Thе vacant lot sought to be taxed is in close proximity to the main buildings of the college, being separated therefrom by a street. It is used by the students .of the college as a field for playing games. It also appears that tract 7 remains vacant, except thаt throughout the period involved in this suit it was used, and is now being used, by the students of the University as an athletic or playing field. This lot which is owned by petitioner is not improved in any way, or marked off as an athletic field, but is a vacant lot which the students in fact “use to play games on.” Petitioner does not maintain a regular athletic program, and does not engage in intercollegiate athletics, but has *719 agreed to permit the students of Clark College to use this lot as their regular football practice field, starting in the fall of 1942. The entire block in which traсt 7 is located fronts 270 feet on Beckwith Street by 273.5 feet on Lawshe Street, by 270 feet on Parsons Street, by 271 feet on Fickens Street, and tract 7 comprises the entire block, excepting a lot at the southwest corner of Fickens and Beckwith Streets fronting 50 feet on Beckwith Street, by 136 feet on Fickens Street. Tract 7 is not large enough for a regular football field or for a regular baseball diamond, and is not laid off as an athletic field of any sort, but is vacant and is in fact used by students “to play games on.”
The decision in
Trustees of the Academy of Richmond Comity
v. Bohler, 80
Ca.
159 (
While the exact question was not the same as here presented, the language used in People ex rel. Board of Trustees of Mount Pleasant Academy
v.
Mezger,
None of the cases decided by this court, which called for construction and application of our laws exempting property from taxation, involved dwelling-houses owned by the educational institution and occupied by the teachers. Similar questions under varying conditions have arisen in other States, but in each instance the constitution and statutes of the particular State governеd; and hence the conclusion reached depended not upon the application of general principles. In some States, buildings such as those dealt with here have been held exempt; in others a contrary conclusion has been reachеd. When the latter line of decisions is examined, however, it will be seen that there is little, if any, supporting authority for the proposition that these dwellings, in the light of what appears in the agreed statement of facts, are not exempt as “buildings erected for and used аs a college.” Eor instance, the case of President &c. of Williams College
v.
Assessors of Williamstown,
To make the question of tax exemption turn on whether or not the building is within the same enclosure as the other buildings does not appear to rest either upon sound reаson or common sense. The ruling assumes that the campus is enclosed. As a matter of fact it need not be, and frequently is not. It also assumes that the institution is small enough to be enclosed within one block, which in many cases is contrary to the fact. The issue of tax exemptions should not depend upon whether or not a street sepa
*723
rates' some buildings from others, all a part of one institution and all used for college purposes. There is respectable authority to the effect that this makes no difference. Dickinson Collеge
v.
Cumberland County,
2
Pa. Dist. 378; State
v.
Carleton College,
In this State the exemption from taxation, so far as applicable here, only covers “all buildings erected for and used as a college,” . . and provided that such property “is not used for purposes of private or corporate profit or income.” Code, § 92-201. Under the stipulation contained in the record, these dwellings are not used for private gain or corporate profit. They were erected by the college, to be occupied by the college professors. They are not remote from, but are in close proximity to, the main campus. The stipulation further recites, that it is a part of the duty of the members of the faculty who occupy these residences to exercise supervision and control of the deportment of the students of thе college; that this duty was facilitated by placing them near the student dormitories; that there were no facilities for housing the married members of the faculty in the dormitories; that proper housing facilities were not available nearer the campus; and that the residences of the faculty members are often used by the students for conferences with the faculty members. In our opinion, these houses are buildings erected for and used as a college. It may be that a college could operate without a central hеating plant, or without dormitories, or without a chapel building; but this would not prove that a central heating plant, or dormitories, or a chapel building, erected for and used by the authorities as a part of the equipment of the institution, was not a part of the college and therefore was subject to taxation. So with these dwelling-houses. Some discretion must be given to the governing authorities of the institution to determine what buildings are necessary or proper to further their educational objectives. The fact' is that the dwellings were erected by the college authorities for college purposes, which our law says shall be exempt from taxation.
There is a long line of authorities which, although dealing with different constitutional and statutory provisions, nevertheless in principle support the view that the dwellings here involved are exempt from taxation. Many of them are referred to in the cases
*724
hereinbefore cited. See also City of Chicago
v.
University of Chicago,
The property here sought to be taxed was exempt under the constitution and laws of this State. See
Board &c.
v.
Hunter,
190
Ga.
767 (
Judgment affirmed.
