The petitioner, Hillcrest Memorial Gardens, Inc., a corporation organized and existing under the laws of the State of West Virginia, has appealed to this Court from a final judgment of the Circuit Court of Wyoming County entered on August 20, 1960, affirming a prior order entered by the county court of that county on March 1, 1960, denying the prayer of the *339 petitioner that certain of its personal property be adjudged to be exempt from taxation by reason of tbe provisions of Code, 1931, 11-3-9, as amended. Apparently tbe proceeding is prosecuted pursuant to Code, 11-3-25, as amended.
On October 9, 1957, a certificate of incorporation was issued to tbe petitioner by tbe Secretary of State of West Virginia. Tbe objects of tbe incorporation were, among others, to purchase and operate, “for burial purposes only”, one or more cemeteries in Wyoming County, including maintenance of lots, vaults and chapels; to buy and to sell tombstones; to sell lots for grave plots for cash or on an installment plan; and to do all things necessary and incident to tbe maintenance and operation of a cemetery. Pursuant to its incorporation tbe petitioner maintains an office at Oceana, Wyoming County, including office furniture and equipment, for tbe keeping of its records and for tbe purpose of conducting corporate business. Tbe petitioner also owns, maintains and operates at Matbeny in tbe same county ‘ ‘ a cemetery plot of ground” known as Hillcrest Memorial Gardens. It has sold lots for burial purposes in such cemetery to various individuals, some sales having been for cash and others on an installment plan.
In relation to the property alleged to have been improperly assessed for tax purposes, tbe petition filed herein states:
“That the Assessor of Wyoming County, West Virginia, secured a signed ‘Return of All Personal Property and Real Estate Owned’ from the petitioner for the calendar year 1958, upon the face of which it appears that (a) the amount of money on hand or deposit, January 1, 1958, was $400.00, (b) the total of notes and accounts receivable (representing the sale of cemetery lots on an instalment plan) was $70,486.00, and (c) the value of office furniture, fixtures and equipment $500.00.
“That all of said described personal property was properly listed upon the records of the Assessor of Wyoming County, West Virginia.
*340 “That your petitioner made no return for taxes of its money, notes and accounts receivable for the calendar year 1959, but that the Assessor of Wyoming County, West Virginia prepared and filed in his own office an unsigned ‘Return of All Personal Property and Real Estate Owned’ by Hillcrest Memorial Gardens, as of January 1, 1959, upon the face of which it appears that (a) the amount of notes and accounts receivable (representing the sale of cemetery lots on an instalment plan) was $180,000.00 (the Assessors estimate,) and (b) the value of office furniture, fixtures and equipment was $1,500.00 (the Assessors estimate.)
“That said Assessor over the informal protest of your petitioner, who claimed said property as exempt from assessment and taxation by virtue of the provisions of Section 9, Article 3, Chapter 11, Code of West Virginia, 1955, as amended, illegally assessed taxes upon said property for 1958 as follows, to-wit: upon $70,485.00 listed as Class No. 1, personal property, $231.21, and upon $500.00 listed as Class 3-4, personal property $6.56, for each half year and for 1959 as follows, to-wit, upon $180,000.00 listed as Class No. 1, personal property, $838.71, and upon $1,500.00, listed as Class 3-4, personal property $27.96, for each half year.”
Separate petitions were filed in the county court for the years 1958 and 1959, respectively. On the joint motion of counsel for the petitioner and the prosecuting attorney in the circuit court, the two proceedings were “combined and consolidated for further proceedings, the same as if one proceeding only.”
Section 1 of Article X of the Constitution of West Virginia provides that certain property as therein specified “may by law be exempted from taxation.” A portion thereof, with emphasis supplied, is as follows: “Subject to the exceptions in this section contained, taxation shall be equal and uniform throughout the State,
and all property, both real and personal, shall be taxed
in proportion to its value to be ascertained as directed by law.
* * *
but property used for educational, literary, scientific, religious or charitable purposes,
all cemeteries,
public property * * *
may
*341
by law be exempted from
taxationFor discussions of the historical background of this constitutional provision, see a scholarly article by Albert A. Abel, 55 W. Va. Law Rev., 170, and
State v. Kittle,
In
State v. Kittle,
While we must look to the Constitution to determine the extent of legislative authority to provide for exemption of property from taxation, we must look to the statute itself to determine the extent to which the legislature has exercised such authority. Certain well-established legal principles are available to guide us in interpreting the constitutional and statutory language dealing with the question herein presented. In Section 1 of Article X of the Constitution, significance must be attached to the words: ‘ ‘ # all property, both real and personal, shall be taxed * # #.” Taxation of all property, both real and personal, is the general rule fixed by constitutional mandate, while exemption from taxation constitutes the exception. 84 C.J.S., Taxation, Section 225, page 431. “Under the Constitution of this state all property both real and personal shall be taxed except such property as the Legislature may exempt under the exceptions contained therein.”
Reynolds Memorial Hospital v. County Court of Marshall County,
The statute now under consideration was reenacted in 1957, and such enactment governed the tax assessments for the years 1958 and 1959. Acts of the Legislature, Regular Session, 1957, Chapter 156. While such is not material in the instant case, the statute was reenacted in 1961. As the statute appeared prior to the 1957 reenactment, the word “cemeteries” was preceded by a semicolon and immediately followed by a comma. In the 1957 reenactment, the word is set off by semicolons, one preceding and one following. The semicolon preceding is perhaps of greater significance, because it shows clearly a legislative intent to leave the word “cemeteries” standing alone, unqualified by prior language. In the earlier portion of the statute are found the following words: “Property belonging to the United States;” “property belonging exclusively to the State;” “property belonging exclusively to any county;” and “property used exclusively for divine worship. ” “The word‘property’ * * * embraces both real and personal estate.” Code, 1931, 2-2-10(r). In relation to the manner in which the word “cemeteries” is set apart in the statute, the Court, in the
*344
case of
Mountain View Cemetery Co. v. Massey,
Apparently by universal acceptation, the word ‘ ‘ cemetery” denotes real estate only as distinguished from personal property. It is defined by Black’s Law Dictionary (4th Ed.) as: “A graveyard; burial ground. * * * Place or area set apart for interment of the dead.” It is defined in Webster’s New International Dictionary (2d Ed.), as: “A place or ground set apart for the burial of the dead.” “A cemetery is a place where the dead bodies of human beings are buried; it is a place or area of ground set apart for the burial of the dead, either by public authority or private enterprise. The term is synonymous with graveyard, burial ground, and place of burial, and it includes not only lots for depositing the bodies of the dead, but also such avenues, walks, and grounds as may be *345 necessary for its use or for ornamental purposes. The term ‘graveyard’ is also defined as a place for the burial of the dead.” 14 C.J.S., Cemeteries, Section 1, page 63. “A cemetery is a place set apart, either by municipal authority or private enterprise for the interment of the dead. The term includes not only lots for depositing the bodies of the dead, but also avenues, walks, and grounds for shrubbery and ornamental purposes.” 10 Am. Jur., Cemeteries, Section 2, page 487.
From at least as early as 1917 until 1945 the statute in question provided for exemption from taxation of trust funds held for the benefit of cemeteries as follows : “ * * * That such exemption from taxation shall apply to all property, including the principal thereof, and the income therefrom, held for a term of years or otherwise under a bona fide deed of trust, transfer or assignment, by a trustee or trustees required by the terms of such trust to apply, annually, the income derived from such property to education, religion, charity and
cemeteries,
when not used for private purposes or profit.” (Italics supplied.) By Chapter 143, Acts of the Legislature, Regular Session, 1945, the legislature eliminated such language from the statute, leaving therein no reference whatsoever to cemeteries other than the word itself, separated and set off by semicolons; and substituted the final paragraph of the statute as it appears in its present form as follows: “Notwithstanding any other provision of this section, however, no language herein shall be construed to exempt from taxation any property owned by, or held in trust for, educational, literary, scientific, religious or other charitable corporations or organizations, unless such property is used primarily and immediately for the purposes of such corporations or organizations.” The legislature thereby eliminated from the statute a provision for exemption from taxation of funds held for the benefit of cemeteries as therein prescribed. We must presume that it did so deliberately and with the purpose of effecting a change
*346
in the previously existing law.
State v. General Daniel
Morgan Post,
Apparently the precise question presented is one of first impression in this state. The case of
Mountain View Cemetery Co. v. Massey,
In the case of
Hollywood Cemetery Co. v. Commonwealth,
Following is a list of cases holding that various items of personal property belonging to cemeteries were not exempt from taxation even though the cemeteries themselves were exempt therefrom:
State of Maryland v. Wilson, President of the Baltimore Cemetery Co.,
Both the constitutional provision and the statute are clear and unambiguous. A statutory provision which is clear and unambiguous and which plainly expresses the legislative intent will not be interpreted by the courts hut will he given full force and effect.
State ex rel. Lambert v. Carman,
For the reasons slated herein, the judgment of the Circuit Court of Wyoming County is affirmed.
Affirmed.
