Opinion
Docket No. 99284.
Decided June 6, 1989.
Thomas J. O'Toole, for City of Muskegon.
Andrew Wierengo, III, for David L. Seymour.
Vander Ploeg, Ruck, Luyendyk Wells, and Kim P. Kobza, of Counsel, for Dalton Township.
Petitioners appeal from the judgment of the Tax Tribunal determining that a golf course owned by petitioner City of Muskegon and operated by petitioner David L. Seymour pursuant to a document entitled "Management and Concession Agreement" was not exempt from the lessee-user tax as a "concession" within the meaning of MCL 211.181(2)(b); MSA 7.7(5)(2)(b). We affirm.
The facts found by the hearing officer and adopted in their entirety by the Tax Tribunal are accepted by the parties for purposes of this appeal. The land subject to the agreement was acquired in 1969 by the City of Muskegon and opened to the public for use as a golf course in 1971. Because the golf course was owned and operated by the city, it was, under that state of affairs, exempt from ad valorem property taxation pursuant to MCL 211.7(m); MSA 7.7(4j). Because the city could not operate the golf course without sustaining financial losses, it decided to turn the course over to private management, and, to that end, it entered into its agreement with Seymour in 1983. The course thereafter remained open to the public.
The agreement granted Seymour, in exchange for stated amounts of compensation, the right of exclusive use, control, and operation of the golf course and related facilities, including a restaurant and bar. The agreement provided that the premises "may only be used by SEYMOUR for golf course and driving range purposes (including cross-country skiing during winter) and such other uses as are traditionally associated with those purposes and are consistent with the uses to which golf course real estate and related facilities are generally put." Any other use was contingent upon the permission of the city. Fees charged to the public could not exceed the highest fees charged by any of seven other public courses designated by the agreement. Seymour was responsible under the agreement for keeping the course maintained "at an acceptable level and to an acceptable degree," determined in part by reference to past maintenance standards at the course and to standards in effect at the other designated golf courses. The parties indicated in the agreement their intent to structure the deal as a concession exempt from the lessee-user tax and further provided that Seymour would have the option of terminating the agreement if the anticipated exemption was not realized.
Appellate review of a decision of the Tax Tribunal includes a determination of whether the tribunal made an error of law or adopted a wrong principle. Dowagiac Limited Dividend Housing Ass'n v City of Dowagiac, 166 Mich. App. 232, 237; 420 N.W.2d 114 (1987), lv pending. Petitioners take no issue with the tribunal's factual findings.
Respondent township contends that Seymour is subject to the tax on lessees and users of public property provided by MCL 211.181(1); MSA 7.7(5)(1):
When any real property which for any reason is exempt from ad valorem property taxation is leased, loaned, or otherwise made available to and used by a private individual, association, or corporation in connection with a business conducted for profit, the lessees or users of this real property shall be subject to taxation in the same amount and to the same extent as though the lessee or user were the owner of this real property.[]
Quoted in its present form, MCL 211.181; MSA 7.7(5) reflects amendments since the events giving rise to this appeal, but which are not material to the issues governing this appeal.
Petitioners rely on the exemption for concessions:
Subsection (1) shall not apply to:
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Property which is used as a concession at a public airport, park, market, or similar property and which is available for use by the general public. [MCL 211.181(2)(b); MSA 7.7(5)(2)(b).]
Since petitioners raise an issue of a statutory exemption from taxation, it is our task to strictly construe the exemption against the taxpayer and in favor of the taxing authority. Ladies Literary Club v Grand Rapids, 409 Mich. 748, 753; 298 N.W.2d 422 (1980). "Since taxation is the rule and exemption the exception, the intention to make an exemption must be expressed in clear and unambiguous terms." Nomads, Inc v City of Romulus, 154 Mich. App. 46, 55; 397 N.W.2d 210 (1986), lv den 428 Mich. 865 (1987). This does not mean, however, that legislative intent to grant an exemption may be thwarted by a strained judicial construction. St Paul Lutheran Church v City of Riverview, 165 Mich. App. 155, 158; 418 N.W.2d 412 (1987), lv den 430 Mich. 890 (1988). With these general principles in mind, we approach the task of determining whether Seymour's use of the property falls within the contours of a concession.
In Detroit v Tygard, 381 Mich. 271; 161 N.W.2d 1 (1968), the Court held that a business operating on premises leased from an airport and which were used for giving flying lessons and for leasing, storage, and maintenance of aircraft did not satisfy the "concession" exemption under the similarly worded statute in force at that time. In so holding, the Court delineated, apparently for the first time, the meaning of a concession and some characteristics of a concession that are pertinent to this case:
We look first to a dictionary definition of "concession":
"A privilege or space granted or leased for a particular use within specified premises."
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Next, we believe the concept of specific obligations on the part of the privileged party to maintain particular services at specified times is an incident of a concession. We find no such obligations imposed by the agreement here under consideration. No minimum hours during which the services offered must be made available to the public are required. No standards of service are mandated. Of course, the services offered must bear a reasonable relationship to the purposes of a public airport. That element in part is present here, particularly the storage and servicing of aircraft. [ 381 Mich. 275-276.]
In Kent Co v Grand Rapids, 381 Mich. 640; 167 N.W.2d 287 (1969), the Court held that rights granted by an airport to use premises for a motel and restaurant business and by the same airport to another operator for a business similar to that at issue in Tygard were exempted as concessions. Although the legal rationale for these holdings is elusive, the Court apparently distinguished Tygard on the basis of the specific obligations under specific terms and standards imposed on the concessionaires in Kent Co v Grand Rapids to offer services deemed necessary to the operation of the airport. The Court did indicate that each fact situation required its own analysis. Id., 652. It further indicated that a concession could be granted by a lease or by other form of agreement. Id., 650-651, 652-653.
The legal criteria supplied by reported decisions supplies minimal guidance. Unlike this case, reported decisions arise only in the context of concessions granted by airports. However, we conclude, based on the foregoing, that the agreement in this case does not amount to a concession. The agreement does little to impose obligations and restrictions upon Seymour stated with the requisite degree of specificity. Terms of an agreement characteristic of a concession, e.g., minimum hours, standards of service, or oversight of operations by the city, are conspicuously absent. Oversight of fees charged to the public is not strenuous; all that is required is that the fees will not exceed the upper end of that range of fees charged by competitors. The maintenance requirement is consistent with the city's interest in protecting its reversion after the termination of the agreement and does not appear to be directed toward exacting some specific term or service for the public benefit. Seymour had an unacceptable degree of discretion to run the golf course and related facilities as he saw fit, without the imposition of obligations directed toward the fulfillment of a public purpose.
We find ourselves in agreement with the conclusion of the hearing officer incorporated by the Tax Tribunal:
[T]he notion of a "concession" . . . is . . . that of a subsidiary business related to a public-oriented operation. . . . [A holding to the contrary that] would allow for a self-contained public entity . . . leased to the private sector to qualify as a concession . . . would give carte blanche to a governmental unit to lease out, for profit, one of any number of governmental enterprises and, with minimal restrictions on its operation, gain for it a favored tax status by simply denominating it a "concession."
Although the cases discussed earlier did not need to reach the question of whether a concession need be incidental to and subsumed by the larger public purpose of the granting governmental entity, our conclusion in the affirmative is supported by a close reading of Tygard, supra. A concession is there defined as a "privilege or space granted or leased for a particular purpose within specific premises." Id., 275 (emphasis added). The concessionaire must be obligated to offer services that "bear a reasonable relationship to the purposes" of the granting entity. Id., 276. If that entity simply privatizes its entire operation, as the city did here, exemption from taxation would be at odds with the broader purpose of the lessee-user tax, which is to eliminate the unfair advantage that private-sector users of tax-exempt property would otherwise wield over their competitors leasing privately owned property. See Detroit v National Exposition Co, 142 Mich. App. 539, 546; 370 N.W.2d 397 (1985), lv den 423 Mich. 862 (1985); Nomads, Inc, supra, p 53.
In light of the policy concerns stated here, the guidance of the Supreme Court regarding the meaning of the term "concession," and the principle of strict construction, we conclude that petitioners have failed to establish their entitlement to an exemption.
Affirmed.