The City of Morgantown filed a declaratory judgment action in the Circuit Court of Kanawha County in July, 1985, asking whether the Board of Regents was required to collect the City’s two-percent amusement tax on the sale of tickets to entertainment events such as carnivals, basketball and football games, and big time entertainers, which are open to the general public. Judge Canady of the Circuit Court of Kanawha County granted summary judgment to the Board of Regents, from which the City now appeals. We agree with the circuit court that the events sought to be taxed are not conducted for private profit, and therefore affirm.
The legislature granted cities the power to levy amusement taxes in W.Va. Code § 8-13-6 (1984). It reads, in pertinent part:
Every municipality shall have plenary power and authority to levy and collect an admission or amusement tax upon any public amusement or entertainment conducted within the corporate limits thereof for private profit or gain. The tax shall be levied upon the purchaser and added to and collected by the seller with the price of admission, or other charge for the amusement or entertainment. The tax shall not exceed two percent of the admission price or charge, but a tax of one cent may be levied and collected in any case.
(emphasis added). In order to uphold the summary judgment, we must find that there is no genuine issue of material fact as to whether sports and entertainment events sponsored by West Virginia University are conducted “for private profit or gain.”
The City of Morgantown relies to a large extent on depositions taken of various University employees that indicate that the West Virginia University Department of Intercollegiate Athletics is a separate, self-supporting unit and that money generated by sports activities does not go directly to the support of the academic function of the University. The City also points out that these receipts do not go into the general revenue fund, but are sequestered in special revenue accounts, and that the State collects consumers sales tax on them. The Board of Regents counters that there is no “private” party that stands to gain from profits generated by West Virginia University’s athletic or entertainment events; that the legislature and this Court have recognized that West Virginia University exercises a governmental (as opposed to private) function when it sponsors athletic contests, and that special revenue funds
The appellant cites two cases that have sustained taxes on football ticket receipts. The first is
Allen v. Regents of Univ. Sys. of Ga.,
The second case is
City of Boulder v. Regents of the Univ. of Colo.,
Proceeds from athletic and entertainment events sponsored by West Virginia University are state funds held in special revenue accounts under W.Va. Code § 12-2-2 (1985). Special revenue accounts are state accounts kept separate from the general revenue due to a legislative determination that money generated by a particular activity should be allocated to a specific purpose. Such accounting does not remove the funds from the state treasury or destroy the public accountability of those who spend them.
This Court has held that admission fees collected by state educational institutions at athletic events are “public moneys.”
City of Morgantown v. Ducker,
The City of Morgantown asks us to hold that such public moneys are collected for private profit or gain. The word “private” means “intended for or restricted to
In a case construing the term “private gain,” Washington, D.C., had a statute providing that property used for educational purposes that was not used for private gain was exempt from taxation, and all other property used for educational purposes was to be taxed as any other property. The court in
District of Columbia v. Mt. Vernon Seminary,
The term “private gain,” as used in the statute, has reference only to gain realized by any individual or stockholder who has a pecuniary interest in the corporation and not ... to profits realized by the institution but turned back into the treasury or expended for permanent improvements ....
If it had been intended to tax institutions earning a profit, i.e., having income in excess of expenditures, Congress would have used the word profit or the word gain instead of private gain.
For the reasons discussed, we conclude that sports and entertainment events sponsored by West Virginia University are not conducted for private profit or gain, and are not subject to the amusement tax levied by the City of Morgantown. 3 We find no genuine issue of material fact in this regard, and no error in the circuit court’s application of the law. We therefore affirm the grant of summary judgment.
Affirmed.
Notes
. 179 Colo, at 426-27,
. For other definitions, see 60 Ops. Att’y Gen. 59 (Mar. 23, 1983).
. We find little merit in the City’s reliance on the fact that the State of West Virginia collects consumers sales tax on non-student tickets to athletic events. The consumers sales tax is nowhere restricted to activities conducted for private profit or gain. See W.Va.Code §§ 11 — 19—3; 11-15-2(7) (1983). The ability of the state to impose a tax does not therefore have any bearing on the scope of the authority granted to municipalities in W.Va.Code § 8-13-6 (1984).
