34 A.D. 83 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1898
The relator, the Medical Society of the County of Kings, seeks to be relieved of the duty of. paying taxes upon certain property situated at 356 Bridge street, borough of Brooklyn, under the provisions of chapter 498 of the-Laws of 1893. For this purpose it petitioned the Supreme Court in this department, praying for a peremptory writ of mandamus to the assessors of the city of Brooklyn, directing them to cancel the taxes levied against the relator in the years 1893, 1894, 1895, 1896 and 1897. This writ was granted,, and from the order granting the same appeal comes to this court.
Section 1 of chapter 498 of the Laws of 1893 provides that- “ The real property of a corporation or association organized exclusively for the moral and mental improvement of men and women or for religious, charitable, missionary, hospital, educational, patriotic, historical or cemetery purposes, or for two or more of such purposes,, and used exclusively for carrying out thereupon one or more of such ■ purposes, shall be exempt from taxation.” I shall assume, for the purposes of this discussion, that the assessors have the power to cancel the taxes levied, and that mandamus was the proper remedy to-invoke, and. will simply inquire whether the facts set forth in the petition of the relator are sufficient to bring it within the provisions-of this statute.
The petition recites that the petitioner is duly organized under the provisions of chapter 94 of the Laws of 1813, entitled “An act to' incorporate' medical societies for the purpose of regulating the-practice of physic and surgery in this State;” that it has “established in the city of Brooklyn an organization for mental improvement and for certain educational and charitable purposes; ” that- “ such society maintains a public medical library and a free public-medical reading room; both open to the public every day in- the: year, Sundays and holidays excepted ; maintains an auditorium in. which are regularly held medical meetings where papers of interest
I am unablé to see how the relator comes within the-provisions of the statute. Exemptions from taxation are not favored; the theory of the law is that all property shall pay its just proportion of the public burdens, and it is only in those cases where the property is put to some use calculated to minimize the expenses of government that public policy justifies an exemption. There are no presumptions in favor- of an exemption of property of any kind, and the. burden of establishing the right is upon the person claiming such exemption.
Chapter 498 of the Laws of 1893, under which the relator claims . an exemption, so far as requisite, has been already set out.
The petitioner. avers that it “.was duly organized,” and that it “ has established in the city of Brooklyn an organization for mental improvement and for certain educational and charitable purposes.” This is most commendable in the gentlemen making up the Medical Society of the County of Kings, but it does not entitle them to exemption from taxation under the laws of this State. There is no
But the society is likewise maintaining an organization “ for certain educational and charitable purposes.” Under this head we are ' told that it maintains an auditorium, etc., but it nowhere appears, either, that these are educational or charitable within the meaning ■ of the statute, or that the society is organized exclusively for the purpose of carrying out one or more of these objects. As was said in Coe v. Washington-Mills (149 Mass. 543): “It was a voluntary association for the mutual benefit of its members, and cannot be held to be a public charitable institution. To constitute a public charity, there must be an absolute gift to a charitable use for the benefit of the public.” No such condition prevails in the relator society. It was organized under the provisions of a law which distinctly declares the object for which it was created. It was “ an act to incorporate medical societies, for the purpose of - regulating the practice of physic.” That was the object for which it was created, and under the provisions of the act these medical societies were authorized to accumulate medical libraries, and to become auxiliaries to the Medical Society of the State of New York, which organization, in common with the county branches, has established -rules and regulations,.. many of them being enacted into the statute law of the State, for the ' practice of physic and surgery. These rules and regulations, and laws which have been enacted upon the suggestion of the Medical Society of the State of New York, have had for their object, at least incidentally, the welfare of the membership of these societies and their individual members as juacticing physicians. For many years,
were actually applied' to a "considerable extent in charity, is no more material than evidence of a similar application of a part' of his income by a private citizen would be in a suit against him.” This was an action for damages against a cemetery association, in which "the defendant sought to be exempted., from damages on the ground that it was a charitable organization. The court made the test, not whether the funds were actually used - for charitable purposes,'but whether the charter of the defendant compelled it to make such use of its funds; and this is cléarly the rule which should he applied to the application of the relator for exemption from taxation on the grounds either of charity or education. ' There is nothing in the statute under. which the relator is organized which compels it to keep its medical library or its reading room open to the public. In fact, it may be fairly questioned whether the public, outside of the comparatively small number of physicians and surgeons, with their students, have any interest in such a library or reading room, while the fact that those rooms are open to the .meetings of other medical societies, made up, for the most part, no- doubt, of the members of the relator, serves - no purpose of society in general which entitles it to immunity from taxation.
In other words, the Medical Society of the County of Kings is performing no service of a character calculated to. relieve the burdens of government more than a thousand other mutual associations or corporations, designed for the promotion of the individual development of its members. It is, therefore, entitled to none of the exemp
The order should be reversed, with costs.
All concurred.
Order reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and. application denied, with ten dollars costs.