SOUTH DAKOTA STATE MEDICAL ASSOCIATION, Respondent v. JONES et al., Appellants
File No. 10257
Supreme Court of South Dakota
November 25, 1966
Rehearing denied April 26, 1967
146 N.W.2d 725
ROBERTS, Judge.
Affirmed. RENTTO, P. J., BIEGELMEIER, HOMEYER, JJ., and SMITH, Commissioner, concur. SMITH, Commissioner, sitting for HANSON, J., disqualified. WINANS, Circuit Judge, sitting for ROBERTS, J., disqualified.
Zimmer & Connelly, Parker, for plaintiff and respondent.
ROBERTS, Judge.
The South Dakota State Medical Association, hereafter called the association, claiming to be a benevolent organization made application to the board of commissioners of Minnehaha County for the abatement of taxеs for the year 1960 and subsequent years on real property described as Lots 11 and 12 of Block 52, Airport Addition to the City of Sioux Falls, upon which there is an office building. The association appealed to the circuit court from the decision of the board denying its application. After hearing evidence the court found that a proportionate part of the real property, consisting of the lots and building, was exempt from taxаtion. The judgment decreed that the taxes for the years in question be abated except the amounts found payable on proportionate value of the part of the property subject to taxation. From the judgment, defendants have appealed.
The question presented is whether respondent association comes within the exempting provisions of
The articles of incorporation of the association state that its objects and purposes are “to advance the medical and collateral sciences and to assist in acquiring a knowledge of the same; to work for the benefit of community health and welfare; to bring together the physicians of this state into one organization and unite with similar organizations to form the American Medical Association; to elevate the standards of medical education; to assist in establishing high standards of medical care in all public programs and to advise persons or agencies in the administration of such programs; and to lease, hold, purchase, buy or sell such property, real, personal, or mixed, as may be necessary or reasonably incidental to the conduct of its business, its purposes and objects; and to acquire such property or any part of it by gift, devise, or purchasе.” The articles also provide: “In the event this Corporation shall be dissolved, voluntarily or involuntarily, all of the corporate assets of this Corpora-tion, wherever situated and of whatsoever character, remaining after the payment of all of its obligations, in the manner provided by law, shall be paid or conveyed to the School of Medicine of the University of South Dakota and in the event such School of Medicine is unаble or unwilling to accept, said assets shall be distributed to the State of South Dakota to be used for the betterment of public health.”
Respondent association is a nonprofit corporation having no stockholders.
In South Dakota Sigma Chapter House Ass‘n. v. Clay County, 65 S.D. 559, 276 N.W. 258, this court had before it the question whether or not plaintiff association incorporated for the purpose of acquiring lots and erecting and furnishing a house thereon for usе as a residence by members of a university fraternity was entitled to exemption of the property from taxation and held that it was not. It was the conclusion of this court that an organization properly incorporated as a charitable or benevolent society must be denied tax exemption if from its activities it appears that the property is not devoted to charitable or benevolent purposes. The faсt then that respondent association was not organized for profit and that in the event of dissolution the corporate assets will not inure to any prohibited person is not of controlling importance.
The respondent argues, and the trial court held, that the activities of the association result in more or less direct benefits to the public, such as providing medical scholarships, assistance to medical students, distribution of public health literature, assistance to the South Dakota Board of Medical Examiners, a physician placement service, maintenance of a medical grievance committee, and assistance in the establishment and operation of clinics free to the public.
The South Dakota Medical Service, Inc., South Dakota Nurses Association, the State Board of Medical and Osteopathic Examiners and the Nationаl Polio Foundation rent and occupy offices in the building of the respondent. The South Dakota Medical Service, Inc. is a corporation organized under the Medical and Surgical Plan law
The association renders a service to its members under agreements negotiated with federal and state agencies in providing medical care for veterans and dependents of
We have indicated that in order for an organization to qualify for exemption under the provisions of Section 57.0311, supra, there must be a concurrence of ownership of the prop-erty by an organization of the type named therein and a use of the property for one or more of the prescribed purposes. It is established by prior decisions of this court that the test for determining whether property is “used exclusively for charitable, benevolent, or religious purposes” is not the mere use of the property that determines the right to exemption, but rather the “purpose of the use” which controls. State ex rel. Eveland v. Erickson, 44 S.D. 63, 182 N.W. 315, 13 A.L.R. 1189; Scottish Rite Temple Association v. Board of Commissioners of Yankton County, 62 S.D. 204, 252 N.W. 626. Whether the property in question was devoted to benevolent purposes is a question of fact and the burden of proof is on the association to show that thе specific property for which exemption is claimed is within the contemplation of the statute.
Massachusetts Medical Soc. v. Assessors of Boston, 340 Mass. 327, 164 N.E.2d 325, involved a claim of tax exemption under circumstances similar to those before us. The plaintiff society sought abatement of taxes on an office building occupied by its officers and a post-graduate
In the State of Illinois the American Medical Association sought exemption from payment of contributions under an Unemployment Compensation Act because it engaged in activities which complied with the exemption features of the act. The Supreme Court of that state held thаt the association was not exempt because a substantial portion of its efforts and income went “toward protecting and furthering economic benefits to the individual members of the association” and not for exempt purposes. American Medical Ass‘n. v. Board of Review, 392 Ill. 614, 65 N.E.2d 350. This court in Sioux Falls Post No. 15 v. Williamson, 73 S.D. 250, 41 N.W.2d 647, pointed out that the Illinois case was not applicable for the reason that the element of personal advantage to members of the American Legion was lacking. This court in thаt case held that under the unemployment compensation act “It is the destination of the income not the source that determines exemption.” The decision is not here precisely in point, but lends inferentially support to the conclusion that the property of a benevolent organization is not used exclusively for the purposes for which it was organized if its activities and income inure primarily to the benefit of its members, even though there are incidental benefits to the public.
We conclude from the record here presented that the property of the respondent association is not exempt from the taxes imposed for the years in question. The objectives of the association are highly laudable and it is evident that dissemination of health information and other public services inure to the benefit of the public. We have heretofore observed that under the present provisions of our exemption statute property to be exempt must not only belong to a benevolent organization, but must also be used “exclusively” for benevolent purposes. In other words, the nature of the use determines the tax exemption character of the property. It fairly appears from the evidence that there are elements of personal advantages and рrofit to members of the association that differ from those inuring to the public. The activities and expenditures of the association do not sustain its claim that the property is used exclusively—is, that primarily—for a benevolent or other purpose warranting exemption.
And see International College of Surgeons v. Brenza, 8 Ill.2d 141, 133 N.E.2d 269, 61 A.L.R.2d 1027; Northeast Osteopathic Hospital v. Keitel, 355 Mo. 740, 197 S.W.2d 970; Medical Soc. of Kings County v. Neff, 34 App.Div. 83, 53 N.Y.S. 1077.
The judgment is reversed and the cause is remanded for further proceedings in accordance with this opinion.
RENTTO, P. J., and BIEGELMEIER and HOMEYER, JJ., concur.
HANSON, J., dissents.
HANSON, Judge (dissenting).
The trial court determined the South Dakota State Medical Association to be a benevolent society within the meaning of our tax exemption statute and entitled to a proportionate exemption from taxes on its headquarters building situated in Sioux Falls. The judgment should be affirmed, in my opinion.
According to
Turning then to our Benevolent Corporation Act, under which the South Dakota Medical Association is incorporated, it appears from
Many different kinds of fraternal, benevolent, and сharitable organizations are entitled to be chartered under our Benevolent Corporation Act. All are not specifically named therein. Various service organizations, for example, are similar in character, purpose, and practices to the American
It is indicated by this court in the case of South Dakota Sigma Chapter House Ass‘n. v. Clay County, 65 S.D. 559, 276 N.W. 258, that if an organization or association has been properly chartered under our Benevolent Corporation Act, it cannot be denied an exemption from taxation if its practices are in conformity with its tenets. According, the South Dakota Medical Association is a benevolent corporation and entitled to exemption from taxation of its headquarters building in proportiоn to the beneficent use made of the building by the association. The nonbenevolent use of the building made by the South Dakota Medical Services Corporation was properly assessed and taxed in accordance with
