30 Colo. 507 | Colo. | 1903
delivered the opinion of the court.
The controversy is between the county of Arapahoe, represented by its board of commissioners, and the Colorado Seminary; the former asserting and the latter denying, that certain property of the Seminary is subject to taxation. The case calls for a construction of the charter of the Seminary which was granted by an act of the legislative assembly of the territory of Colorado in 1864. — Session Laws 1864, p. 209. Section 5 and a portion of section 1 are the only provisions which are material. Among other things, section 1 constitutes the trustees named therein a body corporate “for the purpose of founding, directing and maintaining an institution of learning, * * * with full power to * * * acquire, hold and convey property, real, personal and mixed, to the extent they may judge necessary for carrying into1 effect the objects of this incorporation.” Section 5 reads:
“Such property as may be necessary for carrying out the design of the Seminary in the best manner, while used exclusively for such purpose, shall be free from all taxation.”
At the threshold of the case we are confronted by a decision of this court (Commissioners v. Colorado Seminary, 12 Colo., 497) which, if not modified or overruled, the county attorney says is .conclusive against the contention of plaintiff in error. Its counsel, however, insist that there is such a material difference in the facts of the two cases as to render
1. This court has gone possibly as far as any appellate tribunal in maintaining the maxim stare decisis. The rule, however, is not inflexible, and the maxim should not be allowed to stand as an absolute bar in the way of a re-examination of legal questions previously decided by the same court, if improperly determined, and particularly where the decision reviewed has not passed into a settled rule of property. This is well illustrated in Calhoun G. M. Co. v. Ajax G. M. Co., 27 Colo., 1, wherein this court overruled one of its former decisions- upon an important question of mining law announced fourteen years before and repeatedly re-affirmed.
So far as we are advised, no other corporation of the state has a charter similar to the one under consideration, hence, no general rule of property has been established, no private rights have been acquired by third persons upon the faith of its protection, and none such will be impaired if a review of the judgment results in a change of doctrine.
Yet, for another reason, we reluctantly enter upon a reconsideration of this cause. The writer of the opinion and his associates evidently gave to the
2. It is said by the learned judge in the case referred to that taxation is the rule and exemption the exception; that there is no presumption in favor of exemption, but that every reasonable doubt should be resolved against it. In a later case decided by this court (Bishop etc., v. Treasurer Arapahoe County, 29 Colo., 143, 68 Pac., 272), it was said: “Provisions exempting property used for educational purposes are less strictly construed than those exempting property used for ordinary gain or profit;” and it was also said that the meaning of words employed in the exemption statutes “must be ascertained from the intent of the people and the legislature in exempting from taxation property used for educational purposes. ’ ’ While the decision there was based upon the general exemption law, the same rule applies to a construction of the charter under consideration.
But if a stricter rule than the one indicated in our later decision should prevail, we think that the previous construction of the charter of plaintiff in error was too narrow, if the closing words of the opinion correctly announce the actual conclusion which the court reached. The construction should be reasonably strict, but not so strict as to defeat the obvious intention of the general assembly. Apparently the decision was based upon the meaning attributed to section 5 of the charter as thus stated in the opinion :. “ The language employed in the statute before
In that opinion, University v. The People, 99 U. S., 309, is cited as a case which, when carefully studied, is an authority directly supporting the rule announced. Our study leads us to an opposite conclusion. The question before the federal court was whether certain property of the Northwestern University was exempt. The supreme court of Illinois had held it liable to taxation. The exemption claimed was based upon a section of an act of the Illinois legislature of 1885 providing: “All property, of whatver kind or description, belonging to, or owned by, said corporation, shall be forever free from taxation for any and all purposes. ’ ’ All parties conceded that this language was broad enough to cover the exemption, but the contention of the tax officers of the state was that the act was in violation of the constitution of 1848, which reads: “Such other property as the general assembly may deem necessary for school * * * purposes, may be exempt from taxation.” The property was listed for taxation in 1874 under the revenue act of 1872, which exempts from taxation only “the real estate on which the institutions of learning are located, not leased by such institutions or otherwise used with a view to profit. ’ ’ This act was passed under the Illinois constitution of 1870 which provides: ‘ ‘ Such other property as may be used exclusively for * * * school * * * purposes, may be exempted from taxation.” The argument for the state, to which the state supreme court yielded its assent, was that the revenue act of 1872 meant what the constitution of 1848 said, which was substantially what the consti
It is to be observed that the federal court did not say that the Illinois revenue act of 1872 was the full limit of the power which the legislature could exercise under the constitution of 1870, or that the property there in question could not be exempted thereunder, for that was not the question for decision. It merely observed upon this point that the supreme court of Illinois said that the revenue act of 1872 was what the constitution of 1848 meant; but the federal tribunal did not even intimate, as we read the opinion, that the act of 1872 was the full measure of exemption provided for by the later constitution. Justice Miller,
If, as contended by our own court in its former opinion, “such property as may be necessary for carrying out the design of the seminary in the best manner, while used exclusively for such purpose” (which is the language of the charter before us), is, in its legal signification, synonymous with the language of the Illinois constitution of 1870, “property used exclusively for school purposes,” we are of opinion that both warrant the exemption claimed here.
In the light of the foregoing, and if the case were one of first impression, would we not unhesitatingly declare that the property here involved is not liable to taxation? Let us scrutinize carefully the charter provisions. One of the duties of the trustees of the Seminary thereunder is to maintain an institution of
The language of the Illinois constitution of 1848 under which the supreme court of the United States held that the general assembly might exempt from taxation property similar (to the property involved in this case, is no broader than the language of the exempting clause of this charter. Both upon reason and authority we are of opinion that all property which the Seminary owns is exempt from all taxation while it is exclusively used for carrying out the designs of the Seminary in the best manner, though not
By the decree of the lower court some of the property described in the complaint was held exempt from, and some subject to, taxation. In so far as it exempted from taxation the property therein described, the decree is affirmed, and to the extent it held other property therein described as subject to taxation, it is reversed and the cause is remanded with instructions to the district court to vacate its former decree and enter a new decree exempting from taxation all the property described in the complaint.
Judgment modified.