181 S.W.2d 699 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1944
Affirming.
This action was instituted by the Commonwealth on *853 behalf of the Kentucky Unemployment Compensation Commission against the Lexington Cemetery Company (hereinafter referred to as the Company) to compel the latter to pay the unemployment compensation tax provided in KRS Chapter 341. The answer sets out facts which the company avers show it is operated exclusively for charitable purposes, therefore it is exempt from this tax. The court sustained a general demurrer to the answer, the Company declined to plead further and appeals from a judgment declaring it to be liable for the tax.
The answer avers that the Company was incorporated by an Act of the General Assembly in 1848 and that its charter was amended by an Act of 1888. The Company owns 168 acres of land near the City of Lexington which is used exclusively for the purpose of sepulture. It acquired the land by money advanced by public-spirited citizens who were reimbursed as money was received from the sale of lots. The lot owners are described in the Act incorporating the Company as shareholders, but the Company has no capital stock and is a non-profit corporation with all receipts devoted to the upkeep and beautification of the grounds; any surplus becomes a "permanent fund for the perpetual care, maintenance and upkeep of the cemetery and the land owned and used in connection therewith."
The lot owners obtain only burial rights in the form of deeds and they elect a board of trustees who manage the cemetery and serve without remuneration. The United States Government was sold a lot for one dollar whereon are buried 1,383 federal soldiers; the Confederate Veteran Association was conveyed a lot for the same nominal consideration whereon 181 confederate soldiers are buried. The Children's Home and the Orphan's Society of Lexington, charitable organizations, own lots upon which they bury their indigent dead, and up until this time there have been 259 paupers buried in this cemetery upon orders and directions from the various churches in the City of Lexington. The Henry Clay Memorial Association owns a lot upon which it has erected a monument to that great son of Kentucky, and upon which the State has made expenditures from time to time. It is upon these facts the answer avers that the cemetery is operated exclusively for charitable purposes and is thereby exempt from unemployment compensation tax. *854
The Company bases its claim for exemption as a charitable corporation on KRS
"Service performed in the employ of a corporation, community chest, fund or foundation, organized and operated exclusively for religious, charitable, scientific, literary, or educational purposes or for the prevention of cruelty to children or animals, no part of the net earnings of which inures to the benefit of any private shareholder or individual and no substantial part of the activities of which is carrying on propaganda, or otherwise attempting to influence legislation."
The quoted provision in our Act is taken verbatim from the federal. Social Security Act,
"Cemetery companies owned and operated exclusively for the benefit of their members or which are not operated for profit; and any corporation chartered solely for burial purposes as a cemetery corporation and not permitted by its charter to engage in any business not necessarily incident to that purpose, no part of the net earnings of which inures to the benefit of any private shareholder or individual."
The fact that the Congress lifted subsection 6 from the exemptions of the federal income tax law and incorporated same in the national Social Security Act and omitted therefrom subsection 5 of such income tax exemptions shows a clear intention upon its part not to. exempt cemeteries from the national social security tax. As the Kentucky Unemployment Compensation Act copies the exemptions contained in the national Social Security Law and tracks the latter closely for the purpose of securing federal aid, it follows that our General Assembly likewise expressed an intention not to exempt cemeteries from the State Act.
While not quoted, the greater part of what appears in this paragraph was obtained from Chrisgau v. Woodlawn Cemetery Ass'n,
There is no room for the view that a public cemetery is a public charity where the lawmaking power has legislated to the contrary. Christgau case,
The General Assembly of Kentucky, like that of many other states, adopted the Unemployment Compensation Act with a view to approval by the federal authority so as to obtain federal benefits. As was said in the Christgau case,
"Where the state government, acting independently in its own sphere, copies a federal statute, the state act will be construed to have the same meaning as the federal act." Pittsburgh Plate Glass Co. v. Paine Nixon Co.,
There is no doubt in our minds that the Lexington Cemetery Company is not a charitable corporation. In facts much like those before us the Supreme Court of Massachusetts in Proprietors of Cemetery of Mount Auburn v. Fuchs,
The Company admits that sec. 170 of the Kentucky *856
Constitution exempting from taxation "* * * places of burial not held for private or corporate profit, institutions of purely public charity and institutions of education not used or employed for gain by any person or corporation * * *," has no application, as this section as construed by this court only grants exemption from the payment of ad valorem tax. Strater Bros. Tobacco Co. v. Com.,
We agree with the Company's counsel that Com. v. Lexington Cemetery Co.,
Except as otherwise provided by statute, every grant, conveyance, devise, gift, appointment and assignment made for any charitable or humane purpose shall be valid if it points out with reasonable certainty the purposes of the charity and the beneficiaries thereof."
The statute just quoted is in effect Chapter 4 of 43 Elizabeth, and as was said in Ford v. Ford's Ex'r,
There can be no doubt that a gift or devise to a public cemetery is made for a charitable purpose under the statute of 43 Elizabeth. But the Congress in formulating exemptions in the national Social Security Act eliminated the broad construction given 43 Elizabeth and in effect limited "charitable" as signifying only those corporations "which were organized and maintained exclusively for eleemosynary purposes." Christgau case,
We say, as was written in the Schuster opinion,
Were there any doubt in our minds that we are giving the word "charitable" a too restricted meaning, it would be swept aside when we consider the purpose of the Kentucky Unemployment Compensation Act and the nature of the tax paid thereunder. The Act was intended to vanquish the bete noire — unemployment — of all who earn their living by daily toil. Certainly, there is no reason why the workers for cemeteries should be denied social security. The required payments are regarded as taxes, Unemployment Compensation Commission v. Savage,
In holding that the Company is not exempt from unemployment compensation tax, we in effect say that the exemption of a cemetery from ad valorem and income taxes does not extend to unemployment taxes, since it was the clear intention of the Congress and of the Kentucky Legislature, which followed the national Social Security Act, that public cemeteries should not be relieved of their share of the social security burden.
The judgment is affirmed.
Whole Court sitting.