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May 5, 1998

Mr. Dennis E. Kenealy
Corporation Counsel
Ozaukee County
Post Office Box 994
Port Washington, WI 53074-0994

Dear Mr. Kenealy:

  You ask, in effect, how funds received from a county sales and use tax imposed under section 77.70, Stats., may be budgeted by the county board.

  In my opinion, such funds may be budgeted to reduce the amount of the overall countywide property tax levy or to defray the cost of any item which can be funded by a countywide property tax.

  Section 77.70 provides in part:

    Any county desiring to impose county sales and use taxes under this subchapter may do so by the adoption of an ordinance, stating its purpose and referring to this subchapter. The county sales and use taxes may be imposed only for the purpose of directly reducing the property tax levy and only in their entirety as provided in this subchapter.

  Prior to 1985, counties had the authority to impose sales and use taxes, but the Wisconsin Department of Revenue was required to distribute all of the net proceeds of such taxes to towns, cities and villages within the county imposing the tax. See sec. 77.70, Stats. (1983) and sec. 77.76(4), Stats. (1983). In 1971, the Attorney General opined that a county board could not require by ordinance that the net proceeds of a county sales and use tax be used solely to reduce property taxes levied by the various taxing jurisdictions but must instead be distributed to towns, cities and villages with no conditions attached. See 60 Op. Att'y Gen. 387 (1971). Prior to 1985 few, if any, counties imposed a sales and use tax, presumably because none of the proceeds of the tax could be used by county government and because counties could not control how the net proceeds of such taxes would be used by other local units of government within the county.

  In 1985, the Legislature amended the statute to allow county governments to retain the net proceeds of the sales and use tax, if those proceeds are used "only for the purpose of directly reducing the property tax levy." See sec. 77.70, Stats. (1985), as amended by 1985 Wisconsin Act 41. Although many counties have enacted sales and use taxes since 1985, I am aware of no litigation concerning the meaning of the quoted restriction on the use of county sales and use tax revenues since the passage of 1985 Wisconsin Act 41. It is likely that there has been no litigation because the property tax is almost the only source available to counties to raise revenues of their own accord.

  Some counties illustrate property tax reductions by showing the receipt of sales and use tax revenues on individual property tax bills. Counties, however, lack statutory authority to implement a direct system of tax credits to individual property owners through distribution of property tax bills, the contents of which are specified by the Department of Revenue.

  The countywide property tax levy is usually shown as a single line revenue source in the budget. The net proceeds of the sales and use tax are also a revenue item. The countywide property tax levy is clearly reduced to the extent that the net proceeds of the sales and use tax are shown as a budget item which is subtracted directly from the total property tax before determining the net property tax that must be levied. That budgeting method directly reduces the amount of countywide property tax which must be paid by each taxpayer.

  Some counties have also budgeted the net proceeds of the sales and use tax as a revenue source used to offset the cost of individual items contained in the county budget. The same amount of countywide property tax reduction occurs whether the county board chooses to budget revenues from net proceeds of the sales and use tax as a reduction in the overall countywide property tax levy or as an offset against a portion of the costs of specific items which can be funded by the countywide property tax. With respect to the funding of specific items, I have considered the possibility that the statute could be construed to require that the net proceeds of the sales and use tax be used only to defray the cost of existing projects, as opposed to new items. A statute, however, should be construed so as to avoid unreasonable and absurd results. Estate of Evans, 28 Wis. 2d 97, 101, 135 N.W.2d 832 (1965). It would be unreasonable to construe the statutory restriction so that counties which had already started certain projects could use sales and use tax revenues to complete them while other counties contemplating the initiation of similar projects could not use sales and use tax revenues to fund them at all. Since there is no such county-by-county limiting language in the statute, it is my opinion that the extent of the authority to use sales and use tax revenues in connection with individual budget items does not vary from county to county. Counties may therefore also budget the net proceeds of the sales and use tax as an offset against the cost of any individual budgetary item which can be funded by the countywide property tax.


  I recognize that, if possible, meaning should be ascribed to the word "directly" in section 77.70. Ordinarily, statutory language should not be rendered superfluous. State ex rel. Taylor v. Linse, 161 Wis. 2d 719, 723, 469 N.W.2d 201 (Ct. App. 1991). It is a basic principle of statutory construction that terms are ordinarily construed by our courts according to their ordinary and accepted meaning, by resort to a recognized dictionary, if necessary. State v. McCoy, 143 Wis. 2d 274, 287, 421 N.W.2d 107 (1988). Insofar as is relevant to your inquiry, Webster's Third New International Dictionary 641 (1986) defines the term "directly" as "without any intermediate step." The term "directly" has meaning in those instances where budgetary items cannot be funded through a countywide property tax. For example, under section 43.64(2), property taxpayers in certain taxation districts are exempt from any property tax levy for funding public library service. Similarly, under section 251.08, property taxpayers in certain taxation districts are exempt from any property tax levy for funding county health departments. Sales and use tax revenues may not be budgeted as a revenue item used to offset the cost of any specific budget item which cannot be funded through a countywide property tax. Although any revenue source frees up other funds to be used for other budgetary purposes, the budgeting of sales and use tax proceeds to defray the cost of items which cannot be funded by a countywide property tax constitutes indirect rather than direct property tax relief.

  I, therefore, conclude that funds received from a county sales and use tax under section 77.70 may be budgeted by the county board to reduce the amount of the countywide property tax levy or to defray the cost of any budget item which can be funded by a countywide property tax.

            Sincerely,



            James E. Doyle
            Attorney General


JED:FTC:cla

CAPTION:

  Funds received from a county sales and use tax under section 77.70, Stats., may be budgeted by the county board to reduce the amount of the countywide property tax levy or to defray the cost of any item which can be funded by a countywide property tax.

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