77 Me. 530 | Me. | 1885
The defendant corporation, by special authority from the legislature, together with other powers and privileges particularly enumerated in the act of incorporation, was authorized to build a village hall at a cost of not more than eight thousand dollars. Thereafter a lot was purchased and a building erected thereon by the defendants, known as " Meguntieook Hall.” This building is sixty feet long, fifty feet wide, and two stories high. The upper portion is finished into a hall with galleries, platform and two small ante-rooms. The lower story contains a hall somewhat smaller than the one above, a lock-up, assessors’ room, cook and furnace room. The upper hall is used for the annual and other meetings of the corporation,— the lower one for a police court room ; and when not in use by the corporation, both halls are let, as occasion requires, for lectures and other public entertainments, with an income of from three to five hundred dollars a year which is appropriated in defraying the annual expenses of the corporation.
The plaintifl' town in which the defendant corporation is situated, claiming that this property is subject to taxation under the general statutes, like other real estate, has assessed a tax thereon, and this action is brought to recover the same.
The plaintiffs’ claim is that this corporation is limited in its. extent of territory, is partly private and partly public, in which the inhabitants of much the largest portion of the town-have no pecuniary interest, and that this building, being adapted to and used in part for other than corporate purposes, is owned by the defendants in their social or commercial capacity and for pecuniary profit, and is therefore neither expressly nor impliedly exempt from taxation.
As against this proposition the defence set up is, that the-corporation is of a public nature, and that the property upon, which this tax is sought to be imposed is held by the defendants.
For a correct determination of this question it becomes necessary to consider the nature and character of such corporations, the objects they are intended to accomplish, and their ■connection with the government of the state. It is laid down by the authorities that such corporations are public, and while they are allowed to assume to themselves some of the duties of the :state in a partial or detailed form, but having neither property nor power for personal aggrandizement, they can be considered .in no other light than as auxiliaries of the government.” United States v. Railroad Company, 17 Wall. 328.
Being intended as agencies in the administration of civil government, they are regarded as public, and partaking the ■nature of municipal corporations in their incidents. Being purely creatures of legislative enactment, they owe their creation to the particular statute which gives them their existence ; this ■statute, together with the general provisions of law applicable to them, confers upon them the powers they possess, and, like other .municipal corporations, imposes upon them certain public duties which they owe to the state in the administration of its local government. Likewise towns are public corporations created for similar public purposes in the due administration of the government of the state. As incident to their existence and the objects of their creation they are allowed to purchase or build ■town-houses, school-houses, poor-houses and police stations, these being among the " recognized functions of government,” .and as such exempted by implication from the general provisions ■ of the statute in relation to taxation, as property appropriated to ;public uses. Worcester v. Western Railroad, 4 Met. 567; Wayland v. County Commissioners, 4 Gray, 501; Worcester County v. Worcester, 116 Mass. 193; Portland v. Water Company, 67 Maine, 137 ; Boston and Maine Railroad v. Cambridge, 8 Cush. 239.
This doctrine is thus laid down by a learned writer and jurist (Dillon, Municip. Corp. § 614). " The general statutes of the ■•state upon the subject of taxing property undoubtedly refer to
The courts of other states furnish ample authority in support of exempting, by implication, from taxation, property of the character above named. People v. Doe, 36 Cal. 222, was a case where a writ of assistance was asked by the plaintiff to put him in possession of land which he claimed to have acquired by tax title, being a portion of the city cemetery in the city of Sacramento. The court denied the writ as to that on the ground that- the land was public property and therefore not taxable. Sanderson, J., said: "The constitution and laws upon the subject of taxing property are, therefore, to be understood as referring to private property and persons, and not including public property and the state, or any subordinate part of the state government, such as counties, towns, and municipal corporations.”
Speaking of the South Park Commissioners as a corporation, and of the park property, Breese, C. J., in People v. Salomon, 51 Ill. 52, says: "But holding it, they hold it as a public corporation for public purposes, and was it ever heard, that the property, real or personal of a public municipal corporation, was subject to taxation?” And Pennsylvania maintains the same doctrine.
" No exemption law is needed for any public property, held as such.” Directors of Poor v. School Directors, 42 Penn. St. 25.
To entitle it to exemption, however, it must be public in its nature. There is a distinction between property held and owned
Consequently, if this implied exemption exists as between the state and the public buildings, or property of the town or city, created by its own legislature, a fortiori, the tcnvn can not tax the public means and instrumentalities of a village corporation, an auxiliary of the state, deriving its existence from the same legislative source.
The charter of the defendant corporation, when examined, will be found to contain many of those incidents of a public character usually pertaining to other municipal corporations ; among which this corporation is authorized and vested with power to raise money to defray the expenses of a night watch, a police force, a fire department, and all other necessary measures for the better security of life and property, and for the promotion of good order and quiet within its limits. Thus the powers with which it is invested, and the objects for which it ivas created, are similar in many respects, to those which belong to towns, cities, and other municipal corporations. In addition to the powers and privileges above enumerated, bestoived upon this corporation, express authority is given by the sovereign power of the state to erect this hall. And from a careful examination of the facts in the case, and in view7 of the public nature of this corporation, and the purposes for which it was created, we are led to no other conclusion than that this building, authorized by legislative sanction, is owmed by the corporation for public uses, rather than in its " social or commercial capacity. ” The letting of those parts of the building which are not in actual use by the corporation, are incidental and subsidiary to the objects for which it was created, and do not take away its character as a
The authorities to which our attention has been called by the learned counsel for the plaintiffs, upon examination, will be found to apply to property owned, not by public municipal corporations and appropriated to public uses, but by private corporations or associations, and where express statutory exemption was claimed. In such cases of express exemption, statutes are to be construed with strictness, and the exemption should be denied unless so clearly granted as to be free from doubt. ' Dillon Mun. Corp. § 616.
In accordance with the stipulation in the report of the case, the entry should be,
Plaintiffs nonsuit.