Lead Opinion
The United States challenges Nye County’s imposition of a tax on Areata Associates, Inc. (Areata), a defense contractor. The United States argues that the tax violates the Constitution because it, in effect, is a tax upon property of the United States. The district court entered judgment for the United States, enjoined further assessments of the tax by the County and adjudged the County liable for the taxes previously paid. We hold that the tax Nye County levied on Areata is an ad valorem tax on property owned by the United States government. As such, the supremacy clause and McCulloch v. Maryland,
FACTS
Areata is an independent federal contractor.
The Air Force directs Arcata’s operation of all government-owned equipment. Area-ta does not have the right to use the equipment for its own account or business. It has no property interest in the equipment. Its only access to the equipment is at the time and place and in the manner directed by the United States. Areata cannot exclude Air Force personnel or other contractors from operating or maintaining the equipment. The United States can terminate its relationship with Areata at will.
Nye County contends Areata has a taxable interest in the equipment. It assessed a personal property tax against Areata under Nev.Rev.Stat. 361.159, as if Areata were the owner of the equipment. The statute provides in pertinent part:
1. Personal property exempt from taxation which is leased, loaned or otherwise made available to and used by a natural person, association or corporation in connection with a business conducted for profit is subject to taxation in the same amount and to the same extent as though the lessee or user were the owner of the property ...
Unpaid taxes under this statute do not become a lien on the property but are an obligation of the lessee or user. Id. § 361.159.2. For tax years 1983-84 through 1988-89 taxes assessed against Areata under the statute totaled $127,-414.03. Areata paid these taxes under protest. The United States reimbursed Areata as required by Arcata’s contract. It then sued Nye County to recover the taxes, to obtain a declaratory judgment that assessment of the taxes was unconstitutional, and to enjoin further assessment. After a bench trial, the district court entered judgment in favor of the United States. Nye County appeals.
DISCUSSION
The unconstitutionality of Nye County’s tax is best understood by comparing it to tax measures that have survived, and those that have perished, in the face of ad valorem challenges. The survivors have been tax measures imposed on an isolated possessory interest or on a beneficial use of United States property. The perished have been tax measures levied on the property itself.
Of the survivors, United States v. County of Fresno,
A beneficial use tax was at issue in United States v. New Mexico,
Tax measures which have perished under an ad valorem challenge are exemplified by United States v. Colorado,
The teaching of the foregoing cases is that the wording of a tax measure is significant. This does not mean we exalt form over substance. It means that when a statute says it taxes property it probably does. And when it says it doesn’t, it probably doesn’t. In County of Fresno, the Court upheld California’s levy of a tax on the possessory interest of federal employees. In New Mexico, the Court upheld New Mexico’s tax on the gross receipts of an entity that used federal land. In City
In contrast, the Nevada statute under which Nye County seeks to impose its tax against Areata taxes the user “in the same amount and to the same extent as though the lessee or user were the owner of the property.” Nev.Rev.Stat. § 361.159. Here, the property belongs to the United States. Areata has no leasehold interest in it, but merely has the privilege, terminable at the will of the government, to use the property at the time and place and in the manner directed by the United States. Nye County makes no attempt to segregate and tax any possessory interest Area-ta may have in the property, or Arcata’s beneficial use of the property. Nye County simply taxes Areata as if it were the owner of the property. The tax effectively lays “an ad valorem general property tax on property owned by the United States.” Colorado,
Whether or not the Tennessee legislature had in mind a tax on beneficial use, it unquestionably did not describe one when it enacted the statute in question. Since [the contractor] has been determined not to have a real property interest in the facility, Tennessee’s attempt to tax [the contractor] resulted in what was, in reality, a tax upon the United States itself.
Hawkins County,
While Nye County could no doubt enact a statute taxing a lessee’s possessory interest in, or a user’s beneficial use of, property owned by the United States, the statute under which it levied taxes against Areata is not such a tax measure. The Nye County tax is an ad valorem tax on property of the United States and as such it is unconstitutional. The judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The United States concedes that Areata cannot be considered an agent or instrumentality of the government.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting:
The classic case in this area is, of course, McCulloch v. Maryland,
In so many words, the Court in New Mexico declared that “where a use tax is involved, immunity cannot be conferred simply because the State is levying the tax on the use of federal property in private hands.” Id. at 734,
In the present case the United States argues that the levy falls on an instrumentality so closely connected to the Government that the two cannot realistically be viewed as separate entities. The United States relies heavily on a dictum in a footnote in United States v. County of Fresno,
Two other courts have reached the same conclusion as to analogous taxes. See United States v. Colorado,
The Government’s spirited presentation demonstrates how old distinctions can be refurbished and confusion engendered despite the bright line laid down by New Mexico. Rejecting the Government’s argument, I observe that in New Mexico itself the contractors were managing Government laboratories, which the Government could have managed itself but chose not to do so. The Court observed that the Government “resists using its own employees for the tasks at hand ... because it seeks to tap the expertise of industry.” United States v. New Mexico,
The Government’s reliance on the illustration of the Forest Service employee’s fire ax is misplaced. The forester carries his ax to carry out a governmental function, not for commercial profit. In contrast, Areata conducts the military games for its own profit. In the terms expressly used by New Mexico Areata is engaged in “commercial activity carried on for profit.” Id.
The majority’s acquiescence in the Government’s contentions and its apparently justified reliance on the Colorado case are undermined by the way the Supreme Court analyzed that case in New Mexico itself. The Court said:
While a use tax may be valid only to the extent that it reaches the contractor’s interest in Government-owned property, cf. City of Detroit v. Murray Corp., 355 U.S. [489], at 494 [78 S.Ct. 458 , 461,2 L.Ed.2d 441 (1958)]; United States v. Colorado,627 F.2d 217 (CA10 1980), summarily aff’d sub nom. Jefferson County v. United States,450 U.S. 901 [101 S.Ct. 1335 ,67 L.Ed.2d 325 ] (1981), there has been no suggestion here that the contractors are being taxed beyond the value of their use.
Id.
The Nevada Property Tax Statute expressly exempts the property of the United States from taxation. Nev.R.Stat. § 361.050. No intention on the part of the state to infringe federal sovereignty and to tax the United States is present. It is irrelevant that the economic burden of the tax under these cost-plus contracts falls on the United States. United States v. New Mexico,
In New Mexico, the Court warned that “an immunity of constitutional stature” cannot rest “on such technical considerations” as the way a contract was drawn between the Government and its contractor. Id. at 737,
