NEV. HEALTH AND BIOSCIENCE ASSET CORP. v. STATE OF NEV. (CIVIL)

CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedMay 28, 2026
Docket89238
StatusPublished

This text of NEV. HEALTH AND BIOSCIENCE ASSET CORP. v. STATE OF NEV. (CIVIL) (NEV. HEALTH AND BIOSCIENCE ASSET CORP. v. STATE OF NEV. (CIVIL)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
NEV. HEALTH AND BIOSCIENCE ASSET CORP. v. STATE OF NEV. (CIVIL), (Neb. 2026).

Opinion

142 Nev., Advance Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF NEVADA

NEVADA HEALTH AND BIOSCIENCE No, 89238 ASSET CORPORATION, Appellant, vs. THE STATE OF NEVADA EX REL. DE.PARTMENT OF TAXATION AND MAY 28 2026 THE NEVADA TAX COMMISSION, EL CLERK • ETH A. BR

Respondent. BY CH DŒPU

Appeal from a district court order denying a petition for judicial review of a decision by the Nevada Department of Taxation. Eighth Judicial District Court, Clark County; Anna Albertson, Judge.

Reversed and remanded.

Fabian VanCott and Bryan D. Dixon, Las Vegas, for Appellant.

Aaron .D. Ford, Attorney Gen.eral, Heidi J. Parry Stern, Solicitor General, and David J. Pope, Chief Deputy Attorney General, Carson City, for Respondent.

BEFORE THE SUPREME COURT, EN BANC.

OPINION By the Court, PICKERING J.: This case concerns the scope of state sales and use tax exemptions for religious, charitable, or educational organizations that SUPREME COURT OF NEVADA

Do- NAS- partner with the government. The Nevada Health & Bioscience Asset Corporation (NHBAC) is a nonprofit organization established to privately fund and manage the development of a state-of-the-art medical education building for the University of Nevada, Las Vegas School of Medicine. When NHBAC sought a sales and use tax exemption based on its nonprofit status, the Nevada Department of Taxation denied its application under NRS 372.340, which withholds such exemptions from government contractors, thereby launching this dispute over the proper procedure for evaluating this type of application. We hold that the Department erred by failing to evaluate NHBAC's application according to the criteria for charitable organizations established in NRS 372.3261 and by reading NRS 372.340 to preclude otherwise-eligible entities from receiving tax-exempt status. We further hold that under the correct criteria, NHBAC qualifies for sales and use tax exemption as a charitable organization. We therefore reverse the district court's denial of NHBAC's petition for judicial review and remand to the district court so that it can instruct the Department to approve NHBAC's application and grant it a letter of exemption. I. The UNLV School. of Medicine opened in 2017 with plans to operate out of temporary facilities until a permanent state-of-the-art medical education building could be built. Clark County conveyed property to UNLV to be used for the new building, with a deed restriction requiring construction to be commenced before July 1, 2021, or else the property could revert to Clark County. Construction efforts stalled, however, due to various political and logistical roadblocks not uncommon for public works projects of this scale. To overcome these challenges and stick to the deed restriction's timeline, a coalition of charitable foundations and individuals SUPREME COURT came together in 2019 to establish NHBAC. According to its bylaws, OF NEVADA

2 NHBAC is a nonprofit organization formed "specifically for the funding. design, development, construction, oversight and ownership of a medical school facility for the UNLV School of Medicine," with a broader mission of remedying Nevada's physician shortage and improving the state's healthcare landscape. NHBAC soon entered into a novel public-private partnership arrangement with UNLV and the Nevada System of Higher Education (NSHE) in which NHBAC committed to complete development and construction of the new building at no cost to UNLV, largely by sourcing private charitable contributions. As described in the Development Agreement between NHBAC, UNLV, and NSHE, the arrangement was to proceed as follows: UNLV and NSHE agreed to transfer to NHBAC the parcel of land designated to host the medical education building; NHBAC would lead the development of construction plans and specifications at its own expense, subject to approval by UNLV and the City of Las Vegas; NHBAC would manage construction in accordance with those plans and specifications; and, upon completion. NHBAC would enter into a lease agreement with UNLV, charging a rental rate of $1 per year until 2030, at which time NHBAC would transfer the land and the new building to UNLV free of encumbrances. Because NHBAC operated with few employees and no in-house construction expertise, it committed to retain licensed construction contractors and subcontractors as part of its development team, positioning the organization primarily in a role of project management, rather than of direct implementation. Shortly after formation, NHBAC sought and received tax- exempt status as a § 501(c)(3) organization under federal law, 26 U.S.C. § 501(c)(3), as well as under NRS 361.099 for the designated parcel of land. NHBAC then. applied to the Nevada Department of Taxation for exemption SUPREME Cotorr oF NEVAPA

3 from state sales and use taxation under NRS 372.326, which permits granting such exemptions to certain types of nonprofit organizations. On its appl.ication form, NHBAC checked the box indicating that it was applying as an educational organi.zation as opposed to a charitable or religious one. NHBAC supported its application with copies of its bylaws and articles of incorporation, relevant financial information, its letter of federal exemption, and—after the Department requested supplemental documentation—its Development Agreement with UNLV, a letter of support from UNLV's president describing the partnership, and the project schedule. Tbe Department rejected the application, indicating in its denial letter that NHBAC did not meet the criteria for educational organizations defined in NRS 372.3261(4). NHBAC subsequently sought reconsideration from the Nevada Tax Commission. Before the Commission, the Department argued, first, that NHBAC was not an educational organization because the organization's purpose was not to operate a school or provide instruction. Second, it argued that NHBAC did not qualify for tax-exempt status as a charitable organization because NRS 372.340 withholds such status from government contractors. According to the Department, NRS 372.340 applied to NHBAC because NHBAC would be "fulfilling a contract" with UNLV and was not a constituent part of the university. In response, NHBAC contended that its initial self- identification as an educational organization was a scrivener's error and argued that the Commission should nonetheless reconsider and approve its application under NRS 372.3261(3)'s criteria for charitable organizations, and that NRS 372.340 had no bearing on its application.

SUPREME COURT OF NE VADA

4 After a hearing, the Commission summarily upheld the Department's decision to deny NHBAC's application for tax-exempt status.

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NEV. HEALTH AND BIOSCIENCE ASSET CORP. v. STATE OF NEV. (CIVIL), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nev-health-and-bioscience-asset-corp-v-state-of-nev-civil-nev-2026.