Plaintiff taxpayer Mark Herrick appeals from a Windham Superior Court finding that his land, which is “sequestered” for “pious” uses, is not exempt from property taxation under 32 V.S.A. § 3802(4). Because Herrick failed to irrevocably dedicate the sequestered property for the “pious” use, he fails to meet the three-prong test set forth and affirmed in our recent line of cases. We therefore affirm the trial court’s denial of tax exempt status on the sequestered lands. To the extent this decision conflicts with
Johnson v. Jones,
Herrick owns 171 acres, including a two-unit house and some outbuildings (parcel #256.000), in the Town of Marlboro. He has *171 allowed a nonprofit corporation called The Mountain Ministry Inc., a nondenominational Christian service ministry, the exclusive use of this property.
The Mountain Ministry assists poor people in transition, particularly single mothers, battered women, and homeless persons. Among other services, it provides food, clothing, furniture, moving and transportation assistance and firewood cut from the land. At times the land is used for retreat camping, gardens, storage space for homeless people, and for raising turkeys and other farm animals for consumption. All of the Mountain Ministry’s services are provided free of charge to anyone on a nondiscriminatory basis, based on need and available resources. Under this arrangement between Herrick and the Mountain Ministry, the Mountain Ministry uses all the property, rental income from one unit of the two-unit house on the property, and all revenue from the sale of timber and maple products from the property to support its operating expenses.
On August 1,1998, Herrick removed the upstairs rental apartment from the rental market. The apartment is now used as a safe house for the Mountain Ministry’s patrons. When rented for profit, the unit was rented for $450 per month. There is currently no charge for use of the apartment.
Herrick is on the Mountain Ministry’s board of directors and works for the Mountain Ministry full-time, without pay or any other form of compensation. On March 25, 1999, Herrick executed a document he entitled “Sequestration” in which he sequesters all of parcel #256.000 to the exclusive use of the Mountain Ministry. See
Johnson v. Jones,
The Town assessed Herrick’s parcel at $247,800.00 for the 1999 tax year. Herrick argues that the lands sequestered for the Mountain Ministry’s use fall squarely within the tax exemption for lands which are: “granted, sequestered or used, for public, pious or charitable uses.” 32 V.S.A. § 3802(4). Herrick relies on
Johnson v. Jones,
a case with facts similar to this one, where the Court held that land owned by a clergyman, devoted exclusively to the use of church groups for religious gatherings, with any and all revenue derived from the lands used for the sole purpose of defraying expenses of gatherings, was
*172
property sequestered for pious uses and thus exempt from taxation. The issue of nonprofit ownership of the lands by the clergyman was mentioned in the case but was not considered germane to resolution of the exemption issue which focused on the clergyman’s pious use of the land. See
id.
at 170-71,
The Town of Marlboro concedes that
Johnson v. Jones
would control here, were the case good law. However, the Town maintains that
Johnson
has since been implicitly overruled by our more recent line of cases interpreting 32 V.S.A. § 3802(4) as a whole and mandating application of a three-part test laid out in
American Museum of Fly Fishing, Inc. v. Town of Manchester,
At trial there were no contested facts, and the parties submitted a joint stipulation of facts. On cross-motion for summary judgment, taxpayer Herrick had the burden of proving he was entitled to judgment as a matter of law. That same standard is applicable here.
Morrisville Lumber Co. v. Okcuoglu,
The statute at issue states:
*173 The following property shall be exempt from taxation:
(4) Real and personal estate granted, sequestered or used for public, pious or charitable uses; real property owned by churches or church societies or conferences and used as parsonages and personal property therein . . .; real and personal estate set apart for library uses and used by the public and private circulating libraries . . .; lands leased by towns or town school districts for educational purposes; and lands owned or leased by colleges, academies or other public schools. . .; and lands and buildings owned and used by towns for the support of the poor therein. . . .
32 V.S.A. § 3802(4). This case concerns only the first exemption for “[r]eal and personal estate granted, sequestered or used for public, pious or charitable uses.” Id.
“Our paramount goal in statutory construction is to give effect to the Legislature’s intent.”
Burr & Burton Seminary,
In
American Museum of Fly Fishing,
In
Lincoln Street, Inc. v. Town of Springfield,
The. Court acknowledged that the tax exemption in 32 V.S.A. § 3802(4) contains no express requirements for ownership. However, recognizing that our “primary objective is to give effect to the intent of the Legislature,” the Court was constrained to “gather legislative intent by considering, not just isolated sentences or phrases,” but the separate clauses of the statute “together, as parts of a unified statutory system.”
Id.
at 184-85,
The crux of our decision in Lincoln Street rests upon the fact that the purpose of § 3802(4)
is to benefit the community as a whole by benefiting that indefinite part of the public served by public, pious, or charitable organizations. Where the benefit of an exemption under §3802 would flow to private individuals, however, rather than to an indefinite class of persons who are part of the public, the use is not public, the purpose of the statute is not met, and the town cannot be required under the statute to exempt the property from taxation.
Mat 185,
Even though, under the lease agreement in
Lincoln Street,
the direct benefit of the tax exemption, if allowed, would flow to the nonprofit organization, we found the “ultimate beneficiaries of an exemption” would be the lessor private property owners.
Id.
at 186,
This Court is aware that by sequestering lands, Herrick has not entered into a lease agreement with the Mountain Ministry. But Herrick’s sequestration scheme unfortunately contains a fatal flaw which prevents him from overcoming the American Museum of Fly Fishing test: there is no concurrence of nonprofit ownership and use. Granted, Herrick derives no immediate income from activities or services performed on the property. But so long as Herrick retains title to the land and various benefits of ownership, such as property value appreciation and increasing investment income, flow to Herrick and not the Mountain Ministry, lands owned by Herrick himself will not qualify for the tax exemption.
Most recently, in
Twin Valley Community Services, Inc. v. Town of Randolph,
The property at issue in
Twin Valley
was owned by a nonprofit corporation which was organized solely to further the purposes of its lessee, another nonprofit corporation. The Town argued that the taxpayer lessor had not unconditionally dedicated his land to a public use because the lease contained conditions such as the lessor’s right to terminate the lease and enter should the lessee default. The Town further argued that the fact that taxpayer owns the property, while another nonprofit entity uses the property for the public benefit, bars taxpayer from entitlement to the tax exemption for lack of concurrent ownership and use as construed in
Lincoln Street.
The Court rejected both arguments and held that because “[b]oth the taxpayer-owner and the lessee-operator are nonprofit corporations with a single mission,” certain lease restrictions did not thwart unconditional dedication of the land to the nonprofit use and did not infringe upon the concurrence of ownership and use.
Twin Valley,
What distinguishes the facts in Tioin Valley from the facts herein is the presence of incontrovertible dedication of the property to a pious or charitable mission. Unlike the lessor in Twin Valley, Herrick is not himself a nonprofit corporation limited in the manner he may dispose of corporate assets, such as the sequestered property. Cf. 11B V.S.A. § 14.05 (limiting nonprofit corporation in disposition of assets upon dissolution). Indeed, there is nothing in Herrick’s sequestration which prevents him from revoking the sequestration at will, for any, or no reason at all.
As noted by the trial court, Herrick’s selfless intentions in this case are beyond'question. While we recognize his personal devotion to the Mountain Ministry, there is no unequivocal showing that his lands are irrevocably and legally bound to the Mountain Ministry’s mission. In fact, by retaining title in himself and maintaining the revocability of the sequestered lands, he has organized the *177 sequestration in such a way that the Mountain Ministry’s access to the land operates at his will, revocable whenever he should change his mind and find the arrangement no longer satisfactory. As further noted by the trial court, the interpretation of § 3802(4) which Herrick advocates would doubtless invite tax-avoidance schemes of much less obvious merit than Herrick’s “sequestration.”
The doctrine of stare decisis does not preclude us from recognizing developments in our law and overruling
Johnson v. Jones
or those portions of
Johnson
inconsistent with our more recent decisions. As the Supreme Court has noted,
“[sjtare decisis
is not an inexorable command.”
Payne v. Tennessee,
The decision of the superior court is affirmed.
