The issue presented in this appeal is whether a communications tower owned by the plaintiff and located in the defendant town is subject *410 to municipal taxation under § 12-64 of the General Statutes. 1 The plaintiff appealed to the Superior Court from the action of the assessor of the town in listing the plaintiff’s tower as taxable property on the assessment lists for the years 1975 to 1978 inclusive. Following a trial to the court, judgment was rendered in favor of the defendant from which the plaintiff has appealed.
The plaintiff, Eastern Connecticut Cable Television, Inc., is a community television antenna company. See General Statutes § 16-330. In 1974, the plaintiff erected a tower on its land located in the town of Montville which supports eighteen or nineteen television antennas which receive television broadcasts from various directions, and three microwave antennas which are used for transmitting. The tower is 385 feet high and is constructed of twenty tubular steel sections which are bolted together. The tower rests on a foundation of concrete measuring three feet by three feet and embedded six feet into the ground, and the bolt securing the tower to the foundation is embedded a foot or more into the concrete block. In addition, there are three sets of guy wires used to support the tower which are fastened to turnbuckles which in turn are fastened to metal bolts embedded in three additional blocks of concrete. There is a small building located next to the tower and cables from each of the antennas are connected to receivers located inside the building. The *411 plaintiff does not contest the taxation of its land and the building next to the tower or the valuation attributed to its property. 2
Even assuming arguendo that the tower is so permanently affixed to the realty so as to have lost its character as personalty,
3
it does not necessarily follow that the tower is subject to taxation under § 12-64.
4
As the court noted in
Hartford Electric Light Co.
v.
Wethersfield,
A statutory term should be accorded its ordinary meaning “according to the commonly approved usage of the language.” General Statutes § 1-1 (a);
Doe
v.
Institute of Living, Inc.,
In determining the meaning of the term “building” as utilized in § 12-64, we are mindful of the rule of ejusdem generis which explains that “where a particular enumeration is followed by general descriptive words, the latter will be understood as limited in their scope to . . . things of the same general kind or character as those specified in the particular enumeration.”
Easterbrook
v.
Hebrew Ladies Orphan Society,
The town’s contention that the tower is taxable as machinery is similarly unavailing. The tower is used simply as a support for the various antennas which receive and transmit broadcasting signals. The tower itself neither transmits nor changes the application of energy. As such, we cannot torture the statute by imposing upon it the construction urged by the town.
*415 There is error, the judgment is set aside and the case is remanded with direction to render judgment for the plaintiff.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
Notes
In view of the conclusion reached on this issue, we need not consider the plaintiff’s second argument that the tower is tangible personal property and therefore exempt from municipal taxation under § 12-268j of the General Statutes.
The record does not indicate whether the antennas mounted upon the tower were placed on the assessment list and if so whether the plaintiff challenges that assessment. Accordingly, we express no opinion regarding the taxation of those antennas.
In
Connecticut Light & Power Co.
v.
Oxford,
Section 12-64 of the General Statutes provides in pertinent part: “All the following-mentioned property, not exempted, shall be set in the list of the town where it is situated and, except as otherwise provided by law, shall be liable to taxation at a uniform percentage of its present true and actual valuation, not exceeding one hundred per cent of such valuation, to be determined by the assessors: Dwelling houses, garages, barns, sheds, stores, shops, mills, buildings used for business, commercial, financial, manufacturing, mercantile and trading purposes, ice houses, warehouses, silos, all other buildings, house lots, all other building lots, agricultural lands, shellfish lands, all other lands, quarries, mines, ore beds, fisheries, property in fish pounds, machinery and easements to use air space whether or not contiguous to the surface of the ground.”
See also
Byers
v.
Board of Supervisors,
