45 Minn. 229 | Minn. | 1891
This court has decided in two cases that a rectory or parsonage belonging to a church society is not exempt from taxation. St. Peter’s Church v. County of Scott, 12 Minn. 280, (395;) County of Hennepin v. Grace, 27 Minn. 503, (8 N. W. Rep. 761.) That question is therefore no longer open. The court has also adopted and acted upon and applied to this class of cases the rule of construction that a constitution or legislative act granting privileges, exemptions, or immunities not enjoyed by the community at large shall be strictly construed, and not held to extend beyond the plain requirements of the law itself. It was applied in the case first above cited, and ever since whenever occasion required, including County of Hennepin v. Bell, 43 Minn. 344, (45 N. W. Rep. 615,) the last case in which a similar exemption was claimed. But it is urged that in this case, the rectory is put to such uses as to bring it within the description of “church property used for religious purposes” in section 3, art. 9, of the constitution, under which the exemption is claimed,
Assuming, without deciding, that the séction of the constitution we have referred to is self-executing, — that is, that it operates to exempt the property specified in it, without any legislation pursuant to it, — then the question might be suggested, do the words we have quoted from the section refer to land or buildings ? The entire phrase relating to church property is, “all churches, church property used for religious purposes, and houses of worship.” The question suggests itself, do the words, “church property used for religious purposes,” refer to buildings, or to anything but personal property? If they include buildings, the words_“churches” and “houses of worship” are superfluous. Conceding, however, that those words do include land and buildings, how is the character of the building to be determined ? Is it enough to give a building the character of exempt property that, although the. ordinary use to which it is put may be secular, it is sometimes used for some religious purposes ? If so, a church society owning a dozen buildings besides its church, each of them devoted to secular business, might exempt each from taxation by holding in some part of it a church meeting of some kind, say once a year, or once a month, or once a week, or by its tenant of each holding in it family religious services. Certainly the statute excludes that, and it is not to be supposed that the constitution intended it might be done. The only way to avoid it is to apply the test which the court below appears to have adopted, and determine the question of exemption upon the