108 Ky. 333 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1900
Lead Opinion
Opinion of the court by
Reversing.
The only question involved in this action is whether the appellee’s property is exempt from taxation. This is the second appeal of the case. The opinion on the former appeal is reported in 45 S. W., 881. By the charter of the association enacted in the year 1866, it was provided that its property and income should be exempt from all
On the return of the case to the court below, appellee filed an amended answer, setting up the defense that it is an institution of purely public charity. To this answer appellant filed a reply, to which the court below sustained a demurrer, and dismissed the action.
It appears from the record that appellee is the owner of a four-story brick building and the ground on which it ’Stand's; that the lower floor is rented by the United States Postmaster, and used as a post-office at an annual rent of about $1,000; that the second floor is rented out for offices and living rooms at an annual rent of about $700; and that the third and fourth’floors are used by the association for the purposes of its organization. It also appears that only the first and second stories which were rented out were assessed for taxation. It is admitted in the reply that all of appellee’s income and revenue is devoted! — First, to the payment of the balance of debt for erecting the building sought to be taxed; second, to relieve distressed and indigent members of the Masonic order and their families. But it is alleged that the association, so far as it dispenses charity at all, confines itself exclusively to its members and their families, or, if the members are dead, to their widows and children, or to those who are directly or indirectly connected with the, association; that it does- not extend charity to all alike, or to those not in any way connected with the association ; and that its charity is governed by the following by-law: “The master and wardens of this lodge shall constitute a charitable committee, whose duty it shall be, on application, carefully to inquire into the situation and
The question in the case is therefore whether, under these facts, appellee is an institution of purely public charity, and as such exempt from taxation, under the section of the Constitution above quoted. By the statutes in force previous to the adoption of our present Constitution, all property “devoted to charitable purposes” was exempt from taxation. General Statutes, p. 1036. if this rule was still in force, appellee’s property would, under some authorities, be exempt, as it is, in one view, devoted to charitable purposes. Bur the Constitution was intended to modify the exemptions theretofore allowed, and now only institutions of purely public charity are exempt. While this is a new provision in this State, it has long been in force in a number of other States. The purpose of its adoption in this State was to exclude from exemption all charities not purely public. The words “purely public” need no definition. They do not include any restricted or private charities. These may be very valuable, and the spirit prompting them is much to be commended; but the exemption of property from taxation had assumed such proportions at the time of the adoption of our presen t Constitution that it was seen fit not to exempt property from taxation unless devoted to a purely public charity.
A Masonic lodge, which provides for its members and
A charity may restrict its admissions to a class of •humanity, and still be public. It may be for the blind; the mute; those suffering under special diseases; for the aged; for infants; for women; for men; for different callings or trades by which humanity earns its bread; and, as long as the classification is determined by some distinction which involuntarily affects or may affect any of the whole people, although only a small number may be directly benefited, it is public. But when the right to admission depends on the fact of voluntary association with •some particular society, then a distinction is made which concerns not the public at large. The public is interested
In the previous case of Delaware County Institution of Science v. Delaware County, 94 Pa. St., 163, an institute of science for “the promotion and diffusion of general and scientific knowledge among the community at large, and the establishment and maintenance of a library and museum,” the benefits of which were restricted to members except upon conditions prescribed by a board of managers, was held not exempt from taxation. The court said: “The plaintiff in error, so far from being a purely public charity, is not a public charity at all. It is a private corporation, for the benefit of its members, as much so as any other beneficial or literary society.” In Bangor v. Lodge, 73 Me., 428, a Masonic lodge was held subject to taxation under a statute much broader in its exemption than our Constitution. Among other things, the court said: “The just and honest rule in assessment for govern
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting opinion.
I dissent from the opinion of the court in this case, be cause it disregards the doctrine announced in the cases of Trustees of Kentucky Female Orphan School v. City of Louisville, (Ky.), 36 S. W., 921; City of Louisville v. South