42 P. 3 | Or. | 1895
Opinion by
Article IX, section 1 of the state constitution directs that “The legislative assembly shall provide by law for uniform and equal rate of assessment and taxation; and shall prescribe such regulations as shall secure a just valuation for taxation of all property, both real and personal, excepting such only for municipal, educational, literary, scientific, religious, or charitable purposes as may be specially exempted by law.” Under this provision no property can be relieved from taxation except such as may be in use for some of the purposes enumerated therein, and then only to the extent specially permitted by legislative enactment. The constitution itself does not exempt any property from taxation, and it authorizes the legislature to do so “only for municipal, educational, literary, scientific, religious, or charitable purposes.” It follows, then, that before property can be exempted from taxation it must not only be used for some of the purposes specified in the constitution, but the exemption must be specially authorized by law. Now, the statute which undertakes to exempt property from taxation, and by which the questions presented in this case must be solved, was passed by the territorial legislature in eighteen hundred and fifty-four, and, so far as not inconsistent with the constitution, was continued in force by section 7, article XVIII of that instrument, and is now section 2732 of Hill’s Code. By subdivision 3 of this section it is provided that “The personal property of all literary, benevolent, charitable, and scientific institutions, incorporated within this state, and
It is so manifestly just that all property shall bear its due proportion of the expenses of government that laws granting exemption from taxation are always strictly construed, and before such exemption can be admitted, the intent of the legislature to confer it must be clear beyond a reasonable doubt. Thus, it is held that laws exempting from taxation “houses of religious worship,” or “buildings erected and used for religious worship,” or “property used for religious purposes,” etc., do not exempt a parsonage erected by a religious society for the use of its minister, although occupied by him free of rent and built on grounds which would otherwise be exempt: State v. Axtell, 41 N. J. Law, 117; County of Hennepin v. Grace, 27 Minn. 503 (8 N. W. 761); Ramsey County v. Church of the Good Shepherd, 45 Minn. 229 (11 L. R. A. 175, 47 N. W. 783); Third Congregational Society v. Springfield, 147 Mass. 396 (18 N. E. 68); Wardens of St. Mark’s v. Mayor of Brunswick, 78 Ga. 541 (3 S. E. 561); Gerke v. Purcell, 25 Ohio St. 229; Trustees of the Methodist Episcopal Church v. Ellis, 38 Ind. 3; Vail v. Beach, 10 Kan. 214. And a building belonging to the Young Men’s Christian Association, which contains above the basement, in which are the gymnasium, bowling-alley, and bathroom, twenty-two rooms, only one of which is devoted to public worship, was held not exempt under a law exempting “every building used exclusively for public worship”: Young Men’s Christian Association of New York v. Mayor of
Reversed.