Opinion No. 79-168 (1979) Ag

CourtOklahoma Attorney General Reports
DecidedJuly 31, 1979
StatusPublished

This text of Opinion No. 79-168 (1979) Ag (Opinion No. 79-168 (1979) Ag) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oklahoma Attorney General Reports primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Opinion No. 79-168 (1979) Ag, (Okla. Super. Ct. 1979).

Opinion

Disposition: ** SEE: OPINION NO. 79-106 (1979) **

** Part II of Part II ** According to Powell on Real Property, Vol 2 1722 (1977), the most important of the nonfreehold estates is the estate for years. Paragraph 246 of the Powell treatise goes on to say; "When the owner of real property leases out his property for a term of years, he carves his prior absolute and unqualified estate into two estates, one in the lessee, the other in himself. For all intents and purposes, the tenant is the absolute owner for the term of the lease, however, the lessor still has an interest in the land. Technically this interest could be called a reversion interest." When the public trust leases governmentally owned property, the unitary ownership fragments, leaving only the reversion to qualify for the ad valorem tax exemption. The vast majority of jurisdictions have held, when presented with the question of taxability of property interests divided between public owners and private owners, that the interest of the private owner is not exempt from taxation. In Moeller v. Gormley, 44 Wn. 465, 87 P. 507 (1906) the Washington Supreme Court analyzed a controversy involving the 30-year leasing by a private party of Seattle tidelands in light of the Washington Constitution whose language on exemptions for government property is nearly identical to that of Oklahoma. In determining that although the fee remained in the State, the leased land should be assessed, the Court concluded: "When a lease is given by the State to an individual or private corporation, the lessee thereby obtains for his or its private use certain rights and privileges in, to and upon such real estate. These rights and privileges constitute private property over which the lessee has, and may exercise, absolute dominion and ownership within the limitations of his or its lease. Why as such property it should not be subject to the general rule of taxation we conceive of no reason." The Illinois Court had occasion to interpret an Illinois statute dealing with exemptions in People v. American Airlines, Inc., 233 N.E.2d 568 (1968). In construing Section 19.6 and 26 of the Revenue Act of 1939, the Court noted that the legislative intent, as well as earlier Illinois case law, clearly mandated the practice of taxing private leasehold interests in tax-exempt properties and private leasehold interests in tax-exempt properties and held that the tax was properly levied upon the land and hangers leased to American by the City of Chicago. In San Pedro, L.A. S.L.R. Co. v. City of Los Angeles, 180 Cal. 18,179 P. 393 (1919) tidelands located in the City of Los Angeles and belonging to the State were leased and subsequently assessed for property taxes. The Court, in holding that municipalities have the power to tax such privately-held interests in public property, relied upon a former hearing of the appeal, which analyzed definitions of property interests and interpreted California constitutional provisions. The earlier opinion, which addressed the traditional practice of assessing only the owner of the reversion differentiated between the totally private lessor-lessee relationship and the arrangement resulting from a public-private lessee. The decision stated: "Where . . . the state owns the reversion, its reversionary interest, like all property owned by it is exempt from taxation. In such a case it cannot be said that the private property right of the lessee is taxed through the medium of the taxation of the interest of the owner. Still less can it properly be said that because the interest of the state is not taxable, the private owner of a leasehold interest should be exempt from paying taxes upon the property that is owned by him." According to Iron County v. State Tax Commission, 437 S.W.2d 665 (Mo. 1968), Rubernoid Company and the City of Annapolis entered into a lease pursuant to RSMO 1961 Supp. 71.790 — 71.850. The land and plant were financed by $5,000,000 in bonds which were to be repaid by the lessee Rubernoid over a 20-year lease period. There were options to renew the lease for fifteen successive terms of five years each, with an option to purchase (conditional upon enabling legislation being passed) fixed at the full amount there required to redeem all outstanding revenue bonds plus one dollar ($1.00). The appeal to the Supreme Court of Missouri dealt in part with the question of whether under the State's constitution the leasehold interest of Rubernoid in the manufacturing and industrial plant owned in fee by the City of Annapolis was exempt from taxation. In making its determination that the 82.75 acre-tract should be taxed, the Court looked to an earlier Missouri decision, State ex rel., Benson v. Personnel Housing, Inc., 300 S.W.2d 506, (Mo. 1957), a case in which a private corporation leasing land from the federal government had been assessed taxes on its leasehold interest in improvements to the property. The Court in Iron County stated: "This decision is authority both for the proposition that a leasehold interest is real property for purposes of taxation and that the exemption accorded the Government from taxation thereon does not extend to a privately owned leasehold in the real estate." The Constitution of the State of Missouri in effect at the time of the Iron County decision stated, in Article X, Section 6: "Article X, Section 6. All property, real and personal, of the State, counties and other political subdivisions, and nonprofit cemeteries, shall be exempt from taxation; and all property, real and personal, not held for private or corporate profit and used exclusively for religious worship, for schools and colleges, for purposes purely charitable, or for agricultural and horticultural societies may be exempted from taxation by general law. All laws exempting from taxation property other than the property enumerated in this article, shall be void." The actual meaning of the word "owned" in the phrase "property owned by a county" was considered in the case of Mitchell Aero, Inc. v. City of Milwaukee,168 N.W.2d 183 (Wisc. 1969). The property in dispute consisted of two hangers constructed by Aero on land owned by the county. The case, which traced the judicial evolution of ownership in Wisconsin from adherence to bare legal title language to an emphasis on beneficial ownership as the proper interpretation of the phrase for tax exemption purposes, concluded that for a municipality to qualify for exemption under the statute, there had to be real or true ownership, not paper title only. The Court graphically described the requisites as follows: "Ownership is often referred to in legal philosophy as a bundle of sticks or rights and one or more of the sticks may be separated from the bundle and the bundle will still be considered ownership. What combination of rights less than the whole bundle will constitute ownership is a question which must be determined in each case in the context of the purpose of the determination. In this case for exemption one needs more than the title stick to constitute ownership." The Court affirmed the lower court's ruling that based on the nature of the lease, Aero had sufficient ownership to sustain the taxation.

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Opinion No. 79-168 (1979) Ag, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/opinion-no-79-168-1979-ag-oklaag-1979.