Milwaukee Regional Medical Center, Inc. v. City of Wauwatosa

2006 WI App 139, 720 N.W.2d 161, 295 Wis. 2d 211, 2006 Wisc. App. LEXIS 543
CourtCourt of Appeals of Wisconsin
DecidedJune 20, 2006
Docket2005AP1160
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 2006 WI App 139 (Milwaukee Regional Medical Center, Inc. v. City of Wauwatosa) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Wisconsin primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Milwaukee Regional Medical Center, Inc. v. City of Wauwatosa, 2006 WI App 139, 720 N.W.2d 161, 295 Wis. 2d 211, 2006 Wisc. App. LEXIS 543 (Wis. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinions

FINE, J.

¶ 1. The City of Wauwatosa appeals the trial court's order granting summary judgment to the Milwaukee Regional Medical Center, Inc., declaring that the Regional Medical Center was entitled to a property-tax exemption for the tax years 2001, 2002, and 2003, under Wis. Stat. § 70.11(2) for the Center's daycare facility on Milwaukee County land under a long-term lease, and directing that Wauwatosa refund to the Medical Center property taxes it paid under protest for those years. The Regional Medical Center cross-appeals, seeking review of the trial court's non-dispositive determination that the Center was not entitled to a property-tax exemption under § 70.11(4) for the Center's daycare facility for those years.1 We reverse the trial court's order.

[215]*215I.

¶ 2. The facts material to this appeal are not disputed, and, where appropriate, we quote from the parties' written stipulation.

¶ 3. The Regional Medical Center is a consortium of the following members: Children's Hospital of Wisconsin, Froedtert Hospital, the Medical College of Wisconsin, Curative Care Network, Milwaukee County Behavioral Health Division, and the Blood Center of Southeastern Wisconsin.2 It is a charitable organization under federal law and, accordingly, is exempt from federal income taxation.

¶ 4. The Regional Medical Center leases land on the Milwaukee County Institutions Grounds in Wauwa-tosa from Milwaukee County. The County has title to the land, which is approximately one and three-quarters of an acre, and was leased to the Center by the County in 1990 for fifty years and for the specific purpose of permitting the Center to build the daycare facility, which the Center did in 1991. The Center pays Milwaukee County rent of one dollar per year for thirty years, which is also the projected "life" of the daycare building for straight-line depreciation purposes. After the thirtieth year, the parties agreed to agree on an appropriate rental for the land, and, if they could not agree, the lease sets the rental at ten-percent of the land's fair-market value, "disregarding any increment in value due to improvements made by" the Center.

[216]*216¶ 5. According to the parties' stipulation, the building "is a two-story facility custom-designed for child care and includes 16 classrooms, 2 offices, kitchen, indoor play area, mechanical room, and adult and children's bathrooms." Additionally, the daycare complex includes "four fenced patios, two fenced playground areas, a garage and two parking lots with 59 surface parking stalls." The daycare facility was built with financing supplied by tax-exempt bonds, and the Regional Medical Center services the debt.

¶ 6. The daycare facility "provides year-round comprehensive programs for children age six weeks through six years, along with school age and summer programs for children through age 12." The programs have a large educational component for each age group that is appropriate to that age group. The facility is managed by a company that is not related to the Center, and is paid a flat fee by the Center (ranging, for the years material to this appeal, from $48,000 to $60,000). The teachers and staff at the daycare facility are, however, paid by the Center.

¶ 7. As of October 2001, 151 children were enrolled in the daycare program. This rose to 193 as of November 2002, and to 216 as of December 2003. The daycare facility draws children from "employees and students of the Milwaukee Regional Medical Center, its member organizations and the general public."3 The daycare facility does not give preference to children whose parents are connected to the Center or its members. Indeed, not only does the Center advertise the daycare facility to the general public, but a substan[217]*217tial percentage of the children in the facility come from that community, ranging, for the years material to this appeal, from a low of approximately thirty-three percent to a high of forty-seven percent. Children from both communities (those whose parents are connected to the Center or its members, and those who are not) pay fees to attend the daycare facility. "The revenues from the operation of the day care center are segregated in a separate account and used for the operation of the Day Care Program, including upkeep of the Building and grounds, painting, maintenance, remodeling and debt retirement."

¶ 8. The lease required that the projected daycare facility have "a minimum construction cost of $400,000," and that construction not start until the County approved the facility's "plans and specifications." The County also had to approve any "material changes" in those plans and specifications, as well as any "[ajdditions, additional buildings and alterations to the facility costing in excess of $50,000." No County approval is required, however, "[f]or projects not exceeding a cost of $50,000," unless those projects involved adding to the facility or constructing "additional buildings" on the land.

¶ 9. The lease permitted the Center to finance construction any way the Center saw fit, and allowed the Center to mortgage its leasehold interest in the land. Further, to facilitate financing, the County agreed that it would consider modifications to the lease if requested by one or more sources of financing for the project, and that these modifications could include "the subordination of [Milwaukee Countyj's fee interest in the [land] to any leasehold mortgage."

¶ 10. The lease required the Regional Medical Center to "minimize any interruption of full and corn-[218]*218píete public usage as per site plan during all phases of construction," and required the Center to "restore all roadways to the same or similar condition as existed prior to the commencement of construction." The Center had to pay Milwaukee County for its water and sewer charges, and, initially, also had to buy electricity from Milwaukee County, although this requirement was later rescinded. The Center also had to "provide needed security for the interior of' the facility, and pay its pro rata share "of exterior common area security."

¶ 11. As we have seen, Milwaukee County leased the land to the Regional Medical Center for the specific purpose of building a daycare facility. Thus, the lease essentially restricts use of the land to that purpose:

The [land] and Facility shall be used as a child care center to serve employees and students of the Milwaukee Regional Medical Center, its member organizations and the general public and for no other purpose, without the prior written consent of [Milwaukee County]. [The Center] shall not lease space in its Facility to any person or entity without the prior written consent of [Milwaukee County] which consent shall not be unreasonably withheld. Failure to comply with this requirement shall be deemed a breach of this lease.

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Related

Milwaukee Regional Medical Center, Inc. v. City of Wauwatosa
2007 WI 101 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 2007)
MILWAUKEE REG'L MED. CENTER v. Wauwatosa
2007 WI 101 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 2007)
Milwaukee Regional Medical Center, Inc. v. City of Wauwatosa
2006 WI App 139 (Court of Appeals of Wisconsin, 2006)

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Bluebook (online)
2006 WI App 139, 720 N.W.2d 161, 295 Wis. 2d 211, 2006 Wisc. App. LEXIS 543, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/milwaukee-regional-medical-center-inc-v-city-of-wauwatosa-wisctapp-2006.