Town of Killington v. State

776 A.2d 395, 172 Vt. 182, 2001 Vt. LEXIS 143
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedApril 20, 2001
Docket99-286
StatusPublished
Cited by68 cases

This text of 776 A.2d 395 (Town of Killington v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Town of Killington v. State, 776 A.2d 395, 172 Vt. 182, 2001 Vt. LEXIS 143 (Vt. 2001).

Opinion

Johnson, J.

In this appeal concerning a transition provision of Vermont’s school funding law, we confront a familiar dispute in which one side claims the benefit of the common and ordinary meaning of the statutory language, while the other side relies primarily on the legislative purpose of the statute to give meaning to the term at issue. The provision in question capped for a two-year period the anticipated rapid rise in property taxes in the so-called “gold” towns resulting from the passage of the Equal Educational Property Act of 1997 (hereinafter “Act 60”). The statute saved appellee Town of Killington 1 approximately $1,200,000 in taxes for the first transition year after Act 60 became law. Killington claimed, however, that it was entitled to roughly $500,000 in additional tax savings because the State applied an incorrect methodology in calculating Killington’s increase in municipal expenditure growth during the first transition year. The superior court agreed, ruling that the commonly understood meaning of the statutory term “municipal budget” required the State to calculate Killington’s municipal expenditure growth in terms of the increase in gross expenditures rather than the increase in expenditures funded by taxes.

The State of Vermont and the Commissioners of the Departments of Education and Taxes (“the State”) appeal the superior court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of Killington. We reverse and. enter summary judgment in favor of the State based on our conclusion that the court’s construction of the statutory provision at issue leads to an irrational result that is inconsistent with the spirit of the law and the legislative intent underlying the provision.

The fundamental purpose of Act 60 is “to make educational opportunity available to each pupil in each town on substantially equal terms.” 16 V.S.A § 4000(a). The Legislature sought to attain equal access to similar revenues per pupil through a combination of state block grants and local education spending that would allow each school district to “have substantially equal capacity to raise and provide the same amount per pupil on the local tax base.” 16 V.S.A § 4000(b). Act *184 60 represented the Legislature’s response to Brigham v. State, 166 Vt. 246, 692 A.2d 384 (1997), in which we held that Vermont’s educational financing system, with its wide disparities in per pupil spending and property tax burdens necessary to fund that spending, violated the common benefits clause, Chapter I, Article 7, of the Vermont Constitution. The Legislature chose to respond, in large part, by redistributing property tax revenues so that an equivalent tax rate in any town in Vermont produced the same per pupil resources for educational spending. In some towns, the maintenance of the historic level of educational spending would require substantial, even dramatic, increases in property tax rates to fund education. To reduce the shock of property tax increases in the property-rich towns, the Legislature chose to phase in these increases over time. This litigation is about one of those phase-in provisions.

To produce equality, a fully implemented Act 60 imposes a statewide education property tax on all nonresidential and homestead property in every town in the state at a rate of $1.10 per $100 of equalized education property value. 32 V.S.A. § 5402(a). The law, however, contains a phase-in provision aimed at easing the transition in fiscal years 1999 and 2000 to the $1.10 rate for towns that enjoy relatively low property tax rates. See 1997, No. 60, § 50(a) (amended by 1997, No. 71 (Adj. Sess.), § 67(a)). The first component of that provision, which provides a three-year phase-in toward the uniform statewide rate, is not at issue in this appeal.

The second component, the one at issue here, caps at forty percent any increase in. a town’s combined municipal, school district, and statewide property tax rate from fiscal year 1998 to fiscal year 1999. 2 *185 The forty percent cap provision assured that no town’s combined tax rate would increase by more than forty percent in the first transition year following the passage of the new education funding law.

The cap provision was intended to protect towns against immediate and large tax increases created by Act 60. It was not intended, however, to protect against tax increases brought about by extraordinary spending increases. Indeed, if the cap provision allowed extraordinary spending, a town facing a forty percent property tax increase resulting from Act 60 could increase spending by forty percent, thereby retaining the benefit of the entire tax increase while avoiding a gradual increase in its burden under the statewide property tax rate. Rather than use the phase-in period, as intended, to gradually ratchet up its increased tax burden under the statewide rate, a town could increase its spending to a level that would allow it to avoid any increased payment under the statewide rate and Act 60’s phase-in provisions.

To prevent such a scenario but still allow towns a reasonable increase in spending during the phase-in period, the cap provision included two spending control provisions, one on education spending and one on municipal spending. The former is not involved here. The latter provides that any increase in the “municipal budget” from fiscal years 1998 to 1999 that exceeds ten percent may not be applied in calculating the forty percent cap on the increase in the combined tax rate for fiscal year 1999. In sum, the increase in the combined tax rate of towns from fiscal year 1998 to fiscal year 1999 was capped at forty percent, except that, in relevant part, any growth in the municipal *186 budget exceeding ten percent would not be included in the calculation of the combined tax rate for that year.

Looking at the specifics of this case, Killington is a property-rich town that faces significant property tax increases under Act 60. Thus, its increase in property tax rates during the phase-in period is limited by the forty percent cap, however it is construed. The gist of the State’s claims is that Killington has improperly drawn from its forty percent property tax increase for the first interim year by increasing funds for municipal spending well above the ten percent limit and intentionally generating a large surplus that can be spent in future years. Killington responds that it is simply following the letter of the phase-in provision, and that the State is distorting its clear language in pursuit of a claimed legislative intent that it has invented.

The facts giving rise to the claims are these. Killington had a municipal budget in fiscal year 1998 of $1,951,000. In fiscal year 1999, Killington voted a municipal budget of $2,146,100, precisely ten percent above the fiscal year 1998 budget. Because of different revenue assumptions underlying the two budgets, 3 however, Killington *187 voted a thirty-eight percent increase in the municipal property tax rate to fund the fiscal year 1999 budget.

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

Related

In Re Central Vermont Medical Center Fiscal Year 2025
2025 VT 53 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 2025)
State v. Joseph Leland Bruyette
2021 VT 43 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 2021)
Northern Vermont Rentals, LLC Extension
Vermont Superior Court, 2017
Shatney Home Occupation
Vermont Superior Court, 2016
C&S Wholesale Grocers, Inc. v. Department of Taxes
2016 VT 77A (Supreme Court of Vermont, 2016)
C & S Wholesale Grocers, Inc.
2016 VT 77 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 2016)
Zaremba Group CU - Jericho
Vermont Superior Court, 2014
Progressive Casuality Insurance Co. v. MMG Insurnace Co.
2014 VT 70 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 2014)
Moody Subdivision
Vermont Superior Court, 2013
Schuyler NOV
Vermont Superior Court, 2013
Goddard College CU
Vermont Superior Court, 2013
Smith Boathouse Permit Application
Vermont Superior Court, 2013
Donovan CU Permit
Vermont Superior Court, 2013
UVM Certificate of Appropriateness
Vermont Superior Court, 2013

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
776 A.2d 395, 172 Vt. 182, 2001 Vt. LEXIS 143, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/town-of-killington-v-state-vt-2001.