138 Mich. 676 | Mich. | 1904
Plaintiff brings this suit to recover from defendant city taxes for the year 1899 on its real estate, which it claims was exempt from taxation, and which it paid under protest. Plaintiff recovered a verdict and . judgment in the court below, and defendant asks a reversal of that judgment on many grounds.
Defendant’s treasurer, who made the collection, testified that the city taxes were not paid when due; that the payment was extended because plaintiff ‘ ‘asked me not to enforce collection of them until I got my warrant for the State, county, and school taxes, as they intended to pay them both at the same time.” Upon this testimony defendant asked the court to charge:
“If * * * payment was postponed at the request of plaintiff * * * on the promise of the plaintiff that it would pay such taxes later, though under protest, then I instruct you the payment was voluntary, and the plaintiff cannot recover.”
In support of its contention that error was committed by the trial court in refusing this request, defendant relies on Gachet v. McCall, 50 Ala. 307. In Gachet v. McCall it was held that if a taxpayer obtain an extension of time to pay his taxes under a promise to pay the same, a protest made at the time of payment will be ineffectual. The ground upon which this opinion rests is that the taxpayer was bound to pay in accordance with his agreement. If that principle is applied in the case at bar, it would not prevent recovery, because here the facts indicate, as shown by the request under consideration, that the agreement under which the postponement was obtained contemplated a payment of the taxes under protest.
Section 6 (section 8293, 3 Comp. Laws) provides:
“All the funds of said corporation shall be faithfully and exclusively used for the purposes thereof, as set forth in its articles, and the same shall be wholly used within this State. Said corporation may invest its funds by loan, on mortgage security, or by purchase of any city, county, State, or United States bonds, or by loan on pledge of the same: Provided, that no loan of such funds shall be made to any trustee, officer, or servant of such corporation.”
Section 7 (section 8294, 3 Comp. Laws) provides:
“The property on which said asylum or institution building' stands, together with said building, shall, while occupied for the objects and purposes thereof, be exempt from taxation.” '
The object of plaintiff’s corporation, as set forth in its articles, is as follows:
“ To found a hospital or charitable asylum within the State of Michigan for the care and relief of indigent or other sick or infirm persons, at which institution may be received also patients and patrons who are able to and do pay for the benefits there received, and which institution shall devote the funds and property acquired and received by it from time to time from all sources, exclusively to maintaining itself, improving. its conditions and facilities, extending its benefits and usefulness and facilitating and promoting its purposes, by such sanitary, dietetic, hygienic and philanthropic reforms and efforts as are germane or auxiliary thereto; all of its said purposes being undenomi
The property upon which the taxes in question were paid was the property and sanitarium or hospital building situated thereon of plaintiff. And it claims that the same was exempt from taxation under section 8294, above set forth. This property was transferred to plaintiff after its incorporation. It had formerly been the property of another corporation called the “ Health Reform Institute,” and was called the “ Battle Creek Sanitarium.” Plaintiff took possession of this property July 6, 1898, and thereafter operated the same as a hospital or sanitarium.
Plaintiff’s testimony shows that at this sanitarium it received and treated sick and infirm persons; that its total receipts from this sanitarium from July 6, 1898, to January 1, 1900, was $764,976.09; that its total disbursements during this same period were more than $20,000 in excess of its receipts; that during this time many patients had been treated free, and that many had paid less than the full price; that if these patients had paid full price, plaintiff’s receipts would have been greater by the amount of $35,490.96; that none of plaintiff’s funds had ever gone to any member of the association, except as it went to pay wages or salary; and that none of those funds had been used outside of the State except as they were used for the purpose of purchasing supplies.
Defendant contends that this evidence did not warrant a verdict in plaintiff’s favor, because: (a) It does not appear that plaintiff did not pay dividends upon its stock; (5) it does not' appear that plaintiff’s funds are wholly used within the State, as required by section 8293, 3 Comp. Laws; and (c) that plaintiff is not using said alleged exempt property for the business and purposes specified in the act under which it is incorporated.
(a) Plaintiff sufficiently proved that it had not paid dividends when it proved that none of its funds had gone to its members except as it paid wages or salary.
In this connection we consider the complaint of defendant that the court erred in charging the jury, in effect, that the burden of proving that the funds were used without the State, in violation of the statute, rested upon defendant and not upon plaintiff. Even if this charge was erroneous, as defendant contends—which we by no means affirm—we are bound to say that as all the testimony introduced upon the subject shows that the funds were properly used, the error, if error it was, was not prejudicial.
(c) The contention of defendant that plaintiff did not occupy this property for the business and purposes specified in the act under which it is incorporated is based upon the claim that the business there carried on by plaintiff was not the charitable business which the statute contemplated. Plaintiff used the property for a hospital in which, it treated sick and infirm persons. Some of these persons were treated free, some at reduced rate, but apparently most of them paid a regular schedule of prices fixed by plaintiff’s management. The total receipts were less than the total disbursements. How much of those total disbursements were used for improvements we are not informed. But as this was a matter defendant could have made clear had it chosen, we have no right to assume that any of these disbursements were illegitimate. At least, it may be inferred that the charges collected from patients, were not larger than were necessary to the successful
Defendant also requested the court to charge “ the only direct uses to which the plaintiff can put its property on which its buildings stand, and the only direct objects for which the same can be occupied, to exempt it from taxation, are the care and relief of indigent or other sick or infirm persons.” Assuming that this request correctly states the law, defendant was not prejudiced by the refusal to give it, because all the testimony indicates that the property was used for the care and relief of sick and infirm persons.
It is urged that the court erred in not permitting defendant to prove that it built a fire station near plaintiff’s property late in 1898, because one of plaintiff’s officers in the latter part of the summer of 1898 made the statement that plaintiff was the third largest taxpayer in the city of Bat-
Defendant complains of no other error which in our judgment demands discussion, and as plaintiff has waived its request that the court review the decision of the trial court which denied its right to be exempt from taxation on its personal property, the judgment of the court below will be affirmed, without costs.