Village of Burnsville v. Commissioner of Taxation

202 N.W.2d 653, 295 Minn. 504, 1972 Minn. LEXIS 1129
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedNovember 17, 1972
Docket43479
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 202 N.W.2d 653 (Village of Burnsville v. Commissioner of Taxation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Village of Burnsville v. Commissioner of Taxation, 202 N.W.2d 653, 295 Minn. 504, 1972 Minn. LEXIS 1129 (Mich. 1972).

Opinion

Per Curiam.

Relator, Village of Burnsville, by writ of certiorari, challenges the Minnesota Tax Court’s finding of the fair market value of a 1,420-acre tract of land owned by respondent-taxpayer, Northern States Power Company. The assessment of taxes is as of January 2, 1968. Taxpayer, a public service corporation engaged in the business of generating and distributing electric energy to the general public, has its Black Dog Generating Plant located on a portion of the tract, but the value of the plant structures and improvements is not involved in these tax proceedings.

Taxpayer’s land is located in the bottomlands of the Minnesota River, generally bounded on the north by the river, on the south by tracks of the Chicago & North Western Railway Company, on the east by Cedar Avenue, and on the west by Interstate Highway No. 35W. Approximately 560 acres of the land consist of Black Dog Lake, a long, narrow slough with an average normal depth of about 2 feet, the plant structures and improvements are on 52 acres, and the remaining acreage is unimproved, raw land.

The tract is zoned for heavy industrial uses, but its utility for such purposes is limited by its low elevation and poor soil conditions. Be *505 cause of its low elevation and proximity to the river, the entire tract is subject to periodic flooding and was flooded seven times in the period 1951 to 1969. To mitigate the hazard to the plant structures, those areas were raised from 10 to 20 feet with fill material. The worst of the floods occurred in 1965, when the river elevation rose 15.35 feet above flood stage, flooding the land to depths of 14 feet. Continuous pumping was necessary to maintain the plant’s substation in operation, and the only access to the plant was by boat.

The soil and subsoil throughout the tract consist of soft, silty materials that will not support the weight of substantial structures without the use of pilings to depths of from 40 to 55 feet. Construction of the 500-foot by 500-foot powerhouse, the largest structure, required the driving of more than 5,000 pilings, and another 2,000 or more pilings were required in the construction of the smaller outlying structures.

Location of the tract on the Minnesota River does have two favorable aspects. The first is that the river, the channel of which was dredged and straightened by the Army Corps of Engineers, is utilized by barges for the economical transport of coal and other bulk materials used by taxpayer. The second is that proximity to the river permits the economical use of large quantities of water in taxpayer’s power generating processes. Black Dog Lake is connected to the Minnesota River by an improved natural outlet at one end and by an artificial inlet at the other end, upon which control gates were constructed by taxpayer. Water is introduced from the river into the plant. The intake water is used in the process of condensing steam from the steam turbine generators and the heated water is discharged into the slough for cooling before return to the river. This use of the slough permits taxpayer to comply with state thermal pollution control standards during prescribed warm months of the year without any necessity for constructing cooling towers.

The assessor for the village of Burnsville placed a market value on the entire tract of land, exclusive of the stated structures and improvements, of $2,525,000, to which he added a so-called “use increment” of $3,965,000 (later reduced by him to $1,343,000) because of taxpayer’s use of Black Dog Lake for cooling water in lieu of constructing cooling towers. 1 Taxpayer, on the other hand, contended that the fair market value of the land was not more than $710,000.

*506 The commissioner of taxation, by order, thereafter determined that the market value of the land was $2,525,000, eliminating the village assessor’s added value for use increment. Upon appeal from that order by both the village and the taxpayer, the Tax Court found the fair market value of the land to be $1,420,000.

The essence of relator’s argument is that the expert witnesses for respondent-taxpayer on the issue of market value of the land did not consider taxpayer’s use of Black Dog Lake for cooling purposes as an increment to the value of the land so that their appraisals and the findings of the Tax Court failed, in the words of Minn. St. 273.12, “to consider and give due weight to every element and factor affecting the market value thereof.” This intrinsic value, they contend, is a factor mandated by Schleiff v. County of Freeborn, 231 Minn. 389, 394, 43 N. W. 2d 265, 268 (1950). 2

This claim must be examined in the context of what these appraisers affirmatively did consider in reaching their opinions as to value. 3 *507 Weighing the location and character of the land, they concluded that it was not suited for industrial development and that the highest and best use was for park and recreation purposes, or like flood plain applications. The 16,000 acres of industrial land in the Twin City metropolitan area, according to the testimony, represent a 50-year supply, with a comparatively negligible demand for river bottomlands as industrial sites for reasons of economic feasibility of development and use. Based upon recent sales of lands they considered comparable bottomlands on navigable parts of the same river, ranging from $277 to $973 an acre, they variously estimated the per acre value of taxpayer’s land at $225 (Marzitelli), $400 (Moffet), and $475 (Dolan). 4 The Tax Court, however, found the per acre value to be $1,000.

Valuation of taxpayer’s land by these appraisers did not include a factor of use increment or intrinsic worth for the water cooling uses of Black Dog Lake. 5 The statutory test of “market value,” Minn. St. 272.03, subd. 8, is the “usual selling price” at the place where the property is located. The usual selling price, as stated in In re Petition of Hamm v. State, 255 Minn. 64, 66, 95 N. W. 2d 649, 652 (1959), is “the price that could be obtained in a private sale between a willing seller and a willing buyer.” A finding that, because of a restricted use, the land had a higher value that what otherwise would be the value of the highest use of property so situated was not compelled in the absence of evidence that the market value was in fact affected by such restricted use. This is so because, as stated in In re Delinquent Real Estate Taxes, Waseca County, 182 Minn. 543, 544, 235 N. W. 22 (1931), “[T]he sale value, not the actual value, is what must control.” See, Crossroads *508 Center Inc. v. Commr. of Taxation, 286 Minn. 440, 176 N. W. 2d 530 (1970).

The Tax Court itself, moreover, did not wholly ignore relator’s claimed use increment value. It had before it not only the testimony of taxpayer’s expert witnesses but, in addition, the testimony of expert witnesses for relator who did assign a higher value to the lake because of its use for cooling purposes, and it made a finding of value substantially more than stated in the opinions of taxpayer’s expert witnesses.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
202 N.W.2d 653, 295 Minn. 504, 1972 Minn. LEXIS 1129, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/village-of-burnsville-v-commissioner-of-taxation-minn-1972.