Lead Opinion
OPINION
The City of Richmond (City) appeals the district court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of the Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond (Bank). We find that the district court erred in concluding that the City’s assessment, under 12 U.S.C. § 531, of penalty and interest charges against the Bank for delinquent payment of real estate taxes was improper. We therefore reverse the district court’s grant of summary judgment.
The basic facts giving rise to the present controversy are not in dispute. The Bank maintains its principal offices on approximately seven acres of real estate located at 701 East Byrd Street in Richmond, Virginia. For calendar year 1989, the City assessed the property for purposes of real estate taxation at $66,000,000.00 and calculated that the total tax due was $1,009,-905.91. When the Bank failed to pay this amount by the June 15, 1989 deadline established under local ordinance, the City notified the Bank of the delinquency and assessed a penalty of $100,990.59 for late payment, as well as interest charges. On August 9, 1989, the Bank paid the delinquent $1,009,905.91, but refused to pay the assessed penalty and interest charges.
On January 10, 1990, the Bank filed a complaint in the Eastern District of Virginia seeking a declaration under 28 U.S.C.
Under 12 U.S.C. § 531, Federal Reserve banks are “exempt from Federal, State, and local taxation, except taxes upon real estate.” The issue presented by this appeal concerns the scope of the Congressional grant of permission to tax property of the United States as to “taxes upon real estate.” Specifically, we must determine whether such permission includes interest and late payment charges incurred by the Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond for being delinquent in the payment of real estate taxes.
Because section 531 does not itself define “taxes upon real estate,” we initially consider the question of whether the interpretation of the statute should be guided by federal or state law. Generally, of course, it is assumed that the interpretation of a federal statute of nationwide application is not dependant on state law. Jerome v. United States,
Indeed, in Reconstruction Finance Corp. v. Beaver County, the court specifically addressed a statute in many ways identical to the one at hand, which subjected real property owned by an instrumentality of the United States to local taxation. Beaver County was a case in which a subsidiary of the Reconstruction Finance Corporation had set up a manufacturing plant in Pennsylvania to manufacture aircraft propellers and had leased the same, land, plant and equipment, to Curtiss-Wright, the aircraft manufacturer. Under Pennsylvania law, as decided by the Supreme Court of that State, the equipment in the plant, although not affixed to the freehold and which it is obvious would ordinarily be considered personalty, was considered to be real estate because the plant was a manufactory, and without which equipment the plant would not be a manu-factory at all. A statute of the United States, section 10 of the Reconstruction Finance Corporation Act, provided that States and local governments were not permitted “to impose taxation of any kind on the ... personal property” but the same section provided that “any real property” of the governmental agency “shall be subject to state, territorial, county, municipal, or local taxation to the same extent according to its value as other real property is taxed.” On this set of facts and under the statute just referred to, the Supreme Court held that the real property involved, including the machinery, was subject to the real estate tax of Beaver County. The Court held that “[tjhis [the Pennsylvania Supreme Court’s] interpretation of Pennsylvania’s tax law is binding on us.”
The district court, however, did not mention Beaver County in its opinion, although that case is on quite similar facts as we have mentioned, and rejected the City’s argument that state law should control the interpretation of section 531, relying upon United States v. Kimbell Foods, Inc. It largely analyzed the case as a question of sovereign immunity under cases involving claims against the Government such as Title VII and federal tort claims cases, which it is not, rather than a question of the tax exemption of property owned by the United States or an instrumentality thereof, which involves Congressional intent, the supremacy clause (M’Culloch v. Maryland, 17 U.S. [14 Wheat.] 316,
In adopting this position, we are in agreement with the view expressed by the Fifth Circuit in Reconstruction Finance Corporation v. Texas,
In granting the Bank’s motion for summary judgment, the district court ordered that “[a]ny lien for penalties and interest imposed against plaintiff by defendant is hereby EXPUNGED.” This statement referred to the fact that under Virginia law, there is a lien on real estate for the payment of taxes and levies. Va.Code Ann. § 58.1-3340. The statute that creates this lien expressly provides that “[t]he words ‘taxes’ and ‘levies’ as used in this section include the penalties and interest accruing on such taxes and levies in pursuance of law.” Va.Code Ann. § 58.1-3340. Virginia has thereby included penalty and interest assessments within the meaning of “taxes” upon real estate.
Accordingly, the district court’s order granting the Bank’s motion for summary judgment and denying that of the City is reversed. The case is remanded for proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
Notes
. The Court in Beaver County,
. M'Culloch, it will be remembered, did not involve real property, but notes on standard form paper which was taxed, and originally did not include real property but has since been construed to include it. See United States v. County of Fresno,
. Whether the rule be federal or state, there will be no disruption of any commercial relationship predicated on state law, a third factor mentioned by the Court. See
. The Bank has recited that Va.Code Ann. § 58.1-3916, the statute that authorizes counties, cities, and towns to impose penalties and interest on delinquent taxpayers, provides that penalties shall become a part of the tax but makes no similar mention concerning interest. That section does not exclude interest, however, as included in the term taxes, so it does not affect the plain meaning of § 58.1-3340.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting:
By allowing the Commonwealth’s definition of real property to inform the determination of that property which is subject to real property taxes, the Supreme Court in Reconstruction Finance Corp. v. Beaver County, Pa.,
To the extent that federal courts are instructed by Beaver County to look to the state law to find out the amount of real estate tax that may be payable, we should, of course, do just that. There would be no way for the government to pay a state real estate tax without first consulting the state laws to find out if such a tax is exacted and how much is imposed. Yet, when this is done, the answer obtained is the federal answer to a federal question — the interpretation of a federal statute.
When the United States ... pays its debts, it is exercising a constitutional function or power.... The authority [to require the United States to do so] ha[s] its origin in the ... statutes of the United States and [is] in no way dependant on the laws [of any State]. The duties imposed upon the United States ... find their roots in the same federal source[ ]. In the absence of an applicable Act of Congress, it is for the federal courts to fashion the governing rule of law according to their own standards.
United States v. Kimbell Foods, Inc.,
Uniformity in a nationwide federal program is desirable and controlling federal rules ought to be fashioned. See Kimbell,
The imposition of penalties and interest seems designed, primarily, to coerce the taxpayer into paying the tax when due. At first glance, this appears to be so related to the tax that it might be classified as a part of the tax. A second glance, however, and we are reminded that the government pays the tax only at its own election. I see no point in the government’s being willing, as a volunteer, to pay the tax and being willing, also, to be coerced into doing what it does only because it is willing to do so. While I am not prepared to say that the Second Branch is not capable of allowing for this, I am unwilling to assume that it has so provided in the present case.
In the absence of an express statutory provision providing otherwise, it is a “well-settled principle that the United States are
Uniformity in this area has existed for the past century: Unless Congress designates otherwise, penalties and interest are not recoverable from the government. I see no reason why a different result should obtain here by deferring to the Commonwealth’s classification of penalties and interest as real property taxation. A thorn by any other name still carries the same barb. I respectfully dissent.
. One might find it satisfactory to leave it to the state to set the tax and to classify it, because what it does applies to its citizens (electorate) who can defend themselves — and, incidentally, the federal taxpayer — at the ballot box. However, citizen interest in classification is not the equivalent of citizen interest in imposition. The citizen must pay the tax however it is classified; the federal institution is willing to pay only that tax properly classified as real estate tax.
. This quote is made in reference to the interest which is attached to the recovery of monetary damages from the government. This situation is analogous to the coercive nature of the penalty and interest which the Commonwealth seeks to attach to the FRB’s delinquent real property taxes. In concluding that uniformity is not achievable in implementing Congress’ grant of authority to impose local real property taxes, the majority’s use of case law focusing on real property assessment does not address this parallel.
