State of New York
Supreme Court, Appellate Division
Third Judicial Department
Decided and Entered: June 2, 2016 521831
________________________________
In the Matter of PG ERIE
PROPERTIES, LLC,
Appellant,
v
MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMIC
DEVELOPMENT, Also Known as
EMPIRE STATE DEVELOPMENT,
et al.,
Respondents.
________________________________
Calendar Date: April 19, 2016
Before: Peters, P.J., Garry, Rose, Clark and Aarons, JJ.
__________
Centolella Lynn D'Elia & Temes LLC, Syracuse (Michael T.
Stanczyk of counsel), for appellant.
Eric T. Schneiderman, Attorney General, Albany (Owen W.
Demuth of counsel), for respondents.
__________
Garry, J.
Appeal from a judgment of the Supreme Court (Collins, J.),
entered October 6, 2014, which, among other things, partially
dismissed petitioner's application, in a combined proceeding
pursuant to CPLR article 78 and action for declaratory judgment,
to review a determination of respondent Empire Zone Designation
Board revoking petitioner's certification as an empire zone
business enterprise.
In 1997, petitioner was certified as a participant in the
Economic Development Zones Program, which later became the Empire
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Zones Program (see General Municipal Law art 18-B). Statutory
amendments in 2009, as relevant here, directed respondent
Commissioner of Economic Development to conduct a review of
participating businesses and revoke the certifications of any
entities that failed a 1:1 benefit-cost test or that were found
to be "shirt-changers" – that is, businesses that had transferred
employees or real property between related entities to produce
the appearance that new jobs or investments had been created (see
General Municipal Law § 959 [a] [v] [5]; [w]; Matter of Lyell Mt.
Read Bus. Ctr. LLC v Empire Zone Designation Bd., 129 AD3d 137,
141 [2015]). In June 2009, respondent Department of Economic
Development notified petitioner that the Commissioner was
revoking its certification for failing both the 1:1 benefit-cost
test and the shirt-changer test. Petitioner appealed to
respondent Empire Zone Designation Board (hereinafter the Board),
and the Board upheld the decertification. Petitioner commenced
this combined declaratory judgment action and CPLR article 78
proceeding, which was marked off the calendar pending a de novo
review by the Board. Thereafter, the Board reversed the
Commissioner's determination as to the 1:1 benefit-cost test, but
upheld petitioner's decertification based upon the shirt-changer
test, finding that petitioner had not established the existence
of extraordinary circumstances warranting continued certification
(see General Municipal Law § 959 [w]; 5 NYCRR 14.2 [b]). Supreme
Court found that petitioner was entitled to a declaration that
the revocation of petitioner's certification could not be made
retroactive to 2008, and otherwise dismissed the combined
petition/complaint. Petitioner appeals.
In deciding whether a business should be decertified for
failing the shirt-changer test, the Commissioner was directed to
determine whether the entity had "caused individuals to transfer
from existing employment with another business enterprise with
similar ownership . . . to similar employment with the certified
business enterprise or if the enterprise acquired, purchased,
leased, or had transferred to it real property previously owned
by an entity with similar ownership, regardless of form of
incorporation or organization" (General Municipal Law § 959 [a]
[v] [5]; see General Municipal Law § 959 [w]). Petitioner
contends that it never engaged in such transfers of real property
or employment, that the administrative record lacks any evidence
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to the contrary, and, thus, that there is no factual basis for
the determination that this provision was violated. We agree,
and therefore find that the Board's denial of petitioner's appeal
from the revocation of its certificate was "arbitrary and
capricious and without a rational basis" (Matter of WL, LLC v
Department of Economic Dev., 97 AD3d 24, 29 [2012], affd sub nom.
James Sq. Assoc. LP v Mullen, 21 NY3d 233 [2013]).
In its appeal to the Board, petitioner argued that the
Commissioner improperly based its determination that petitioner
had violated the shirt-changer provision on its response to a
particular question on a business annual report (hereinafter BAR)
that petitioner had submitted in 2006.1 The question required
petitioner to state whether it was subject to a Tax Law provision
that precluded certain businesses from receiving tax benefits if
they could not establish that they were formed for a valid
business purpose and were not "formed solely to gain empire zone
benefits" (Tax Law § 14 [j] [4] [B]). Petitioner gave an
affirmative response to this question and was thus required to
explain the circumstances of its formation. Petitioner's
explanatory statement reads in full as follows: "This entity was
formed for valid business purposes related to acquisition and
leasing of real property from an unrelated party. The form of
the new business entity was chosen on consideration of financing
requirements and legal issues." Petitioner contends – and we
agree – that this response failed to provide a rational factual
1
Contrary to petitioner's argument, the Commissioner's
decertification letter was not required to set out the specific
factual basis for its determination. The letter provided
adequate notice by stating the statutory basis for the revocation
and explaining petitioner's right to appeal to the Board (see
General Municipal Law § 959 [w]; Matter of Hague Corp. v Empire
Zone Designation Bd., 96 AD3d 1144, 1147 [2012], affd sub nom.
James Sq. Assoc. LP v Mullen, 21 NY3d 233 [2013]). Petitioner
asserted in its appeal to the Board that it was "well-publicized"
that the Commissioner had identified petitioner and numerous
other businesses for decertification under the shirt-changer test
based upon their affirmative responses to the question on the
2006 BAR.
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basis for the Commissioner's subsequent revocation of its
certification as a shirt-changer.
Tax Law § 14 (j) (4) (B) was a 2005 legislative effort to
address shirt-changing as it was then defined, applying to
businesses that were certified before August 1, 2002, "ha[d] a
base period of zero years or zero employment for its base period"
and were similar in ownership and operation to another tax paying
business entity.2 This legislation focused on the purpose of an
entity's formation and sought to identify businesses that had
been formed solely to obtain benefits rather than for valid
business reasons. The 2009 shirt-changer legislation was not
concerned with the purpose of an entity's formation but, instead,
examined its actions – specifically, whether a business had
qualified for benefits by using transfers of assets or employees
between related entities to create the impression that new jobs
or investments had been generated (see General Municipal Law §
959 [a] [v] [5]; [w]). These were new statutory criteria that
did not exist in 2006. As such, although an affirmative response
to the question on the 2006 BAR about the applicability of the
2005 Tax Law provision indicated that the business in question
was similar in ownership and operation to another entity so that
transfers of assets or employees might have occurred, it was not
sufficient, without more, to provide a rational basis for an
inference that such transfers had actually taken place (see
Matter of Dermody, Burke & Brown, CPAs, LLC v Department of
Economic Dev., ___ AD3d ___ [decided herewith]).
Nothing in the statement that petitioner attached to its
2006 BAR indicates that any transfers of employment or property
between similar entities occurred. The statement makes no
reference of any kind to transfers of employment, and its sole
reference to asset transfers concerns the "acquisition and
leasing of real property from an unrelated party" (emphasis
2
Separate legislation excluded businesses that were
substantially similar in operation and ownership to existing or
previously existing entities from obtaining certification after
August 1, 2002 (see L 2002, ch 85, pt CC § 10, adding Tax Law
§ 14 [j]).
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added). As such, nothing in petitioner's 2006 BAR provides a
factual basis for the Commissioner's determination that
petitioner was a shirt-changer within the meaning of the 2009
legislation (compare id.; Matter of Lyell Mt. Read Bus. Ctr. LLC
v Empire Zone Designation Bd., 129 AD3d at 145-146). Upon this
appeal, respondents concede that the Commissioner's determination
in petitioner's case was premised upon the 2006 BAR, and they
make no argument that anything else in the administrative record
supports the revocation of its certificate.
In its appeal to the Board, petitioner relied in part upon
an affidavit from Peter Muserlian, one of its members, setting
forth facts about petitioner's business operations, investments
and assets. With regard to real property transfers, Muserlian
asserted that petitioner was formed in 1996 to acquire a building
in the City of Syracuse, Onondaga County that had formerly been a
furniture warehouse, had been vacant for a long period of time
and was in "decrepit condition." Muserlian stated that
petitioner acquired the building in a tax foreclosure proceeding
and further averred that petitioner did not acquire, purchase,
lease or transfer to itself real property previously owned by a
company with similar ownership, and did not cause individuals to
transfer from existing employment with another business with
similar ownership to employment with petitioner.
In its decision rejecting petitioner's appeal, the Board
acknowledged these factual assertions as well as petitioner's
contention that its response on the 2006 BAR did not reveal a
violation of the 2009 shirt-changer provision. The Board further
acknowledged that it had found extraordinary circumstances
justifying the continued certification of certain other
enterprises based upon proof that they had not transferred assets
or employees from a related entity. The Board nevertheless
denied petitioner's appeal, finding that petitioner had failed to
produce "specific factual information and supporting
documentation" demonstrating the existence of the required
extraordinary circumstances and had not presented "underlying
facts that would allow the Board to conclude that [petitioner's]
employees and properties were not transferred from related
entities." In the absence of any record evidence revealing that
petitioner had ever engaged in prohibited transfers of assets or
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employment, this determination was irrational.
As respondents contend, the sole basis upon which the Board
could reverse a determination by the Commissioner that a
participant should be decertified under the shirt-changer
provision was a unanimous finding that "extraordinary
circumstances [had] occurred which would justify the continued
certification of the business enterprise" (General Municipal Law
§ 959 [w]), and it was petitioner's burden to establish the
existence of such extraordinary circumstances by submitting
"specific factual information (along with documentation
establishing that information) and all legal arguments" (5 NYCRR
14.2 [b]). We reject respondents' contention that Muserlian's
affidavit was inadequate to satisfy this burden and that
petitioner should also have submitted a deed or other
documentation substantiating the affidavit's description of the
acquisition of its real property. Muserlian's sworn testimony
that the building was acquired in a tax foreclosure proceeding –
and, thus, presumably from a municipality – revealed that the
property was not transferred from a similar private business
entity; it is unclear what further relevant information the tax
deed may possibly have conveyed. The Board did not state that it
had rejected the credibility of Muserlian's uncontradicted
testimony, nor did it provide any reason for doing so, and this
Court may not "affirm the underlying determination upon a ground
not invoked by the Board in the first instance" (Matter of Office
Bldg. Assoc., LLC v Empire Zone Designation Bd., 95 AD3d 1402,
1404-1405 [2012]). In view of the complete absence of any
evidence controverting Muserlian's account or otherwise
indicating that a prohibited real property transfer had occurred,
it was irrational for the Board to require further proof on this
issue.
Likewise, while Muserlian's terse statement that no
prohibited employment transfers had occurred might not have
sufficed under 5 NYCRR 14.2 (b) if there had been some other
contradictory proof in the record, it was adequate where, as
here, there was no evidence whatsoever that petitioner had ever
engaged in a prohibited employment transfer (compare Matter of
Dermody, Burke & Brown, CPAs, LLC v Department of Economic Dev.,
___ AD3d at ___). As such, the Board should have found
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extraordinary circumstances warranting the issuance of a
retention certificate pursuant to General Municipal Law § 959 (w)
(see Matter of Lyell Mt. Read Bus. Ctr. LLC v Empire Zone
Designation Bd., 129 AD3d at 149). Petitioner's remaining
arguments are rendered academic by this determination.
Peters, P.J., Rose, Clark and Aarons, JJ., concur.
ORDERED that the judgment is modified, on the law, without
costs, by reversing so much thereof as dismissed that part of the
petition/complaint seeking to annul the revocation of
petitioner's certification as an empire zone business enterprise;
petition granted to that extent and determination annulled; and,
as so modified, affirmed.
ENTER:
Robert D. Mayberger
Clerk of the Court