Lead Opinion
OPINION OF THE COURT
New York Telephone Company (NYTC) owns and maintains telephone lines, wires, cables, poles, supports and enclosures for electrical conductors within the Town of Oyster Bay. The equipment, referred to as “mass property,” is situated on public and private land and is within the Town’s refuse and garbage
Claiming that its mass properties received no benefit from municipal garbage collection and that the Town’s levy therefore violates Real Property Tax Law § 102 (14), NYTC initiated two related actions in 1998 and 1999, seeking a judgment declaring the Town’s levy on its mass properties for garbage collection illegal and enjoining the continued imposition of such levies. Further, NYTC argued that it was entitled to a refund, with interest, for the levies it paid in tax years 1995 through 1999, as well as a trial to calculate its damages for tax years 1992, 1993 and 1994.
Supreme Court granted summary judgment to NYTC, invalidating the Town’s levy and enjoining future garbage collection levies against NYTC’s mass properties. It also directed the Town to refund with interest any levies collected on the mass properties between tax years 1995 through 1999, and determined that the refund for tax years 1992 through 1994 would be calculated at trial. Relying on RPTL 102 (14) and Applebaum v Town of Oyster Bay (
Special ad valorem levies represent a key vehicle
Our decisional law establishes that, for real property to be “benefited,” it must be capable of receiving the service funded by the special ad valorem levy. Thus, in Applebaum v Town of Oyster Bay (
As the Appellate Division correctly recognized, the logic of Applebaum dictates our result. Although here, no preexisting legal agreement bars NYTC’s mass properties from receiving garbage collection from the Town, the inherent characteristics of the subject properties preclude them from receiving such services.
In determining whether a property is benefited—i.e., whether it is capable of receiving the municipal service funded by the special ad valorem levy—we look to the innate features and legally permissible uses of the property, not the particularities of its owners or occupants or the state of the property at a fixed point in time. As a class of property, telephone poles can never produce or require municipal garbage collection. For the purposes of a special ad valorem levy to finance garbage collection, they therefore are not benefited.
By contrast, a lot that is vacant, but otherwise amenable to development, would be “benefited.” Although undeveloped, there is no legal or practical disability to the lot’s one day receiving garbage collection. Likewise, a hypothetical home whose owners never produced refuse or garbage of any kind would, for the purposes of RPTL 102 (14), be directly benefited by municipal garbage collection. By the same token, home or business owners could not opt out of a special ad valorem levy funding the local sewer or water district simply by virtue of having a septic tank or well on their properties. The same logic would apply to others who would seek to avoid special ad valorem levies under analogous circumstances. In determining whether a property is capable of receiving a benefit, our focus is on the innate characteristics of an individual property as representative of a species of property (in our last example, homes), not the conditions or proclivities of individual owners.
Notes
. Pursuant to Town Law § 198 (9) (a), the creation of a refuse and garbage district enables a town to provide or contract for “the collection and/or resource recovery or disposition, or any combination thereof of garbage, ashes, rubbish and other waste matter in such district.”
. The dissent argues that a property may be “benefited,” and therefore be made subject to possible special ad valorem levies, if it receives an “indirect or general benefit” from the service funded by the levy (dissenting op at 396). This interpretation of “benefited” renders the word meaningless. If an indirect benefit is sufficient for the purposes of RPTL 102 (14), every conceivable species of real property could be said to benefit from garbage removal, or any other municipal service. Any given municipal service will always exert a positive influence on a property’s value—an indirect benefit under the dissent’s reasoning. The Legislature’s use of the modifier “benefited” plainly implies that there is some class of property that is not benefited. The dissent’s interpretation of the statute would render “not-benefited real property” a nullity, and thereby defeat the legislative intent. Further, its construction disregards the plain distinction between a special ad valorem levy and a general tax (see RPTL 102 [20] [no benefit requirement]).
. In addition to special ad valorem levies, a town may also impose user fees to fund garbage and refuse collection. Town Law § 198 (9) (b) authorizes a town to establish “charges, fees or rates to be paid by users for refuse and garbage collection service and may provide for the payment of said charges in advance.” The statute notes that “[s]uch charges, fees or rates may be based upon the volume of refuse, garbage, ashes, rubbish and other waste matter collected, making a proper allowance for commercial or industrial establishments, the number of calls per month, the number of persons or families served in the district, or upon any other equitable basis as the town board may determine.”
. RPTL 102 (16) explains that a “[s]pecial district” is a “town or county improvement district, district corporation or other district established for the purpose of carrying on, performing or financing one or more improvements or services intended to benefit the health, welfare, safety or convenience of the inhabitants of such district or to benefit the real property within such district.” In a special district, real property is “subject to special ad valorem levies or special assessments for the purposes for which such district was established” (id.).
. We disagree with the dissent’s suggestion that our decision today “obliterates the distinction” between special assessments, which are levied in proportion to the benefit received (see RPTL 102 [15]), and special ad valorem levies (dissenting op at 396). Our analysis neither contemplates this result nor demands a strict proportionality review of special ad valorem levies. We note that, in extremely rare cases, a town’s severe restrictions on the property owner’s use of the municipal service funded by the special ad valorem levy may entitle the property owner to relief (see Matter of Sperry Rand Corp. v Town of N. Hempstead,
. The dissent argues that our result on this appeal will engender adverse, far-reaching fiscal consequences for municipalities. Neither the Town nor the Association of Towns of the State of New York, as amicus, has advanced this
. We note that NYTC’s challenge here constitutes a plenary action attacking the Town’s authority to impose special ad valorem levies for garbage and refuse collection on the subject mass properties, and it is therefore not time-barred under Town Law § 195 (2) (see Niagara Mohawk Power Corp. v City School Dist. of City of Troy,
Dissenting Opinion
For essentially three reasons, I respectfully dissent and would vote to reverse.
A special ad valorem levy is defined as “a charge imposed upon benefited real property ... to defray the cost, including operation and maintenance, of a special district improvement or service” (RPTL 102 [14] [emphasis added]).
First, the narrow interpretation that both the majority and the lower courts give to the term “benefited” is unwarranted. These levies finance varying services associated with the operation and maintenance of “special districts” (RPTL 102 [16]). These special districts are established expressly to “benefit the
While telephone poles may not produce or require municipal garbage collection, the Legislature did not indicate that a direct or actual benefit was necessary to trigger this type of levy. Instead, in its definition, it required only that the property at issue be “benefited” (RPTL 102 [14]). Moreover, the validity of a tax does not “depend on the receipt of some special benefit” (O’Flynn v Village of E. Rochester,
A reading of RPTL 102 (14), in conjunction with other relevant sections of both the Real Property Tax Law and the Town Law, makes clear that an ad valorem levy, by definition, requires only an indirect or general benefit to the subject property. The mass properties at issue here are cleárly benefited within the meaning of RPTL 102 (14). An ad valorem levy cannot be based on the commensurate value of services; instead, it is by definition a levy based on the value of the property itself (see RPTL 102 [14]).
By contrast, a “[s]pecial assessment” is levied in “proportion to the benefit received” (RPTL 102 [15]). This language makes clear that there must be a direct benefit supporting a special assessment. Real Property Tax Law § 102 (14), however, does not include an analogous qualification in its definition of an ad valorem levy and the majority obliterates the distinction between the two.
The majority, in requiring the subject property to receive a “direct benefit from the Town’s garbage and refuse district,” unnecessarily and unjustifiably restricts the availability of, and a town’s ability to impose, an ad valorem levy on real property located within a special district (majority op at 395). Moreover, the majority’s restrictive reading of this distinct tax provision undermines the Town’s ability to operate and maintain necessary special districts. The subject mass properties at issue here, even if not producing trash or refuse, nevertheless are part of
Second, today’s decision is a significant step beyond Applebaum v Town of Oyster Bay (
Third, the majority looks exclusively to the nature or inherent characteristics of the subject property to determine whether any direct benefit is evident. It is inconsequential, however, that the “species of real property at issue here cannot, even theoretically, produce garbage” (majority op at 395).
The property is likewise incapable of producing sewage, yet NYTC pays an ad valorem levy in support of the sewage district.
In short, the majority’s reasoning invalidating this ad valorem levy, and requiring a “direct benefit” to the subject real property, has potentially far-reaching consequences, as the majority’s rule jeopardizes a traditional method of financing costs of local government.
Judges G.B. Smith, Read and R.S. Smith concur with Judge Rosenblatt; Judge Ciparick dissents and votes to reverse in a separate opinion in which Chief Judge Kaye and Judge Graffeo concur.
Order affirmed, etc.
. Black’s defines an ad valorem tax as “[a] tax imposed proportionally on the value of something (esp. real property), rather than on its quantity or some other measure” (Black’s Law Dictionary 1496 [8th ed 2004]).
. Requiring only an indirect benefit does not, as the majority suggests, render the term “benefited” meaningless (majority op at 392 n 2). To the contrary, the term is used consistently with Town Law § 194 (1) (b) which requires a finding of “benefited” property prior to establishment of the district itself. The term is used to ensure that only real property within a special district will be subject to the Town’s special ad valorem levy. Therefore, contrary to the majority’s assertion, the term is not superfluous and does not cover “every conceivable species of real property” (majority op at 392 n 2). Only real property that exists within the geographically designated special district is benefited within the meaning of RPTL 102 (14).
. There may come a time when the property itself is abandoned and becomes refuse.
