138 Minn. 67 | Minn. | 1917
This matter is before the court on an appeal by the Diocese of St. Paul from the judgment of the district court for Ramsey county confirming an assessment against the real estate comprising “Calvary Cemetery” for the construction of a sewer extending along the side of the property.
Appellant’s chief claim is that the property is exempt from assessment under the statutes of this state. It also contends that the finding of the trial court that the sewer in question was or might be a benefit to the property is not sustained by the evidence.
Calvary cemetery was established two years before Minnesota was admitted into the Union. It comprises 97% acres, is inclosed by a fence, and is laid out and platted into blocks, lots, streets and alleys. The Diocese of St. Paul owns the land and conducts the cemetery, which is, in the number of burials, perhaps the largest in St. Paul. The Diocese is a religious corporation organized under the laws of this state in 1883, and has since owned the property and used it for burial purposes exclusively. The ownership prior to the incorporation of the Diocese does not appear. The cemetery is used for the burial of persons of the Catholic faith, though members of other churches or nonchurch members, who are connected with families who are .members of the Catholic church and have lots in the cemetery, are permitted burial there. The Diocese, by an instrument in writing, for a certain consideration, grants to its patrons the exclusive right of burial in the lots, subject to the rules, regulations and restrictions made at the time of the grant or which may thereafter be made for the government of Catholic cemeteries in the Diocese, and it agrees to keep the lots so granted in good order and condition without further charge.
The learned trial court based its decision that the property was not exempt from assessment upon this failure to file and have recorded a plat of the property, certified as correct by the surveyor making it, and designating a monument which must be placed at one corner of the property, all as provided by the laws governing cemeteries established by a private person or a religious corporation.
These laws are now found in G. S. 1913, § 6316, et seq. Section 6316 provides that “any private person and any religious corporation may establish a cemetery on his or its own lands in the following manner.” Then follow the provisions as to a survey and plat, which shall be filed for record with the register, of deeds. Section 6317 provides that when such plat has been recorded every donation or grant of lands thereon to the public or to a religious corporation shall be deemed a conveyance of such lands; that every conveyance of such lots'shall be exclusively for burial purposes, and the lands designated on the plat as streets, alleys, ways, commons, or other public uses shall be held by the owner of the cemetery in trust for the uses and purposes thereon indicated. Section 6318 provides that any religious corporation, or two or more together, may acquire by gift or purchase the cemetery lands and property of any cemetery association or private cemetery. Section 6323 provides that all lands, not exceeding 100 acres in extent, so laid out and dedicated as a private cemetery, shall be exempt from public taxes and assessments.
Appellant concedes that it has not complied with the statute in that it has not filed for record a plat as provided in section 6316. It claims that notwithstanding this, the cemetery has been dedicated as such, is subject to the conditions and restrictions imposed by the statute, and should be entitled to its benefits and exemptions. We regret that we are unable to adopt this view. Section 6323, which creates the exemption, says explicitly that all lands “so laid out and dedicated as a private cemetery” shall be exempt from public taxes and assessments. This must mean “laid out and dedicated” in accordance'with the preceding sections. It cannot .mean a common law or “de facto” dedication. The legislature has prescribed definitely what is necessary to constitute a dedication of lands as a private cemetery. Among these requirements is the one which requires a plat Qf the property to be recorded, stating the blocks, lots, streets and the location of the monument to mark one corner of the cemetery. We fail to see how the omission to comply with this requirement can be regarded as unimportant, or overlooked. The legisla' ture had an object in view, and one not difficult to see. It was undoubtedly considered important to have the records show lands that were exempt from taxes, -assessments and sale on execution, especially when they did not show by the name of the owner that the lands were devoted to cemetery purposes.
The appellant in this case is not a public cemetery association, so as to come within the provisions of G. S. 1913, § 6268, et seq., and so as to make its “lands and property exempt from all public taxes and assessments.”
In State v. City of St. Paul, 36 Minn. 529, 32 N. W. 781, it was held that under G. S. 1878, c. 34, § 259, which is the exemption provision which corresponds to the present provision found in G. S. 1913, § 6286, the lands and property of cemetery associations are exempt from assessments for local improvement. The above section of the 1878 statute construed in ‘that case exempted only “the cemetery lands and property of any association formed pursuant to this title,” that is, those of public
We do not understand counsel for appellant to claim that Calvary is a public cemetery. They rather claim that all cemeteries, save those conducted by a governmental agency, are private, and that we have in this state two kinds of private cemeteries: First, those owned by a cemetery association; and, second, those owned by a private person or religious corporation. This is true in a sense, and a cemetery operated by a religious corporation may be as much a public one as is a cemetery operated by a cemetery association, except that in the first case burials are in the main restricted to those of the faith of the religious corporation, while in the second case there is no restriction of this kind. But the point is that the legislature has seen fit to enact one set of laws for eeme^teries owned and conducted by associations organized for that purpose, and another set of laws for cemeteries owned and conducted by private persons or religious corporations. And there can be not doubt that the appellant in' this case come under the second set of laws. It is quite clear that section 6286 does not apply. This section exempts only the lands and property of “public cemetery associations” existing at the time the act went into force or thereafter organized. It is hardly claimed that the Diocese of St. Paul can be called a public cemetery association. It is plainly a religious corporation with many activities other than conducting a cemetery. Further, there are many provisions of the public cemetery law which appellant has not and could not comply with. We 'have already noted that the statutes make a clear distinction between cemetery associations operating a public cemetery, and individuals or religious corpora
Judgment affirmed.