EASTAUGH, Senior Justice.
The State of Alaska and the Municipality of Anchorage exempt from municipal property taxation $150,000 of the assessed value of the residence of an owner who is a senior citizen or disabled veteran. But the full value of the exemption is potentially unavailable if a person who is not the owner's spouse also occupies the residence. Contending that the exemption program violates their rights to equal protection and equal opportunities, three Anchorage same-sex couples in committed, long-term, intimate relationships sued the State and the Municipality. The superior court ruled for all three couples. The State and Municipality appeal.
As to two of the couples, we affirm. Same-sex couples, who may not marry or have their marriages recognized in Alaska, cannot benefit or become eligible to benefit from the exemption program to the same extent as heterosexual couples, who are married or may marry. The exemption program therefore potentially treats same-sex couples less favorably than it treats opposite-sex couples even though the two classes are similarly situated. The identified governmental interests do not satisfy even minimum scrutiny. The exemption program therefore violates the two couples' equal protection rights as guaranteed by article I, section 1 of the Alaska Constitution.
As to the third couple, we reverse the ruling in their favor because we conclude that the program does not exempt a residence from taxation unless the senior citizen or veteran has some ownership interest in it. If the senior citizen or veteran has no actual ownership interest, the program treats a same-sex couple the same as a heterosexual couple by denying the exemption to both couples, rendering marital status and the ability to marry irrelevant. Because the senior citizen member of the third couple had no ownership interest in the residence, that couple had no viable equal protection claim.
We also vacate and remand the award of attorney's fees.
By statute, specified classes of Alaska municipalities may levy property taxes.
The statute authorizing this exemption has existed since 1972, when the legislature adopted a property tax exemption for senior citizens.
The pertinent parts of the exemption statute partially exempt a home's assessed value from municipal property taxation. The applicable subsection is AS 29.45.030(e). It provides in relevant part:
In sum, the statute exempts $150,000 of the assessed value of a home owned and occupied as the primary residence by a senior citizen (a person 65 or older)
The pertinent implementing regulation — 3 AAC 135.085 — provides in relevant part:
Two aspects of the regulation's subsections are significant here: (1) So long as the eligible applicant and the applicant's spouse occupy the residence, reimbursement is available regardless of which spouse holds title; and (2) if a person other than the eligible applicant and the applicant's spouse occupies the residence, reimbursement is available only with respect to the portion occupied by the eligible applicant and his or her spouse.
The regulation's text ostensibly only addresses the extent of the State's obligation to reimburse a municipality for lost tax revenues. But its title — "Eligibility" — could be read to imply that it addresses exemption eligibility, and the parties have litigated this dispute as though the regulation defines exemption eligibility. Moreover, the Municipality seems to believe that it must interpret eligibility in accordance with the regulation.
As a result of this interpretation, if the assessed value of the residence is less than $300,000 and the ineligible partner occupies half the property, the full value of the exemption will not be granted to the unmarried couple.
The exemption program applies to residences owned and occupied by senior citizens or disabled veterans in the Municipality of Anchorage.
Six plaintiffs who comprised three same-sex couples brought this lawsuit, alleging that the members of each couple "live together in long-term, committed, interdependent, intimate relationships (`domestic partners'), with the intention of remaining in such relationships for life."
The first couple — Julie Schmidt and Gayle Schuh — co-owned their Anchorage home as tenants in common. Each had a 50% ownership interest in the home. In 2010, the year they filed suit, their home's assessed value was $254,200. Schmidt was then 67 years old and Schuh was 62. Because Schmidt was 65 or older, she was eligible to apply for the tax exemption. Because Schuh was under 65, she was not eligible to apply. Schmidt had applied for the exemption in 2008. The application form required Schmidt to list the percentage of the home that she owned and the percentage that she occupied. She indicated that she owned and occupied 50% of the property. An affidavit prepared by State Assessor Steve Van Sant discussing the effect of marriage on the senior citizen exemption for 2010 stated that because Schmidt had only a 50% ownership interest in the home, only 50% of the home's assessed value was exempt. Van Sant calculated that if Schmidt and Schuh had been married, their property tax in 2010 would have been "roughly $359.31 less." In effect, because Schuh and Schmidt were not married, they could not achieve the tax exemption's maximum benefit.
The second couple — Julie Vollick and Susan Bernard — co-owned their Anchorage home as tenants in common from 2004 until 2010. Each had a 50% ownership interest in the home. In 2010 their home's assessed value was $232,600. Vollick had served in the United States Air Force for 20 years and was injured in the line of duty. She qualified as a "disabled veteran" under AS 29.45.030(i)(1), making her eligible for the tax exemption. Bernard did not qualify as a disabled veteran or senior citizen. Vollick applied for the disabled veteran exemption in 2008. Her application indicated that she
The third couple — Fred Traber and Laurence Snider — did not formally co-own their Anchorage home; according to their complaint, the home was "held in Traber's name." The complaint also alleged that "both partners view the home as belonging to both of them." In 2010 the home's assessed value exceeded $150,000. In 2010 Snider was 69 years old, but although he was a senior citizen, the State contended that he could not then apply for the exemption because he did not own the condominium. Traber was then 62 and therefore did not qualify as a senior citizen. The record does not reflect whether Traber or Snider ever applied for the senior citizen exemption.
The couples sued the State of Alaska and the Municipality of Anchorage, alleging that the tax exemption program is unconstitutional. They claimed that the program discriminates against them based on sexual orientation because they are barred from marrying or having their marriages recognized in Alaska.
The couples requested a judgment declaring that the tax exemption program violates the Alaska equal protection clause; they also requested an injunction requiring the State and Municipality to apply the exemption program on terms identical to those that would apply if the couples were in recognized marriages.
The State argued that the superior court should not reach the merits of the couples' equal protection claim because: (1) the Alaska Constitution's Marriage Amendment, article I, section 25, precludes the claim; (2) the couples are not situated similarly with married couples; and (3) the tax exemption program is not facially discriminatory. The Municipality argued that because state law dictates the terms of the exemption, the State was in the best position to address the couples' arguments. The Municipality did not otherwise address the merits of the couples' claims.
Superior Court Judge Frank A. Pfiffner granted summary judgment for all six plaintiffs. Applying minimum scrutiny, the court held that the tax exemption program violated the Alaska Constitution's equal protection clause. The court did not reach the couples' alternative arguments regarding heightened scrutiny. The court declared that the program violated article I, section 1 of the Alaska Constitution "by imposing a spousal limitation that facially discriminates against same-sex domestic partners." It permanently enjoined the State and Municipality from administering the program in a manner that treated same-sex domestic partners differently from married, opposite-sex couples. And it awarded the couples 100% of their attorney's fees. The State and Municipality appeal. The State's appeal primarily focuses on the merits of the summary judgment; the Municipality's appeal exclusively challenges the attorney's fees award.
"We review a grant or denial of summary judgment de novo."
"Whether there are sufficient findings for informed appellate review is a question of law."
When a judgment is reversed in part and affirmed in part, we exercise our independent judgment in deciding whether any part of an attorney's fees award must be vacated and reconsidered on remand.
We must first address the State's argument that the Marriage Amendment altogether forecloses these couples' equal protection claims.
Article I, section 1 of the Alaska Constitution provides in part: "This constitution is dedicated to the principles that ... all persons are equal and entitled to equal rights, opportunities, and protection under the law...."
In 1998 Alaska voters amended the Alaska Constitution by adopting the Marriage Amendment, which became article I, section 25 of the constitution.
Constitutional provisions that potentially conflict must be harmonized if possible.
Before turning to the Marriage Amendment, we briefly address the State's invocation of AS 25.05.013(b), which provides that "[a] same-sex relationship may not be recognized by the state as being entitled to the benefits of marriage."
Even assuming, as the State argues, that the statute demonstrates that married couples
The State implies that the comments of the sponsor of the bill that resulted in AS 25.05.013(b) are germane to the meaning of the Marriage Amendment. We are unconvinced that the history of the 1996 statute has any bearing on the meaning of the 1998 amendment to the constitution, especially considering the brevity and limited scope of the Marriage Amendment's text. Although AS 25.05.013(b) expressly prohibits same-sex couples from being entitled to the benefits of marriage, the legislature did not include a prohibition on benefits in the text of the resolution proposing the Marriage Amendment.
We now return to the effect of the Marriage Amendment here. In ACLU, same-sex partners challenged a public-employee benefits program.
But in contending that the Marriage Amendment precludes the equal protection claims of same-sex couples, the State attempts to distinguish ACLU in two ways. First, it argues that ACLU was limited to employment benefits. Second, it argues that ACLU involved the right, recognized in article I, section 1 of the Alaska Constitution, to obtain the rewards of one's own industry, whereas here "there is no corresponding constitutional guaranty of a right to tax exemptions."
These two arguments fail to explain why ACLU's holding regarding the Marriage Amendment does not dispose of the State's contention that the Marriage Amendment controls here. ACLU involved claims based
We conclude that what we said and held in ACLU regarding the Marriage Amendment controls here:
Similarly, the Marriage Amendment does not explicitly or implicitly prohibit the State from offering the same property tax exemption to an eligible applicant who has a same-sex domestic partner that the State offers to an eligible applicant who has a spouse. Nor does the Marriage Amendment explicitly or implicitly permit the State to deny benefits to same-sex couples who demonstrate that they are similarly situated to married couples who receive those benefits.
The couples' arguments here are like those of the ACLU plaintiffs.
The Marriage Amendment does not bar the couples' equal protection claims here.
A plaintiff alleging an equal protection violation must show either that facially neutral state action has a discriminatory purpose
The words of the tax exemption statute and regulations create a classification between married couples and unmarried couples.
Judge Pfiffner correctly observed that "[i]n Alaska, a marital classification facially discriminates based on an individual's sexual orientation." He reasoned with regard to this case that because the exemption program expressly refers to "widow," "widower," "spouse," "husband," and "wife," it facially discriminates based on sexual orientation. Judge Pfiffner's reasoning tracks our analysis in ACLU, where we explained:
The State argues that the difference in treatment is based not on marital status, but
The State's contentions are problematic for two reasons.
First, as the exemption program pertains to this lawsuit, marital status is the only distinction the exemption statute and regulation draw; they contain no distinction, explicit or implicit, based on differences in property interests. In fact, by extending the exemption to married couples regardless of whether the residence "is held in the name of the husband, wife, or both,"
Second, even if the exemption's full value were conferred only on couples with a type of property interest — tenancy by the entirety — that is exclusively available to married couples, the program would facially discriminate against same-sex couples who could never acquire that type of interest.
We therefore conclude that the tax exemption program facially discriminates between same-sex couples and opposite-sex couples.
Plaintiffs who assert equal protection violations "must demonstrate that the challenged law treats similarly situated persons differently."
The State argues that the classes for comparison should be unmarried co-owners and married co-owners. Judge Pfiffner rejected that argument and compared the plaintiff couples (who are same-sex couples in marriage-like relationships) to married couples.
We decided above that the tax exemption program draws a facial classification between
We must next determine whether same-sex and opposite-sex couples are similarly situated with respect to the benefits at issue. The superior court found that married couples and same-sex domestic partners are similarly situated because they make similar long-term commitments to each other, including commitments to co-own their homes.
The State argues that committed same-sex couples are not similarly situated to married couples because only married couples own property as tenants by the entirety. This argument merely recites one potential aspect of marriage: a married couple's ability to own property as tenants by the entirety. But the State has not explained what it is about tenancy by the entirety that could justify denying same-sex couples equal access to the tax exemption. The only justification the State identifies is based on marital status, a difference that leads back to the constitutional issue. (To the extent the State's argument bears on the importance of governmental interests, we will discuss it when we apply the three-part analysis for equal protection claims in Alaska.)
Moreover, tenancy by the entirety could not be the basis for distinguishing between these classes. First, married couples do not necessarily co-own their residences as tenants by the entirety.
The couples argue that the couples in this case "have cared for and supported each other, built and shared homes together, and combined finances. Their relationships are like those of committed opposite-sex couples in every way except that they cannot marry under Alaska law." In ACLU, we considered similar arguments and noted:
For purposes of analyzing the effects of the exemption program, we hold that committed same-sex domestic partners who would enter into marriages recognized in Alaska if they could are similarly situated to those opposite-sex couples who, by marrying, have entered into domestic partnerships formally recognized in Alaska.
We must next determine whether the challenged program treats these similarly situated classes unequally.
This reasoning applies equally here. As we explained in ACLU, the Marriage Amendment dictates that only heterosexual couples can become "spouses."
Having decided that the tax exemption program is facially discriminatory and that it treats similarly situated people differently, we must apply the three-part sliding-scale approach to equal protection under the Alaska Constitution. Our equal protection clause "protects Alaskans' right to non-discriminatory treatment more robustly than does the federal equal protection clause."
Government action that burdens only economic interests generally receives only minimum scrutiny.
Under minimum scrutiny, the governmental interests advanced by the challenged law need only to be legitimate.
The State argues that the marital classification advances governmental interests "in cost control, administrative efficiency, and promotion of marriage." Although we held in ACLU that these same interests failed to justify the marital classification,
The State's proffered interests are legitimate. But the classification here is not sufficiently related to those interests.
First, we have repeatedly explained that "cost savings alone are not sufficient government objectives under our equal protection analysis."
Second, the State allows married couples to establish eligibility for the exemption merely by making a sworn statement. No other proof of marital status is required. Thus, the State's assertion that sworn statements will not suffice for same-sex couples is unpersuasive. The State lists potential impediments to verifying that same-sex couples are in marriage-like relationships, but it has not explained why the initial application cannot require disclosure of sufficient information to satisfy threshold municipal concerns about a given relationship. The State seems to suppose that no initial disclosure can be sufficient, but we are unwilling to make that assumption. We rejected an equivalent argument
Third, we can assume that providing benefits to spouses promotes marriage among adults who can marry. But "restricting eligibility to persons in a status that same-sex domestic partners can never achieve ... cannot be said to be related to that interest."
The State's additional arguments are unpersuasive. For example, the State argues that same-sex couples will be able to obtain the exemption program's full benefit in some circumstances. This contention is irrelevant, because it is undisputed that the full benefit of the exemption program was unavailable to these two couples, and would likewise be unavailable to any other same-sex domestic couple in similar circumstances.
Because the exemption program's marital classification does not bear a substantial relationship to the interests identified by the State, we conclude that the exemption program fails minimum scrutiny and violates these couples' rights to equal protection.
The State contends that because they were not eligible for the senior citizen exemption, it was error to rule for Fred Traber and Laurence Snider, the third couple. Alaska Statute 29.45.030(e) exempts $150,000 of assessed value of a "property owned and occupied as the primary residence and permanent place of abode by a [senior citizen or disabled veteran]." (Emphasis added.) The State argues that the statute requires that the senior citizen both occupy and own the residence. Because Fred Traber was the "sole owner" but was not over 65 and Laurence Snider was over 65 "but had no ownership interest," the State contends that neither met the statute's eligibility requirements. It also argues that the superior court erred in reading the relevant regulation, 3 AAC 135.085(a), as creating an exception to the ownership requirement.
We must therefore decide whether the senior citizen must have an ownership interest in the residence.
We begin with the words of the statute. They exempt a residence "owned and occupied" by a senior citizen.
In granting relief, the superior court relied on 3 AAC 135.085(a), which states, "[w]hen an eligible person and his or her spouse occupy the same permanent place of abode... the reimbursement applies, regardless of whether the property is held in the name of the husband, wife, or both." (Emphasis added.) The superior court reasoned that "[t]he regulation language clearly extends the Tax Exemption to eligible applicants who share a home with their spouse, but who do not own the home."
The State asserts that the regulation's reference to an "eligible person" must incorporate the statute's eligibility requirements, including the requirement of ownership.
Traber and Snider respond that if they could marry, Snider would receive the full exemption even though the property was
The implementing regulation relied on by the superior court and by the couples, 3 AAC 135.085(a), specifies when the State will reimburse municipalities for the tax revenues lost as a result of the statutory exemption. It does not explicitly excuse or ameliorate any exemption requirements set by the enabling statute.
We do not read the regulation as making it irrelevant that a senior citizen has no ownership interest at all. The regulation does make it irrelevant that the property "is held in the name of the husband, wife, or both."
Even assuming the expansive reading of the regulation proposed by the couples and adopted by the superior court were permissible, the word "eligible" in 3 AAC 135.085(a) is, at best for the couples, ambiguous. The couples may assume that anyone benefitted by the exemption program, i.e., either a senior citizen or a disabled veteran who both owns and occupies the residence, or the spouse who owns the residence occupied by the senior citizen or disabled veteran, is "eligible." But it would be odd to rely on an ambiguous regulation to invert the meaning of an unambiguous statute. And most importantly, "eligible" as it is used in the controlling subsection of the statute cannot be read to suggest that a senior citizen or disabled veteran applicant does not need to have some ownership interest in the residence.
"Whether the regulation is consistent with the statute involves statutory interpretation, which is a question of law, to which we apply our independent judgment."
Reading the statute and the regulation together,
The superior court gave three additional reasons for rejecting the State's contention that the regulation did not extend the statutory exemption to this residence. It first noted that the Municipality had granted a full exemption to another married couple although the "non-eligible spouse solely owned" their shared home. That exemption was irrelevant because the statute's language controls. If the exemption was granted to that couple in error, its grant neither determines a valid reading of the statute nor sets a standard that must be followed for a similarly situated couple.
The superior court also thought it significant that Alaska Association of Assessing Officers Standard 1.(b) states in part that the exemption applies "to the entire value of the property irrespective of that percentage of ownership of the applicant." But as the State points out, the text of the standard presupposes that an "eligible applicant" and his or her spouse own the residence; the text therefore incorporates the same notions of eligibility we discussed above. And the State correctly reads this standard to implicitly tie eligibility to ownership because the standard expressly addresses the situation "when partial property ownership exists." The standard
Finally, the superior court thought it particularly important that the "legislature intended the exemption to apply" even in those few situations when the applicant spouse does not own or partially own the residence. It reasoned that if the two men were married, the senior citizen "would be able to claim the exemption." It concluded that there was a viable equal protection claim.
We assume for discussion's sake that if a married couple in Traber and Snider's identical situation were eligible to receive the exemption, equal protection would not permit denying the exemption to Traber and Snider. But as we have seen, AS 29.45.030(e) would not exempt the residence of a married couple if only one member was a senior citizen or disabled veteran but that member had no ownership interest whatsoever. Because Traber and Snider were treated no differently from that hypothetical married couple, there was no equal protection violation if Snider in fact had no ownership interest in the property.
The superior court granted complete summary judgment to Traber and Snider and denied the governments' cross-motion. It did not determine whether Snider had any ownership interest in the residence, but it confirmed that the parties had agreed that there were no genuine issues of material fact. Traber and Snider litigated their claims without preserving any possible factual dispute about whether Snider had any actual ownership interest that would satisfy AS 29.45.030(e).
We have concluded as a matter of law that the senior citizen or disabled veteran must both occupy and have an ownership interest in the residence. There is no genuine factual dispute about whether Snider is an owner of the residence. We consequently reverse that portion of the judgment in favor of Traber and Snider. As to their claims, we remand for entry of judgment for the State and Municipality.
The State and Municipality argue that it was error to grant the couples' motion for an award of 100% of their attorney's fees, $135,475.50. The State and Municipality contend that it was an abuse of discretion not to make the findings needed to address their arguments opposing the fees motion.
The couples' motion sought $135,475.50 for 458.8 billed hours of services. The parties filed memoranda discussing whether the couples qualified as constitutional claimants and whether equitable factors applied. The State and Municipality argued that the requested fees were excessive, reflected duplicative services, and were much higher than those awarded in ACLU, the case the couples claimed controlled. The Municipality also argued that the couples did not establish that there was insufficient economic incentive to bring the litigation, and that other factors, including the relative simplicity of the case, justified a reduction in the award. On appeal, the State and Municipality argue that the court made no findings resolving their objections.
We first observe that our reversal of the portion of the judgment entered in favor of Traber and Snider requires reconsideration of the fee award, aside from the reasons the State and Municipality advance. Because Traber and Snider are no longer prevailing parties, fees may not be awarded to
Because the same disputes may recur on remand, we now turn to the issues raised by the State and Municipality.
The fees order awarding the couples the full amount requested, $135,475.50, briefly stated that the couples had "properly" moved for fees under Alaska Civil Rule 82 and AS 09.60.010 and that the requested fees were reasonable in terms of hours spent and rates billed. It did not explain how Rule 82 or AS 09.60.010 applied, did not state whether the couples were prevailing constitutional claimants for purposes of AS 09.60.010, did not discuss whether the couples had sufficient financial incentive to sue absent their constitutional claims, and did not discuss whether Rule 82(b)(3) factors or other factors were relevant. It did not address any of the governments' arguments, including their arguments that the billings reflected excessive and duplicative services.
The couples argue that as the prevailing parties, they can recover fees under Rule 82 and AS 09.60.010(c)(1), and that the superior court adequately explained its decision by referring to Rule 82 and AS 09.60.010. They rely on Krone v. State, Department of Health & Social Services for the proposition that courts should generally award full reasonable attorney's fees to couples who prevail on their constitutional claims.
Krone addressed the interplay of Rule 82 and AS 09.60.010.
An absence of explicit findings is not necessarily fatal. In Law Project for Psychiatric Rights, Inc. v. State, we stated, "[b]ecause the superior court's attorney's fees award accords with the presumptive percentages in Rule 82(b)(2) ... the court need not offer an explanation of its award."
But here it is not self-evident from the order or the record how or whether the superior court resolved the governments' contentions. The order did not address their contentions, supported by citations to the billing records, that the hours billed and services provided by seven experienced attorneys billing at substantial rates were excessive and duplicative. The award did not accord with the presumptive percentages set out in Rule 82(b)(2). We cannot tell whether the award took into account any Rule 82(b)(3) factors or other equitable factors.
And although we can safely assume that the court concluded that the couples had prevailed on constitutional claims, the court made no finding about whether the couples had sufficient economic incentive to sue, one of the statutory factors pertinent to awarding full fees.
Because Traber and Snider are no longer prevailing parties, we vacate the entire fees award and remand for further proceedings.
For these reasons, we AFFIRM the superior court's declaration that "in combination," AS 29.45.030(e) and 3 AAC 135.085(a) and (c) violate Alaska's equal protection clause "by imposing a spousal limitation that facially discriminates against same-sex domestic partners." We likewise AFFIRM the declaration of prevailing party status as to Schmidt, Schuh, Vollick, and Bernard. As to Snider and Traber, we REVERSE the ruling that the exemption applied to them and that they had "stated a viable equal protection claim." We also REVERSE the order for entry of final judgment to the extent it declares Snider and Traber to be prevailing parties, and REMAND for entry of judgment for the State of Alaska and Municipality of Anchorage on the claims of Traber and Snider.
We VACATE and REMAND the attorney's fee award for the reasons discussed in Part IV.G.
CARPENETI, Justice, not participating.
WINFREE, Justice, concurring.
WINFREE, Justice, concurring.
I agree with the court's analysis and decision as it addresses the issues litigated in the superior court and presented to us in this appeal. Alaska Civil Liberties Union v. State
I write separately only to question whether the same result might have been achieved through a pure statutory interpretation analysis, even though it was not argued in the superior court or on appeal.
As we hold today, AS 29.45.030(e) requires that a person claiming a senior citizen or disabled veteran property tax exemption must have an ownership interest in the assessed residential real property. The tax exemption applies to the "real property owned and occupied as the primary residence and permanent place of abode" by an eligible person.
As noted in our comparison of a tenancy by the entirety and a tenancy in common,
The factual anomaly here is that two of the unmarried couples in this case owned their primary residence as tenants in common, but the eligible applicant of each couple expressly stated in her application that she owned and occupied 50% of the property. It seems to me inconsistent that these couples could state they were in longterm, committed, marriage-like relationships while at the same time somehow splitting the occupancy of their residences into separate spheres. I suspect the statements about occupation were based on a misunderstanding of the law of common tenancy and undivided possession, and simply mirrored their (undivided) ownership interests.
From the record before us, it seems we are faced with the issues addressed in our decision because the parties all assume the senior citizen and disabled veteran tax exemption of AS 29.45.030(e) is limited to the eligible applicant's percentage ownership interest of the residence, except, due to 3 AAC 135.085(a), in the case of a residence owned and occupied by a married couple. And if that is true, then today's decision correctly addresses it. If, on the other hand, the statutory exemption is allowable in full with any amount of ownership and full occupation, then today's decision is unnecessary.
We use "same-sex couple" or "same-sex domestic couple" to mean two people of the same biological sex who are in a long-term, committed, intimate domestic partnership, and who would marry if they could. The three couples in this case met this definition. See Alaska Civil Liberties Union v. State, 122 P.3d 781, 784 n. 5 (Alaska 2005); see also AS 39.50.200(a)(4) ("`[D]omestic partner' means a person who is cohabiting with another person in a relationship that is like a marriage but that is not a legal marriage....").
In contrast, unmarried persons (including domestic partners) in Alaska who acquire real property together hold it as tenants in common. By law, they cannot establish a tenancy by the entirety. AS 34.15.130 (abolishing joint tenancies except interests in personalty and tenancy by the entirety); see also AS 34.15.110(a). Tenancy in common is "[a] tenancy by two or more persons, in equal or unequal undivided shares, each person having an equal right to possess the whole property but no right of survivorship." BLACK'S LAW DICTIONARY 1604 (9th ed.2009); see Voss v. Brooks, 907 P.2d 465, 468 n. 2 (Alaska 1995) (noting that unmarried couples could not hold property as tenants by the entirety). "Tenants in common are presumed to take equal undivided interests, but this presumption is rebuttable." Voss, 907 P.2d at 469 (citing D.M. v. D.A., 885 P.2d 94 (Alaska 1994)).
AS 29.45.030(e), in language parallel to the text of AS 29.45.040(a) quoted above, extends the senior citizen/disabled veteran exemption to an owner/occupant who is at least 60 years old and is "the widow or widower of a person who qualified for" the senior citizen or disabled veteran exemption. (Emphasis added.) It is probable the legislature intended "qualified" to mean the same thing as "eligible."
The complaint instead alleged that the home "is held in Traber's name, but the couple has made it their home together and both partners view the home as belonging to both of them." Their appellate brief makes the same assertion. The parties' cross-motions for summary judgment raised no factual dispute about whether Snider in fact had any ownership interest in the residence. In short, Snider and Traber have not asserted that Snider had any legally cognizable ownership interest in the residence or that an alternative ground — that Snider in fact has some qualifying ownership interest — exists for affirming the court's judgment in their favor.