Skip Maine state header navigation
CCCS v. City
MAINE SUPREME JUDICIAL COURT
Reporter of Decisions
Decision: 2003
ME 2
Docket:
Cum-01-536
Argued:
January 9, 2002
Decided: January
10, 2003
Panel: CLIFFORD,
J., and RUDMAN, DANA, ALEXANDER, and CALKINS, JJ.
Majority: CLIFFORD,
J., and RUDMAN, ALEXANDER, and CALKINS, JJ.
Dissenting: DANA,
J.
CREDIT COUNSELING
CENTERS, INC., d/b/a CCCS
v.
CITY OF SOUTH PORTLAND
et al.
[1]
CLIFFORD, J.
[¶1] The City of South Portland appeals from
the judgment entered in the Superior Court (Cumberland County, Warren, J.) declaring that Credit
Counseling Centers (CCCS) is entitled to a charitable tax exemption for its
property pursuant to 36 M.R.S.A. § 652(1)(A) (Supp. 2002). CCCS cross-appeals from the judgment
entered in the Superior Court (Cumberland County, Warren, J.) that denied its Rule
80B appeal and affirmed the decision of the South Portland Board of Assessment
Review denying its application for a charitable tax exemption. The City contends that the court's
declaratory judgment was based on insufficient evidence to establish that CCCS
is entitled to the exemption. CCCS
contends in its cross-appeal that the Board of Assessment Review improperly
considered prejudicial and incompetent evidence, improperly based its decision
to deny CCCS's application for a tax exemption on the source of CCCS's funds,
and failed to make sufficient factual findings. We affirm the judgment denying CCCS's 80B appeal, but we
vacate the judgment granting CCCS's declaratory relief because the business of
CCCS is not "conducted exclusively for benevolent and charitable purpose"
within the meaning of section 652(1)(A).
I. FACTS AND PROCEDURE
[¶2] The facts stipulated to in the
declaratory judgment proceeding establish the following: CCCS was founded in
1971 to provide credit counseling, debt management services, and consumer
education. It is a nonprofit
corporation, is tax-exempt for federal income tax purposes under 26 U.S.C. §
501(c)(3) (2001), and is certified by the Maine Attorney General to solicit
charitable contributions.
[¶3] The clients that CCCS serve fall within
three categories. Approximately
one-third of the clients have the capacity to address their debt problems
without significant assistance.
These clients receive budget counseling services only. They are charged a fee for the service
on a sliding scale according to their ability to pay, but no client is denied
these services because of an inability to pay. There are also some clients whose debt problems are so
severe that CCCS helps them only by informing them of their options in
bankruptcy.
[¶4] The final category of clients are those
who have significant debt, but whose problems are manageable. These clients enroll in CCCS's Debt
Management Program. Pursuant to
this program, CCCS negotiates a debt accommodation on behalf of the debtor with
the debtor's creditors. The
program provides the debtor with average repayment periods of 48-60
months. CCCS charges the debtors
an average fee of $15 per month.
[¶5] CCCS is a local affiliate of the
National Foundation for Credit Counseling (NFCC). NFCC affiliates, including CCCS, have returned a minimum of
$1.6 billion from debtors to creditors each year since 1996. NFCC solicits voluntary contributions
from creditors who participate in Debt Management Plans of up to 15% of each
payment received.
[¶6] CCCS returned $8,801,264 to creditors
in 1995, $9,877,179 in 1996, $11,933,638 in 1997, $13,146,614 in 1998, and
$16,715,565 in 1999. Creditors
normally pay between 8.5% and 9% of the amount collected as a "fair share"
contribution to CCCS. Fair share
contributions make up approximately 60% of CCCS's revenue.
[¶7] CCCS owns real property in South
Portland. The property, including
the personal property located on it, was assessed by the City of South
Portland's Tax Assessor at a value of $821,600. On January 26, 1998, pursuant to 36 M.R.S.A. § 841
(1990 & Supp. 2002), CCCS applied to the Tax Assessor for a charitable
exemption from property tax under section 652(1)(A). The Assessor denied CCCS's request, and, on March 10, 1999,
pursuant to 36 M.R.S.A. § 843 (Supp. 2002), CCCS appealed to the South Portland
Board of Assessment Review for an abatement for the 1998 and 1999 tax
years. After a hearing, the Board
denied CCCS's appeal because "CCCS failed to carry its burden of proof that it
was organized and conducted exclusively for benevolent and charitable purposes
in that significant benefits were accorded to creditors of consumers and such
benefits were not merely incidental to any benevolent and charitable purpose
that CCCS may have."
[¶8] CCCS then filed a complaint in the
Superior Court, appealing from the Board's decision pursuant to Rule 80B of the
Maine Rules of Civil Procedure.
CCCS also brought a plenary action, pursuant to 14 M.R.S.A. §§ 5951-5960
(1980), seeking a declaratory judgment that its property is exempt from
taxation under section 652(1)(A).
CCCS concurrently filed a motion for determination of future course of
proceedings. In that motion, CCCS
maintained that the Board was without jurisdiction to determine its tax exempt
status,[2]
and, therefore, the case before the Superior Court should proceed as an
ordinary civil matter, not as an appeal.
The City opposed the motion contending (1) that the Board did have
jurisdiction, (2) that the court should decline to address the declaratory
judgment request, and (3) that the action proceed only as an 80B appeal.
[¶9] The parties submitted a list of
stipulations and then proceeded to trial in the declaratory judgment
action. At the close of the trial,
the Superior Court concluded that CCCS's request for abatement with respect to
its 1998 taxes would proceed as an 80B appeal, and that it would use the
declaratory judgment action to resolve the ongoing dispute between CCCS and the
City as to the tax exempt status of CCCS's property. The court entered a judgment declaring that CCCS is entitled
to a charitable tax exemption for the years 1999 and beyond. In the 80B appeal, the court affirmed
the Board's decision to deny CCCS a charitable tax exemption for the 1998 tax
year. The City appealed from the
declaratory judgment, and CCCS cross-appealed from the judgment on the 80B
appeal.
II. 80B APPEAL
[¶10] CCCS contends that the Superior Court
erred by denying its Rule 80B appeal because the Board improperly considered
prejudicial and incompetent evidence, based its denial of the abatement request
on the source of CCCS's funds, and failed to make required factual findings.[3] We review directly the decision of the
Board when the Superior Court acts in an appellate capacity. See Christian Fellowship &
Renewal Ctr. v. Town of Limington, 2001 ME 16, ¶ 4, 769 A.2d 834, 836.
A. Incompetent
Evidence
[¶11] The rules of evidence do not generally
apply to administrative proceedings unless otherwise provided by statute. 5 M.R.S.A. § 9057(1) (2002). "Hearsay testimony is admissible if it
is 'the kind of evidence upon which reasonable persons are accustomed to rely
in the conduct of serious affairs.'"
Aviation Oil Co. v. Dept. of Envtl. Prot., 584 A.2d 611, 614 (Me.
1990) (quoting 5 M.R.S.A. § 9057(2)). A bare claim that an administrative agency has considered
questionable evidence is not sufficient to disturb the agency's action. The claimant must show that the agency
relied on incompetent evidence and that the claimant was prejudiced
thereby. Maddocks v.
Unemployment Ins. Comm'n, 2001 ME 60, ¶ 12, 768 A.2d 1023, 1026. The record in this case does not
disclose such prejudicial error.
B. Source of CCCS's
Funds
[¶12] CCCS also contends that the Board erred
by depriving it of a tax exemption because CCCS receives much of its revenue
from the "fair share" contributions of creditors. An organization "may not be deprived of the right of
exemption by reason of the source from which its funds are derived." 36 M.R.S.A. § 652(1)(A). Contrary to CCCS's contention, however,
the Board made clear that it denied CCCS's application not because of the
source of its funds, but because its services significantly benefit creditors
and because those benefits are not merely incidental to some benevolent and
charitable purpose. Although the
Board may not base a denial of an exemption on the source of an organization's
funds, it may consider, as it properly did here, the ultimate beneficiaries of
the organization's services. See 36 M.R.S.A.
§ 652(1)(C)(1) ("Any corporation claiming exemption under paragraph A must
be organized and conducted exclusively for benevolent and charitable
purposes.") (emphasis added).
C. Sufficiency of Findings
[¶13] The Board made, among others, the
following findings of fact:
19. CCCS provides services that are
beneficial to creditors.
20. The benefit provided to creditors is
not merely incidental to any charitable purposes for which CCCS may be
organized and conducted.
CCCS contends that these
findings are insufficient under Christian Fellowship & Renewal Ctr. v.
Town of Limington,
2001 ME 16, 769 A.2d 834, because they are conclusory. In Christian Fellowship, we vacated the
judgment of the Superior Court that affirmed the decision of the York County
Commissioners denying a tax abatement because the Commissioners failed to make
findings sufficient to appraise the court or the parties of the basis for their
conclusion. Id. ¶ 10, 769 A.2d at
839-40. In that case, the
Commissioners failed to make findings of fact regarding whether the
organization was a benevolent and charitable institution and whether the
organization used or occupied the property exclusively for charitable and
benevolent purposes. Id. ¶ 9. The Board's findings in this case,
however, are sufficient to show the basis for its decision and for effective
judicial review.
III. DECLARATORY
JUDGMENT
[¶14] South Portland contends that CCCS did
not carry its burden of proving, in the declaratory judgment proceedings, that it
is entitled to a charitable tax exemption. "Whether an organization's real property qualifies for a
charitable tax exemption is a mixed question of law and fact." Cushing Nature & Pres. Ctr. v.
Town of Cushing,
2001 ME 149, ¶ 10, 785 A.2d 342, 345.
Because the material facts of the present case are undisputed, we review
the Superior Court's legal conclusions de novo. Hoag v. Dick, 2002 ME 92, ¶ 7, 799 A.2d 391, 393.
[¶15] By statute, "[t]he real and personal
property owned and occupied or used solely for their own purposes by benevolent
and charitable institutions incorporated by this State" is exempt from
taxation. 36 M.R.S.A. §
652(1)(A). One of several conditions
on such an exemption is that the corporation seeking an exemption "must be
organized and conducted exclusively for benevolent and charitable
purposes." 36 M.R.S.A. §
652(1)(C)(1).
When an exemption is
claimed, the court must undertake a careful examination of the facts presented
to determine (1) whether the owner of the land is organized and conducting its
operation for purely benevolent and charitable purposes in good faith; (2)
whether there is any profit motive revealed or concealed; (3) whether there is
any pretense to evade taxation; and (4) whether any production of revenue is purely
incidental to a dominant purpose that is benevolent and charitable.
Cushing Nature and
Pres. Ctr.,
2001 ME 149, ¶ 17, 785 A.2d at 347.
[¶16] As an exemption to taxation, section
652 must be strictly construed because "'[s]uch privileges are in conflict with
the universal obligation of all to contribute a just proportion toward the
public burdens.'" Episcopal
Camp Found., Inc. v. Town of Hope, 666 A.2d 108, 110 (Me. 1995) (quoting City
of Bangor v. Rising Virtue Lodge, No. 10, 73 Me. 428, 433 (1882)). The party seeking an exemption "must
establish that its organization comes 'unmistakably within the spirit and
intent of the act creating the exemption.'" Id. (quoting Holbrook Island Sanctuary v. Town of
Brooksville,
214 A.2d 660, 664 (1965)).
[¶17] In the present case, the Superior Court
erred in its legal conclusion that CCCS is entitled to a charitable tax
exemption. In 1995, CCCS collected
$8,801,264 for the creditors of the clients with whom it works; in 1996, it
collected $9,877,179; in 1997, it collected $11,933,638; in 1998, it collected
$13,146,614; and in 1999, it collected $16,715,565. These creditors normally pay between 8.5% and 9% of the
amount collected as a "fair share" contribution to CCCS. The magnitude of the amounts collected
for creditors clearly demonstrates that CCCS's business is not "conducted exclusively for benevolent and
charitable purposes."
36 M.R.S.A. § 652(1)(A) (emphasis added), or that the revenue
generated is not "purely incidental to a dominant purpose that is benevolent
and charitable," Cushing Nature & Pres. Ctr., 2001 ME 149, ¶ 17, 785
A.2d at 347. CCCS is a thriving
organization that provides a significant and very valuable public service to
creditors and debtors. CCCS has not shown, however, that it comes "unmistakably
within the spirit and intent" of the charitable exemption statute. Episcopal Camp Found. Inc., 666 A.2d at 110
(quotations omitted).
The entry is:
Judgment on the 80B
appeal is affirmed. Judgment
granting declaratory relief is vacated and remanded for entry of judgment for
the City of South Portland.
DANA, J., dissenting
[¶18] Because I
believe that the benefit (if any) CCCS accords its clients' creditors is
incidental to CCCS's charitable and benevolent purpose, I respectfully dissent.
[¶19] The Court
concludes that CCCS's business is not conducted exclusively for charitable and
benevolent purposes because of the large quantity of money CCCS returns to
creditors. I disagree with this
conclusion for two reasons. First,
it is not clear the money CCCS returns to creditors actually represents a
benefit to creditors. Second,
assuming that it does, this benefit is incidental to CCCS's dominant charitable
and benevolent purpose.
I. Benefit
[20]
CCCS's
payments to creditors on behalf of its clients are not clearly a benefit
to creditors. It is true
that from 1995 to 1999, CCCS facilitated payments to creditors totaling
$60,474,260; however, these payments represent only a portion of the money
already owed these creditors. In
facilitating payment arrangements for clients, CCCS asks creditors to make "concessions,"
to which they frequently agree. These concessions include accepting minimum monthly payments
that represent the client's "best effort," reducing interest
rates, and stopping both late fees and over-the-credit-line fees. Many "firing line" collectors
view CCCS as taking away their ability to bring accounts current and are
reluctant to work out arrangements with CCCS despite upper management's
public support for CCCS. Creditors
appear to support CCCS for three reasons: (1) guilt over impersonally
granting credit to many customers who are not financially worthy; (2) political
and public relations reasons; and (3) recovering some money that might
otherwise be lost in bankruptcy.
[¶21] It can be
inferred then, that CCCS is returning less revenue to creditors than clients
actually owe. It is not clear,
however, whether creditors are receiving more or less than they could actually
collect on their own (after the costs of collection). Regardless, if there is any monetary benefit to creditors,
it is significantly less than $60,474,260 because creditors would likely have
recovered a substantial portion of that amount without CCCS's intervention.
II. Incidental Benefit
[¶22] Even if some
portion of the payments CCCS facilitates are a benefit to creditors, CCCS is
entitled to a charitable tax exemption because the benefit is incidental to
CCCS's charitable and benevolent purpose.
Although exemptions to taxation must be strictly construed, and those
entitled to a charitable exemption must be organized and conducted exclusively
for benevolent and charitable purposes, this rule of construction has not
prohibited us from entitling organizations to charitable tax exemptions when an
organization's activities confer only an incidental non-charitable
benefit. See, e.g., Town of Poland v. Poland Spring Health Inst., Inc., 649 A.2d 1098, 1100 (Me. 1994); Maine AFL-CIO Housing
Dev. Corp. v. Town of Madawaska, 523 A.2d
581, 584 (Me. 1987); Maine Med. Ctr. v. Lucci, 374 A.2d 1, 2 (Me. 1974); Ferry Beach Park Ass'n of
Universalists v. City of Saco, 127 Me.
136, 138, 142 A. 65, 66 (1928).
[¶23] Here, the
record provides ample evidence to support the Superior Court's determination in
the declaratory judgment proceeding that the benefits (if any) creditors
receive are incidental to CCCS's charitable and benevolent purpose. CCCS's stated mission is to provide
budget counseling and debt counseling for Maine families that are experiencing
financial distress. To realize its
mission, CCCS provides financial counseling and develops action plans for all
clients, numbering between six and eight thousand per year. CCCS facilitates payments to creditors
for only approximately one-third of its clients. Other clients are either provided action plans they can
administer themselves or referred to other agencies for assistance in exploring
options like bankruptcy. CCCS
administered debt management plans are CCCS's last alternative for its
clients. The payments CCCS makes
as a conduit for one-third of its clients are, therefore, incidental to its
overall purpose of providing budget counseling and debt counseling for Maine
families.
[¶24] Because the Court focuses on the relationship between CCCS and the creditors of one-third of CCCS's clients, it overemphasizes the role of this relationship, supporting an interpretation of the relationship as central rather than incidental to CCCS's primary purpose. Consideration of CCCS's total activities, however, reveals the incidental nature of these payments and properly places the role of this portion of CCCS activities in context.
[¶25] Two-thirds of
the consumers CCCS assists do not use CCCS as a payment facilitator. CCCS also provides a large number and
wide variety of educational programs to clients, schools, and businesses. In fact, consumer education is a
"mandate" of CCCS' service. In
2000, it provided approximately 850 educational programs, 600 of which it
provided to schools.[4] CCCS also counsels first-time
homebuyers, provides reverse mortgage counseling for seniors, and supplies
educational materials for the State.
[¶26] CCCS is
distinguishable from other "non-profit" credit counseling services that do
operate for the purpose of benefiting creditors. It is accredited by the National Foundation for Credit
Counseling (NFCC) through a year and a half long process and is re-evaluated
every four years to insure that CCCS "clearly [is] in all respects in business
to aid the consumer." This process
involves compliance with eight policies, including a policy of placing clients
on debt management plans only when it is in the clients' best interest and will
not result in the client paying "indefinitely." Compliance with NFCC policies demonstrates CCCS's consistent
prioritization of its clients' interests above creditors' interests. NFCC accreditation is meaningful. Organizations have lost their
accreditation when they refused to handle payments to creditors who would not
fund them because NFCC believes "[the organization] cannot be benefiting the
consumer if [it is] trying to negotiate deals that are otherwise in their best
interest so that [they] can make money."
[¶27] Here, the
magnitude of payments CCCS provides creditors may tempt one to conclude that
the payments are central to CCCS's purpose. When, however, the relationship between CCCS and creditors
is placed in its proper context, it is evident that the benefit (if any) to
creditors is incidental to CCCS's primary charitable and benevolent purpose.
[¶28] The Court
also fails to consider two key factors in the exemption analysis: whether CCCS
alleviates a public need that government would otherwise have to fulfill, and
whether CCCS' services are open to the "indefinite public." Whether an organization fulfills a
public need is key to the exemption analysis because it relates directly to the
broader justification for the exemption, the quid pro quo for public services
rendered. See Episcopal Camp
Found. Inc., 666 A.2d at 111 (Glassman J.
dissenting) (citing Y.M.C.A. of Germantown v. City of Philadelphia, 323 Pa. 401, 187 A. 204, 210 (1936); Poland Spring
Health Inst., Inc. 649 A.2d 1098; Maine
AFL-CIO Housing Dev. Corp., 523 A.2d 581; Camp
Emoh Assoc. v. Town of Lyman, 132 Me. 67,
166 A. 59 (1933); City of Bangor v. Rising Virtue Lodge, 73 Me. 428 (1882)).
[¶29] The Superior
Court found that "by educating and assisting persons laboring under significant
consumer debt, CCCS is alleviating a public need that otherwise might require
various forms of governmental assistance and intervention." The record reveals facts sufficient to
support the Superior Court's conclusion.
Witnesses testified that the counseling CCCS provides first-time
home buyers fulfills a pre-qualification requirement for a State program,
reverse mortgage counseling for seniors is offered as part of a federal
program, and CCCS provides both educational programs for the State and State
access to all of CCCS's materials for use in State programs. Moreover, CCCS often refers clients to
a wide variety of other agencies for assistance, including CAP agencies for
fuel assistance, the Volunteer Lawyers' Project for legal assistance, Ingraham
Volunteers for suicide counseling, and agencies for substance abuse counseling. It develops proposals that clients
submit in small claims court, the majority of which, according to testimony,
are ultimately accepted (thereby lessening the burden on judicial
resources). Finally, CCCS provides
budget counseling to all its clients, and appears to be the only organization
in Maine providing this type of service (A. 46).[5] In other states, these kinds of
financial counseling services are often provided by multi-service charities
(like Catholic Charities and the United Way) because financial difficulties are
often related to other problems, such as substance abuse and domestic violence.
[¶30] Similarly,
the Court has not addressed what we have determined to be an essential feature
of a public charity, whether it is open to the "indefinite public." Rising Virtue Lodge, 73 Me. at 434 ("The essential features of a public
charity, are, that it is not confined to privileged individuals, but is open to the indefinite public."). The Superior Court found that CCCS
demonstrated that it intended to benefit an indefinite number of people and the
record sufficiently supports this conclusion. Credible testimony indicated that no one has ever been
turned away for inability to pay fees and at least twenty-five percent of
counseling sessions require no fees.
[¶31] For these reasons, I would affirm the
judgment granting CCCS declaratory relief. I would also affirm the Superior Court's decision regarding
the 80B appeal and abatement for the tax year 1998. Although seemingly inconsistent, such a conclusion is
supported by our limited standard of review and the apparent sufficiency of the
evidence with respect to the Board's finding for the tax year 1998.
Attorney for
plaintiff:
David A.
Lourie, Esq. (orally)
189 Spurwink
Road
Cape Elizabeth,
ME 04107
Attorney for
defendants:
Mary Kahl,
Esq. (orally)
Corporation
counsel
City of South
Portland
P. O. Box 9422
South Portland,
ME 04116-9422
Attorney for
amicus curiae:
Richard P. Flewelling,
Esq.
Maine Municipal
Association
60 Community
Drive
Augusta, ME 04330-9486
[1]
Elizabeth Sawyer, the
Assessor of the City of South Portland, is also a defendant.
[2]
We have made clear that
a party seeking a property tax exemption pursuant to 36 M.R.S.A.
§ 652(1)(A) has the option of proceeding administratively to
seek a tax abatement from the assessors of the municipality, 36 M.R.S.A.
§ 841, or of seeking a declaratory judgment declaring that the
property is tax exempt. Maine Cent. R.R. Co. v. Town of Dexter,
588 A.2d 289, 292 (Me. 1991) (citing Berry v. Daigle, 322 A.2d 320, 324 (Me.
1974).
[3] CCCS also contends that
the Board erred by requiring it to prove that it comes "unmistakably within the
spirit and intent" of the charitable tax exemption. Contrary to CCCS's contention, however, this standard is a
correct statement of the law. See
Episcopal Camp Found., Inc. v. Town of Hope, 666 A.2d 108, 110 (Me. 1995).
[4] CCCS charges a modest, maximum $100, fee for programs it provides businesses but provides schools with free educational programs.
[5] Testimony indicated that in the 1970s, the State provided this type of service through the University of Southern Maine Extension Service.