Garage Not Used Exclusively for an Exempt Purpose Not Entitled to Tax Exemption/Supreme Court Should Not Have Deemed the “Statement of Undisputed Material Facts” to Have Been Admitted by the Respondent, Despite Respondent’s Failure to Provide a Paragraph by Paragraph Response As Required by the Rule
The Fourth Department determined that property (a parking garage) was not entitled to tax exempt status because it was not used exclusively for an exempt purpose, noting that parking for private-practice physician’s offices was not exempt (parking for a hospital is). The Fourth Department further held that the respondent city did not admit to the petitioner’s “Statement of Undisputed Material Facts,” even though the city did not submit a paragraph by paragraph response as required by the relevant Rule of the Commercial Division:
It is well settled that, pursuant to the RPTL, “[r]eal property owned by a corporation or association organized or conducted exclusively for . . . hospital . . . purposes . . . and used exclusively for carrying out thereupon . . . such purpose[] . . . shall be exempt from taxation” (RPTL 420-a [1] [a]). Here, respondents concede that petitioner is organized for an exempt purpose, as a hospital, and thus only the second prong of the statute is at issue. “[T]he test of entitlement to tax exemption under the used exclusively clause of [RPTL 420-a (1) (a)] is whether the particular use is reasonably incident[al] to the [primary or] major purpose of the [corporation] . . . Put differently, the determination of whether the property is used exclusively for the statutory purposes depends upon whether its primary use is in furtherance of the permitted purposes” … . “The burden of establishing that the property is entitled to a tax exemption rests with the taxpayer” … . Additionally, when a taxpayer in a tax certiorari proceeding seeks summary judgment, “it is necessary that the movant establish his cause of action or defense sufficiently to warrant the court as a matter of law in directing judgment in his favor . . . , and he must do so by tender of evidentiary proof in admissible form” … .
Here, we agree with respondents that petitioner failed to establish that the primary use of the subject parcels is for exempt purposes, and thus it failed to meet its burden on the motion. Indeed, the evidence submitted by petitioner in support of the motion established that an undetermined portion of the people who used the garage did so for purposes associated with nonexempt uses such as the adjacent private physicians’ offices. Inasmuch “[a]s the private practice of medicine by a hospital’s attending physicians is primarily a commercial enterprise, and such physicians’ offices are not entitled to a tax exemption under RPTL 420-a . . . , the parking spaces subleased to those offices cannot be said to so further the hospital’s purposes as to create an entitlement to an exemption” … . * * *
…[W]e conclude that the court abused its discretion in deeming respondents to have admitted all the information in petitioner’s “Statement of Undisputed Material Facts” submitted pursuant to Rule 19-a of the Rules of the Commercial Division of the Supreme Court ([hereafter, 19-a Statement] see 22 NYCRR 202.70 [g] [Rule 19-a (a)]). The 19-a Statement was merely an almost verbatim repetition of an affidavit submitted by one of petitioner’s employees in support of the motion, and respondents clearly disputed the content of the information in it. Further, petitioner failed to submit sufficient evidence in admissible form in support of the 19-a Statement, as required by the Rule (see 22 NYCRR 202.70 [g] [Rule 19-a (d)]; …). Although “the rule gives a motion court the discretion to deem facts admitted, the court is not required to do so” … . Consequently, although “it would have been better for [respondents] to submit a paragraph-by-paragraph response to [petitioner’s] statement” as required by the regulation (… see 22 NYCRR 202.70 [g] [Rule 19-a (b)]), under the circumstances the court abused its discretion in deeming the entire statement admitted. The evidence submitted in support of petitioner’s motion failed to eliminate all “triable issues of fact and the court was not compelled to grant summary judgment solely on the basis of blind adherence to the procedure set forth in Rule 19-a” … . Matter of Crouse Health Sys., Inc. v City of Syracuse, 2015 NY Slip Op 02258, 4th Dept 3-20-15