Vetri Navy Yard, LLC v. Dept. of Community & Economic Development of the Commonwealth of PA

189 A.3d 1137
CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJuly 16, 2018
Docket499 M.D. 2017
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 189 A.3d 1137 (Vetri Navy Yard, LLC v. Dept. of Community & Economic Development of the Commonwealth of PA) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vetri Navy Yard, LLC v. Dept. of Community & Economic Development of the Commonwealth of PA, 189 A.3d 1137 (Pa. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

OPINION BY JUDGE COHN JUBELIRER

Vetri Navy Yard, LLC (Vetri NY) 1 petitions for review of the September 27, 2017 Order of the Secretary of Community & Economic Development of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania (Secretary), 2 related to Keystone Opportunity Zone (KOZ) tax benefits (KOZ benefits) that Vetri NY received between 2013 and 2015, and KOZ benefits Vetri NY requested for 2016 under the Keystone Opportunity Zone, Keystone Opportunity Expansion Zone and Keystone Opportunity Improvement Zone Act 3 (Act). Vetri NY had constructed and operated a restaurant in the Philadelphia Navy Yard Keystone Opportunity Improvement Zone (Navy Yard KOZ) in 2013, for which it had received KOZ benefits. Vetri NY sold the restaurant to another business on January 30, 2016. Under Section 902(a) of the Act, when a "qualified business" "relocates" outside a KOZ within a certain time period, KOZ benefits are subject to recapture. 73 P.S. § 820.902(a). The Secretary's Order upheld a decision that, because of the sale of the restaurant, the KOZ benefits Vetri NY received were subject to recapture; Vetri NY was not entitled to a waiver of the recapture of those benefits; and Vetri NY was not entitled to any KOZ benefits for January 2016. On appeal, Vetri NY argues the Secretary erred or abused his discretion in holding it had "relocated" from the Navy Yard KOZ thereby triggering the Act's recapture provisions. Vetri NY also contends the Department of Community & Economic Development of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania (DCED) could waive the recapture, and, at the very least, Vetri NY was entitled to KOZ benefits for January 2016 when it was actively operating its restaurant in the Navy Yard KOZ.

Because the Secretary's decision upholding the recapture of Vetri NY's KOZ benefits and the denial of the waiver of that recapture is consistent with the Act's terms and purpose, we affirm that portion of the Order. However, Vetri NY was a qualified business actively conducting business in the Navy Yard KOZ during the month of January 2016, which would entitle it to KOZ benefits for that month. Recapture of those benefits because of its relocation within three years would require the return of only a percentage of the KOZ benefits it would receive for that month. We, therefore, reverse the Order to the extent that it denied Vetri NY's application for KOZ benefits for January 2016 in its entirety.

I. The Act

In 1998, the General Assembly passed the Act to aid economically and socially distressed communities that were "characterized by high unemployment, low investment of new capital, inadequate dwelling conditions, blighted conditions, underutilized, obsolete or abandoned industrial, commercial and residential structures and deteriorating tax bases." Section 102(1) of the Act, 73 P.S. § 820.102(1). The Act was intended to "restore prosperity" to these areas by authorizing DCED to create "keystone opportunity zones and keystone opportunity expansion zones" that encourage "coordinated efforts between private and public entities" to improve the "economic and social life of the Commonwealth." Section 102(2), (3) of the Act, 73 P.S. § 820.102(2), (3). The General Assembly found that "[l]ong-term economic viability of these areas requires the cooperative involvement of residents, businesses, State and local elected officials and community organizations" and is accomplished by "provid[ing] temporary relief from certain taxes within the zone[s]." 73 P.S. § 820.102(3).

The Act "combine[s] state and local tax benefits to provide virtually tax-free status," by giving qualified businesses located within a KOZ "exemptions, deductions, credits, and abatements [that can] ... last for" the time the area is designated a KOZ. Rachel A. Wilson et al., State Enterprise Zone Programs: A Survey of the Benefits (Part III) , Journal of Multistate Taxation and Incentives, 12-Aug. J. Multistate Tax'n 24, 31 (2002). These state and local tax exemptions, deductions, abatements or credits, set forth in Chapters 5 and 7 of the Act, include, but are not limited to: exemptions from the state sales and use tax and personal income tax; a credit against the corporate net income tax 4 "for tax liability attributable to business activity actively conducted within the subzone in the taxable year"; the abatement of 100 percent "of the real property taxation on the assessed valuation of deteriorated property" within a KOZ; and exemptions from local sales and use taxes, earned income and net profit taxes, as well as business privilege and mercantile license taxes. Sections 501, 511-512, 515-516, 702-705 of the Act, 73 P.S. §§ 820.501, .511-.512, .515-.516, .702-.705.

The Act's provisions and beneficial tax treatment are applicable only to a qualified person or business, 5 and, in the case of a business, it must be certified as qualified by DCED. Section 1306 of the Act, 73 P.S. § 820.1306. A " qualified business ," under the Act, is one that is:

authorized to do business in this Commonwealth which is located or partially located within a subzone , expansion subzone or improvement subzone and is engaged in the active conduct of a trade or business in accordance with the requirements of section 307 for the taxable year. An agent, broker or representative of a business is not engaged in the active conduct of trade or business for the business.

Section 103 of the Act, 73 P.S. § 820.103 (emphasis added). To qualify for KOZ benefits under the Act each year, a business is required to "own or lease real property in a subzone, improvement subzone or expansion subzone from which the business actively conducts a trade, profession or business." Section 307(a) of the Act, 73 P.S. § 820.307(a) (emphasis added). Additionally, the business must annually obtain "certification from [DCED] that the business is located and is in the active conduct of a trade, profession or business within" one of these zones in order to continue to qualify under Section 307. 6 Id. Certification is not transferable. Section 901 of the Act, 73 P.S. § 820.901.

The Act provides a means for a taxing authority to recover past KOZ benefits received by qualified businesses under certain circumstances by authorizing the "recapture" of a percentage of those benefits. Section 902(a) provides:

(a) General rule. - If any qualified business located within a subzone , improvement subzone or expansion subzone has received an exemption, deduction, abatement or credit under this act and subsequently relocates outside of the zone within the first five years of locating in a subzone, improvement subzone or expansion subzone, that business shall refund to the State and political subdivision which granted the exemption, deduction, abatement or credit received in accordance with the following:

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Bluebook (online)
189 A.3d 1137, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vetri-navy-yard-llc-v-dept-of-community-economic-development-of-the-pacommwct-2018.