105 Misc. 405 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1918
The relator is a corporation organized in 1915 under the Benevolent Orders Law, section 7, which provides: “Any number of Masonic bodies within the state, chartered by the Grand Lodge of Free and Accepted Masons of the State of Hew York * * * may unite in forming a corporation for the purpose of
The corporation has built and is the owner of the Syracuse Masonic Temple on Montgomery street in the city of Syracuse, where all Masonic bodies and lodges of the city have their place of meeting. The building is á five-story brick building with basement. The basement contains heating apparatus, cloak rooms, lockers, ventilating apparatus, store room and toilet. On the first floor there are offices for the accommodation of the corporation, a large room used as a drill room, for banquets, lectures and balls, a kitchen operated in connection with the large room for banquets, and a lodge room. On the second or mezzanine floor is a balcony connected with a large room, an ante room and an organ loft. On the third and fourth floors there are two lodge rooms with ante rooms, dressing rooms, toilet and storage rooms. On the fifth floor is a directors’ room, a meeting room for the use of the trustees of the corporation, and social rooms consisting of a parlor, card rooms, reading rooms, a small kitchen and a store room, and a billiard room. There are no stores in the building and no part of the building is devoted to any ordinary commercial purpose.
In the year 1917, the city assessors made an assessment on the property of $184,500. This proceeding is to review that assessment, the relator claiming that the. entire property is exempt from taxation.
Subdivision 7 of section 4 of the Tax Law, as amended by chapter 411 of the Laws of 1916, provides
The purposes and objects of the relator, as stated in its certificate of incorporation, are all those, including those stated in the disjunctive, that are set forth in the sections of the Benevolent Orders Law, and the latter part of subdivision 7 of section 4 of the Tax Law heretofore quoted, in the identical language of the statute; and the foundation was thus laid in forming the corporation for a proper claim for exemption.
It has been judicially determined that a corporation such as the relator is a charitable and benevolent corporation within the meaning of the provisions of the Tax Law relating to exemptions. People ex rel. Crook v. Wells, 179 N. Y. 257. If, therefore, its property is exclusively used for benevolent or charitable purposes, or if the entire net income of its building maintained for the meetings of the general assembly of its members or subordinate bodies “is exclusively applied or to be used ” for one or more of the charities named in the statute, then it is legally entitled to such exemption.
It is admitted that during the year 1917 the drill room in the building was rented on one occasion to the ladies of the Jewish Communal Home, a charitable organization, for the sum of $100; that on another occasion its kitchen was rented to the Syracuse Journal, a newspaper corporation, for ten dollars. Neither of these parties was in any way connected with the
No one would claim, I apprehend, that the use of a church parlor or even its auditorium on one or two occasions for some secular meeting, would cause the loss of exemption to the religious society on the ground that its property was not used exclusively for religious purposes. The intent of the statute has a broader significance and contemplates the leasing or use of the building at fixed rates of rental for public entertainments and meetings of various kinds, either regularly or as suitable opportunities occur. People ex rel. Young Men’s Association v. Sayles, 32 App. Div. 197; affd., 157 N. Y. 677; People ex rel. Catholic Union v. Sayles, 32 App. Div. 203; affd., 157 N. Y. 679. Therefore, I think we may dismiss from consideration the two instances of the leasing of small portions of the building. If such leasing were continued and became a fixed policy, the rule would be different. As for the dedication ball, there would, of course, be but one. That inci
The real difficulty lies in the fact, as it appears from the evidence, that the social rooms on the fifth floor of the club are conducted by a separate corporation, known as the Masonic Temple Club, organized under the Membership Corporations Law, belonging to a league of Masonic clubs. A somewhat complicated arrangement has been entered into between the club and the trustees of the relator, whereby all members belonging to any of the Masonic lodges meeting in the Temple may become members of the club without payment of any dues or initiation, the club retaining the right to impose an initiation fee and dues upon Masons not affiliated with any of the Syracuse bodies. The consideration of this agreement, as to the membership in the club, is that the trustees pay into the treasury of the club one dollar a year for each member of the Masonic lodges, and five cents per year for each member of the higher Masonic organizations. The club, on its part, agrees to return to the treasury of the corporation seventy per cent of such amount paid to it, and on the first day of May in each year sixty-six and two-thirds per cent of all moneys remaining in the treasury of the club at that date. This somewhat confusing arrangement is apparently a device by which all members of the Masonic bodies may have social privileges in the club, and the club shall pay a reasonable rental for the use of the rooms. The club leases a lunch or restaurant privilege to an outside caterer, and the members of the club, and occasionally a few others brought in as friends, may take their lunches in the club room. For this privilege the club receives ten per
It is very evident that this social or club arrangement destroys the claim that the property is used exclusively for benevolent or charitable purposes.- The use of a portion of the property for the purpose of a club and the acceptance of a pecuniary profit for the benefit of the members of the lodges to pay their club dues, is a violation of both the letter and spirit of the statute under which exemption is claimed. People ex rel. New York Lodge No. 1 v. Purdy, 179 App. Div. 805.
There remains to consider then, the claim for exemption based on the fact that the ‘ ‘ real property of any fraternal corporation created to build and maintain a building for its meeting * * * the entire net income of which real property is exclusively applied to be used to maintain an asylum or asylums,” etc.
It appears from the evidence and from the exhibits that there was incorporated in this state in 1864 ‘ ‘ The Trustees of the Masonic Hall Fund ” (Laws of 1864, chap. 272). This act has been amended by chapter 503 of the Laws of 1873, chapter 350 of the Laws of 1877, chapter 55 of the Laws of 1885, chapter 105 of the Laws of 1890 and chapter 66 of the Laws of 1898. This corporation was created to build and maintain the Masonic Hall in the city of New York for the meetings of the grand lodge or general assembly of Masons, and out of the fund derived from the rent, income or other sources to build, establish and maintain an asylum or asylums, school or schools for the free education of the children of Masons, and for the relief of worthy and indigent Masons, their widows and orphans. Subsequently, this Masonic Hall was built in New York city, and eventually a Masonic Home
But it is not by an act of incorporation, stating all the purposes of charitable and benevolent acts in the language of the statute, that such a corporation becomes entitled to exemption. It is by dedicating and applying certain net income and profits to a definite purpose that its claim may be recognized. It is doubtful if, without specific legislative authority, a corporation like the relator would be entitled to rent part of its building for commercial purposes and then apply the net profits to charitable work. It is apparently contemplated that the income from the rental of the building to the subordinate lodges, or to the various lodges for their purposes, would be, as it should be, sufficient for the payment of the expenses and upkeep of the building, interest on the investment, with a profit or income besides. The building of the relator has produced no such profit, even with the accretions from out
Undoubtedly the corporation would be entitled to an exemption for such portion of its property as was being used entirely for fraternal, benevolent or charitable purposes; but that question is not presented here. The claim is for entire exemption. If the entire building were used for a meeting place for the members of the association and subordinate lodges, and the net income received from the rentals paid by those lodges, if any, dedicated to some particular charitable purpose contemplated by the statement of its objects and purposes in the certificate of incorporation, the corporation would be entitled to claim exemption for the entire
It follows that the petition of the relator must be dismissed and the writ of certiorari quashed.
Petition dismissed and writ quashed.