44 A.2d 102 | N.J. | 1945
The point in issue here is whether three parcels of land comprising eighty-seven acres (designated as the "Memorial Park," "King Solomon" and "Woodland" parcels), acquired by the West Ridgelawn Cemetery in 1907, and a fourth tract of twenty acres (called the "Lockwood" parcel), purchased by it on July 14th, 1939, are exempt from taxation for the year 1940 under R.S.
54:4-3.9 and 8:2-27, as lands actually used for cemetery purposes. The State Board of Tax Appeals ruled in favor of the claimed exemption, on appeals from judgments of the Passaic County Board of Taxation sustaining assessments for taxation for the stated year. Sub nom. West Ridgelawn Cemetery v. Clifton,20 N.J. Mis. R. 399; 26 Atl. Rep. (2d) 262. The rationale of the decision is that whether the lands be considered as owned *380
by the West Ridgelawn Cemetery, the repository of the legal title, or by the Cresthaven Cemetery Association, incorporated under the Rural Cemetery Act (R.S. 8:1-1, et seq.), the holder of the equitable title, they are exempt from taxation for the year in question under the cited statutes. Following the allowance of the writ of certiorari herein, depositions were taken by the appellant municipality under R.S. 2:81-8, in an endeavor to show, as stated in the opinion of the Supreme Court, that while the legal title to the lands was vested in the West Ridgelawn Cemetery, the Cresthaven Cemetery Association, Inc., "a business corporation, and, admittedly, not a cemetery association within the purview of the applicable statutes, was, in fact, the owner and that the rural cemetery association was merely holding an equitable interest for the benefit of the business corporation;" but the conclusion of the court simply was, and this is the basis of the affirmance, that the municipality "has not established that the lands * * * were not, on the assessing date, owned by an appropriate cemetery association, and that they were not laid out and dedicated for cemetery uses, and that they were not either actually used for burials, or were not being laid out and prepared for such use."
These findings do not reach the crucial issue. The Memorial Park tract had been held taxable for the year 1938 on the ground that it was owned and possessed by the Cresthaven Cemetery Association, Inc., a business corporation organized under theGeneral Corporation Act (R.S. 14:1-1, et seq.), and was devoted to cemetery uses for profit (West Ridgelawn Cemetery v.State Board of Tax Appeals,
The Supreme Court was under a duty to "determine disputed questions of fact as well as of law." R.S. 2:81-8. This of necessity implies that the factual issues shall be made the subject of specific findings. The substance rather than mere form determines the right to exemption from taxation. It is fundamental in the statute that if a cemetery is operated on a purely commercial plane, for the profit of the operators, the lands are liable to taxation. Such is the ratio decidendi of the case of West Ridgelawn Cemetery v. State Board of TaxAppeals, supra. The profit motive is alien to the concept *382
of cemeteries permissible under the Rural Cemetery Act. At least one-half of the proceeds of the sales of the cemetery lots are required to be appropriated to the payment of the purchase money of the lands "acquired by the association," until the whole thereof is paid; and the residue is directed to be used for the preservation, improvement and embellishment of the cemetery grounds, and the defrayment of the incidental expenses of the cemetery establishment. R.S. 8:2-11. Vide Burke v. Gunther,
There is evidence which in the view of the municipality tends to establish an interlocking directorate and management of the business corporation and the rural cemetery association, and the operation of the cemetery for profit under the guise of the nonprofit association contemplated by the Rural Cemetery Act.
The question thus raised was not resolved by the Supreme Court. And, as we have seen, there are other issues of fact and law remaining to be determined. Accordingly, in keeping with the usual course of procedure, the record will be remitted to the Supreme Court for a review of the evidence and the settlement of all factual issues, and the application of the appropriate principles of law to the facts as found, according to the statute and the rules and practice of that court. Gibbs v. State Boardof Taxes, c.,
The judgment is accordingly reversed; and the cause is remanded for further proceedings in conformity with this opinion; costs to abide the event.
For affirmance — None.
For reversal and remand — THE CHIEF JUSTICE, PARKER, BODINE, HEHER, PERSKIE, COLIE, OLIPHANT, WELLS, RAFFERTY, DILL, FREUND, McGEEHAN, JJ. 12. *383