Portsmouth Country Club v. Town of Greenland

883 A.2d 298, 152 N.H. 617, 2005 N.H. LEXIS 147
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedSeptember 21, 2005
DocketNo. 2004-501
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 883 A.2d 298 (Portsmouth Country Club v. Town of Greenland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Portsmouth Country Club v. Town of Greenland, 883 A.2d 298, 152 N.H. 617, 2005 N.H. LEXIS 147 (N.H. 2005).

Opinion

NADEAU, J.

The defendant, the Town of Greenland (Town), appeals an order of the Superior Court (McHugh, J.) ruling that the Town cannot continue to tax the golf holes on the plaintiff’s golf course as improvements in addition to taxing the underlying land as open space. The plaintiff, Portsmouth Country Club (Club) cross-appeals, challenging the trial court’s refusal to apply its ruling retroactively and to award the Club attorney’s fees. We affirm.

The following facts are recited in the trial court’s order or agreed to by the parties. The Club operates an eighteen-hole golf course on 255 acres in Greenland. Following a town-wide revaluation of property in 1987 and an attendant increase in the assessed value of the Club’s property, the Club and the Town negotiated a discretionary easement deed pursuant to former RSA 79-A:15-:21 (repealed and replaced by RSA ch. 79-C (2003)). That statute provided a mechanism for taxing land subject to a discretionary easement either according to the current use assessment category specified in the easement or at a “fixed assessment ... which does not exceed the highest per acre valuation of any category of open space land established by the [current use advisory] board.” RSA 79-A:18 (1991) (repealed 1996).

The Club’s discretionary easement deed, as later amended, provided that 247 acres of the Club’s property, which are used for playing golf, would be subject to the easement and classified, “for purposes of current use tax assessment^] as open space.” The remaining five acres, on which a pro shop, clubhouse, “snack shack” and parking lot were located, would be excluded from the easement and taxed at fair market value. Although the deed was not signed until 1991, implementation of its provisions began in 1987.

Since 1992, the current use rate for the 247 acres subject to the easement has been set by the Town at $400 per acre. The Town has also, however, separately assessed the golf holes located on those 247 acres. Prior to 2001, the total additional assessment for these holes was $504,000, and that value was listed on the Club’s tax bill under the category of [619]*619buildings. Between 1987 and 2000, the Club never inquired about the components of its assessed valuation or complained about its tax bill.

In 2001, another property revaluation was conducted, resulting in an increase in the Club’s taxes and prompting an inquiry by the Club into the Town’s taxing policies. It was then that the Club first realized that in addition to the current use assessment of $400 per acre, it was being taxed on the value of the golf holes.

The Club applied to the Town for an abatement, which was denied. It then filed a petition for abatement, declaratory judgment and damages with the superior court, contending that according to the discretionary easement deed and applicable statute, the Town could not assess the 247 acres at more than its current use value. The trial court agreed, and ruled that the Town could not assess “any additional tax on the 247 acres of open space land ... except for the agreed-upon current use amount. Thus, the Town cannot independently assess the golf holes and add that amount to the current use amount.” The trial court declined, however, to grant a rebate of erroneously-assessed taxes for the years 1991 through 2001 or to award the Club its attorney’s fees. The Town appeals the trial court’s ruling regarding the method of tax assessment. The Club cross-appeals the trial court’s failure to apply its ruling retroactively and to award attorney’s fees. We first address the Town’s appeal.

The Town argues that golf course components such as tees, fairways and greens are improvements to land, separate from the land itself, and “are properly assessed and taxed separately from the land.” It contends that its assessment practice is consistent with the easement deed, in which it “agreed to classify the lands encumbered by this easement for purposes of current use assessment as open space.” (Quotation omitted.) “The Discretionary Easement Deed,” the Town argues, “says absolutely nothing about the improvements to the golf course land.” Moreover, it argues that its separate assessment of the golf course components is mandated by the current use statute, which, at the time the discretionary easement deed was executed, directed the selectmen or assessing officials to appraise, at current use values established by the current use advisory board, “open space land, as classified under the provisions of this chapter, excluding any building, appurtenance or other improvement thereon.” RSA 79-A:5,1 (1991) (amended 1991) (emphasis added).

The Club, on the other hand, contends that what the Town identifies as golf course improvements are “part of the land” encumbered by the easement and subject thereunder to assessment as open land. The Club argues that this interpretation is consistent with the applicable statutory scheme, which allows land used for a golf course to be eligible for a discretionary easement even though “[a] golf course obviously must have [620]*620some improvements to land in its natural condition, all of which are a necessary part of a ‘golf course,’ i.e. tees, greens, sand traps, fairways, roughs, etc.” Thus, the question before us is whether, for purposes of the applicable statute and the discretionary easement deed, golf course components such as tees and greens are to be treated as land or improvements to land.

We begin with the applicable statute, as the discretionary easement deed explicitly conveyed the easement “pursuant to New Hampshire RSA 79-A:15-21,” and, in any event, could not contravene the statute. Cf. Albertson v. Shenton, 78 N.H. 216, 217 (1916). “In matters of statutory interpretation, we are the final arbiter of legislative intent as expressed in the words of the statute considered as a whole. We first examine the language of the statute and ascribe the plain and ordinary meanings to the words used.” Carignan v. N.H. Int’l Speedway, 151 N.H. 409, 419 (2004) (citation omitted). We also interpret statutes not in isolation, but in the context of the overall statutory scheme. In the Matter of Claude & Fogg, 151 N.H. 273, 275 (2004).

When interpreting two statutes which deal with a similar subject matter, we construe them so that they do not contradict each other, and so that they will lead to reasonable results and effectuate the legislative purpose of the statute.

Sanborn Regional Sch. Dist. v. Budget Comm. of the Sanborn Regional Sch. Dist., 150 N.H. 241, 242 (2003) (quotations, citation and ellipsis omitted).

The current use statute in force at the time the discretionary easement deed was executed did not define the term “improvement.” See RSA ch. 79-A (1991 & Supp. 1995). Nevertheless, even were we to assume that tees, greens and other golf course characteristics would otherwise be improvements for purposes of RSA 79-A:5, I (1991) (amended 1991), we still interpret the overall statutory scheme to treat these features as part of the land on which a discretionary easement has been granted and to preclude their separate taxation as improvements.

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Bluebook (online)
883 A.2d 298, 152 N.H. 617, 2005 N.H. LEXIS 147, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/portsmouth-country-club-v-town-of-greenland-nh-2005.