66 A.2d 2 | Vt. | 1949
This is a bill in chancery to restrain the defendants from assessing or collecting any future taxes with respect to a piece of real estate owned by the plaintiff and known as the "Humphrey House", and to require the repayment of taxes thereon for the year 1945, which had been paid under protest. After hearing and filing of findings of fact a decree was entered for the plaintiff, and the cause has been brought here upon exceptions by the defendants.
The findings show the following facts: The plaintiff was incorporated under the name of Troy Conference Academy in 1834, by an act of the General Assembly. Sections 6 and 9 of this act read as follows:
"Sec. 6. It is hereby further enacted, that all necessary buildings of the institution, together with the lands to be connected therewith for the purpose of uniting manual labor with education, together with all philosophical apparatus and library of the institution, shall be exempt from taxation.
"Sec. 9. It is hereby further enacted, That all the privileges of this act shall be under the control of this, or any future legislature, so as to alter, amend or repeal the same, at pleasure, as the public good may require."
In 1936 its name was amended to read "Troy Conference Academy And Green Mountain Junior College". It has no capital stock and is not organized or operated for profit. All its income is used for the operation, maintenance and improvement of its educational facilities. It is an educational institution, now known as a junior college, *483
with a faculty of 26 instructors and teachers and about 40 other employees. It has about 300 students. Located on the school grounds are the usual buildings for such a school. At time of the hearing all of the available rooms in the dormitories were occupied by students, and it furnished room and board to 284 students and board alone to 18 others. In March, 1945, it purchased the so-called Humphrey property, a large house and lot located in the defendant municipalities and about 200 yards from the center of plaintiff's campus, for the purpose of making it into a home for members of the faculty, and has since maintained and supervised it. Since the fall of 1945, it has been occupied by eight members of the plaintiff's faculty, and three rooms on the first floor have been used as reception rooms. All other members of the faculty reside in homes off the campus. Although there are no class rooms in this house some instruction is given there, and meetings of students and others are held there several times each week of the school year. Students go there for individual tutoring and to confer with its occupants. It is vacant during the summer vacation. Compensation of all faculty members is figured on the basis of whether board and room is furnished, and the plaintiff's books reflect a debit entry of $400 per year against the salary of each one rooming in this house as a charge for room and board and of $160 per year for room alone. There has been a shortage of homes for rent or for sale in Poultney since prior to 1945, but it is not found that rooms for rent to faculty members were unobtainable during this period. The several defendants have never voted to exempt this property from taxation, nor have they been requested to do so in pursuance of No.
In his decree the chancellor adjudged, among other things, that the Humphrey House is and has been at all material times a reasonably necessary building of plaintiff, and is and has been at all material times exempt from local taxation in accordance with Section 6 of plaintiff's charter.
The defendants claim that the Humphrey House is not exempt under Section 6 of plaintiff's charter, because that section is no longer effective, but has been amended and changed, first by P. L. 590, sub-sec. IV, and second by No.
*484So far as here material P. L. 590 reads as follows:
"Sec. 590. The following property shall be exempt from taxation:
"IV. Real and personal estate granted, sequestered or used for public, pious or charitable uses; . . . and lands owned or leased by colleges, academies or other public schools. . . . The exemption of lands owned or leased by colleges, academies or other public schools, shall not apply to lands or buildings rented for general commercial purposes, nor to farming or timber lands owned or leased thereby, but this provision shall not affect the exemption of so-called school or college lands, sequestered to such use prior to January 28, 1911."
These provisions have been carried forward into V. S. 649, sub-sec. IV, rev. of 1947. Except for the last sentence, which was first enacted by No.
Section I of No.
"Section 1. Any real property acquired after passage of this bill by any college, university or fraternity such as would be exempt from taxation under the provisions of section 590 of the Public Laws, shall be set to such institution in the grand list of the town or city in which such real property is located at the value fixed in the quadrennial appraisal next preceding the date of acquisition of such property and taxed on such valuation; provided, however, that the voters of any town or city may at any legal meeting thereof vote to exempt such property from taxation. The value fixed on such property at such quadrennial appraisal shall not be increased so long as the property is owned and used by such institution for other than commercial and charitable purposes, whether or not improvements are made thereon."
This has been carried forward into V. S. 650, rev. of 1947, but the word "charitable" in the last sentence has been amended to read "investment". Defendants claim nothing for the use of this word.
There are no express words of repeal in these statutes, *485
and repeals by implication are not favored. But such a repeal may result in one of two situations: (1) When the acts are so far repugnant that they cannot stand together. (2) When, though not repugnant, the later act covers the whole subject of the former and plainly shows that it was intended as a substitute therefor.Central Vermont Railway, Inc. v. Hanley,
The term "colleges" as used in P. L. 590 includes such an educational institution as the findings show the plaintiff to be. Willard v. Pike,
Before the enactment of No.
While the Humphrey House is largely a dormitory for teachers without families, it has other uses directly connected with the operation of the plaintiff institution as we have seen. New Jersey has a statute exempting from taxation buildings of colleges and schools which may be necessary for the fair enjoyment thereof, and which are devoted to the purposes of such institutions and to no other purpose. In Hoboken v. Div. of TaxAppeals,
A college is a building or group of buildings in which students are housed, fed, instructed and governed. Yale University v.New Haven,
Dormitories and dining halls furnished by colleges for the use of their students are regarded as devoted to college purposes, and the fact that certain sums are paid for the use of the rooms therein does not affect their exemption. Yale University
v. New Haven, supra; Harvard College v. Cambridge, supra;People v. University of Illinois Foundation,
It is difficult to see any distinction between a dormitory for students and a dormitory for teachers, as in this case, but we need not base our decision upon this ground. The debiting against teachers' salaries of sums for room rent or room and board is not unlike that in Harvard College v. Cambridge,supra. How the rent for rooms is received, whether their salaries include quarters, or the cost is deducted, or the teacher is required to pay such cost direct, makes no difference. Considering all the circumstances, the location of the Humphrey House, its many uses by the students, the shortage of homes for rent or sale in the locality, and the other facts shown, we have no doubt that the officers of the plaintiff corporation, in good faith and not unreasonably, are using this building in a way which they deem directly connected with the running of the institution as a college and promotive of its purposes. This being so, we must accept their judgment, and hold that the building is not rented for general commercial purposes, and that it would be exempt from taxation under P. L. 590.
It is now necessary to ascertain the effect, if any, that Section 1 of No.
The act reads: "Any real estate acquired after passage of this bill by any college . . . such as would be exempt from taxation under the provisions of section 590 of the Public Laws . . .". "Any" college as here used means "every" college. Webster's New International Dictionary. Since the Humphrey House would be exempt from taxation under P. L. 590, the language used comprehends the plaintiff college. It appeared in argument that there is another college in the State, besides the plaintiff, which claims exemption by special act. It would be unjust and unreasonable to limit the exemption of other colleges claiming under the general law and not treat colleges exempt by special acts likewise. No such intention is expressed.
For a long time, owing to the increasing cost of town and city government and the need for increased local revenue, there has been a growing complaint about the removal from taxation of real estate held for tax exempt purposes. This has resulted in legislation. Beginning in 1904 we note the commencement of a legislative policy of curtailing the exemption from local taxation of lands sequestered or used for public, pious or charitable uses, and of lands owned by colleges, academies or other public schools. By No.
From an examination of the language of the act of 1941, construed according to the foregoing rules, in view of the legislative trend and other matters mentioned, we hold that there is a manifest legislative intention to include all colleges, (including those having a charter exemption where the right to alter, amend or repeal the same is reserved), within the terms of the act, and that the act shall be of universal application notwithstanding any special charter provision. *492 Since the act and Section 6 of the plaintiff's charter are so far repugnant that they cannot stand together, the act repeals that section of the charter in so far as the repugnancy exists. The result is that the Humphrey House is taxable under the terms of the act.
Since an injunction bond has been filed in this case we do not make final entry here.
Decree reversed, and cause remanded with directions that thebill be dismissed with costs to the defendants.