HealthEast v. County of Ramsey

770 N.W.2d 153, 2009 Minn. LEXIS 439, 2009 WL 2409574
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedAugust 6, 2009
DocketA08-2190
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 770 N.W.2d 153 (HealthEast v. County of Ramsey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
HealthEast v. County of Ramsey, 770 N.W.2d 153, 2009 Minn. LEXIS 439, 2009 WL 2409574 (Mich. 2009).

Opinion

OPINION

ANDERSON, PAUL H., Justice.

Relator HealthEast appeals from the Minnesota Tax Court’s decision denying an exemption from real estate taxes assessed in 2002, 2003, and 2004 on its real property housing the Bethesda Clinic. HealthEast and University of Minnesota Physicians contend that the subject real property is exempt from taxation under Minn.Stat. § 273.19 (2008). At the time of the assessments, the real property was owned by HealthEast and leased to the University of Minnesota and University of Minnesota Physicians. HealthEast and its affiliates, collectively known as the HealthEast care system, provide acute and tertiary hospital services, long-term care services, and various other health care and health care-related services. HealthEast provides management services for a fee to various hospitals and clinics in the HealthEast care system.

On remand from our opinion in HealthEast v. County of Ramsey, 749 N.W.2d 15 (Minn.2008) (HealthEast I), the tax court again affirmed the Ramsey County Assessor’s classification of the subject real property by holding that the property is not exempt from real property taxes under Minn.Stat. § 273.19. The tax court found that HealthEast had not met its burden to prove the HealthEast care system should be considered the property’s owner, and *155 therefore the property was not entitled to the tax exemption. We affirm.

HealthEast is a Minnesota non-stock, non-profit corporation that was the fee owner of the subject real property for all three tax assessment years at issue-2002, 2003, and 2004. 1 The property, at 580 Rice Street in Saint Paul, Ramsey County, Minnesota, houses the Bethesda Clinic. In assessment year 2002, the University of Minnesota leased the property and operated the clinic. In assessment years 2003 and 2004, intervenor UMPhysicians assumed the lease and operated the clinic. UMPhysicians is the designated faculty clinical practice organization of the University of Minnesota Medical School. Residents in the medical school’s Department of Family Practice and Community Health receive training through Bethesda Clinic. The clinic is located in a low-income St. Paul neighborhood and treats patients regardless of their ability to pay.

HealthEast and its affiliates are known collectively as the HealthEast care system, which provides acute, and tertiary hospital services, long-term care services, and various other health care and health care-related services. Services are provided through a number of separate, but affiliated, legal entities that are controlled, directly or indirectly, by HealthEast. Heal-thEast is also a management company that provides centralized services such as accounting, finance, marketing, and human resources services to the various hospitals and clinics in the care system. Heal-thEast “back-charges” the organizations for the cost of the services performed. The amount charged is “based on utilization and is allocated to each entity within the HealthEast Care System at cost.” The tax court found that the fee charged is a percentage of the operating expense of the subsidiary.

HealthEast’s Articles of Incorporation state that HealthEast “shall be operated exclusively for charitable purposes” and “exclusively for the benefit of, to perform the functions of, or to carry out the purposes of Bethesda, St. John’s, St. Joseph’s and Woodwinds [hospitals].... ” Heal-thEast is a “separate entity” from the affiliated organizations in the care system and files its own informational tax return. Besides its relationships with the affiliated entities, HealthEast has derived revenue from entities that are outside, or arguably outside, the HealthEast care system.

Ramsey County assessed real property taxes against the subject property in 2002, 2003, and 2004. HealthEast timely petitioned for review of each assessment. On May 1, 2007, the tax court concluded that the subject property was not exempt from real property taxes as a property owned by an institution of purely public charity under Minn.Stat. §§ 272.02 (2008), subd. 7, or 273.19, subd. 1. The court affirmed the Ramsey County Assessor’s classification of the subject property for January 2, 2002, January 2, 2003, and January 2, 2004. HealthEast appealed to our court.

On appeal, HealthEast argued the subject property satisfied Minn.Stat. § 273.19, which makes property tax-exempt when it is owned by a tax-exempt entity, leased to another tax-exempt entity, and used for a tax-exempt purpose. HealthEast I, 749 N.W.2d at 19. HealthEast did not challenge the tax court’s finding that HealthEast itself did not qualify as an entity *156 whose property is tax-exempt under section 273.19. Id. But HealthEast asserted that the court should have ignored Heal-thEast’s status as a separate corporate entity and instead attributed to it the characteristics of the tax-exempt HealthEast care system, particularly the characteristics of the system’s four public hospitals. Id. at 20.

We reversed the tax court’s decision denying the exemption and remanded. HealthEast I, 749 N.W.2d at 24. We concluded that in determining whether to treat HealthEast or the HealthEast care system as the owner of the subject property, the tax court had failed to explicitly apply the principles of our previous decisions establishing when a corporate entity’s separate corporate status may be disregarded. Id. at 23. We noted that the record suggested HealthEast performed services for outside entities. Id. at 24. But we said it was “not clear from the record whether ‘the substance of the arrangement’ between the applicable entities [was] such that HealthEast has ‘a purpose or existence apart from’ ” the HealthEast hospitals or the rest of the HealthEast care system. Id. at 23-24. We remanded for the tax court to determine whether HealthEast had met its burden to prove “that it does not have ‘a purpose or existence apart from’ the HealthEast care system.” Id. at 24. We concluded that, if the tax court were to determine that HealthEast had met that burden, then the court, in deciding whether the subject property qualified as tax-exempt, was to consider the HealthEast care system as the property’s owner. Id.

On July 7, 2008, the tax court issued an order setting a briefing schedule and seeking additional evidence related to 1) the nature, scope, value, and extent of any services HealthEast performs for outside entities, 2) the relationship between Heal-thEast and the care system hospitals and clinics, and 3) whether the substance of the arrangement between the applicable entities was such that HealthEast had a “purpose or existence apart from” the hospitals or the rest of the care system. Heal-thEast and Ramsey County both filed briefs. HealthEast filed exhibits consisting of selected pages from its 2001, 2002, and 2003 tax returns. HealthEast also filed an affidavit and supplemental affidavit of Paul Keenan, its System Director of Tax, addressing the nature of HealthEast’s services provided to organizations outside the HealthEast care system.

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770 N.W.2d 153, 2009 Minn. LEXIS 439, 2009 WL 2409574, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/healtheast-v-county-of-ramsey-minn-2009.