Georgia O'Keeffe Museum v. County of Santa Fe

2003 NMCA 003, 62 P.3d 754, 133 N.M. 297
CourtNew Mexico Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 2, 2002
Docket22,202
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 2003 NMCA 003 (Georgia O'Keeffe Museum v. County of Santa Fe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Georgia O'Keeffe Museum v. County of Santa Fe, 2003 NMCA 003, 62 P.3d 754, 133 N.M. 297 (N.M. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

OPINION

SUTIN, Judge.

{1} The opinion filed in this case on September 30, 2002, is withdrawn and the following opinion is substituted therefor.

{2} The Georgia O’Keeffe Museum, a private corporation (O’Keeffe), protested the assessment of property tax by the County of Santa Fe (the County), claiming an exemption for its museum property under New Mexico Constitution Article VIII, Section 3. The County Valuation Protests Board (the Board) upheld the assessment on the ground that O’Keeffe “failed to produce sufficient competent evidence” that “a substantial use, and the primary use, of the ... property is charitable or educational.” O’Keeffe appealed the denial, paid the assessment under protest, and filed a complaint for refund of the taxes it paid. After consolidation of the refund action with the appeal, the district court affirmed the Board on the exemption denial and dismissed the refund action upon the County’s motion for summary judgment. We reverse and remand for further proceedings on the exemption issue. We affirm the dismissal of the refund action.

BACKGROUND

{3} O’Keeffe is a New Mexico non-profit corporation and a tax exempt organization under the Internal Revenue Code, 26 U.S.C. § 501(c)(3). One of O’Keeffe’s stated purposes is to “maintain property, including a building and museum collections, for the operation of a museum devoted primarily to the exhibition of the works of Georgia O’Keeffe.” Another is to “promote and encourage public awareness of, interest in and appreciation of its collections and ... engage in such educational programs as are consistent with the operation of a museum.” O’Keeffe’s museum is situated on Johnson Street in Santa Fe, New Mexico (the museum property). O’Keeffe has allocated about sixty percent of its annual budget for what it deems educational purposes.

{4} O’Keeffe applied for an exemption from taxation of the museum property for the year 1999 under the “educational or charitable purposes” exemption contained in Article VIII, Section 3 of the New Mexico Constitution, which reads in pertinent part:

The property of the United States, the state and all counties, towns, cities and school districts and other municipal corporations, public libraries, community ditches and all laterals thereof, all church property not used for commercial purposes, all property used for educational or charitable purposes, all cemeteries not used or held for private or corporate profit and all bonds of the state of New Mexico, and of the counties, municipalities and districts thereof shall be exempt from taxation.

The County Assessor denied the exemption application and O’Keeffe filed a protest with the Board. After a hearing, the Board entered a Decision and Order upholding the Assessor’s denial of the exemptions for educational and charitable use.

O’Keeffe’s Evidence at the Board Hearing

{5} O’Keeffe’s director of education testified regarding its programs and activities, several of which are also illustrated in documents. We summarize this evidence which relates to the operation of the museum only during the period 1997 to 1999.

{6} On-Site: The museum opened in 1997 and is open six days per week. O’Keeffe collects, houses, and publically displays artworks by Georgia O’Keeffe, and operates a retail gift shop. Over 665,000 persons visited the museum in the two years following its opening, the majority of whom paid an entrance fee.

{7} In the museum, visitors receive a brochure that discusses significant events in Georgia O’Keeffe’s life. Orientation tours for the general public are available thirty hours a week. Educational tours for school children are regularly conducted on Mondays when the museum is closed to the public. Student tours are given to about three thousand students each year. Less regularly, lectures are held, students from an elementary school visit the museum (three times per year) in conjunction with a primarily off-site art education program, tours are given for persons with disabilities, and teacher workshops are held for Santa Fe area teachers. O’Keeffe funds visits by students and teachers as exhibitions change at the museum.

{8} O’Keeffe also provides pre- and post-museum visit educational material to give students “a richer and deeper experience.” Further, O’Keeffe provides “hands on lessons in the galleries with teachers and students,” and conducts a Saturday family program (once a month during the school year and twice a month during the summer) to encourage children to become lifelong museum visitors. The family program begins at the museum, teaching the children to develop critical thinking skills and to articulate what they have experienced, and continues at another location for practical lessons.

{9} Off-Site: O’Keeffe conducts or participates in a substantial number of educational programs and activities that occur away from the museum property. For example, O’Keeffe, as part of its professional development program in art education: produces teacher lesson plans; conducts workshops and teaching programs for instructors in art education; offers professional development and art leadership experience programs for girls and young women; works with a city summer therapeutic recreation program for kids with disabilities; and conducts or is involved in various other educational and mentor programs. O’Keeffe also has office space on Grant Avenue in Santa Fe, where it often conducts educational programs.

{10} Through several of its programs and activities, O’Keeffe reaches out to local communities around the state, conducting courses and workshops in conjunction with universities and schools. O’Keeffe also sponsors lectures; operates senior citizen programs; donates materials and supplies to schools, teachers, and libraries; and carries on a year-round university intern program, as well as a docent program that trains adults. For its plentiful programs and activities, O’Keeffe produces several types of resource materials and supplies for study in conjunction with artwork at the museum, for career development in the arts (e.g., art conservation, art criticism, art education, art therapy), for instruction on how museums operate to use Georgia O’Keeffe’s life as an educational tool (e.g., as part of New Mexico history), and for use in art education generally.

{11} Further, O’Keeffe has a resource library containing books about Georgia O’Keeffe and other contemporary artists, and donates books to repositories such as college and public libraries. In addition, O’Keeffe donates seventy-five percent of its one-day pass revenue to the Museum of Fine Arts and the Museum of New Mexico, and eighty percent of its four-day pass revenue to the Museum of New Mexico. Both of these museums are state owned and operated.

What Is “Use for Educational Purposes”?

{12} Both parties rely on NRA Special Contribution Fund v. Bd. of County Comm’rs, 92 N.M. 541, 591 P.2d 672

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Bluebook (online)
2003 NMCA 003, 62 P.3d 754, 133 N.M. 297, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/georgia-okeeffe-museum-v-county-of-santa-fe-nmctapp-2002.