105 Me. 214 | Me. | 1909
This is an action of debt for a municipal tax for the year 1907 and comes to this court on an agreed statement of facts. The defendant admits that the assessment of the tax and all of the proceedings connected therewith are regular in form, but denies liability on the ground that the property is exempt from taxation. It appeará from the agreed statement that the defendant, a Greek letter fraternity, is a corporation organized November 13, 1903, under the general laws of this State for the purpose of "erecting and maintaining a chapter house on the campus of the University of Maine, and to hold and dispose of all such real estate and personal property by purchase, lease, sale or otherwise as may be necessary for all such purposes and any and all other acts and things incident thereto and necessary, proper and convenient to the transaction of any such business of said corporation.”
In accordance with its chartered rights, the defendant corporation in 1904, under a parol license granted to it by the trustees of the University, erected upon land of said University in Orono, a frame building, called a chapter house, with properly equipped dining room, kitchen, study and sleeping rooms, reception rooms and the
Under these circumstances was the defendant corporation subject to taxation for this chapter house, which was taxed as real estate, under Revised Statutes, chapter 9, sec. 3 ?
1. The general rule is that all real property within the State is subject to taxation. R. S., ch. 9, sec. 2. Among the exemptions is "the real estate of all literary and scientific institutions occupied by them for their own purposes or by any officer thereof as a residence.” R. S., ch. 9, sec. 6, par. II. Clearly the case at bar does not fall within this exception to the general rule. This is not a tax against the University of Maine, which is conceded to be a literary and scientific institution. The University does not own the property which is the subject of taxation here. This property is owned by an independent corporation and the owner is the party taxed and sued. The corporate purposes of the defendant are neither literary nor scientific. They are rather domestic in the nature of a private boarding house, and such is the business that it carries on.
It is true that in these cases cited the land itself'was owned by the fraternity, while in the case at bar, the land was owned by the University. This fact, however, makes no legal difference in the result. Not all the real estate of literary and scientific institutions is exempt from taxation. It is only such as is "occupied by them for their own purposes or by any officer thereof as a residence.” The lot on which this building was erected was occupied neither by the University nor by any officer thereof, but by an independent corporation for its own purposes and therefore it lost the privilege
2. But the defendant goes further and claims not merely an exemption, but an immunity from taxation on the ground that the University of Maine is a branch of the State government an instrumentality of the State itself and therefore its property is public property, no more subject to taxation by the town of Orono than a jail, a court house or an insane hospital, and still further that the relations between the University and the defendant are such that the immunity reaches to it. The doctrine of such immunity is everywhere acknowledged when the facts present an apposite case. "No exemption is needed for any public property held as such,” says the court in Directors of Poor v. School Directors, 42 Penn. St. 25. The same principle is recognized in People v. Salomon, 51 Ill. 52; People v. Doe, 36 Cal. 222; Worcester County v. Worcester, 116 Mass. 193; Camden v. Camden, Vill. Corp., 77 Maine, 530; Goss Co. v. Greenleaf, 98 Maine, 436.
The necessary facts, however, are lacking here. The University of Maine, while chartered by the State and fostered by it especially in recent years, is not a branch of the State’s educational system nor an agency nor an instrumentality of the State, but a corporation, a legal entity wholly separate and apart from the State. The defendant seeks to class it as a State institution in the same sense as are the public schools or the normal schools, but such is not its legal status.
A comparison with the normal schools of the State is a fair one to illustrate the difference. The State maintains at the present time four normal schools, one each at Farmington, Castine, Gorham
Contrast now the history and the legal status of the University of Maine. By an act approved July 2, 1862, Congress donated a certain quantity of public lands to such States as might provide colleges for the benefit of Agriculture and the Mechanic Arts, the money to be received from the sales thereof to be invested as a perpetual fund and the income thereof to be appropriated by each State acting as trustee, to the endowment, support and maintenance of at least One such college. Acting under this offer from the general government, the State of Maine by ch. 532 of the Priv. &
This change of name did not change the status of the institution or work its adoption as a part of the State or make its property the property of the State. It remained the same distinct corporation as before.
Nowhere in the Revised Statutes is the University of Maine mentioned except in connection with the compensation of its trustees, R. S., ch. 116, sec. 12, and with the duties imposed upon the Experi
The difference between the .relation of the normal schools and of the University of Maine to the State is paralled in the difference between the various so called public or general hospitals of the State, and the two hospitals for the insane. The former are doing a necessary and charitable work and are recipients of the bounty of the State, but the latter alone represent the State itself in its sovereign capacity along charitable lines. The former are apart from the State, the latter a part of the State. Actions at law would lie against the former as against any other corporation, ■but not against the latter as no suit lies against the sovereign power.
The defendant calls attention to the case of Auditor General v. Regents of the University of Mich., 83 Mich. 467, 47 N. W. 440, 10 L. R. A. 376, where the court held that property owned by the defendants was owned by the State and therefore exempt from taxation under a statute exempting all public property belonging to the State. The court, however, in that case based their decision upon the fact that by the constitution of Michigan the Regents of the University are made an agency of the State. "By these provisions” say the court, "the body corporate, which was at first the creation
3. The second step by which the defendant corporation seeks to appropriate any such immunity from taxation as might belong to the University is equally difficult of accomplishment under the facts as they exist, but it is unnecessary to consider the reasons at length, because the first step is itself, impossible.
The defendant corporation is entitled neither to exemption as an educational or scientific institution, nor immunity as an agency or instrumentality of the State. Its property was subject to taxation by the plaintiff town and in accordance with the stipulation of the parties the entry must be,
Judgment for the plaintiffs for $8J¡, with interest as claimed in the writ.