In this class action,
2
thе plaintiffs challenge the constitutionality of a statute granting real estate tax abatements
The facts are as follows. The named plaintiffs, John and Catherine Lee, are both over the age of seventy. From 1943 to 1977, they owned and occupied a two-story, eight-room house in Springfield. In 1977, the Lees sold that house to a son and his wife, and purchased their present one-story, five-room house, also located in Springfield. The Lees have assets of less than $40,000, exclusive of their present home, which is assessed at 100% valuation of $42,600. On September 28, 1982, the Lees applied to the board of assessors of Springfield for a property tax abatement under G. L. c. 59, § 5, Seven
The Lees then instituted this suit in Superior Court, on their own behalf as well as on behalf of all those similarly situated, claiming that the durational requirement of cl. Seventeenth C is an unconstitutional infringement of their right to travel. 5 On March 8, 1984, the judge found that the statutе has an impact on the “ability of the plaintiffs to obtain the necessities of life.” Finding this impact “significant,” and the right to travel “fundamental,” the judge held that the durational requirement was subject to review by the “strict scrutiny” test, and therefore could be upheld only on a showing of a compelling State interest in that requirement. Finding no such State interest in this case, the judge held that the ten-year period “penalizes the fundamental right of interstate travel protected by the United States and Massachusetts constitutions,” and therefore that it was unconstitutional. We disаgree.
Although the Supreme Court has not held that the right to travel protected by the United States Constitution is applicable when only intrastate rights are involved, we assume, for the purposes of discussion, that the statute in question affects that right. “The right to travel and to move from оne state to another has long been accepted, yet both the nature and the source of that right have remained obscure.”
Zobel
v.
Williams,
The determination whether a particular statute imposes a “penalty” on the right to travel includes something more than merely deciding whether the statute denies some other fundamental right or the “necessities of life.”
Zobel
v.
Williams, supra
at 64 & n. 11. To determine what level of scrutiny to apply, courts have generally focused on the “nature of the benefit denied.”
Fisher
v.
Reiser,
The Commissioner states that the local option abatement provisions of cl. Seventeenth C were enacted by St. 1981, c. 743, § 1, in response to inflationary increases in real estate values occurring in the 1970’s, which led to increases in real estate tax assessments. The Legislature rationally could have concluded that persons over the age of seventy, many of whom are retired and who depend on fixed incomes, might have difficulty meeting these higher tax assessments. This problem has, if anything, been compounded by substantial increases in real estate values unrelated to inflation.
8
Of course, elderly
It is true that, in a sense, the statute may result in the unequal distribution of benefits. However, the classification made by cl. Seventeenth C, between those who move and those who stay and receive the abatement, reflects preexisting differences; it does not еstablish new classes that are different only in the way that the statute treats them. Compare
Williams
v.
Vermont,
We hold that the statute “has a fair and rational relationship to the object sought to be accomplished.”
Seiler Corp.
v.
Commissioner of Revenue,
So ordered.
Notes
The judge certifiеd a class comprising all present and future applicants for real estate tax abatements under G. L. c. 59, § 5, Seventeenth C, who have been residents for at least ten years of a Massachusetts municipality
General Laws c. 59, § 5, states in part: “The following property shall be exempt from taxаtion . . . Seventeenth C Real estate, to the taxable valuation of two thousand dollars or the sum of one hundred and seventy-five dollars, whichever would result in an abatement of the greater amount of actual taxes due, of a surviving spouse or of any minor whose parent is deceased, occupied by such spouse, or minor as her or his domicile, or a person or persons over the age of seventy who has owned and occupied it as a domicile for not less than ten years.” Only those persons whose assets do not exceed $40,000 (exclusive of the first $60,000 of value in owner-occupied real estate) are eligible for the abatement, but there are no income limitations. Cities and towns have the option to accept this clause.
The judge allowed the plaintiffs’ motion for attorneys’ fees and costs, pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1988 (1982).
The Commissioner moved to dismiss the complaint in the Superior Court on the ground that the plaintiffs failed to appeal the denial of the abatement to the Appellate Tax Board, as provided in cl. Seventeenth C. That motion was denied, and since the Commissioner no longer argues the point, we do not address it.
If the right to travel is founded instead on the privileges and immunities clause of Article IV of the United States Constitution (see
Zobel
v.
Williams,
But see
Sosna
v.
Iowa,
See, e.g., U.S. Bureau of the Census, Statistical Abstract of the United States: 1984, 493 & 746 (104th ed. 1983) (prices of one-family houses in northeastern United States rose by approximately 20% more than the consumer price index from 1970 to 1981).
The plaintiffs argue that because cl. Seventeenth C also рrovides an identical abatement to “a surviving spouse or any minor whose parent is deceased,” without any durational requirement, the policy outlined cannot have been the Legislature’s intention. But the plaintiffs do not challenge those, exemptions, and we therefore need not attempt to ascertain the legislative intent in providing them.
The plaintiffs’ brief refers in passing to the Massachusetts Constitution as a basis for their claim. However, “it contains no separate discussion of Massachusetts constitutional principles ... [so that] we review the . . . claim solely on the basis of an alleged violation of Federal constitutional principles. See Mass. R. A. P. 16 (a) (4), as amended,
