41 A.2d 89 | Conn. | 1945
Lead Opinion
This is an appeal from a determination by the commissioner of labor and factory inspection acting as administrator under the Unemployment Compensation Act that the plaintiff is required to make contributions under the act for the years 1941-1943. The trial court sustained the administrator and the plaintiff has appealed to this court. The plaintiff's contention is that it is exempt from making contributions because it is "a corporation . . . organized and operated exclusively for . . . educational purposes . . . no part of the net earnings of which inures to the benefit of any private shareholder or individual." General Statutes, Cum. Sup. 1939, 1335e.
The plaintiff is a corporation without capital stock, organized under a special law passed in 1929. 20 Spec. Laws 1138. The sole purpose stated in its charter is to "conduct an institution for the higher education of men and women and more particularly in hygiene and physical education and for the training of teachers of physical education." It is managed by a board of trustees which, originally appointed by the incorporators, has since been self-perpetuating. It has at times operated at a loss and at other times at a profit, and while the profit has in some measure offset the *505 loss, the profit and loss account has at all times shown a deficit. During the period for which contributions are claimed it operated at a loss. The trustees have never received any compensation, no part of the net earnings has ever been distributed to private individuals, and no person has received anything of value from the corporation except reasonable compensation for services rendered. There is, however, nothing in the charter to prevent the corporation from distributing earnings, if there are any, to its members. In 1937 the plaintiff claimed to be exempt from the unemployment compensation tax, but the administrator denied the claim on the ground that the charter did not contain any provision forbidding the distribution of earnings to its members. The plaintiff thereafter paid contributions. It secured the passage by the legislature of an amendment to its charter which would obviate the grounds of the administrator's decision. 23 Spec. Laws 1011. It neglected, however, within six months thereafter to accept the amendment at a meeting properly warned and held for that purpose and did not file a copy of a vote of acceptance in the office of the secretary of the state, as required by 3370 of the General Statutes. Upon being notified of the passage of the amendment, the administrator ruled that the plaintiff was exempt from the provisions of the act after June 30, 1941; but, upon learning of its failure to comply with 3370, he demanded contributions relating back to that date.
Previous to an amendment made in 1925 to our statutes imposing property taxes, they had exempted "buildings or portions of buildings exclusively occupied as colleges, academies, churches, public school houses or infirmaries, with the land appurtenant to such infirmaries." General Statutes, Rev. 1918, 1160. In applying this provision we held that an *506
educational institution, to come within the exemption, must be "wholly sequestered from private use" and that it was not so sequestered if it were possible under its charter that individuals might gain a private benefit from its operation beyond reasonable compensation for services rendered. Brunswick School v. Greenwich,
The federal Social Security Act, for the purposes of establishing unemployment compensation, imposed a tax upon employers based upon the amount of wages paid, and it provided that, if any state enacted a law *507
providing for such compensation which would meet certain tests laid down in the federal act and which was approved by the federal social security board, any employer could deduct from the federal tax 90 per cent of the amount paid under the state law. 49 Stat. at Large, p. 639, Title 9,
The words in the statute under which the plaintiff claims to be exempt are taken literally from the federal Social Security Act; in that act they occur twice *508
in provisions relating to unemployment compensation and also with reference to old age benefits. 49 Stat. at Large, p. 639 811, p. 643 907, p. 625 210,
An examination of the decisions in the federal courts points clearly to the conclusion that the test of exemption is found in the actual purposes which an organization serves and for which its funds are used rather than in the possibility that, as organized, it might pursue objects or use its funds for purposes beyond the scope of the exemption. Thus in Kansas City Hay Dealers' Assn. v. Crooks,
If we turn to decisions under the Social Security Act, we find that they point to a similar conclusion. Thus in Southeastern Fair Assn. v. United States,
There can be no question that the plaintiff was organized exclusively for an educational purpose. No shareholder or individual has ever received any benefit from its operations except reasonable compensation for services rendered. There is no finding that there is or ever has been an intent that any pecuniary profit should accrue to any individual, and in fact the presence of such an intent is thoroughly disproved by efforts of the plaintiff to amend its charter so that this could never happen. If we follow the decisions we have cited, we are satisfied that the mere fact *511 that under its charter its members might possibly secure some benefit at least through distribution of its property on its dissolution does not take it out of the exemption under our Unemployment Compensation Act. We find no sufficient warrant for reading into the provisions of this act the further requirement that, to secure an exemption, an organization must be so constituted that no member or other individual can legally derive a benefit from it beyond reasonable compensation for services rendered.
There is error, the judgment is set aside and the case is remanded with direction to enter judgment for the plaintiff.
In this opinion BROWN and ELLS, Js., concurred.
Dissenting Opinion
The majority opinion lays stress on the proposition that the mere fact that under the plaintiff's charter its members might possibly secure some benefit through distribution of its property is not sufficient to take it out of the exemption clause in the act. While this was one of the grounds upon which the trial court based its decision, it was not the main ground. The main ground was that under the special act creating it the plaintiff's earnings inured to the benefit of its members as a matter of law, there being no provision that these should be otherwise disposed of. This conclusion seems inescapable and to leave no room for the determination of the existence of an intent otherwise to dispose of possible net earnings from the conduct of the plaintiff corporation. The plaintiff apparently realized this and attempted to cure it by amendment to the act creating it. It secured such an amendment but failed to accept it in accordance with the provisions of General Statutes, 3370. Its claim that acceptance *512 was not essential to the amendment's validity under General Statutes, 3371, is not tenable. The latter section was not applicable in the absence of a provision in the amendment itself expressly stating that consent was not necessary.
It is a matter of common knowledge that there are numerous private institutions organized for educational purposes but conducted for profit. Under the ruling in the majority opinion, no assessment for unemployment contribution may be made against these unless it is found as a matter of fact that they have acquired a net income and have distributed this to individuals. The difficulties of the defendant administrator in applying such a rule are obvious. His assessments are based upon wages, not on income, are payable quarterly and are required to be made within twenty-eight days after the end of the period of employment in question. Cum. Sup. 1939, 1336e. This emphasizes the importance of the provision in 1335e that a corporation to be exempt must be organized exclusively as well as operated exclusively for educational purposes.
An examination of the federal authorities leads to no contrary conclusion. In Trinidad v. Sagrada Orden,
If the federal rule be, as the opinion states, that the test of exemption is found in the actual purposes which an organization serves and for which its funds are used, the instant case does not come within the factual situation contemplated in the cases cited in its support. There the profits had accrued and were used for purposes other than private enrichment. Here there have been no net earnings and hence no appropriation of them to exclusively educational purposes from which intent may be determined.
I think there was no error.
In this opinion JENNINGS, J., concurred.