase, “all
interest created under leases, concessions, permits and other agreements
associated with the properties.” (§ 103(c)(9).) If we are going to make a
serious effort to discern the meaning of those words, I think we must deal
with the plain language, rather than importing into it a specialized meaning
taken from the field of property taxation that we think Congress must have
had in mind when enacting the statute in 1996.
      Without considering whether, based on the actual language Congress
used, there is any ambiguity which justifies looking beyond the plain text, the
majority inserts the word “possessory” as a modifier to “interest”—apparently
because in the field of property taxation law there is a well understood
distinction between direct taxation on possessory interests in property and
excise taxes on income produced from such interests—and on that premise
then proceeds to conclude that the exemption at issue here does not apply.
      Of course it is right that the section 103(c)(9) exemption extends to
nothing more than possessory interests in property if we assume that
conclusion going in. I prefer an approach that first makes an effort to discern
congressional intent from the actual language of the statute, read in light of
the entire statutory scheme, and only then, if the issue presented cannot be
resolved on that basis, resorting to other tools of interpretation.

                                        1
      And if we must look beyond the plain words of the statute, I would infer
from the legislative history—specifically, the addition of clarifying language
by amendment in 2000—an intent to ensure that the exemption in
section 103(c)(9) covers the full breadth of the commercial leasing business
the Trust is in, including subleasing and anything else with a contractual
nexus to its properties. Giving the operative language that construction best
effectuates the congressional intent, evident from the language of the statute,
to support the Trust’s ability to operate the Presidio in a self-sustaining way.
                             I. BACKGROUND
      Because the Trust itself is a government-owned corporation, it is
exempt from all taxation, state and federal. And because the Presidio, as a
place, is a federal enclave, all property comprising the Presidio and all
income-producing activities within it are exempt from state and local taxes.
Not just property taxes. Any taxes.
      In the Buck Act, Congress removed some of this exemption, but not all
of it. Under the Buck Act, which is not specific to the Presidio but opens
federal enclaves to taxation nationwide, states and local jurisdictions may
impose income taxes on activities in federal areas, or on residents of such
federal areas, to the same extent and with the same effect as though such
land was not a federal area. (4 U.S.C. § 106(a).)
      At issue here are two forms of local taxation. Under article 12-A-1,
section 953, subdivision (a) of the San Francisco Business and Tax
Regulations Code, “every person engaging in business within the City shall
pay an annual gross receipts tax.” The City characterizes the tax as “a
privilege tax imposed upon persons engaging in business within the City for
the privilege of engaging in a business or occupation in the City.” (Id.,
subd. (b).) In addition, the City requires that such businesses pay an annual

                                       2
registration fee, which is measured by its gross receipts. (S.F. Bus. & Tax
Regs. Code, art. 12, § 855, subd. (e)(1).)
      Letterman claims that the section 103(c)(9) exemption insulates its
sublease income from the gross receipts tax, and that, as a business, it also
enjoys an exemption from the annual registration fee under section 103(c)(9).
I think Letterman is right about sublease income, but wrong about the
annual registration fee. Thus, as explained further below, I concur with the
result reached by the majority with respect to the annual registration fee, but
I respectfully dissent from the majority’s view that Letterman’s sublease
income is subject to the gross receipts tax.
                                 II. ANALYSIS
   A. Interpretive Principles
      “Well-established rules of statutory construction require us to ascertain
the intent of the enacting legislative body so that we may adopt the
construction that best effectuates the purpose of the law. [Citation.] We first
examine the words themselves because the statutory language is generally
the most reliable indicator of legislative intent.” (Hassan v. Mercy American
River Hospital (2003) 31 Cal. 4th 709, 715; see Robinson v. Shell Oil Co.
(1997) 519 U.S. 337, 340.) “When statutory language is clear and
unambiguous, ‘ “there is no need for construction and courts should not
indulge it.” ’ ” (Esberg v. Union Oil Co. (2002) 28 Cal. 4th 262, 268; see
Robinson v. Shell Oil Co., supra, 519 U.S. at p. 340.)
      Where, as here, a statute contains a tax exemption, we apply the
settled principle that exemptions from taxation are to be narrowly or strictly
construed in favor of the state. (Alpha Therapeutic Corp. v. County of
Los Angeles (1986) 179 Cal. App. 3d 265, 270; Helvering v. Northwest Steel
Rolling Mills (1940) 311 U.S. 46, 49.) But this “rule of strict construction

                                         3
does not require that the narrowest possible meaning be given to the
exempting language, for a fair and reasonable interpretation must be made of
all laws with due regard for the ordinary acceptance of the language
employed and the object sought to be accomplished. . . . [S]trict construction
must still be a reasonable construction.” (English v. County of Alameda
(1977) 70 Cal. App. 3d 226, 234, italics omitted.)
   B. Statutory Text and Structure
      Section 103(c)(9) reads: “Taxes. The Trust and all properties
administered by the Trust and all interest created under leases, concessions,
permits and other agreements associated with the properties shall be exempt
from all taxes and special assessments of every kind by the State of
California, and its political subdivisions, including the City and County of
San Francisco.”
      Also relevant is the structure of the statute, since the specific provision
at issue, and its language, must be read contextually, together with the
statutory scheme as a whole. (Los Angeles County Metropolitan
Transportation Authority v. Alameda Produce Market, LLC (2011) 52 Cal. 4th
1100, 1107.)
      Congress intended that through the Trust, the Presidio is to be
“managed through an innovative public/private partnership that minimizes
cost to the United States Treasury and makes efficient use of private sector
resources.” (§ 101(7).) With the goal of making the Presidio as close to
financially self-sustaining as possible, Congress established the Trust so that,
as an operating entity, it could generate income that would be reinvested in
the operation and maintenance of the grounds and historical structures. (See
§ 101(5) & (7).)

                                        4
      The Presidio is unique within the National Park System in that unlike
other parks, it is required to “increase revenues to the Federal Government to
the maximum extent possible.” (§ 104(c).) Toward that end, the Trust has
authority to enter into leases and other arrangements “as are necessary and
appropriate to carry out its authorized activities.” (§ 104(b).) And “[i]n
managing and leasing the properties transferred to it, the Trust shall
consider the extent to which prospective tenants contribute to the
implementation of the general objectives of the General Management Plan for
the Presidio and to the reduction of cost to the Federal Government. The
Trust shall give priority to the following categories of tenants: Tenants that
enhance the financial viability of the Presidio and tenants that facilitate the
cost-effective preservation of historic buildings through their reuse of such
buildings.” (§ 104(n).)
      As these provisions indicate, Congress created a singular form of land
management to accommodate the unique needs of the Presidio. It specifically
envisioned that the use of building leases would be instrumental to the
Trust’s goals. Lease revenues would provide the Trust with a stable income
stream required for its financial self-sufficiency. Leases also ensure that
vacant Presidio spaces are occupied or rehabilitated. Given the Trust’s
priority of “increasing revenues . . . to the maximum extent possible” and its
reliance on lease revenues to achieve that, construing section 103(c)(9)’s tax
exemption as extending to interests created under such leases can be squared
with the Presidio Trust Act’s purposes.
      Congress understood that the Trust would operate as a commercial
enterprise, and that commercial leasing would be among its sources of
revenue. Thus, the Trust was granted power to “negotiate and enter into
such agreements, leases, contracts and other arrangements with any person,

                                       5
firm, association, organization [or] corporation” as it saw fit. (§ 104(b).) And
in operating its leasing businesses, the Trust was charged to “give priority to
. . . [t]enants that enhance the financial viability of the Presidio . . . .”
(§ 104(n).)
      Because every dollar in sublease income not subject to tax by the City
enhances the total leasing revenue the Trust will be able to generate from
administering the Presidio properties, I think section 103(c)(9) must be
construed in light of Congress’s evident purpose—maximizing the operating
income of the Trust so that it can operate the Presidio as a self-sustaining
enterprise. And I think that construction must center on the plain language
of the exemption at issue: “all interest created under leases, concessions,
permits and other agreements associated with the properties,” a phrase
section 103(c)(9) does not define. Where terms are undefined, “[t]he everyday
understanding . . . should count for a lot,” and we look to “regular usage to
see what Congress probably meant.” (Lopez v. Gonzales (2006) 549 U.S. 47,
53; Sacks v. City of Oakland (2010) 190 Cal. App. 4th 1070, 1082.)
      1. “all interest”
      Moving to the first step of the textual analysis here, I note that the
parties do not dispute the meaning of “all” in the phrase “all interest.”
Because the phrase is not a term of art, its meaning may be discerned as a
matter of everyday English. “All” is defined as “the whole amount, quantity,
or extent of ” and “every member or individual component of.” (Merriam-
Webster.com  [as of
Dec. 30, 2020].) It cannot be disputed that the word “all” has an expansive
meaning. (See Siskiyou County Farm Bureau v. Department of Fish &
Wildlife (2015) 237 Cal. App. 4th 411, 433–434 [“The dictionary is a proper
source to determine the usual and ordinary meaning of words in a statute”

                                          6
and “relevant dictionary definitions are those extant before or at least near in
time to the statutory or contractual usage”].)
      Some dictionaries do, as Letterman says, define an “interest” as a
“right, title, or legal share in something” (Merriam-Webster.com
 [as of Dec. 30,
2020]), or a “legal share in something; all or part of a legal or equitable claim
to or right in property ” (Black’s Law Dict. (11th ed.
2019) p. 968, col. 1). But the phrase “all interest” in section 103(c)(9)
precedes the phrase “created under leases, concessions, permits and other
agreements,” which suggests that “interest” should be understood in light of
the words that follow. (See People v. Valencia (2017) 3 Cal. 5th 347, 362
[specific location of words within a statute may serve as an indicator of their
meaning and scope].) Thus, to further illuminate the context in which the
words are used, we must look to the adjacent phrase, “created under leases,”
in section 103(c)(9).
      2. “created under leases”
      “Create” means “to bring into existence” or “to produce or bring about
by a course of action or behavior.” (Merriam-Webster.com
 [as of Dec. 30, 2020].)
“Under” means “[s]ubject to the authority, control, guidance, or instruction
of,” as in “under a contract.” (Merriam-Webster Dictionary.com
 [as of Dec. 30, 2020]).
      The meaning of “lease” is well settled. A lease is “a contract by which a
rightful possessor of real property conveys the right to use and occupy the
property in exchange for consideration, usu[ally] rent.” (Black’s Law Dict.
(11th ed. 2019) p. 1066, col. 2.) Cases also define “lease” in terms of what
right or interest the lease “creates.” For example, as explained in Winters

                                        7
Coal, Inc. v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue (1974) 496 F.2d 995, 998
(plur. opn. of Coleman, J.), “[t]here is little conflict or disagreement with the
old hornbook principle that a lease is a conveyance and creates in the lessee
an estate which entitles him to exclusive possession unless certain rights are
reserved by the lessor.”1 It is also commonly understood that a “sublease” is a
form of lease, specifically one “by a lessee to a third party, transferring the
right to possession to some or all of the leased property for a term shorter
than that of the lessee, who retains a right of reversion.” (Black’s Law Dict.
(11th ed. 2019) p. 1724, col. 1.) That is so because “the relation created by a
sublease [is] for all general purposes the ordinary relation of landlord and
tenant.” (Marcellus v. K.O.V., Inc. (1980) 5 Kan. App. 2d 339, 341; see also
52 C.J.S. Landlord (2020) Landlord & Tenant, § 338 [“The word ‘lessee’ has
been construed as including a sublessee”].)
      To this point in the textual analysis, there is no real dispute. Both
parties accept that an “interest created under [a] lease[]” or sublease is the
possession of property in a lessee or sublessee, and that ultimately the
sublease at issue here is an “agreement[] associated with” “properties
administered by” the Trust. Letterman alleges that it leased real property
from the Trust and in turn subleased that property to other parties. The
parties thus agree that the lease and sublease created possessory interests
and that such interests are exempt from taxation under section 103(c)(9).
Where the parties diverge is on whether, as Letterman urges,

      1See California State Teachers’ Retirement System v. County of Los
Angeles (2013) 216 Cal. App. 4th 41, 55 (“in the creation of a lease, the fee
simple interest is divided into the leasehold interest [i.e., the possessory
interest] and the leased fee interest [i.e., the nonpossessory interest]”); see
also Herpel v. County of Riverside (2020) 45 Cal. App. 5th 96, 107 (“when an
exempt or immune entity leases its property, ‘[i]t creates valuable privately-
held possessory interests’ ”).
                                        8
section 103(c)(9) also exempts from taxation Letterman’s receipts of the rent
it earns from its subleases, or, as the City urges—and the majority agrees—
section 103(c)(9) only “refers to taxes levied against property or possessory
interests in that property.” I find Letterman’s position on this critical issue
to be more persuasive.
      As noted above, a lease is “a contract by which a rightful possessor of
real property conveys the right to use and occupy the property in exchange for
consideration, usu[ally] rent.” (Black’s Law Dict. (11th ed. 2019) p. 1066,
col. 2, italics added; see Seminole Tribe of Florida v. Stranburg (11th Cir.
2015) 799 F.3d 1324, 1331 [rent payments “secure a lessee’s possessory
interest in the land for the duration of the lease” (italics omitted)].) Courts
have held that the “right to . . . rent is not a separate and distinct item of
property but is part of the bundle of rights incident to the ownership of the
fee [simple].” (Koch v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue (1978) 71 T.C. 54,
66; see Sullivan v. United States (3d Cir. 1980) 618 F.2d 1001, 1005 [same];
Ellingson v. Walsh, O’Connor & Barneson (1940) 15 Cal. 2d 673, 675
[tenancies in property “carry with them the incident obligation of rent”];
Seminole Tribe of Florida v. Stranburg, supra, 799 F.3d at p. 1331 [“payment
[of rent] under a lease is intimately and indistinguishably connected to the
leasing of the land itself ”].)
      Indeed, the covenant to pay rent runs with the land; until separated
from the reversion, rent constitutes a part of the land and passes as an
incident to a transfer of the reversion. (See Callahan v. Martin (1935)
3 Cal. 2d 110, 124 [“the right to receive future rents . . . is an incorporeal
hereditament, an interest in land”]; accord, People ex rel. Hargrave v. Phillips
(1946) 394 Ill. 119, 123 [“ ‘Unaccrued rents . . . are an incident to the
reversion and follow the land . . . . [A]lthough separable from the reversion,

                                         9
[they] are, until such separation, part of the land’ ”].) Accordingly, a “lessor’s
interest” is defined as “[t]he present value of the future income under a lease,
plus the present value of the property after the lease expires.” (Black’s Law
Dict. (11th ed. 2019) p. 1086, col. 1; accord, Cherokee Water Co. v. Gregg
County Appraisal Dist. (1990) 801 S.W.2d 872, 875 [“The lessor’s interests in
the property are not just the future right to receive the property back at the
end of term, but the present right to receive income in the form of rent”].)
      3. “all taxes”
      Reading all of the operative words in section 103(c)(9) as a whole, I
would conclude that, by its plain text, the statute exempts from “all taxes”
Letterman’s receipt of sublease rent payments, since these rents were
produced by a legal right or claim (an “interest[]”) that was, in turn, brought
into existence (“created under leases”) by a sublease under a lease with the
Trust (“associated with properties administered by the Trust”).
      Because we must presume that Congress legislated with knowledge
that the unadorned phrase “created under leases,” as used in this context,
would sweep within it not only any possessory interest under but rents
produced by such leases (see Foley v. Interactive Data Corp. (1988) 47 Cal. 3d
654, 675 [“When the Legislature enacts language that has received definitive
judicial construction, we presume that the Legislature was aware of the
relevant judicial decisions and intended to adopt that construction”]), the
statutory language should be read with commensurate breadth. In my view,
we must take Congress at its word when it used the phrase “all taxes” in
section 103(c)(9). (County of Oakland v. Federal Housing Finance Agency
(6th Cir. 2013) 716 F.3d 935, 940 [“a straightforward reading of the statute
leads to the unremarkable conclusion that when Congress said ‘all taxation,’

                                        10
it meant all taxation”]; Sander v. Alexander Richardson Inv. (8th Cir. 2003)
334 F.3d 712, 716 [“ ‘In short, “all” means all’ ”].)
      The City blithely dismisses any need to deal directly with statutory
text, describing Letterman’s interpretation of the phrases “all interest” and
“created under leases,” when read together with “all taxes,” as “little more
than wordplay.” But disparagement of an opposing interpretation of
statutory text does not substitute for engagement with it. (Estate of Dye
(2001) 92 Cal. App. 4th 966, 976 [“A party attacking a meaning succeeds only
if the attacker can propose an alternative, plausible, candidate of meaning”].)
By offering no textual analysis of its own, the City pays no heed to the
fundamental rule that we must “first examine the [statutory] words
themselves [as they are] . . . generally the most reliable indicator of
legislative intent.” (Hassan v. Mercy American River Hospital, supra,
31 Cal.4th at p. 715.) It is here, I think, that the majority goes astray in
adopting the City’s analysis, glibness and all.
      As a substitute for its own analysis of the text, the City invokes the
principle that tax exemption statutes are to be construed narrowly. But that
rule presupposes an available plain language reading of the exemption to
support invocation of the narrow construction principle. (See English v.
County of Alameda, supra, 70 Cal.App.3d at p. 234 [“statutes granting
exemption from taxation as a general rule are strictly construed to the end
that such concession will neither be enlarged nor extended beyond the plain
meaning of the language employed”].) The City does not even pretend there
is a plain language reading of section 103(c)(9) to support its position here.
Only by presupposing that Congress smuggled into the statute a specialized
meaning that is not apparent from the statutory text—which is what
insertion of the word “possessory” as a modifier to “interest” accomplishes—

                                         11
does the City’s position make sense. Without this first interpretive step, the
City cannot proceed to the heart of its analysis, which is the distinction
between property tax and excise tax.
   C. The Property Tax Versus Excise Tax Distinction
      Rather than deal directly with the statutory text, the City, arguing at a
broad, conceptual level, contends that the challenged taxes are excise taxes,
not property taxes, and that “Letterman failed to establish that the
challenged taxes are imposed on its ‘interest’ under its subleases.” I find this
line of argument unconvincing. It is untethered to any specific language in
section 103(c)(9) and proceeds on the assumption that when Congress said
“all taxes” in the statute, it did not really mean all taxes. Unless we are to be
guided by an unexpressed policy preference favoring maximum revenue
generation for the City at the expense of the federal government, I see no
principled foundation for such a limitation.
      The majority’s citation to United States v. Wells Fargo (1988) 485 U.S.
351 (Wells Fargo) does not compel a different conclusion. At issue in Wells
Fargo was an Internal Revenue Service refund claim in a case where the
trustee of two family estates, in the mid-1980’s, held significant amounts of
tax-free housing bonds, known as “Project Notes,” in their asset portfolios.
(Wells Fargo, supra, 485 U.S. at pp. 353–354.) The trustee sought refunds
under section 5(e) of the Federal Housing Act of 1937 (section 5(e)), the
statute that authorized the issuance of the Project Notes. (Wells Fargo, at
p. 355.) The opinion in Wells Fargo opens with a careful delineation of the
context: In making the Project Notes tax exempt, the court explained, the
congressional purpose was to attract capital as a way of stimulating housing
investment in the midst of the Great Depression. (Id. at p. 353.) “For almost
50 years after the Act’s passage,” the court points out, “it was generally

                                       12
assumed that [section 5(e)] . . . exempted the [Project] Notes from federal
income tax, but not from federal estate tax.” (Ibid.)
      The case arrived in the Supreme Court when, in 1986, the trustee
persuaded a district court to adopt the view, never before suggested by any
taxpayer in more than five decades, that section 5(e) extended to estate tax as
well as income tax. (Wells Fargo, supra, 485 U.S. at pp. 353–354.) The
question in the case was whether, all those years after enactment of
section 5(e), the operative statutory term that created the exemption—the
phrase “all taxation”—should be read as a perpetual exemption from all
forms of tax for all time, not just from income tax but from estate tax as well.
Defending the district court’s ruling allowing the claimed estate tax refunds,
the trustee relied principally on another, long-since repealed provision of the
Federal Housing Act of 1937 in which Congress had empowered the Federal
Housing Authority to issue bonds in the 1930’s that were exempt from income
taxes subject to an express carveout ensuring that the exemption would not
extend to federal estate and gift taxes. (Wells Fargo, at p. 356.) Based on the
principle of expressio unius est exclusio alterius, the trustee argued that,
given the absence of such carveout, section 5(e) should be read to include an
implied exemption from federal estate tax. (Wells Fargo, at p. 356.)
      The Wells Fargo court rejected the argument, pointing out that
“exemptions from taxation are not to be implied; they must be
unambiguously proved.” (Wells Fargo, supra, 485 U.S. at p. 354.) The court
explained that “an exemption of property from all taxation had an understood
meaning: the property was exempt from direct taxation, but certain
privileges of ownership, such as the right to transfer the property, could be
taxed.” (Id. at p. 355, italics added.) The court thus concluded that the
Project Notes were not exempt from federal estate taxes because estate taxes

                                       13
were excise taxes, “levied upon the use or transfer of property . . . .” (Ibid.)
That is the core of the reasoning in Wells Fargo, and it has no application in
this case for the simple reason that the estate tax at issue never purported to
tax the Project Notes. The tax there—a form of excise tax—was on the
transfer of property, not on the Project Notes themselves.2 This principle of
property taxation has nothing to do with the scenario we have here because
neither the City’s gross receipts tax nor its annual business registration fee is
a tax on property or the transfer of property.
      The majority’s unstated premise in applying the holding of Wells Fargo
is that we are dealing with an exemption from a tax on property. But only by
impliedly reading the word “possessory” into the statutory text, as the City
urges, is it possible to support this premise. As noted above, there is nothing
in the statutory language to suggest the key phrase “all interest” is a term of
art that demands such a specialized reading. Quite to the contrary, the
cluster of words we are focused on here—“all properties administered by the
Trust and all interest created under leases, concessions, permits and other

      2 As explained in Hertel v. Bank of America N.A. (W.D.Mich. 2012) 897
F. Supp. 2d 579, 584, “In Wells Fargo, ‘all taxation’ in the housing statute still
meant all taxation even after the court’s decision. . . . The reason ‘all taxation’
was still able to retain its meaning is because the estate tax never purported
to tax the promissory notes. The estate tax . . . was a tax on the transfer of
property, not the property itself. And because the statute specified an
exemption only for the property and not its owner or its transfer, the
exemption was never triggered even though it was the owner of the
promissory notes who was liable for the tax.” “In context,” therefore, “it is
clear that the [Wells Fargo] Court is explicating the meaning of exempting
property from taxation: an exemption of property from taxation does not
block taxes not imposed on the property, and, since excise taxes are not
considered to be imposed on the property itself, they are not exempt. This all
seems clear enough.” (Montgomery County Commission v. Federal Housing
Finance Agency (M.D. Ala. May 6, 2013, No. 2:12CV885-MHT) 2013 U.S.Dist.
Lexis 64211, at pp. *12–*13.)
                                        14
agreements associated with the properties”—is more expansive than the City
would have us read it.
      Even if the statutory text could plausibly be read as narrowly as the
majority construes it, I think it is incorrect to read more into the holding in
Wells Fargo than that case plainly stands for: The rejection of an attempt by
the trustee for two estates to claim a windfall immunity from federal estate
tax based on an out-of-context reading of the Federal Housing Act of 1937
that went far beyond the evident congressional purpose in enacting the
statute. Not only does section 103(c)(9), by its terms, create a broader
exemption than the one at issue in Wells Fargo,3 but the operative language
we are dealing with, in my view, is fully consistent with congressional
purpose in enacting the Presidio Trust Act.
      Which is why, for me, it is crucial to interpret the term “all interest” in
light of the statutory scheme as a whole. Other provisions in the Presidio
Trust Act make clear that the Trust was expected to be more than a passive
landowner, deriving income, as many national parks do, by charging modest
user fees, but to operate as an enterprise—leasing buildings, granting
concessions, and entering into all kinds of agreements from which it would
derive profit from the land—thus allowing it to reinvest in the operation and
maintenance of the Presidio and its historical buildings. This is not
guesswork. It is evident on the face of the statutory scheme.

      3 Cf. County of Oakland v. Federal Housing Finance Agency, supra,
716 F.3d at p. 943 (distinguishing between exemptions of property like that
in Wells Fargo and broader statutory exemptions of the entity-defendants in
that case); Hertel v. Bank of America, supra, 897 F.Supp.2d at p. 584 (same);
Montgomery County Com. v. Federal Housing Finance Agency, supra, 2013
U.S.Dist. Lexis 64211, at p. *13 (same, and observing that the Wells Fargo
court “did not . . . turn the phrase ‘all taxation’ into a term of art in all places
where those words may be found”).
                                         15
      Unconvinced, the majority employs yet another bootstrap argument
offered by the City, this one based on an advisory opinion issued by legal staff
of the California State Board of Equalization (Board) discussing
section 103(c)(9)’s application to privately held possessory interests in
Presidio property. (SBE Property Tax Annots., Annot. 600.0092, The Presidio
of San Francisco—Possessory Interests (Jan. 30, 2002).) The Board’s
advisory opinion, supplied at the request of the City, concludes that “not only
has Congress not consented to state and local assessment of privately held
possessory interests in Presidio property, but it has enacted legislation
specifically precluding the assessment and taxation of such interests. As a
consequence, such privately held possessory interests in real property are
exempt from state and local property taxation . . . .” (Id. at p. 1.)
      But the Board did not consider non-possessory interests because the
City did not ask it to do so. As a result, while the Board’s interpretation of
section 103(c)(9) in the narrow context of possessory interests in property is a
factor to consider, it is not dispositive here, or even particularly meaningful,
because the Board made no attempt to grapple with whether the critical
statutory language “all interest created under leases, concessions, permits
and other agreements associated with the properties” extends beyond
possessory interests in real property. (See Yamaha Corp. of America v. State
Bd. of Equalization (1998) 19 Cal. 4th 1, 14–15 [“The deference due an agency
interpretation . . . [and] ‘[t]he weight of such a judgment in a particular case,’
. . . ‘will depend upon the thoroughness evident in its consideration, the
validity of its reasoning, its consistency with earlier and later
pronouncements, and all those factors which give it power to persuade, if
lacking power to control’ ” (italics omitted)].)

                                        16
      The majority also contends that, to read the phrase “all interest”
broadly, as I do, “conflat[es] a property interest with the rights conveyed by
that interest.” (Maj. opn., ante, at p. 15.) But this contention tracks the
City’s argument that the subject taxes are imposed on the “income derived
from the use of property,” not the property itself, which goes back to the same
flawed premise that we are dealing with here only with possessory interests
in the real property sense. The right to receive rent is only one stick in the
bundle of rights acquired in the creation of a lease or sublease. (See Koch v.
Commissioner of Internal Revenue, supra, 71 T.C. at p. 66; see also Cherokee
Water Co. v. Gregg County Appraisal Dist., supra, 801 S.W.2d at p. 875.)
Unlike the majority, I find unpersuasive the City’s categorical distinction
between taxes on property, on the one hand, and taxes on the income or use
derived from the property, on the other. As Letterman points out, “[c]alling
rent ‘income’ does not change the fact that it is an interest created under
leases or other agreements associated with [the] properties.”
      In any event, the argument proves too much. By this reasoning, the
phrase “all interest created under leases, concessions, permits and other
agreements” brings within it a wide variety of intangible (i.e., nonpossessory)
interests, since, as Letterman notes, many interests can be created by any of
the listed groups of contractual instruments. (See, e.g., DFS Group L.P. v.
County of San Mateo (2019) 31 Cal. App. 5th 1059, 1087 [holder of an exclusive
lease and concession in airport terminal for the sale of duty-free merchandise
was entitled to property tax refund, as “the right to sell duty-free goods at
[the airport]” was an intangible “ ‘right to do business that is exercised in
connection with the use of the real property’ at [the airport]”]; Watson
Cogeneration Co. v. County of Los Angeles (2002) 98 Cal. App. 4th 1066, 1070
[“California decisions have held that assets such as . . . airport car rental

                                       17
concessions, ballpark food concessions . . . are intangible rights”]; County of
Los Angeles v. County of Los Angeles Assessment Appeals Board (1993)
13 Cal. App. 4th 102, 112 [Although the assessor was entitled to tax
possessory interests created by concessions agreements, “[t]he further rights
granted by the agreements, to do business at the airports and their environs,
are not possessory interests. They are intangibles not subject to property
(possessory interest) tax”]; American Sheds, Inc. v. County of Los Angeles
(1998) 66 Cal. App. 4th 384, 389 [governmental permits to operate landfill
gave rise to intangible rights].)
   D. Legislative History
      To achieve its desired result, the City would have us not only add a
word that is not there (“possessory”), but treat the language “all interest
created under leases, concessions, permits and other agreements associated
with the properties” as meaningless surplusage. Apparently recognizing that
this position violates the fundamental canon of construction that we must
strive to give meaning to all the words in a legislative enactment (Lungren v.
Deukmejian (1988) 45 Cal. 3d 727, 735), the majority, quoting Macbeth,
among other authorities, concludes that Congress must have been engaging
in a belt-and-suspenders exercise when it amended the Presidio Trust Act in
2000 to add the statutory wording at the heart of this case. (Maj. opn., ante,
at pp. 15–16 & fn. 9.) According to the majority, the words “and all interest
created under leases, concessions, permits and other agreements associated
with the properties” were added as part of a batch of “technical” corrections.
(Maj. opn., ante, at p. 11.)
      In this view, the “technical” purpose of the amendment was equivalent
to adding an underscore or an exclamation point. But emphasis to what end?
Because I think the plain language of the statute is sufficient to resolve the

                                       18
question presented here, I see no need to delve into legislative history. If we
are going to go there, however, I think the purpose of Congress’s clarifying
emphasis when it amended the statute in 2000 is readily apparent. By then,
after four years of operation, the Trust had a substantial operating history.
It was clear that, as Congress originally contemplated, many types of
commercial activities were generating revenue—not just leasing revenue, but
“concessions, permits and other agreements associated with the properties”—
and to make sure the tax exemption in section 103(c)(9) matched the breadth
of business operations on Trust property, additional language was added that
draws from counterpart language elsewhere in the statutory scheme. (See
§ 104(b) [“The Trust shall have the authority to negotiate and enter into such
agreements, contracts, leases and other arrangements with any person, firm,
association, corporation or governmental entity”].) In other words, the
language was added to capture more accurately what the Trust actually does
as an enterprise.
      As I read the new language added by amendment in 2000, therefore, it
did not broaden the scope of the exemption but merely clarified that the
exemption should be read congruently with the provisions in the statute
defining the operational scope of the Trust, which extends to various kinds of
contracts with private parties. The majority disagrees, pointing out that the
amendment cannot have been intended to “expand the exemption from the
taxation of property interests to ‘interests’ of another kind, such as the right
to do business, to sublease the property, or to receive rent or other income
from use of the property” because there is nothing in the legislative history
expressly saying so. (Maj. opn., ante, at p. 12.) But that is incorrect. There
was no need to expand anything—at least there was no such need, unless one
begins by reading the term “all interest[s]” in section 103(c)(9) as “all

                                       19
possessory interests,” thereby assuming the conclusion of the analysis from
the beginning, which is what the majority does by adopting the City’s position
in this case.
   E. The Buck Act
      As a final point at the end of its analysis, the majority accepts the
City’s argument that, if Letterman’s interpretation of section 103(c)(9) were
correct, Letterman’s reading of the Presidio Trust Act exemption would
conflict with and result in an implied repeal of the Buck Act (4 U.S.C. §§ 105–
111). This issue may be resolved quite simply. There is no irreconcilable
conflict between Letterman’s position here and the Buck Act.
      “When confronted with two Acts of Congress allegedly touching on the
same topic, this Court is not at ‘liberty to pick and choose among
congressional enactments’ and must instead strive ‘ “to give effect to both.” ’ ”
(Epic Systems Corp. v. Lewis (2018) ___U.S. ___ [138 S. Ct. 1612, 1624].) “A
party seeking to suggest that two statutes cannot be harmonized, and that
one displaces the other, bears the heavy burden of showing ‘ “a clearly
expressed congressional intention” ’ that such a result should follow.” (Ibid.)
Such intention “ ‘must be clear and manifest.’ ” (Morton v. Mancari (1974)
417 U.S. 535, 551 (Morton).) “[I]n approaching a claimed conflict,” we apply
the “ ‘stron[g] presump[tion]’ that repeals by implication are ‘disfavored’ and
that ‘Congress will specifically address’ preexisting law when it wishes to
suspend its normal operations in a later statute.” (Epic Systems Corp. v.
Lewis, supra, ___U.S. at p. ___ [138 S.Ct. at p. 1624]; Pacific Palisades Bowl
Mobile Estates, LLC v. City of Los Angeles (2012) 55 Cal. 4th 783, 805.)
      Implied repeals may be found “ ‘only when there is no rational basis for
harmonizing the two potentially conflicting statutes [citation], and the
statutes are “irreconcilable, clearly repugnant, and so inconsistent that the

                                       20
two cannot have concurrent operation.” ’ ” (Pacific Palisades Bowl Mobile
Estates, LLC v. City of Los Angeles, supra, 55 Cal.4th at p. 805; Branch v.
Smith (2003) 538 U.S. 254, 273 [“An implied repeal will only be found where
provisions in two statutes are in ‘irreconcilable conflict,’ or where the latter
act covers the whole subject of the earlier one and ‘is clearly intended as a
substitute’ ”].)
      Applying these principles, I think these two statutes are easily
harmonized. While the two statutes overlap, they can be reconciled by
treating section 103(c)(9) as an exception to, but not as a replacement of,
section 106(a) of the Buck Act. “ ‘It is well settled . . . that a general provision
is controlled by one that is special, the latter being treated as an exception to
the former. A specific provision relating to a particular subject will govern in
respect to that subject, as against a general provision, although the latter,
standing alone, would be broad enough to include the subject to which the
more particular provision relates.’ ” (San Francisco Taxpayers Assn. v. Board
of Supervisors (1992) 2 Cal. 4th 571, 577; Medical Board of California v.
Superior Court (2001) 88 Cal. App. 4th 1001, 1005; see also Morton, supra,
417 U.S. at pp. 550–551 [“Where there is no clear intention otherwise, a
specific statute will not be controlled or nullified by a general one, regardless
of the priority of enactment”].)
      Here, the Buck Act “is of general application.” (Morton, supra, 417 U.S.
at p. 550.) Section 103(c)(9), on the other hand, “is a specific provision
applying to a very specific situation.” (Morton, at p. 550.) It applies only to
the Trust, its properties, and, with respect to private individuals or entities,
“all interest created under leases, concessions, permits and other agreements
associated with the properties.” (§ 103(c)(9).) Thus, at most, section 103(c)(9)

                                        21
will serve as a minor exception affecting only a limited set of interests
associated with the Presidio properties.
      Even within the Presidio, there remains a wide range of private
commercial activities that take place on the Presidio, producing income that
is not “created under leases, concessions, permits and other agreements
associated with [Trust] properties.” For example, any law office or
accounting office operating out of the Presidio, or the Presidio’s most famous
tenant, Lucasfilm and its affiliates, must pay the City’s gross receipts tax on
revenues arising from commercial activities unrelated to Trust properties.
All of these private commercial activities remain subject to the City’s gross
receipts tax. In the end, in my view, it is an indication of how overreaching
the City’s position is in this case that it would even suggest section 103(c)(9),
as construed by Letterman, somehow obliterates the Buck Act. The idea is
absurd.
   F. Annual Business Registration Fee
      The one narrow issue on which I agree with the majority, and there
only in result, is that I too think Letterman is not entitled to a refund of the
amounts it paid for the City’s annual registration fee. Although the amount
of the City’s annual business registration fee is set by a schedule that varies
by the size of a business’s gross receipts (S.F. Bus. & Tax Regs. Code,
art. 12-A-1, § 953, subd. (b); id., art. 12, § 855, subd. (e)(1)), the fee itself is
not imposed on gross receipts, but on the privilege of doing business. To use
tax language, therefore, the incidence of the tax is on the right to do business
within the City, not on business income generated by that activity (in
Letterman’s case, its sublease income). The difference matters. Because
Letterman’s right to do business within the City is not an “interest created

                                          22
under leases, concessions, permits and other agreements associated with
[Trust] properties,” it is not exempt from the City’s annual business license
fee.
                                                    STREETER, J.

                                      23
Trial court:               San Francisco County Superior Court

Trial judge:               Honorable Harold E. Kahn

Counsel for Appellant:     SILVERSTEIN & POMERANTZ
                           Amy Silverstein
                           Robert Petraglia
                           John Ormonde
                           Adam Hooberman

Counsel for Respondents:   Dennis J. Herrera, City Attorney
                           Jeremy M. Goldman, Co-Chief of Appellate
                           Litigation City Hall