City of Snoqualmie v. King County Exec. Constantine

CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 22, 2016
Docket91534-2
StatusPublished

This text of City of Snoqualmie v. King County Exec. Constantine (City of Snoqualmie v. King County Exec. Constantine) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Snoqualmie v. King County Exec. Constantine, (Wash. 2016).

Opinion

This opinion was filed for record

at tJ: QV ~ on fru 2.2, LdH() O&M-o<.CLSUSAN L. CARLSON SUPREME COURT CLERK

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

CITY OF SNOQUALMIE, a municipal ) corporation, ) ) Respondent, ) No. 91534-2 ) v. ) EnBanc ) KING COUNTY EXECUTIVE DOW ) Filed _ _ _ _ _,,_,,._,,,_._ __ CONSTANTINE, an individual, in his ) official capacity; KING COUNTY ) ASSESSOR LLOYD HARA, an individual, ) in his official capacity; and KING COUNTY, ) ) Defendants, ) ) and ) ) THE STATE OF WASHINGTON ) DEPARTMENT OF REVENUE, ) ) Appellant. ) )

OWENS, J.- Article VII of the Washington Constitution imposes a set of

requirements on taxes for the protection of the taxpayers; however, not all

governmental charges are "taxes" that are subject to those requirements. At issue in City of Snoqualmie v. King County, et al. No. 91534-2

this case is whether a certain governmental charge imposed on Indian tribes is a tax.

After the legislature amended a statute to expand the types of tribal property that are

eligible for a property taX: exemption, the Muckleshoot Indian Tribe applied for and

received an exemption on its Salish Lodge property pursuant to the amendment. As

required by statute, the tribe negotiated and paid an amount to the county in lieu of

taxes. Today, we are asked to consider the constitutionality of this payment in lieu of

tax (PILT). We find that the PILT is not a tax at all but, rather, a charge that tribes

pay to compensate municipalities for public services provided to the exempt property.

Since the PILT is not a tax, it is not subject to article VII's tax requirements and thus

we reverse the trial court and uphold the constitutionality of the provision.

FACTS

The Washington Constitution gives the legislature the authority to exempt

property from taxation. CONST. art. VII, § 1. In 2004, the Washington Legislature

added tribal property to the list of tax-exempt property. LAWS OF 2004, ch. 236, § 1.

Tribal property is exempt from state taxation if the property is owned by a recognized

tribe and used for "'essential government services,"' including operations like "tribal

administration, public facilities, fire, police, public health, education, sewer, water,

environmental and land use, transportation, and utility services." I d. § 1(2).

In 2014, the legislature passed Engrossed Substitute House Bill (ESHB) 1287,

which expanded qualifYing exempt property and created a payment in lieu of property

2 City of Snoqualmie v. King County, et al. No. 91534-2

tax for some of it. LAWS OF 2014, ch. 207. To do so, it expanded the qualifYing list

of "essential government services" to include "economic development," thereby

expanding the types of properties eligible for the tax exemption. LAws OF 2014, ch.

207, § 5(3)(b); RCW 84.36.010(3)(b). "Economic development" is defined as

"commercial activities, including those that facilitate the creation or retention of

businesses or jobs, or that improve the standard of living or economic health of tribal

communities." LAWS OF 2014, ch. 207, § 5(3)(c).

If a tribe takes advantage of the property tax exemption, it does not pay

property taxes, but the statute still requires the tribe to make some payment. Where

tribes lease the property to a third party, the private lessee must pay a leasehold excise

tax essentially for the "privilege of occupying or using" the land. RCW 82.29A.030.

If the land is not leased, then the tribe must make a "payment in lieu ofleasehold

excise taxes." RCW 82.29A.055(1 ). This PILT is owed to the county if (1) the

property is used exclusively for economic development, (2) there is no taxable

leasehold interest in the tax-exempt property, (3) the property is not on the tribe's

reservation, and (4) the property is not otherwise exempt from taxation under federal

law. !d. The amount of the PILT is to be determined through good faith negotiation

between the tribe and the county in which the property is located. RCW

82.29A.055(2). If they cannot agree, the Department of Revenue will determine the

3 City of Snoqualmie v. King County, et a/. No. 91534-2

PILT amount, which cannot exceed the leasehold excise tax amount that would be due

if the land were leased to a third party. !d.

PILTs are nothing new. In 1976, the federal government established the

payments in lieu of taxes (referred to as PILT or PILOT) program, whereby the

government pays sums of money to state governments or localities where its property

sits, in spite of its tax-exempt status. See 31 U.S.C. §§ 6901-6907. The purpose for

PILT payments was to mitigate the burden on state governments created by the tax-

exempt land that still requires public services from the state. As one report explained,

"Federal lands cannot be taxed but may create a demand for services such as fire

protection, police cooperation, or longer roads to skirt the federal property."

M. LYNNE CORN, CONG. RESEARCH SERV., RL31392, PILT (PAYMENTS IN LIEU OF

TAXES): SOMEWHAT SIMPLIFIED, "Summary" (2015),

https://www.fas.org/sgp/crs/misc/RL31392.pdf [http://perma.cc/4P9R-CGUC]. For

instance, federal land in the state of Washington is some 12 million acres of mostly

wildlife and forestland, representing about one-quarter of the state's total acreage.

The federal government ameliorates the impact of these tax-exempt lands by paying

PILTs to the State for the various state public services needed to support these lands.

Washington also has PIL T programs for property owned by other governmental

agencies, such as the Washington State Department ofFish and Wildlife and the

4 City ofSnoqualmie v. King County, et al. No. 91534-2

Washington State Department of Natural Resources. See, e.g., RCW 77.12.201; RCW

79.71.130.

Various Washington tribes took advantage of the 2014 amendment expanding

the off-reservation tribal property exemption for around 190 properties. One of those

properties is the Salish Lodge, an off-reservation hotel and spa in the city of

Snoqualmie and King County, owned by the Muckleshoot Indian Tribe. Pursuant to

the 2014 amendment, the tribe applied for and received a property tax exemption on

the Salish Lodge as a property used for "economic development." Clerk's Papers at

416-34. The tribe negotiated a PILT payment with King County and agreed to pay 25

percent of the property taxes it paid in 2014.

The city challenged the constitutionality ofESHB 1287. It contended that the

Salish Lodge would generate about $93,500 in property tax revenue to the city, which

would be roughly 1.6 percent of the city's total property tax levy. The city stated in

its complaint that the exemption of the lodge created a tax shift to its taxpayers

(raising their individual tax liability due to the loss in overall revenue) and also raised

the city's property tax levy rate.

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City of Snoqualmie v. King County Exec. Constantine, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-snoqualmie-v-king-county-exec-constantine-wash-2016.