State ex rel. Village of Bel-Ridge v. Lohman

Decision Date07 April 1998
Docket NumberBEL-RIDGE,No. 72647,72647
Citation966 S.W.2d 356
PartiesSTATE of Missouri ex rel. VILLAGE OF, et al., Relators/Respondents, v. Janette M. LOHMAN, Director, Department of Revenue, State of Missouri, Respondent/Appellant, and St. Louis County, Intervenor/Appellant.
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals

James H. White, Clayton, Evan Buckheim, Jefferson City, for appellant.

James E. Mello, St. Louis, for respondents.

CRAHAN, Chief Judge.

Appellants Janette M. Lohman, Director of the Missouri Department of Revenue ("Director"), and St. Louis County appeal the judgment of mandamus entered against Director requiring her to allocate and distribute certain tax proceeds to Relators Village of Bel-Ridge, City of Chesterfield, City of Eureka, City of Sunset Hills and City of Independence. 1 We affirm the judgment as modified to delete the trial court's erroneous assessment of costs against Director.

The case below was submitted on stipulated facts. The Real Property Tax Increment Allocation Redevelopment Act, Sec. 99.805-99.855 RSMo 1994 2 ("TIF Act") authorized municipalities to adopt redevelopment plans for blighted areas through tax increment financing ("TIF"). Pursuant to the TIF Act, Relators enacted a series of ordinances designed to accomplish the redevelopment of certain blighted areas and to create within these areas new and substantial sources of sales tax revenue.

Pursuant to the TIF Act, the taxing authority retains half of the new local sales tax revenue generated in the designated TIF redevelopment area and the other half must be allocated to a special allocation fund for the payment of redevelopment costs. Sec. 99.845.3.

St. Louis County has authorized and imposed several sales taxes that generate revenue within the redevelopment areas established by Relators Bel-Ridge, Chesterfield, Eureka and Sunset Hills. These include a general sales tax (Sec. 66.600, et seq.) and two transportation sales taxes (Sec. 94.600, et seq. and 94.660, et seq. RSMo 1995 Supp.). Jackson County 3 has authorized and levied sales taxes applicable within the redevelopment areas established by the City of Independence, including a general sales tax (Sec. 67.500, et seq.) and an anti-drug sales tax (Sec. 67.391, et seq.).

Relators have also passed local sales taxes. Bel-Ridge, Eureka and Sunset Hills each impose a capital improvement tax pursuant to Sec. 94.890 RSMo 1995 Supp. Independence imposes a general sales tax pursuant to Sec. 94.500, et seq. Sunset Hills also imposes a general sales tax pursuant to Sec. 94.850, et seq.

Director is statutorily obligated to collect and administer the revenues generated by all of the sales taxes. Sec. 32.087.6. The parties stipulated that Director has complied with her statutory obligation to collect this sales tax revenue. The dispute in this case is based upon Director's failure to allocate and pay to Relators fifty percent of the increased sales tax revenue generated in Relators' TIF districts for deposit in Relators' respective allocation funds, which Relators claim is required by Sec. 99.845.3.

In its Amended Judgment and Permanent Writ of Mandamus, the trial court declared that Director "has a clear, unequivocal, specific duty to pay to Relators' financial officers fifty percent of the total additional revenue from local sales taxes generated by Relators' redevelopment under taxes imposed pursuant to Sec. 66.600, et seq., 67.391, et seq., 67.500, et seq., 94.500, et seq., 94.600, et seq., 94.660, et seq., 94.850, et seq. and 94.890 RSMo1995 Supp. the amount of such taxes generated within the area of each respective redevelopment area in the calendar year prior to its establishment." The trial court, however, granted only prospective relief, compelling Director to pay to Relators' financial officers fifty percent of the total additional sales tax revenue generated in the TIF districts "from the date of this Order." 4 The trial court further stayed its writ pending the outcome of this appeal.

On appeal, St. Louis County urges that the trial court erred in ordering Director to include three of the subject sales taxes in the TIF allocation on the ground that they are special purpose levies enacted subsequent to enactment of the TIF Act and intended to be exempt from such allocation. St. Louis County and Director further claim the trial court erred in entering its writ of mandamus against Director because she is not the "collecting officer" designated to perform the duties imposed by the writ as contemplated by Sec. 99.845.3. Finally, Director urges the trial court erred in taxing court costs against her.

In its first point, St. Louis County challenges the trial court's inclusion of three taxes among those required to be included in the TIF allocation: the quarter cent Metrolink sales tax enacted in 1994 and codified in Sec. 94.660 RSMo 1995 Supp.; the municipal "local option" sales tax enacted in 1993 and codified in Sec. 94.850; and the municipal capital improvements sales tax enacted in 1994 and codified in Sec. 94.890 RSMo 1995 Supp. The statutes authorizing each of these taxes contain provisions requiring that the revenues derived from the tax be deposited in a special trust fund and, in the case of the Metrolink and municipal capital improvement taxes, that the revenues produced by such taxes be used solely for specified purposes. See Sec. 94.660.5-6 RSMo 1995 Supp.; Sec. 94.857; Sec. 94.890.6 RSMo 1995 Supp.

In County of Jefferson v. Quiktrip Corp., 912 S.W.2d 487 (Mo. banc 1995), the Missouri Supreme Court considered a similar contention with respect to whether taxes required by their enabling legislation to be deposited in a special trust fund and used only for certain specified purposes were nonetheless required to be included in computing the allocation required by the TIF Act. The Supreme Court observed that the requirement in Sec. 99.845 that 50% of the additional revenue from taxes generated within a redevelopment area be allocated to the TIF District "special allocation fund" is at least facially inconsistent with the requirements of the sales tax enabling statutes that the revenues be devoted solely to statutorily specified purposes. 912 S.W.2d at 490. In reconciling the apparent conflict, the Court took note of the general rule of statutory construction that, when two statutes are repugnant in any of their provisions, the later act, even without a specific repealing clause, operates to the extent of the repugnancy to repeal the first. Id., citing Morrow v. City of Kansas City, 788 S.W.2d 278, 281 (Mo. banc 1990). In addition, the Court pointed out that in enacting Sec. 99.845 (the TIF Act), the legislature expressly excluded some taxes from the required TIF allocation--i.e., "taxes imposed on sales or charges for sleeping rooms paid by transient guests of hotels and motels, licenses, fees or special assessments other than payments in lieu of taxes." 912 S.W.2d at 490. Reasoning that the legislature could also have excluded sales taxes authorized for special designated purposes but did not do so, the Court found that it was reasonable to conclude that the taxes specifically excluded were the only taxes the legislature intended to exclude. Id. The Court held that the legislature intended to create an exception to the sales tax statutes where ordinances create a TIF District and authorize public improvements which generate additional economic activity that results in greater tax collection. Id.

St. Louis County points out that the three taxes at issue on appeal were all enacted after the latest enactment of the TIF Act. Therefore, St. Louis County urges, the reasoning of the Missouri Supreme Court in Quiktrip compels the conclusion that these taxes are exempt from the TIF allocation because the later acts must be deemed to have repealed the former to the extent of any repugnancy. We disagree.

The "repeal by later repugnant enactment" principle discussed and applied by the Missouri Supreme Court is not, as St. Louis County apparently would have it, a rule of substantive law. It is simply a generally recognized rule of statutory construction frequently employed by courts in ascertaining the intent of the legislature. Although the Court acknowledged and relied upon this principle as part of its analysis in determining the legislature's intent in enacting the TIF Act, it does not follow that the subsequent enactments of specially designated sales taxes renders them exempt from allocations under the TIF formula. Having ascertained that the legislature intended by its enactment of the TIF Act to create an exception to the requirement that certain sales taxes be devoted only to specified purposes, that intent presumably applies to any increased tax revenues from the increased economic activity in the TIF District unless such revenues are specifically exempted from allocation either in the TIF Act itself or in the sales tax enabling legislation.

Moreover, St. Louis County's argument completely ignores the other basis for the Quiktrip decision, that the legislature had seen fit to exclude certain specified taxes from the TIF allocation required by Sec. 99.845 and thus presumably did not intend to exclude any others. In this regard, the 1997 amendments to the TIF Act are instructive. See 1997 Mo. Legis. Serv. No. 7, 1517, et seq. In these amendments, signed into law on September 26, 1997 and effective on December 23, 1997, the legislature expanded the list of taxes excluded from the TIF allocation required by Sec. 99.845 to specifically exclude "personal property taxes, taxes imposed on sales or charges for sleeping rooms paid by transient guests of hotels and motels, taxes levied pursuant to section 70.500, RSMo, or effective January 1, 1998, taxes levied for the purpose of public transportation pursuant to section 94.660, RSMo,...." Inasmuch as taxes levied pursuant to Sec. 94.660, one of the taxes at issue in this appeal, are expressly...

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4 cases
  • State ex rel. City of Monett v. Lawrence Cnty., s. SD 31500
    • United States
    • Missouri Court of Appeals
    • 1 Octubre 2013
    ...areas with the purpose to create in such areas new and substantial sources of sales tax revenue. See State ex rel. Village of Bel–Ridge v. Lohman, 966 S.W.2d 356, 357 (Mo.App.1998).The 1996 and 2005 TIFs City created one TIF district in 1996 and another in 2005. In each instance, City creat......
  • State ex rel. City of Maryland Heights v. James
    • United States
    • Missouri Court of Appeals
    • 12 Abril 2022
    ...costs. See State ex rel. City of Monett v. Lawrence County , 407 S.W.3d 635 (Mo. App. S.D. 2013) ; State ex rel. Village of Bel-Ridge v. Lohman , 966 S.W.2d 356, 357 (Mo. App. E.D. 1998) ("The TIF Act authorizes municipalities to adopt and finance redevelopment plans for blighted areas with......
  • State ex rel. City of of Maryland Heights v. James
    • United States
    • Missouri Court of Appeals
    • 12 Abril 2022
    ...See State ex. rel. City of Monett v. Lawrence County, 407 S.W.3d 635 (Mo. App. S.D. 2013); State ex rel Village of Bel-Ridge v. Lohman, 966 S.W.2d 356, 357 (Mo. App. E.D. 1998) ("The TIF Act authorizes municipalities to adopt and finance redevelopment plans for blighted areas with the purpo......
  • State ex rel. City of Monett v. Lawrence Cnty.
    • United States
    • Missouri Court of Appeals
    • 13 Mayo 2013
    ...areas with the purpose to create in such areas new and substantial sources of sales tax revenue. See State ex rel. Village of Bel-Ridge v. Lohman, 966 S.W.2d 356, 357 (Mo.App. 1998).The 1996 and 2005 TIFs City created one TIF district in 1996 and another in 2005. In each instance, City crea......

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