Roberta, Inc. v. Inhabitants of Town of Southwest Harbor

449 A.2d 1138, 1982 Me. LEXIS 772
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedSeptember 8, 1982
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 449 A.2d 1138 (Roberta, Inc. v. Inhabitants of Town of Southwest Harbor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Roberta, Inc. v. Inhabitants of Town of Southwest Harbor, 449 A.2d 1138, 1982 Me. LEXIS 772 (Me. 1982).

Opinion

WATHEN, Justice.

This case presents a narrow question involving the construction of 36 M.R.S.A. § 655(1)(I) (1978), the statute exempting from personal property taxation certain pleasure boats owned by nonresidents. Since our reading of the statute leads us to conclude that the Superior Court justice [1139]*1139erred in holding the pleasure boat in question taxable, we reverse the judgment entered below in favor of the Town levying the tax.

Plaintiff Roberta, Inc., is a Delaware corporation that owns the pleasure boat Roberta, which was built and outfitted in Maine by Henry R. Hinckley & Co. of Southwest Harbor. After being launched in early 1979, the Roberta through the summer was kept by its owner in nearby Northeast Harbor in order that the builder could do certain repairs and warranty work, including replacement of the engine. During that period the boat went on a one-month cruise to Canada in order to test the replacement engine the builder had installed under its warranty; a representative of the builder accompanied the boat on that cruise. During the repairs performed later in the summer, the boat was used for several short sails and trips in Maine waters. In the fall of 1979 the boat was hauled and stored at the Hinckley yard in Southwest Harbor so that during the winter the topsides could be completely repainted under warranty. The boat was still there on April 1, 1980, when the tax assessor of defendant Town assessed a tax on her in the amount of $2,331.17. When Roberta, Inc.’s request for total abatement was denied by the Town’s Board of Assessment Review (the “Board”), it brought the present action in Superior Court (Hancock County) pursuant to M.R.Civ.P. 80B to challenge the assessment.

The parties stipulated to all the facts stated above, and further stipulated that but for the repairs the Roberta would not have been kept in Maine in 1979. On cross motions for summary judgment, the Superi- or Court entered judgment for defendant Town, holding that the Board had not clearly erred in finding that the boat had been “regularly kept” in the state during the year preceding April 1, 1980.

At issue in this case is the statutory exemption from personal property taxation of

[pleasure vessels and boats in the State on the first day of each April whose owners reside out of the State, and which are left in this State by the owners for the purpose of repair or storage, except those regularly kept in the State during the preceding year.

36 M.R.S.A. § 655(1)(I). Prima facie the Roberta on April 1,1980, was entitled to the benefit of the statutory exemption because its nonresident owner had as of that assessment date left it in Maine for the purpose of repair and storage. The sole question posed by this appeal is whether the Roberta lost its prima facie tax exemption by application of the final exception carved out by section 655(1)(I) for “those [boats] regularly kept in the State during the preceding year.” On the particular facts here stipulated, we hold that it did not, because as a matter of law it was not “regularly” kept in Maine during the preceding year within the meaning of the tax statute since it was in Maine only because of the necessary repairs and any use was incidental to the boat’s presence here for repairs.

The thrust of the Town’s argument is that if the nonresident’s boat is in fact kept in Maine through the twelve months ending on the pertinent April first assessment date, the tax exemption is defeated, even if it was kept in Maine for purposes of repair and storage. Thus, the Town would have us construe section 655(1)(I) as establishing an easily administered, temporal test for determining when the prima facie tax exemption of a pleasure boat is lost: If the boat is physically kept in Maine during the preceding year, regardless of the purpose of its presence, the boat would by the Town’s argument lose its exemption. Such a straight temporal test would, however, achieve ease of administration only by ignoring a more reasonable construction of the exemption, which is supported by the statute’s legislative history, its language, and the interpretation placed upon it by the Bureau of Taxation. Those sources make clear that the exception to the exemption for boats regularly kept in the state during the preceding year refers to the purpose of their sojourn in Maine rather than to its duration.

[1140]*1140The legislative debate surrounding passage of this statute and its predecessors demonstrates the legislature’s obvious intent of encouraging nonresidents to patronize the state’s boat repair and storage industry.1 Accepted rules of statutory construction mandate that we construe and apply section 655(1)(I) to give effect to that intent. See, e.g., Cummings v. Town of Oakland, Me., 430 A.2d 825 (1981); Schwanda v. Bonney, Me., 418 A.2d 163 (1980). The construction urged by the Town would, however, frustrate the plainly articulated purpose of the statute in substantial part by excluding from the tax exemption pleasure boats in Maine for lengthy repairs or for extended storage. If the exemption is held to apply only to shorter term repair and storage, the business most profitable to Maine’s boatyards is discouraged.

The Town urges that its interpretation of the tax exemption accurately reflects accommodation to another concern expressed in the legislative debates, i.e., that the tax base of many coastal towns would be seriously eroded if the exemption did not have a durational limitation.2 It seems more likely that the legislature meant to specify a purpose or domicile limitation on the exemption since that closes significant loopholes without frustrating the primary intent of the statute.3 Given alternative possibilities, when it is clear, as it is here, that the legislature enacted the legislation in question to address a specific problem, we are charged by the rules of statutory construction with adopting the construction that will best solve the problem. We cannot choose a construction which tends to nullify the legislative purpose. See Waddell v. Briggs, Me., 381 A.2d 1132 (1978).

If one were to read the phrase “except those regularly kept in the State during the preceding year” to impose a time limitation on the tax exemption, the modifying word regularly is rendered redundant. It then would add nothing in conceptual or administrative clarity to the time limitation expressed by the phrase “kept in the State during the preceding year.” Since nothing in a statute may be treated as surplusage if a reasonable construction giving each word meaning and force is possible, see Labbe v. Nissen Corp., Me., 404 A.2d 564 (1979), the adverb regularly must be given independent meaning.

Further bolstering a conclusion that the meaning given to regularly should refer to the purpose for which the boat was kept in the state is the administrative interpretation given to the exemption by the Bureau of Taxation in its Property Tax Bulletin No. 8 (Jan. 1, 1975).

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

State v. Zach
502 A.2d 896 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1985)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
449 A.2d 1138, 1982 Me. LEXIS 772, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roberta-inc-v-inhabitants-of-town-of-southwest-harbor-me-1982.