Minnesota Power & Light Co. v. Carlton County
This text of 145 N.W.2d 68 (Minnesota Power & Light Co. v. Carlton County) 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.
Opinion
Appeals from judgments1 of the district court in two cases tried together involving property tax classification of lands in Carlton County for tax years 1962 and 1963.
Appellee, Minnesota Power and Light Company, a Minnesota corporation engaged in generating and distributing electricity, petitioned the district court under Minn. St. c. 278 to change the property tax classification on certain of its lands in Carlton County for the tax years 1962 and 1963 from class 4 (Minn. St. 273.13, subd. 9, “[a]ll property not included in the preceding classes”) assessed at 40 percent of full and true value to class 3 (§ 273.13, subd. 4, “rural in character and devoted or adaptable to rural but not necessarily agricultural use,” subject to certain exceptions) assessed at 3316 percent of full and true value. The District Court of Carlton County, the Honorable Sidney E. [103]*103Kaner, granted the petition and Independent School District No. 99, Thomson Township, and Carlton County appeal to this court.
The lands in question, which had been designated class 3 for many years prior to 1962, are owned by appellee and comprise 11 contiguous parcels extending in a narrow strip from the east boundary of the small community of Thomson eastward through Jay Cooke State Park to a point on the St. Louis River. The lands are used for facilities which carry water diverted from the St. Louis River eastward through a canal and conduits to surge tanks, where it is stabilized and used to drive electric generators, after which it is returned to the St. Louis River.2 The parcels in contest all lie outside Thomson and within Jay Cooke State Park.
The parcels are composed of generally rugged and rocky forest terrain. There are presently no residences upon this land, although there were about four residences used by appellee’s employees up until several years ago. There was evidence that the lands are not generally suitable for dwellings. The area is not served with municipal water, sewer, police,3 or fire facilities. It is surrounded on all sides by Jay Cooke State Park,4 although on the west end the lands abut the community of Thomson. The nearest town (Wrenshall) is 3 miles from the land. No streets, roads, or sidewalks serve the parcels although a state road crosses the lands at one point.
The sole issue on appeal is whether the trial court’s finding that the property is “rural in character and devoted or adaptable to rural but not necessarily agricultural use” has reasonable support in the evidence.
Whether a parcel of land is “rural” is a question of fact. National Bank v. Banholzer, 69 Minn. 24, 71 N. W. 919. Questions of classi[104]*104fication under tax statutes are also questions of fact. State v. Minnesota Federal S. & L. Assn. 218 Minn. 229, 15 N. W. (2d) 568.5 The trial court’s findings of fact in tax cases, like those in ordinary civil actions, must be sustained upon review if reasonably supported by the evidence as a whole. Lindahl v. State, 244 Minn. 506, 70 N. W. (2d) 866.
Both questions raised by the statute — whether the land is “rural in character” and whether it is “devoted or adaptable to rural but not necessarily agricultural use” — involve interpretation of the term “rural.”
Although the term “rural” is sometimes employed as coterminous with “agricultural,” 6 it appears from the legislature’s use of the phrase “rural but not necessarily agricultural use” and otherwise 7 that the legislature did not so use it. Rather, it is likely that it used the word to mean “of or pertaining to the country as distinguished from a city or town,” the definition uniformly given the term by the courts.8
The first question presented by the statute is whether the property is rural in character. The criteria traditionally employed in answering this question have been the location and general surroundings of the [105]*105property,9 the availability to it of municipal services,10 and its use.* 11 The location and general surroundings of the land in question are undeniably rural. While the property at one end abuts a small community, it is surrounded by the rugged and rocky forest lands of Jay Cooke State Park and is 3 miles from the nearest town. The property receives the benefit of no municipal services. Appellants point out that water and sewer facilities would be impractical because of the rocky nature of the soil, and that often properties do not need all the normal municipal services. But the fact remains the properties have no municipal services. The property’s use is discussed below. Taking these criteria into account, it is clear that the trial court’s finding that the lands are rural in character is sustained by the evidence.
The second question is whether the property is devoted or adaptable to a rural but not necessarily agricultural use. It is very arguable that the land is devoted to such a use. The use of lands for carrying water through canals and conduits to drive generators might well be deemed a use characteristic of the country as distinguished from a city or town. Such a use is clearly distinguishable from the use of property solely for residential purposes by persons engaged in city pursuits, which this court has indicated would be a nonrural use.12 Appellants strongly em[106]*106phasize the fact that the land is employed for a commercial and completely nonagricultural use. Aside from the fact that agriculture itself is a “commercial” use, appellants have shown no reason why rural uses cannot include commercial ones.13
But it is not necessary to determine whether the property is devoted to a rural use since, if it is rural in character, it is sufficient that it be “adaptable to rural though not necessarily agricultural use.” Staples v. State, 233 Minn. 312, 315, 46 N. W. (2d) 651, 653.14 In light of the character of the land, as shown by the testimony and exhibits, including many photographs which were placed in evidence, it is clear that the trial court could reasonably find the land adaptable to rural use.
Affirmed.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
145 N.W.2d 68, 275 Minn. 101, 1966 Minn. LEXIS 733, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/minnesota-power-light-co-v-carlton-county-minn-1966.