148 Conn. 233 | Conn. | 1961
The plaintiff is the owner of certain, properties in the town of Milford which the plaintiff' claims are exempt from taxation by the town as-property of a municipal corporation used for a public purpose. Both the assessor and the board of tax review of the town rejected the plaintiff’s claim.. The plaintiff appealed to the Court of Common-Pleas, which rendered judgment adverse to the-plaintiff, whereupon it appealed to this court.
The defendant by its answer admitted all but one of the allegations of the complaint. Upon these-admissions and an oral stipulation, the case was-submitted to the trial court. The complaint alleged,, and the answer admitted, that the plaintiff was a. municipal corporation specially chartered by the-state of Connecticut; that it owned properties in the defendant town which were assessed for $63,610’
Section 12-81 (4) of the General Statutes provides that “property belonging to, or held in trust for, a municipal corporation of this state and used for a public purpose” shall be exempt from taxation. The plaintiff has alleged, and the defendant has admitted, that the plaintiff is a municipal corporation which was specially chartered by Special Acts 1899, No. 148, as amended by Special Acts 1919, No. 297. 13 Spec. Laws 129; 18 id. 244. But this admission, alone, cannot control the disposition of this case. If the plaintiff’s properties are not devoted to a public use, they are not exempt from taxation, even though it is admitted that the plaintiff is a municipal corporation. Devotion to a public use is the ground for such an exemption. Hamden v. New Haven, 91 Conn. 589, 592, 101 A. 11. The phrase in the statute “used for a public purpose” means a use open to the public, generally, as distinguished from a use available only to a restricted group of privileged individuals. Central Veterans’ Assn. v. Stamford, 140 Conn. 451, 456, 101 A.2d 281. Instead of at
This case is clearly distinguishable from Sachem’s Head Property Owners’ Assn. v. Guilford, 112 Conn. 515, 152 A. 877, and Fenwick v. Old Saybrook, 133 Conn. 22, 47 A.2d 849, upon both of which the plaintiff relies. The Sachem’s Head association, like the plaintiff, was an organization of property owners and electors within a prescribed area of the town in which the association’s property was located. A comparison of the charters of the two associations reveals that Sachem’s Head, in addition to other privileges not enjoyed by the plaintiff, had the right to take and condemn land within the limits of the association for the purposes of fire protection, sewers and sewage disposal plants. 18 Spec. Laws 866, § 1. As Sachem’s Head furnished water for fire protection and other public purposes, its water
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.