CHUN KING SALES, INC. v. COUNTY OF ST. LOUIS.
No. 37,583.
Supreme Court of Minnesota
August 14, 1959
98 N. W. (2d) 194
Affirmed.
Miles Lord, Attorney General, Thomas J. Naylor, County Attorney, and Ralph J. Olson, Assistant County Attorney, for respondent.
MURPHY, JUSTICE.
This is an appeal from an order of the District Court of St. Louis County denying a petition for relief from assessment for real estate taxes. The appellant, Chun King Sales, Inc., purchased the plant and property involved from the State of Minnesota pursuant to a contract entered into with the Iron Range Resources and Rehabilitation Commission, which we will hereafter refer to as I.R.R.R.C.
It appears from the record that Chun King Sales, Inc., is a Minnesota corporation engaged in processing, packaging, and selling prepared food products. On September 18, 1950, it purchased certain industrial land located in Duluth for the sum of $8,830. The deed did not convey the buildings or other personal property. It recited that these had been concurrently sold to the State of Minnesota and were to remain personal property. The state, pursuant to an agreement with Chun King, had purchased the buildings and other personal proрerty located on the
On September 25, 1950, the State of Minnesota, through the commissioner of I.R.R.R.C., entered into an agreement whereby Chun King agreed to convey its title to the land involved to the state and the state agreed to purchase the buildings and other personal property for $51,170 and to spend an additional $148,830 on equipment and repairs. Pursuant to this agreement Chun King executed a deed to the State of Minnesota on September 25, 1950. This deed contained a reverter clause that if Chun King should purchase the building prior to January 1, 1971, the title to the land should revert to it. On the same date, September 25, 1950, the commissioner entered into a lease with Chun King covering both land and buildings. This lease was for a period of 5 years from January 1, 1951, and could be renewed by the state at its option for three successive terms. The lease contained rental provisions calling for rentals during the first 9 months at a flat rate and thereafter on a percentage of net sales with provisions for minimum payments.2
On May 2, 1957, pursuant to the provisions of the agreement, the state at the request of Chun King advertised the plant for sale on competitive bids. Pursuant thereto the buildings and other personal property were sold by the state to Chun King on May 29, 1957, for the sum of $200,000. While nominally the sale was advertised on a competitive basis, it is obvious that Chun King had a preferred advantage by reason of the fact that under its agreement and lease with the state it was entitled to be credited with all of the payments it had made during the term of the lease and agreement. Pursuant to the agreement the bid of $200,000 representing the amount the state had invested in the property was made by Chun King. Of this amount Chun King paid $32,686.19 in cash since it was entitled to credit of the $167,318.81 previously paid.
It should be noted at this point that all of the conditions and agreements set forth in both the contract and lease entered into by the I.R.R.R.C. and Chun King were carried out and both contracts are executed.
On December 28, 1954, the commissioner of taxation requested that an omitted property assessment be entered against the property.4 This wаs not done until March 16, 1956. The amount of the assessment was $30,749.17.
It may be assumed from the facts that during the pendency of the agreement and lease the record title to the property was in the State of Minnesota.
In substance, the transaction giving rise to transfer of title to the state comprehended that the I.R.R.R.C. would finance Chun King to the extent of $200,000. There were no express statutory provisions in effect at the time which authorized I.R.R.R.C. to accept a mortgage to secure the money advancеd nor to enter into a contract for deed. Apparently it was considered that the method used in expressing the undertaking of the parties would protect the interests of both within the limits of existing law.
It is well established that property owned by the state or other public body is exempt from taxation both as a matter of policy and by specific constitutional or statutory provisions. 51 Am. Jur., Taxation, § 557.
Thus it is emphasized that public property to be exempted must be “used exclusively for any public purpose.” State ex rel. Realty Co. v. Cooley, 62 Minn. 183, 64 N. W. 379, 29 L. R. A. 777.“* * * public property used exclusively for any public purpose, shall be exempt from taxation * * *.”
The state may tax public property not exclusively used for a public purpose. The legislature has a wide discretion in classifying property for the purpose of taxation provided its classifications are based upon differences which furnish a reasonable ground for resulting distinctions between several classes. The legislature may determine*
It is clear from this provision that, where public property is held by a person or corporation under a lease or arrangement in the nature of a contract for purchase for a term of 3 years or more and has been appropriated to private uses, that property shall share in the burden of taxation the same as all other property. United States v. City of Detroit, 355 U. S. 466, 78 S. Ct. 474, 2 L. ed. (2d) 424; United States v. Township of Muskegon, 355 U. S. 484, 78 S. Ct. 483, 2 L. ed. (2d) 436. The lawful possession of property is a valuable right when the possessor can use it for his own personal benefit. While“Property held under a lease for a term of three or more years, or under a contract for the purchase thereof, when the property belongs to the state, * * * shall be сonsidered, for all purposes of taxation, as the property of the person so holding the same.”
When the parties entered into the contract and lease before us, they did so with full knowledge of the provisions of
Chun King claims, however, that the provisions of
In considering the import of the contract and lease as they bear upon the issue before us, it should be kept in mind that when the state enters into а contract in its proprietary capacity its rights and liabilities are the same as a private person and that contracts entered into by one of its officers in excess of his authority may be ratified by the legislature.6
Chun King recognizes that the 1955 legislature amended
By the contract and lease Chun King was placed in possession of the premises for a period of not less than 5 years. The fact that the commissioner acted in excess of his authority in committing the state to a lease beyond a 2-year period does not change the determinative fact that Chun King did in fact go into possession of the property under an arrangement pursuant to“* * * Any rentals of property heretofore made under
Minnesota Statutes 1935, Section 298.22 for more than two years are hereby validated.”
Thus, the contract and lease were ratified both by the act of the legislature and by the acts of Chun King in using the property, in paying the rentals or purchase money, and in exercising its option to purchase. It cannot be said under the circumstances that substantial rights of Chun King were impaired by the retroactive validation of the lease. The rights they secured and from which they benefited were confirmed by the validation.
While Chun King seems to concede that the effect of the amendments to
The fact that the property of the city was involved thеre and not that of the state does not alter the rule of law. Sanborn v. City of Minneapolis, 35 Minn. 314, 29 N. W. 126, and Foster v. City of Duluth, 120 Minn. 484, 140 N. W. 129, 48 L.R.A. (N.S.) 707, are not particularly helpful.“* * * Consequently, the determinative consideration here is the use to which the city put this acreage which it owns in Anoka county. If the city used and is using this land for a nonpublic purpose then
the land is not tax-exempt. If, on the other hand, the city is using this land in its capacity as an agency of government for a public purpose, then it is tax-exempt. It cannot be said that the city is acting in its governmental capacity when it purchases land and leases the same to private parties for a stipulated rental.” (Italics supplied.)
In State v. Browning, 192 Minn. 25, 29, 255 N. W. 254, 256, in discussing the application of
For a public hospital to gain exemption to taxation we said (192 Minn. 30, 255 N. W. 256):“* * * So construed, ‘operated for the benefit of the public’ means operated without an intent to make a private profit. * * * The controlling feature is whether the institution was built, organized, and/or is maintained with an intent to make a private profit, not whether there happens to be a profit in any given year.”
“* * * It must be open to the public generally, and it must be operated for the benefit of the public, and thus without a private profit.”8
Chun King‘s situation should be distinguished from Thomas v. Housing & Redevelopment Authority of Duluth, 234 Minn. 221, 48 N. W. (2d) 175. A housing authority may be exempt from taxation as public property or property held or owned by a municipality within the
The next issue raised by Chun King is that certain alleged defects in the assessment procedure demand invalidation of the tax. This claim is based on the facts that (1) the omission was discovered in December 1954 but the assessment was not made until March 1956, (2) the assessment was not made against the tax list for the current year (1956) but against the 1955 recоrds, and (3) the assessment was made against the state, not Chun King. The claim is based on
well-established rule that the proceedings in reference to the assessment, computation, and levy of taxes are merely directory in nature and, in the absence of substantial prejudice, any irregularity in such directory matters will not result in invalidation of the assessment.11
Affirmed.
KNUTSON, JUSTICE (dissenting).
I cannot agree that the attempt to tax this property is valid. In the first place, it seems to me that the property was exempt from taxation because it was used for a public purpose.12 Any other conclusion would inevitably lead to the result that the state has expended money to acquire and equip this plant in direct contravention to
The I.R.R.R.C. came into existence by virtue of L. 1941, c. 544, for the purpose of developing and encouraging the use of resources of the state in areas where distress and unemployment exists. Before money appropriated thereunder, or under subsequent amendments to the act, could be devoted to a proposed project, it was necessary that the commissioner determine that distress and unemployment existed by reason of the removal of natural resources and the decrease in employment resulting therefrom.
Funds were allocated by the commission to petitioner after the requisite determination had been made by the commission. Among other things, the commissioner found that distress and unemployment existed within St. Louis County on account of the removal of natural mineral and timber resources and the decrease in employment resulting therefrom and that the area was especially suited to the growing of celery and onions and the raising of poultry. In order to develop an industry which could use such products, the commissioner found:
The commissioner further determined that this pilot plant could best be operated by someone experienced in the business as a lessee. He found—“* * * that it is desirable, necessary and proper that a pilot plant so constructed and equipped as to demonstrate the commercial feasibility of so refrigerating and storing such locally grown celery and onions and the evisceration, dressing and use of such locally raised poultry that the same may, during the growing and production seasons be processed, stored and preserved in quantity sufficient to permit the later use thereof throughout the year as principal ingredients in prepared canned food-stuffs which can be nationally marketed and sold; that if such pilot plant proves the commercial success and feasibility of such operations it will foster and materially increase the use of a large acreage of such land not now productively utilized and the employment of a considerable number of residents of said county in the growing and raising of such products, and that it is in the interest of the State and the welfare of its inhabitants that this be done and that the commercial success and feasibility of such pilot plant is reasonably assured; * * *” (Italics supplied.)
If the commission had operated the pilot plant directly instead of by a lessee, there could be no doubt as to tax exemption. The fact that a lessee acts for the commission does not destroy the public nature of the project.“* * * that it is for the best interests of the State to have such pilot plant operated under appropriate terms and conditions by a lessee qualified by experience in operations of such character rather than by the Commissioner, * * *” (Italics supplied.)
It was pursuant to that determination that the plant was leased to Chun King Sales, Inc. At the outset, it is apparent that no one knew whether the experiment would be successful or not. The I.R.R.R.C. has engaged in a great variety of projects. In its biennial report to the governor and the legislature, 1954-1956, for instance, it appears among other things that experimental plants have been established to produce plywood; hardboard from aspen; molded veneer products and other wood products; canning of rutabagas; find uses for peat; use of frozen
But even if we assume that the property was taxable under
Beginning, then, with the proposition that the state was the owner and Chun King was the holder of a leasehold interest, there are certain fundamental rules of law pertaining to the assessment and collection of real estate taxes that prevent the collection of this tax at the present time which are being completely ignored. In the first place, real estate taxes are not charges against the person. They are assessed and enforced against the land; they are a lien against the land. Proceedings to enforce them are strictly in rem.16 For a nonpayment of the tax, the state can enforce it only against the interest which the taxpayer has in the land at the time the tax is assessed.
Applying these rules to the facts of this case, at the time the taxes the state now seeks to collect should have been assessed Chun King had nothing more than a leasehold interest in the land. The tax lien could be enforced only against that interest. Upon nonpayment of the tax, the most the state could do would be to cancel the leasehold interest or probably sell it to a purchaser if such could be found. In discussing this proposition in In re Petition of S. R. A., Inc. 213 Minn. 487, 497, 7 N. W. (2d) 484, 489, we said:
“* * * If there be tax default where no one is willing to take over the tax interests of the state, the practice is to cancel the contract. If it be land owned by the state, all taxes are cancelled and the land reаppraised and sold anew.”
Again assuming this tax to be valid, the state now seeks to enforce the lien it had on petitioner‘s leasehold interest against the fee which the state owned at the time the tax was assessed. This, it seems to me, cannot be done. If petitioner had chosen not to exercise its option to purchase, or a third party had bid more than petitioner was willing to pay and the property had been sold by the state to such third party, no one would claim, I should think, that the tax lien which the state had acquired would follow the fee into the hands of such third party. If that is true, petitioner, as the purchaser of the fee, stands
It seems obvious that neither the state nor petitioner contemplated an attempt to tax this property when it was leased to petitioner. It was carried on the tax records as property owned by the state and as exempt from taxation. Now, apparently because petitioner has successfully accomplished what both parties sought to do, and as a result the state has been completely reimbursed, it seeks to recover still another bite. In the report of I.R.R.R.C., 1956-1958, p. 58, we find the following:
“Chun King and its related firms employ upwards to 1,000 persons a good share of the year. Complete recovery of the IRRRC funds became a reality on May 29, 1957.
“At that time Chun King Sales, Inc., according to the provisions of the contract with the State of Minnesota, asked that the plant be put up for sale. Chun King was awarded the bid for the plant and all IRRRC expenditures for this project were returned to the General Revenue Fund.”
It seems to me that both from a standpoint of law and equity this decision should be reversed and the property held to be free from the tax which the state now seeks to impose.
MATSON, JUSTICE (dissenting).
I concur in the dissent of Mr. Justice Knutson. Prior to the exercise of its option to purchase in the year 1957, Chun King had neither legal nor equitable title to the property. It should not be overlooked that an option to purchase embodied in a lease is nothing more than an irrevocable and continuing offer to sell and conveys no interest in the land of the optionee but vests in him only a right in personam to buy at his election. Shaughnessy v. Eidsmo, 222 Minn. 141, 23 N. W. (2d) 362, 166 A. L. R. 435.
Notes
“* * * Under the law of Minnesota all buildings and improvements are for the purpose of taxation considered a part of the real estate, and must be assessed as such.”
“Within the term of said lease or any renewal thereof, the lease or renewal thereof being then in full force, and Chun King not being in default, but in no event later than January 1, 1971, Chun King has the option to purchase the pilot plant described in paragraph I hereof, including said buildings and appurtenances therein described at an amount not lower than that offered by any оther competitive bidder, subject to the right of the State to reject all bids for said plant which are for less than the total amount of money which has been paid out by the State on account of said plant and all money which has been encumbered by the State as required by law on account of said plant and not paid out, all prior to the date of the conveyance of said plant by the State to Chun King. If, on demand of Chun King the Commissioner elects to fix the price at an amount not lower than that offered by any other bidder, he shall notify Chun King in writing, and if Chun King fails to purchase the plant at such price within thirty (30) days from the date of such notice, its option to purchase said plant shall terminate forthwith. In the event of the purchase of said plant by Chun King any payments of royalty or rental рursuant to the terms of the lease hereinabove referred to shall be credited to Chun King as part payment on the purchase price to be paid by it.” (Italics supplied.)
* * * * *
“(13) To rent out, with the approval of the governor, any state property, real or personal, not needed for public use, the rental of which is not otherwise provided for or prohibited by law; this shall not apply to state trust fund lands, or other state lands under the jurisdiction of the department of conservation, or to property under the jurisdiction of the conservator of rural credit, or to lands forfeited for delinquent taxes; no such property shall be rented out for a term exceeding two years at a time.”
The contract further provides that Chun King would “afford the use of the facilities of said plant” for refrigeration or storage of certain products to other food processers within St. Louis County, provided such accommodation would “not unreasonably interfere with its own requirements of such facilities, at reasonable charges and upon a basis uniform and non-discriminatory to all applicants therefor.” The contract contains the following provision:“Chun King in making its purchases in its use of celery, onions and poultry for processing in said plant shall give preference to such products produced within Minnesota and particularly within St. Louis County provided the price at which the same may be purchased, delivered at said plant, shall not exceed the price at which similar products of like quality may from time to time be purchased and delivered at said plant from sources without the State.” (Italics supplied.)
The force and effect of these provisions are not entirely clear. If they have any bearing on the question of the public character of the operation of Chun King, the brief does not indicate it.“* * * In the event that letters patent shall, during the term of said contract or this lease and any renewal thereof, be applied for or issued to Chun King or any of its officers or employees upon any such process, any person, firm or corporation will be granted forthwith for the term of this lease and any renewals thereof a license by Chun King for the full term of said letters patent and any аnd all extensions thereof, to use the processes covered thereby without payment of royalty or charge to Chun King.”
While this operation has been referred to as a “pilot plant” it is not correct to say that it was entirely experimental and speculative. The report of the I.R.R.R.C., 1950-1952, p. 8, contains the following:
“Duluth now has a firmly established $4,000,000 business that benefits a wide area thanks to the helping hand of the state through the Iron Range Resources and Rehabilitation Commission. The business is Chun King Sales, Inc., producer of oriental foods. It was already well established when Jeno F. Pauluсci, the president, came to the commission for a helping hand. He needed money to expand.”
