Matter of T-Mobile Northeast, LLC v. DeBellis

32 N.Y.3d 594, 2018 NY Slip Op 08539
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 13, 2018
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 32 N.Y.3d 594 (Matter of T-Mobile Northeast, LLC v. DeBellis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Matter of T-Mobile Northeast, LLC v. DeBellis, 32 N.Y.3d 594, 2018 NY Slip Op 08539 (N.Y. 2018).

Opinion

Matter of T-Mobile Northeast, LLC v DeBellis (2018 NY Slip Op 08539)

Matter of T-Mobile Northeast, LLC v DeBellis
2018 NY Slip Op 08539 [32 NY3d 594]
December 13, 2018
DiFiore, J.
Court of Appeals
Published by New York State Law Reporting Bureau pursuant to Judiciary Law § 431.
As corrected through Wednesday, March 20, 2019


[*1]
In the Matter of T-Mobile Northeast, LLC, Appellant,
v
Anthony V. DeBellis, as Commissioner of Assessment of the City of Mount Vernon, et al., Respondents, et al., Respondents/Defendants.

Argued November 15, 2018; decided December 13, 2018

Matter of T-Mobile Northeast, LLC v DeBellis, 143 AD3d 992, affirmed.

{**32 NY3d at 598} OPINION OF THE COURT
Chief Judge DiFiore.

This dispute over whether certain telecommunications equipment is taxable property comes to us in the wake of historic and fundamental changes in the telecommunications industry during the last century prompting a legislative overhaul of the Real Property Tax Law, including the enactment of RPTL 102 (12) (i). Under that statute, certain "lines, wires, poles, supports and inclosures for electrical conductors" used for transmission of electromagnetic data qualify as taxable real property. We are asked to decide whether certain large cellular data transmission equipment owned by petitioner T-Mobile Northeast, LLC and mounted to the exterior of buildings{**32 NY3d at 599} throughout its service area in Mount Vernon constitutes taxable real property under the RPTL. Because we agree with respondent tax authorities and the Appellate Division that the equipment is taxable pursuant to RPTL 102 (12) (i), we affirm the Appellate Division order.

I.

To provide necessary context for the discrete statutory interpretation issue at the heart of this appeal, we review the evolution of the statutory scheme and the events that have driven it. The telecommunications industry [*2]operated as a regulated monopoly until the divestment of American Telephone & Telegraph Company (AT&T) in 1982. Prior to that critical shift, AT&T dominated the market, supplying almost all telephone service nationwide. Long-distance service was provided through its Long Lines department and local exchange service through the Bell System—a network of subsidiary operating companies, each serving a different geographic region.

During this period, the network of equipment constituting the telephone system was generally taxable under the RPTL. Former RPTL 102 (12) (d) defined as taxable real property "[t]elephone and telegraph lines, wires, poles and appurtenances; supports and inclosures for electrical conductors and other appurtenances, upon, above and under ground." Prior to 1975, the term "appurtenances" was broadly interpreted to encompass essentially all equipment involving use of telephone lines, whether located on telephone company property or customer premises, even when it was detachable and otherwise would have been treated as personalty (see State Board of Equalization and Assessment, Report to Governor Mario M. Cuomo on the Taxation of Telecommunications Property at 6 [Jan. 1985], available at https://www.tax.ny.gov/pdf/publications/orpts/taxation_telecommunications_prop.pdf, cached at http://www.nycourts.gov/reporter/webdocs/TelecomReport.pdf [hereinafter 1985 SBEA Report]; see also Matter of Crystal v City of Syracuse, Dept. of Assessment, 47 AD2d 29, 31 [4th Dept 1975], affd 38 NY2d 883 [1976], citing Matter of New York Tel. Co. v Ferris, 257 App Div 415, 416 [4th Dept 1939], affd 282 NY 667 [1940], and Matter of New York Tel. Co. [Canough], 290 NY 537 [1943]). Until 1969, these taxable "appurtenances" were typically owned by the telephone utility because the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) required that a telephone company furnish all equipment connected{**32 NY3d at 600} to its service (see FCC Tariff No. 132). Thus, telephones, private branch exchanges, and associated wiring on customer property—referred to in the industry as "customer premises equipment" (CPE)—were owned by the telephone utility that owned the lines supplying service and whatever equipment it connected to the service on its own property.

However, beginning in the 1960s, a series of regulatory and legal changes resulted in greater competition in the telecommunications markets, leading to significant restructuring of the industry. This, in turn, raised questions about the taxability of certain equipment. First, the FCC invalidated the requirement that telephone customers use only utility-issued equipment, allowing customers to connect privately-purchased or leased telephones at their premises (see In the Matter of Use of the Carterfone Device in Message Toll Tel. Serv., 13 FCC2d 420, 425 [1968]). Then, in 1976, in Matter of Crystal v City of Syracuse, Dept. of Assessment (38 NY2d 883, 885 [1976]), we affirmed an Appellate Division order holding that customer-owned telephones were not taxable under RPTL 102 (12) (d), at least where not "incorporated as part of the real estate." As the Appellate Division explained in Crystal, when it enacted RPTL 102 (12) (d), the legislature intended to expand the definition of real property when owned by a utility (Matter of Crossman Cadillac v Board of Assessors of County of Nassau, 44 NY2d 963, 964 [1978], citing Crystal, 47 AD2d at 31). Thus, under this interpretation of section 102 (12) (d), equipment that would not be taxable if owned by the customer or leased to the customer by a non-utility was taxable when owned by a telephone utility.

After Crystal, the scope of RPTL 102 (12) (d) was narrowed even further by judicial decisions holding that it did not encompass a removeable system of privately-owned telephone equipment on customer premises (Crossman Cadillac, 44 NY2d at 964-965) or cable television equipment owned by a television company (Matter of Manhattan Cable TV Servs., Div. of Sterling Info. Servs. v Freyberg, 49 NY2d 868 [1980]; see also Matter of Cablevision Sys. Dev. Co. v Board of Assessors of County of Nassau, 98 AD2d 818 [2d Dept 1983]; Matter of American Cablevision of Rochester v Jacobs, 101 AD2d 65 [4th Dept 1984]). Thus, by 1984, only utility-owned equipment was taxable under RPTL 102 (12) (d). Additionally, technological advancements and deregulation in the CPE and telephone service markets resulted in a more diverse range of property owners{**32 NY3d at 601} in the industry, which—because the taxable status of certain equipment turned on its ownership by traditional utilities—further threatened the tax base and created a system of unequal taxation.

Throughout this period, AT&T was the target of antitrust litigation resulting in a settlement under which AT&T would divest itself of its Bell System local-service operating companies (United States v American Tel. & Tel. Co., 552 F Supp 131, 140-141 [D DC 1982]). Thereafter, AT&T provided only long-distance service and the Bell System operating companies reorganized as independent regional companies providing local service. In addition to accelerating the growth of competition spawned by deregulation, the divesture further complicated taxation of CPE. The FCC permitted AT&T to participate in the deregulated, competitive CPE market only through a fully separated subsidiary—AT&T Information Systems (ATTIS) (

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32 N.Y.3d 594, 2018 NY Slip Op 08539, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-t-mobile-northeast-llc-v-debellis-ny-2018.