In this appeal, we must primarily decide if an action by a county treasurer to collect delinquent property taxes is subject to the statute of limitations, and if a tax sale certificate is a condition precedent to such an action when the parcels for which taxes are delinquent consist of machinery and equipment. The district court granted summary judgment to the taxpayer, and the treasurer appealed. Upon our review, we conclude the action is not barred by the statute of limitations, and a tax sale certificate was not a condition precedent to bringing this action. We affirm the district court in part, reverse in part, and remand for further proceedings.
I. Background Facts and Proceedings
A-l Machine & Tool Co. (“A-l”) is an Iowa corporation. It owned or leased certain industrial metalworking machinery, which was treated as a taxable real property parcel by the Scott County Assessor from 1989 to 2001. The Scott County Auditor levied taxes on the parcel each of those years. A-l never paid the taxes. Its president, Alvin Roggenkamp, claimed the corporation never received any tax bills or notices that taxes were owed. The taxes were deemed delinquent by the Scott County Treasurer, Bill Fennelly (the “Treasurer”). He eventually obtained a tax sale certificate for the taxes from 1989 to 1996, but did not obtain a certificate for the taxes from 1997 to 2001.
The Treasurer did not file an action to collect the delinquent taxes until July 18, 2003. At that time, he filed a petition in district court to recover a personal judgment against A-l under Iowa Code section 445.3 (2003).
A-l answered the petition and alleged a variety of defenses to the claim. These defenses included: (1) the property composing the taxed parcel was personal property, not real property, and thus the Treasurer could not collect taxes on the parcel;
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(2) a personal judgment could not be entered for delinquent taxes levied
Both parties filed motions for summary judgment. A-l sought to have the petition dismissed based on the strength of its defenses. The Treasurer also sought to adjudicate the viability of the defenses so that the action could proceed to judgment on its claim.
The district court granted summary judgment for A-l. It held the claims by the Treasurer for taxes levied prior to 1997 were barred by the five-year statute of limitations. It further held that the claims for taxes after 1997 were required to be dismissed because the Treasurer
The Treasurer appeals from the decision by the district court. First, he claims a treasurer is immune from the statute of limitations when bringing an action on behalf of a county to collect delinquent real property taxes. Second, he claims a tax sale certificate is not a condition precedent to an action for a personal judgment for delinquent property taxes. Finally, he claims the district court erred by failing to adjudicate the other defenses asserted by A-l as requested in his motion for summary judgment. A-l requests the case be remanded to the district court for consideration of common law attorney fees for defending the action in district court and on appeal. Alternatively, A-l requests an award for appellate attorney fees.
II. Standard of Review
Our review in summary-judgment appeals is for correction of errors at law.
Stewart v. Sisson,
A motion for summary judgment should only be granted if, viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the non-moving party, “the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any, show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law.”
Otterberg,
We normally review the district court’s decision to award or not to award attorney fees for an abuse of discretion.
In re Marriage of Sullins,
III. Statute of Limitations
Limitations on the time to bring an action in Iowa are generally governed by chapter 614 of the Code. This chapter provides a number of special limitation periods for various types of actions, and includes section 614.1(4), which provides:
Actions may be brought within the times herein limited, respectively, after their causes accrue, and not afterwards, except when otherwise specially declared:
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4. Umoritten contracts — injuries to property — fraud—other actions. Those founded on unwritten contracts, those brought for injuries to property, or for relief on the ground of fraud in cases heretofore solely cognizable in a court of chancery, and all other actions not otherwise provided for in this respect, within five years, except as provided by subsections 8 and 10.
Iowa Code § 614.1(4).
2
None of the special limitations provisions in chapter 614
The Treasurer asserts the statute of limitations does not apply to this action under the doctrine of
nullum tempus occurrit regi.
The literal translation of this ancient maxim is “no time runs against the King.”
Black’s Law Dictionary
1669 (7th ed.1999). The doctrine originated in the English common law as a declaration that the statute of limitations could not be applied against the Crown.
See United States v. Thompson,
The doctrine was promptly imparted to our American justice system as one of the incidents of sovereignty,
see Thompson,
The same considerations that support immunity from limitation periods for the state, however, do not necessarily support immunity for political subdivisions of the state.
See Payette,
The public-private distinction applicable to counties and municipalities is easily
In Iowa, however, a fairly clear line has been drawn between governmental and proprietary actions. Early in our judicial development of the
nullum tempus
doctrine, we began to focus on the nature and character of the action to determine if the political subdivision was assisting in the welfare of the state, or merely regulating its internal affairs for the benefit of those within its own boundaries. In doing so, we have formed the distinction between public or governmental activities vis-a-vis private or proprietary activities as a means to determine if the doctrine of
nullum tempus
applies to make a subdivision of the state immune from the general statute of limitations. In
Great Western Insurance Co. v. Saunders,
On the other hand, when an action by a political subdivision benefits the state, not just the public within the boundaries of the subdivision, the
nullum tempus
doctrine applies, and the county or municipality is not subject to a general statute of limitation as other litigants. In another early
nullum tempus
case extending the doctrine to political subdivisions, we held that the statute of limitations did not apply to an action by a county to collect money owed to a “school fund” because the nature of the action was in effect one by the state.
Des Moines County,
These cases also reveal that the mission behind the doctrine is to extend immunity from a statute of limitations to a political subdivision when the subdivision is acting in the nature of an arm or instrumentality of the state.
See Payette,
A-l asserts it is unnecessary to quibble over the application of the rule because we have previously determined in one of our early
nullum tempus
cases that an action by a county or municipality to collect taxes does not assert a public or governmental right, and a political subdivision is therefore subject to the general statute of limitations when it brings an action to collect taxes.
City of Burlington v. B. & M. R.R.,
However, the
City of Burlington
case cannot be read as a broad declaration that the collection of taxes by a city or county is not a public activity under the
nullum tempus
doctrine. The collection of taxes in that case was a proprietary activity because of the particular underlying circumstances. In that case, the city only sought to collect taxes levied for municipal purposes, something that benefited the city, but not the state.
Id.
at 138. Thus, the character of the action was to satisfy its own proprietary interests, not the public’s interests as a representative of the state.
Id.
at 141;
see also Fitzgerald v. Sioux City,
Our cases reveal that the distinction between governmental and proprietary functions largely depends upon the facts of each case, and it is dangerous to apply the distinction with broad strokes. Instead, the true nature and character of the action in each case must be identified. Many factors can be considered, including any constitutional provisions or statutes that address the type of powers exercised by a city or a county in bringing an action, as well as the inherent nature of such power or the underlying activity engaged in by the subdivision. The nullum tempus doctrine will apply when the city or county is exercising powers as an agent of the state to promote the interests of the citizens of Iowa.
In this case, a portion of property taxes collected by a county goes to support the public schools within its school districts.
See
Iowa Code §§ 257.3(1) (“[A] school district shall cause to be levied each year, with the school general fund, a foundation property tax equal to $5.40 per $1000 of assessed valuation on all taxable property in the district. The county assessor shall spread the foundation levy over all taxable property in the district.”), 257.4(1) (“A school district shall cause an additional property tax to be levied each year. The rate of the additional property tax levy in a school district shall be determined by the Department of Management and shall be calculated to raise the difference between the combined district cost for the budget year and the sum of the products of the regular program foundation base per pupil times the weighted enrollment in the district and the special education support services foundation base per pupil times the special education support services weighted enrollment in the district.”);
see also
Iowa Dep’t of Revenue,
An Introduction to Iowa Property Tax
(2006), http://www.state.ia.us/tax/educate/ 78573.html (noting that 45% of property taxes collected in fiscal year 2005 went to K-12 schools); Lori Reynolds,
Skybox Schools: Public Education as Private Luxury,
82 Wash. U. L.Q. 755, 756 (2004) (“In most states, in spite of the widespread litigation and legislative reform, the most important single source of revenue for elementary and secondary schools is still the local property tax.” (citing Nat’l Ctr. for Educ. Statistics, U.S. Dep’t of Educ.,
Financing Elementary and Secondary Education in the States: 1997-98,
at tbl. A-l (1997))). The source of school funding is important because the duty and authority to educate Iowans rests with the state. The duty of the state to establish and supervise a state system of education not only has constitutional origins, but it has been an inherent aspect of state government from the inception of our state.
See
Iowa Const. art. IX, § 12 (“The Board of Education shall provide for the education of all the youths of the State .... ”). Moreover, a comprehensive statutory scheme exists that defines the role of the state and the state department of education to provide a public education to Iowa’s young people.
See generally
Iowa Code ch. 256. Thus, an action by a county to collect delinquent property taxes benefits the state school system and helps the state in carrying out its mission to provide education to Iowans. In this light, the county, when collecting delinquent property taxes, is engaged in a public or governmental activity.
See
78 C.J.S.
Schools and School Districts
§ 9, at 46 (1995) (“The financial maintenance of the public schools is the carrying out of a state, and not a local or municipal, purpose .... ”). In as
In summary, we conclude that the district court erred in refusing to apply the common-law doctrine of nullum tempus occurrit regí and in holding the statute of limitations ran against the Treasurer in this tax-collection action. We hold the district court erred in granting summary judgment to A-l on the claims for delinquent taxes for the years 1989 through 1996 based on a finding that the claims were precluded by the statute of limitations.
IV. Tax Sale Certificate
We turn to consider whether the district court properly dismissed the collection claims for the tax years 1997 to 2001 because the Treasurer failed to obtain a tax sale certificate prior to instituting its action. The district court determined the statutory scheme for collecting delinquent property taxes requires the Treasurer to obtain a tax sale certificate as a condition precedent to bringing an action to collect taxes in all cases except those in which the subject parcel is land, and the Treasurer is unable to offer the land for tax sale. Because the parcel in this case consists of machinery and equipment, not land, the district court found a tax sale certifícate was a condition precedent to an action for a personal judgment for taxes on the parcel.
As previously noted, the taxation structure in Iowa includes a tax on real property. Iowa Code § 427.13. The taxation process begins with the county assessor, who values each item of taxable property in the county. Id. §§ 441.18-.21. Each taxable item is called a “parcel.” Id. § 445.1(4). After the property is valued, the taxpayer has an opportunity to protest the assessment to the board of review. Id. §§ 441.23, .37. The department of revenue then equalizes the assessments, id. § 441.47, and taxing authorities (e.g., cities, counties, school districts, and townships) establish their budgets based on the valuations in the assessments and determine the rate of tax, based on the value of the property, needed to fund their budgets, id. §§ 444.1-.3. The county auditor then delivers a tax list computing the total amount due, id. § 443.2, to the county treasurer to collect the taxes, id. § 443.4.
The taxes generally become delinquent if the first installment is not paid by October 1, and the second installment is not paid by April 1.
Id.
§§ 445.36-.37. If the taxes remain delinquent, the treasurer must offer the parcel at the annual tax sale.
See id.
§ 446.7 (“Annually, on the third Monday in June the country treasurer shall offer at public sale all parcels on which taxes are delinquent.”). The purpose of the sale is to collect the taxes, interest, fees, and costs due by means of the sale of the parcel to a bidder, or by subsequent redemption.
See generally id.
chs. 446-48. If a bid is received in an amount equal to the total amount due, then the sale ultimately provides a means for the treasurer to collect the delinquent taxes.
See id.
§ 446.16(1) (“The person who offers to pay the total amount due, which is a lien on any parcel, for the smallest percentage of the parcel, is the purchaser .... ”). If no person bids on the parcel, the county treasurer offers it for sale again periodically (at least every two months) until the next annual tax sale.
Id.
§ 446.25. If the parcel remains unsold at the time of the next annual tax sale, the treasurer then offers the parcel at the
Additionally, the county may pursue an action to convert the amount due into a personal judgment against the parcel’s owner. See id. §§ 445.3 (“In addition to all other remedies and proceedings now provided by law for the collection of taxes, the county treasurer may bring or cause an ordinary suit at law to be commenced and prosecuted in the treasurer’s name for the use and benefit of the county for the collection of taxes .... ”), 446.20(1) (“Without limiting the county’s rights under section 445.3, once a certificate is issued to a county, a county may collect the total amount due by the alternative remedy provided in section 445.3 by converting the total amount due to a personal judgment.”). The tax-sale-certificate remedy and the personal-judgment remedy may be pursued simultaneously until the total amount due has been collected. Id. § 446.20(1).
However, as a condition precedent to pursuing the personal-judgment remedy, normally, a tax sale certificate must first be issued. See id. (stating a county may pursue a personal judgment “once a certificate is issued” (emphasis added)); id. § 445.3 (“The commencement of actions for ad valorem taxes authorized under this section shall not begin until the issuance of a tax sale certificate under the requirements of section 446.19.”). Thus, in order to obtain a personal judgment based on delinquent property taxes, a treasurer must usually (1) offer the parcel at the annual tax sale to collect the amount due, id. § 446.7; (2) re-offer the parcel at least every two months until the next annual tax sale (i.e., for one year), id. § 446.25; (3) offer the parcel at the public bidder sale, id. § 446.19; and (4) bid the total amount due and obtain a tax sale certificate, id. §§ 446.19, .29. Obviously, this can be a lengthy process.
However, there is an exception to the requirement for the treasurer to first obtain a certificate of sale before pursuing an action under section 445.3. Section 445.3 provides:
Notwithstanding any other provisions in this section, if the treasurer is unable or has reason to believe that the treasurer will be unable to offer land at the annual tax sale to collect the total amount due, the treasurer may immediately collect the total amount due by the commencement of an action under this section.
Id. § 445.3, para. 5. The district court read this exception as limited to situations when the parcel consists of land that the treasurer is unable to offer for sale at the annual tax sale. We think the exception has broader application for two reasons.
This situation may commonly occur in the case of leased land, where the landowner remains responsible for paying the property taxes on the land. See id. §§ 445.5(5) (stating the treasurer “shall deliver” the statement of taxes due to the titleholder of the land); 445.5(2) (stating the lessee, mortgagee, contract-purchaser, or financial institution is entitled to a statement of taxes due “upon request”). It would not be uncommon for a business owner to lease a building and land to operate a business, but own the machinery, equipment, or computers located in the building. Conversely, a business owner could own the building and land and lease the machinery, equipment, and computers from another person or entity. In both situations, the land and non-land real property would have separate owners, and the property would be separately taxed. Consequently, there would be separate parcels that could ultimately be offered at a tax sale in the event of a delinquency.
This analysis reveals that a county treasurer is unable to sell land at a tax sale when the parcel consists of real property other than land, such as equipment, machinery, or computers. See id. § 445.3, para. 5 (“Notwithstanding any other provisions in this section, if the treasurer is unable or has reason to believe that the treasurer will be unable to offer land at the annual tax sale to collect the total amount due, the treasurer may immediately collect the total amount due by the commencement of an action under this section.”). Thus, the exception under the statute is not limited by its language to situations in which the parcel is land. The language itself applies to situations in which the parcel offered for sale does not consist of land. This is the precise situation in this case.
Second, the exception would serve little purpose under the interpretation by the district court. There is no readily apparent reason why a county treasurer should be allowed to bypass the tax-sale-certificate procedure in the case of land but not in the case of non-land real property parcels. Conversely, it is clear why the legislature would want to bypass the tax-sale-certificate procedure for non-land parcels but not for land. A treasurer does not bid on a parcel, and obtain a tax sales certifi
We conclude a county treasurer may maintain an action to collect a delinquency on a parcel without first obtaining a certificate of sale when, as in this case, the parcel does not include land. Id. § 445.3, para. 5. When a treasurer is not able to sell land at a tax sale to collect delinquent taxes on a parcel, or when the treasurer reasonably believes the treasurer will be unable to sell land, the treasurer may immediately commence an action to collect the amount due on the parcel. Id. The district court erred in granting summary judgment for A-l on this issue.
V. Remaining Issues
The district court determined the defense of laches could not be applied in this case, and that the defense of estoppel was not amenable to adjudication because of the existence of disputed facts. However, it did not address the viability of the remaining defenses asserted by A-l.
Generally, error is not preserved for appeal on issues submitted to the district court but not decided, if the appellant failed to file a posttrial motion requesting the court to rule on the matter.
Teamsters Local Union No. 421 v. City of Dubuque,
However, there is another legal principle that permits us to review the viability of the remaining defenses. We may uphold a district court ruling on appeal on grounds not relied upon by the district court if the grounds were presented to the district court.
DeVoss v. State,
A. Effect of Iowa Code Section 427A.10 on Tax Years Prior to July 1,1994
A-l claims we can partially uphold the summary judgment because the property assessed by the Treasurer was not subject to taxation for the tax years prior to July
B. Prospective Application of Personal-Judgment Remedy
Prior to 1992, a claim for delinquent taxes in Iowa was only in rem.
Hiskey v. Maloney,
In
Hiskey,
we held that sections 445.3 and 446.20(1) “do not apply to delinquent taxes included in tax sale certificates acquired by a county prior to April 1, 1992.”
In deciding this question, we turn to the underlying rationale that led us in
Hiskey
to declare that the statute operates prospectively. Statutes that create new rights or obligations, such as personal
C. Equitable Estoppel
Finally, we turn to consider the claim by A-l that the Treasurer was estopped to collect delinquent taxes on the property under the defense of equitable estoppel. A-l claimed that the Treasurer was es-topped to collect taxes because it failed to provide A-l with adequate notice of the assessment and an opportunity to provide information to contest it at the time.
The Treasurer, in its motion for summary judgment, argued this defense was
“We have consistently held equitable estoppel will not lie against a government agency except in exceptional circumstances.”
ABC Disposal Sys., Inc.,
To determine the viability of this defense, we must examine the specific grounds upon which it is based. In resisting the Treasurer’s motion for summary judgment, A-l explained that its equitable estoppel defense was based on the failure of the Davenport city assessor’s office “to communicate with Alvin W. Roggenkamp to obtain information upon which to obtain a valid tax assessment.” It claimed the city assessor’s conduct could be imputed to the Treasurer because the assessor acts as an agent.
Even assuming the truth of A-l’s factual allegation, and the legal validity of its vicarious-liability theory, A-1’s equitable estoppel defense fails as a matter of law. A failure by the assessor to communicate with A-1 does not establish “ ‘a false representation or concealment of material facts,’ ”
Markey,
D. Attorney Fees
A-l requests the case be remanded to the district court for consideration of common law attorney fees for defending the action in district court and on appeal. Al
There is no statute providing for attorney fees in a tax-collection action, so any award would have to be for common-law attorney fees.
See Capital Fund 85 Ltd. P’ship v. Priority Sys., L.L.C.,
A plaintiff seeking common-law attorney fees must prove that the culpability of the defendant’s conduct exceeds the punitive-damage standard, which requires “willful and wanton disregard for the rights of another.” Instead, “such conduct must rise to the level of oppression or connivance to harass or injure another.” Put another way, the standard “envisions conduct that is intentional and likely to be aggravated by cruel and tyrannical motives.”
Wolf,
Our resolution of this case on appeal reveals any claim for attorney fees is inappropriate. This case is far removed from the rare exception to the general rule against an award for attorney fees. Accordingly, we deny the request for appellate attorney fees made by A-l. Additionally, a claim for trial attorney fees is untimely when made for the first time on appeal.
See Meier v. Senecaut III,
VI. Conclusion
The district court erred in granting summary judgment to A-l, except with respect to the Treasurer’s claim for a personal judgment on taxes levied prior to April 1, 1992. We reverse the decision of the district court and remand the case to the district court for further proceedings.
AFFIRMED IN PART, REVERSED IN PART, AND REMANDED.
Notes
. In Iowa, all real property not exempt is subject to property tax. Iowa Code § 427.13. Importantly, "real property,” for purposes of taxation, encompasses more than is covered
The County claimed in its petition that A-l owed delinquent taxes on a parcel consisting of "machinery and equipment.” In its answer, A-l claimed, as an affirmative defense, that the machinery and equipment described by the County was not taxable as real property because it was not "attached” to the building. See id. § 427A.l(l)(d) ("Buildings, structures, equipment, machinery or improvements, any of which are attached to the buildings, structures, equipment, machinery or improvements defined in paragraph ‘c’ ....” (Emphasis added.)); id. § 427A.1(2) (" ‘[Attached’ means any of the following: a. Connected by an adhesive preparation, b. Connected in a manner so that disconnecting requires the removal of one or more fastening devices, other than electric plugs, c. Connected in such a manner so that removal requires substantial modification or alteration of the property removed or the property from which it is removed.”); id. § 427A.1(3) ("Notwithstanding the definition of ‘attached’ in subsection 2, property is not 'attached.' if it is a kind of property which would ordinarily be removed when the owner of the property moves to another location.”). The County then shifted gears in its motion for summary judgment and argued that even if this were so, the property making up the parcel was still taxable as “computers” under section 427A.1(1)(/')• The definition of "computers” does not require the computer to be attached to the land or building in order to be taxable as real property. Id. § 427A.1(1)(/).
We note these arguments must usually be made initially before the board.
See id.
§ 441.37(l)(c ) (stating a taxpayer may protest the assessment of property to the board of review on the grounds that "the property is not assessable, is exempt from taxes, or is misclassified”);
Read v. Hamilton County,
. Subsections 8 and 10 govern claims for wages and malpractice, respectively, and thus
. While the language of the default limitations period in section 614.1(4) applies to "all other actions,” we must interpret the statute to determine whether the legislature intended to include actions by the state or a subdivision.
See Worth County Friends of Agric. v. Worth County,
Moreover, in over 130 years of our applying
nullum tempus
to our statute of limitations, the legislature has never taken action to abrogate this interpretive approach or otherwise contradict the doctrine or make the limitation period specifically applicable to the sovereign.
See
2B Singer § 49:10, at 112 ("A number of decisions have held that legislative inaction following a contemporaneous and practical interpretation is evidence that the legislature intends to adopt such an interpretation.”). This is, of course, not conclusive of legislative intent, but it is some evidence. The fact that the legislature has left the statute of limitations untouched is, however, very persuasive evidence given that the legislature has been active in taking steps to put the state on the same level as private litigants by, for example, abrogating the doctrine of sovereign immunity except as provided in the Iowa Tort Claims Act.
See Hawk v. Jim Hawk Chevrolet-Buick, Inc.,
We reject the approach of some other courts,
see, e.g., Shootman v. Dep’t of Transp.,
. We recognize our home rule doctrine in Iowa gives a county those powers not reserved by the state. Iowa Const, art. Ill, § 39A. Yet, this authority to self-govern those areas not governed by the state does not enervate a county’s role as an agency of the state.
. Under this standard, the summary judgment granted by the district court would be proper for those tax years in which the taxes were levied prior to April 1, 1992. Under the evidence, this would include the tax claims from 1989 and 1990. However, the parties did not have the benefit of our ruling at the time of the summary judgment proceedings to determine when the taxes for the years 1991 and 1992 were actually levied. On remand, we leave it for the district court to determine which claims for delinquent taxes were levied prior to April 1, 1992 and to enter judgment accordingly.
