Nextel of New York, Inc. v. Assessor of Spring Valley

4 Misc. 3d 233, 771 N.Y.S.2d 853, 2004 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 65
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 2, 2004
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 4 Misc. 3d 233 (Nextel of New York, Inc. v. Assessor of Spring Valley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nextel of New York, Inc. v. Assessor of Spring Valley, 4 Misc. 3d 233, 771 N.Y.S.2d 853, 2004 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 65 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2004).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Thomas A. Dickerson, J.

Cell Towers are Taxable

The petitioner, Nextel of New York, Inc. asserts that its telecommunications equipment (Nextel’s Spring Valley communications equipment) is not taxable real property. The communications equipment consists of 12 antennae in three sectors of 4 each on top of a 110-foot-high steel water tank and are used along with two global positioning devices or timing devices to receive and transmit signals. The antennae are connected by coaxial cable to a 40,000-pound shed which sits on concrete piers buried three-feet deep on the property and attached to the piers by a series of welds to metal plates which themselves are set in the concrete blocks by means of threading rods. The antennae and coaxial cable are attached to the water tower by exothermically welded studs and metal supports (brackets and casings attached to the studs). All of the equipment can be removed within two days and it would take up to five days “for the final.”1

The Nextel License Agreement

In a license agreement dated June 14, 1999,2 United Water New York Inc. (licensor), the owner of the water tower, granted Nextel (licensee) “a non-exclusive and personal right ... to erect, maintain and operate on the Tank Site radio communications facilities . . . utility lines, transmission lines . . . equipment shelters, electronic equipment, radio transmitting and receiving antennas and supporting equipment.”3 The term of the license agreement is for five years and “four (4) renewal terms of five (5) years each unless Licensee terminates,”4 with an annual licensee fee of $30,000 for the first year which shall increase 4% each subsequent year.5 Should Nextel terminate the license agreement during the first 15 years it must pay licensor [235]*235liquidated, damages of 12 months of license fees.6 Nextel is further required to pay “an amount equal to any increase over the base year in real estate taxes, personal property taxes, or any other taxes and assessments levied against the Tank Site that are attributable to Licensee’s Equipment and use of the Tank Site.”7 Nextel must also pay utilities, insurance and all costs associated with the facility’s use, maintenance and operation.8

Nextel asserts that its license agreement describes its communications equipment as “personal property” and not as “fixtures” (e.g., “Licensor . . . agrees that [none of Nextel’s communications equipment shall] be considered as being affixed to . . . Tank Site”;9 “Licensee’s Equipment which [is] deemed Licensee’s personal property and not fixtures”).10 Of the 1,950 wireless communications facilities owned by Nextel in the States of New York, Connecticut and New Jersey only a few have actually been removed, primarily, because of condemnation proceedings brought by state or municipal agencies and a landlord’s insistence upon younger leases.* 11

Tax Assessments Increased and Challenged

After Nextel’s Spring Valley communications equipment was installed (authorized by a special use permit, a building permit and a certificate of use) the respondent Assessor, William R. Beckmann, by notice of change in assessment dated February 1, 2001,12 increased the property’s assessment from $200,000 to $400,000 which was continued in 2002 and reduced to $350,000 in 2003.13 Although Nextel’s counsel protested the 2001 assessment by letter14 dated October 11, 2001 no formal complaint was filed with the Board of Assessment Review as it was for the 2002 and 2003 assessments. Nextel filed before this court a notice of petition for review under RPTL article 7 for years 2002 and 2003 and within the context of the 2002 petition an application under RPTL article 5 for the refund of illegal taxes arising from the 2001 assessment. The agreed upon equalization rates are 13.59% for 2001, 12.40% for 2002, and 10.34% for 2003.

[236]*236The Scope of RPTL 102 (12) (i)

The taxability of Nextel’s Spring Valley communications equipment though still unsettled15 can be resolved by reference to RPTL 102 (12) (i)16 and its legislative history and, alternatively, to the common law of fixtures.17 RPTL 102 (12) (i) provides, in relevant part, that “real property” “[w]hen owned by other than a telephone company” (see RPTL 102 [12] [d]) shall be defined as

“all lines, wires, poles, supports and inclosures for electrical conductors upon, above and underground used in connection with the transmission or switching of electromagnetic voice, video and data signals between different entities separated by air . . . except that such property shall not include: . . . (D) such property used in the transmission of news or entertainment radio,[18] television or cable television signals for . . . exhibition to the public . . . .”

[237]*237In concluding that its Spring Valley communications equipment is not within the purview of RPTL 102 (12) (i), Nextel relies upon Matter of Travis v Board of Assessment Review (183 Misc 2d 699, 702 [1999]) which held that Nextel’s “antennae, cable and receiver equipment installed at [a building in Binghamton, New York] pursuant to [a] lease” (Nextel’s Binghamton communications equipment) did not constitute “lines, wires, poles, supports and inclosures for electrical conductors” and, hence, were not real property pursuant to RPTL 102 (12) (i) (internal quotation marks omitted).

The 1987 Amendment and Deductive Reasoning

Reasoning by deduction,19 the Travis court (at 702) held that

“The 1987 amendment eliminated from the definition of taxable realty ‘telecommunications equipment,’ i.e., equipment used for the transmission or switching of electromagnetic voice signals, which is owned by other than a telephone company . . . limited such definition to ‘lines, wires, poles, supports and inclosures for electrical conductors upon, above and underground used in connection with the transmission or switching of . . . signals.’ ”

The Travis court then found that Nextel’s Binghamton communications equipment was the very same “telecommunications equipment” exempted from taxation under RPTL 102 (12) (i) and, further, rejected the argument “that the coaxial cable should be construed as ‘lines’ or ‘wires,’ the antennae as ‘poles’ and the racks in the basement as ‘supports [or] inclosures for electrical conductors.’ If equipment such as that involved in this case should be assessable as real property ‘the remedy is legislative rather than by strained or distortive judicial decisional analysis’ ” (Travis, supra, 183 Misc 2d at 702).

Stated, simply, Nextel would like its Spring Valley communications equipment treated by this court as its Binghamton communications equipment was treated by the Travis court.

The Legislative History of the 1987 Amendment

As it evidently failed to do in Travis, Nextel has failed herein to produce and discuss the legislative history underlying the 1987 amendment.

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Bluebook (online)
4 Misc. 3d 233, 771 N.Y.S.2d 853, 2004 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 65, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nextel-of-new-york-inc-v-assessor-of-spring-valley-nysupct-2004.