101 Mass. 319 | Mass. | 1869
The plaintiff is a benevolent institution, incorporated within this Commonwealth. By Gen. Sts. c. 11, § 5, cl. 3, “ the real estate belonging to such institutions, occupied by them or their officers for the purposes for which they were incorporated,” is exempted from taxation.
The statute contains no limitation of the amount of real estate that may be thus held exempt from taxation ; and we know of no authority under which, or rule by which, the court can affix ny such limitation. The only condition upon which the exemption depends is the proviso as to the purposes for which the real estate is occupied.
In construing and applying this proviso, the court cannot restrict it to the limit of necessity. The statute does not indicate
In this case, it is manifest that the intention with which the lands in question were purchased and held was to promote the purposes for which the institution was incorporated. The case suggests several uses to which different portions of the land were appropriated, and which tend to justify their occupation for the proper purposes of the institution. One, which applies to the whole extent of land held, is, that “ it was bought and held to prevent too near proximity of buildings and use which might be deleterious to the hospital for the treatment of the insane.” There is nothing in the case to show that this was not the real intention ; nor that the whole of the lands were not in fact held, and proper to be held, for this purpose. The court cannot, from the mere fact of the extent of the lands so held, (one hundred and ten acres, including marsh and flats,) determine judicially that the trustees of the institution have wrongly exercised their discretion in this respect. The presumption is in favor of their judgment, and it requires something more than mere difference of opinion, upon a matter of opinion especially confided to them, to overcome that presumption. The decision in Wesleyan Academy v. Wilbraham, 99 Mass. 599, is directly applicable, and conclusive upon this point.
It is contended that there is no such occupation of the flats as the statute contemplates. But if the purpose stated be one which is sufficient to warrant the holding of land exempt from taxation, then, the occupation being all that is necessary for that purpose, the condition of exemption is satisfied in both respects. We can have no doubt upon this point.
At the new trial, before Dewey, J., a verdict was again returned for the defendants, by direction of the judge, who allowed the following bill of exceptions, which was argued at the November session 1869.
“ The plaintiff corporation is managed by a board of trustees, and previously to April 27, 1867, owned a large extent of real estate (from forty to sixty acres of land) in Somerville, upon which they had erected a large number of buildings, of great value. The buildings, with all the land, had been occupied for their hospital for the insane, and had not been taxed by the defendants. It appeared that on the books of the corporation the buildings and land were valued at about §400,000, which was less than the actual cost.
“ The plaintiffs had from time to time purchased adjoining land, and occupied the same for the purposes of the hospital. Upon a portion of the territory bought and occupied, as before stated, by them, there was an old wooden building which had been on the plaintiffs’ land for a long time, and been in the place where it now stands since 1859 or 1860, and was, in May 1867, and for some years had been, occupied by a person with his family, who was and is exclusively employed in repairing and taking care of the buildings on the hospital grounds. He was paid by the superintendent, once a fortnight, a certain sum per day. At the end of every month, the superintendent deducted nine dollars from his wages, as rent, and gave him a receipt for the rent of that month. He credited the institution with rents so received. There was testimony to show that the rent was very low. And there was testimony that the superintendent settled his accounts with the treasurer; but there was no evidence that the trustees knew of this rent being so charged and received.
“ On April 27, 1867, the plaintiffs bought, for §40,000, a neighboring estate of about one hundred and ten acres, known as the Barrell farm, consisting of upland, flats and marsh, a por*
The judge erred in ruling substantially that the workman had an estate in the building, when it was possible that he gained no estate, but occupied only as a servant of the corporation. His occupation was in fact by reason of his service. The monthly deduction from his wages did not change its character. Colleges take pay for the occupation of their dormitories by students, and hospitals for the occupation of their wards and rooms by patients, without vesting estates in student or patient. The corporation might supply a place of residence as part of the compensation of an employee. At the most, the workman was but a tenant at sufferance; for there was no evidence that the letting by the superintendent was authorized or sanctioned by the trustees
The dwelling-house was not occupied by the plaintiffs or their officers, at all, and certainly not for the purposes for which they were incorporated, and is not exempt under the Gen. Sts. c. 11, § 5. It was rented to a person not an officer of the institution. It is immaterial whether he credited the rent, or was charged therefor, or paid it in money; it does not change the relation of the parties as landlord and tenant. Pierce v. Cambridge, 2 Cush. 611. And if any part of the estate was liable to be taxed, though the remaining part was not, this action cannot be maintained. Gen. Sts. c. 11, § 43. Bourne v. Boston, 2 Gray, 496. Howe v. Boston, 7 Cush. 273. Lincoln v. Worcester, 8 Cush. 55. Salmond v. Hanover, 13 Allen, 119.
Although the fact that rent was paid or allowed for the house may not have been brought home to the trustees, it is not in evidence that the tenant was in wrongful possession ; and, not being an officer of the institution, the tenant, in the absence of any agreement, is liable to pay rent. And if the plaintiffs had no knowledge that the tax was assessed on the building, it was not the fault of the defendants. The assessors’ books are always open for inspection.
The defence now relied on is, that, in the assessment by which this tax was laid, there was included “ an old
The tax, in the case of Pierce v. Cambridge, was levied upon the tenant of premises held under a lease which gave him an estate in the land. The ground of the decision was, that the tenant “ had an estate in possession in the house and land, and the college bad only the reversion.” The court further say, in regard to the exemption under Rev. Sts. c. 7, § 5, that it “ ceased after the house and land had been separated from the college yard, and leased to the plaintiff.”
The building, in the present case, was upon land not taxed and apparently exempt from taxation, by reason of the manner in which it was held, in connection with the charitable objects for which the plaintiff was incorporated. The facts in regard to the occupation of the building are imperfectly stated in the exceptions. As the judge ruled that the property was taxable, the facts should be taken to be as claimed by the plaintiff’s counsel, at least so far as the jury would have been authorized to find such facts by the evidence before them. If, as it is claimed in behalf of the plaintiff, the occupation was one merely by reason of service, the building being held -as incident only to the general purpose for which the land was held, and occupied by the person charged with the care of the buildings on the hospital grounds, for reasons of convenience ; and the rent was paid and received, in the manner stated, as a convenient mode of adjusting the compensation of the person so employed, and not as the income or fruit of an estate granted; we are of opinion that the exemption would still attach to the property. By the ruling of the court below, as we understand it, the question was made to turn upon the single fact of the payment and receipt of rent. This we think was erroneous.
There was one assessment of $40,000. The principal subject of that valuation was the Barrell farm, of about eighty acres. At the trial, it appeared that, upon the assessors’ books, immediately preceding the description of the farm, and under a heading of “ Buildings,” there was a figure 1. There was no further description, nor any separate valuation of the building. One of the assessors testified “that the building referred to by figure 1 was the one occupied by the plumber on the other land of the plaintiff's not taxed ; that he had assessed the tax and wrote the description; that he did not know whether the plaintiffs received rent for the same in 1867, when assessed.” It is to be observed that the assessor does not state what valuation was placed upon the building, nor that any valuation was in fact put upon it and included in the $40,000. There was no ground to justify a tax upon the building, which would not require the tax to be laid also upon the land on which it stood. And it would appear, from the testimony of the assessor, that the ground upon which it is now sought to maintain the tax was not then known to himself. Whatever may have been the purpose of entering the figure 1 upon the assessors’ books, we think the testimony does not show that there was any valuation of that building, nor that any part of the tax was then intended to be applied to that property.
But further than that, we are inclined to think that it would not be competent for the defendants thus to establish a tax which does not appear upon the books of the assessors. There is a full and distinct description of the Barrell farm, and a sum set against it as for the valuation put upon it. If the figure 1 may properly be taken as a part of the description of the subject matter upon which that valuation is placed, it indicates a ouilding upon the land there described and valued. Buildings are taxable with the land to which they are affixed, constituting
This failure of proper description was not occasioned by the omission of the plaintiff to return a list to the assessors. The corporation denied that it held any property liable to be taxed. The assessors undertook to assert the right to tax certain portions of its real estate, as not covered by the exemption afforded by the statute. They were bound so to designate the specific property as to which they claimed this right, that the corporation might ascertain from their record upon what the tax was intended to be laid. Torrey v. Millbury, 21 Pick. 64.
For these several reasons, the verdict returned by direction o the court below must be set aside. Exceptions sustained.