Hartford Electric Light Co. v. Town of Wethersfield

332 A.2d 83, 165 Conn. 211, 1973 Conn. LEXIS 730
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJune 29, 1973
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 332 A.2d 83 (Hartford Electric Light Co. v. Town of Wethersfield) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hartford Electric Light Co. v. Town of Wethersfield, 332 A.2d 83, 165 Conn. 211, 1973 Conn. LEXIS 730 (Colo. 1973).

Opinion

Shapiro, J.

The plaintiff, the Hartford Electric Light Company, hereinafter called HELCO, brought an action pursuant to § 12-119 of the G-eneral Statutes against the defendant, the town of Wethersfield. In its complaint, HELCO asserted that the *213 town had unlawfully assessed rights-of-way belonging to HELCO for the reason that these rights-of-way are not taxable property under Connecticut law. The plaintiff moved for summary judgment on the sole issue of whether its rights-of-way were taxable. There being no substantial issue of fact, the court granted the motion and rendered judgment in favor of HELCO. On appeal, the only claim of the defendant town 1 concerns the taxability of HELCO’s interests under General Statutes § 12-64. The relevant provisions of the statute are set out in the footnote. 2

This litigation arose shortly after the assessor of the town notified HELCO in January, 1971, of the disputed assessments. The assessments were laid on nine real estate interests, some being in the form of an easement and some in the form of a lease, by which HELCO possesses certain rights in various lands of others, situated in the town of Wethersfield, to use portions of said lands for utility purposes. *214 By the notice of assessment, the town informed HELCO that it had valued the nine separate interests at a total assessment value of $262,400. A tax based on that assessment was levied by the town on HELCO’s rights-of-way on or about May 15, 1971, and was due and payable July 1, 1971. The attorneys for the parties submitted to the court three separate documents and stipulated that these instruments fairly represent the documents creating the nine rights-of-way which the town has assessed. It was further stipulated that the submission of all documents creating HELCO’s rights-of-way would be repetitious and burdensome, and that a proper adjudication could be obtained by an examination of the grants set forth in the three instruments submitted. These documents were made a part of the finding and have been reproduced in the record. Two of these documents evidence easements which give to the grantee, HELCO, basically the right to erect and maintain electric power lines, together with incidental rights to trim hazardous trees and *215 obstructions. The third and earliest of the documents, executed in 1914, evidences a “lease for right of way” for ninety-nine years; by its terms, this “lease” gives HELCO the identical but limited privileges of the first two documents and expressly reserves to the grantor all of his original rights except such as interfere with the enumerated rights for utility purposes of the grantee.

I

It is the town’s contention that the plaintiff’s rights-of-way are taxable under § 12-64 of the General Statutes. 3 Its first argument is based on an erroneous interpretation of one part of the statute which this court has corrected on more than one occasion. The third sentence of § 12-64 begins: “Any interest in real estate shall be set by the assessors in the list of the person in whose name the title to such interest stands on the land records . . . .” Since the easements in question are indisputably interests in real estate, 4 the defendant asserts that *216 this provision of § 12-64 emphatically makes the ownership interests of the plaintiff taxable in the town of Wethersfield.

In Sanford’s Appeal, 75 Conn. 590, 592, 54 A. 739, decided in 1903, this court disposed of an identical argument aimed at the taxation of a mining lease in stating the following: “Section 2299 of the General Statutes of 1902, provides that ‘any interest in real estate listed for taxation shall be set by the assessors in the list of the party in whose name the title to such interest stands on the land records of the town in which such real estate is situated.’ This section is part of an Act passed in 1887, entitled an ‘Act concerning the Taxation and Record of Title of Real Estate.’ Public Acts of 1887, Chap. 127, p. 749. . . . It means that any separately taxable [emphasis added] interest in real estate shall be set in the list in the name of the owner of record of such interest. An estate for years in land is a mere chattel interest. Goodwin v. Goodwin, 33 Conn. 314, 318; Flannery v. Rohrmayer, 49 id. 27, 28. Such an interest, unless otherwise provided by statute, is generally not taxable separately from the freehold; although there may be exceptional cases where an interest in real estate, conveyed by an instrument in the form of a lease for a term of years, may for certain purposes be regarded as a fee, as in the case of Brainard v. Colchester, 31 Conn. 407, 411, in which it was held that a lease of real estate for a gross sum, for 999 years, was to be considered for the purposes of that case, as practically a conveyance of a fee. Such a chattel interest is not named either in § 2322 or §2323 (Rev. 1902) [now §§12-64 and 12-71], which enumerate the kinds of real and personal property liable to taxation .... The interest in real estate which § 2299 [Rev. 1902] requires to be listed in the *217 name of the record owner, is not a mere chattel interest in land, but a freehold interest properly termed real estate.”

One year later, in Middletown & Portland Bridge Co. v. Middletown, 77 Conn. 314, 59 A. 34, this court was confronted with the assertion that the statutory language subjected a bridge to taxation as real estate. Again, this court rejected the argument, observing that the municipality’s construction would extend taxation to railroads and publie utility equipment that may be attached to the soil. The plain answer to this contention was simply that the statute made no provision for the listing and valuation of such property as real estate liable to taxation. Id., 317; see also Comstock v. Waterford, 85 Conn. 6, 9-10, 81 A. 1059; Field v. Guilford Water Co., 79 Conn. 70, 71, 63 A. 723. In Montgomery v. Branford, 107 Conn. 697, 142 A. 574, where the defendant town sought to tax a lease for sixty-four years in reliance on the statutory language in question, the ruling in Sanford’s Appeal, supra, was reasserted. “Our decisions have interpreted the record owner to mean the freehold or fee owner. Leased land can only be assessed against the lessor, the freehold owner.” Montgomery v. Branford, supra, 701.

The provision in § 12-64 which requires the assessors to set “[a]ny interest in real estate” in the list of the record owner of such interest has thus been definitively interpreted to mean no more than that the assessor must list any taxable interest, previously defined as “[d] welling houses, garages, barns, sheds, . . . buildings, . . . house lots,” in the name of the record owner of the freehold.

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Bluebook (online)
332 A.2d 83, 165 Conn. 211, 1973 Conn. LEXIS 730, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hartford-electric-light-co-v-town-of-wethersfield-conn-1973.