Court Opinion

ID: 3864353
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 08:57:59.795409+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:23:21.394725
License: Public Domain

The Athenaeum, the Central Congregational Society, the First Congregational *Page 479 
Society and Brown University, all object to the allowance of the report of the commissioners in the matter of the widening of College street, upon the ground that by the general law of the State the property of religious and educational institutions, used for those purposes, is exempted from taxation, the terms of the law being as follows: "The following property, and no other, shall be exempt from taxation: "houses for religious worship, houses for schools, academies and colleges, and all the appurtenances thereto belonging, owned by any town, company, or corporation, and the land used in connection therewith, so far as the same is held, occupied and used for, and the rents and profits thereof are applied to religious and educational purposes." And the University claiming an exemption also by the terms of its charter, which are as follows: That "the college estate" "shall be freed and exempted from all taxes." The conclusions at which we have arrived in this case are the result of the authorities upon the subject rather than of our own reasonings. The act under which these assessments were made was copied from the legislation of New York and of other States, and it is to be presumed that our General Assembly intended to adopt the construction put upon these acts by the courts of the States whence they were derived. A decision of the question was many years since made in our own State, and has been since acted upon with the acquiescence of the people and of the law-making power of the State. This court as at present constituted has adhered to the decisions heretofore made, even when not altogether satisfied with the reasons upon which they rest, especially where such decisions are but a construction of the statute law of the State, for if the court had mistaken its meaning, it is to be presumed that the legislature would correct that mistake by subsequent legislation. Nor have we found it necessary to decide whether the doctrine of Love v. Howard, 6 R.I. 116, that a covenant to pay all taxes, assessments, c., does not apply to assessments under this law, as the law was of a nature unknown in the State when the covenant was made, is a doctrine applicable to a case like the present. We proceed then to consider these decisions by force of which we have come to our conclusion. *Page 480 
The first case occurred in 1814, in the State of New York,In the Matter of the Mayor c., of New York, 11 Johns. 77, in which case several churches claimed exemption from an assessment of this character, upon the ground that the general tax law declared "that no real estate belonging to any church shall be taxed by any law of this State." The court held that "the word taxes means burdens, charges, or impositions put or set upon persons or property for public uses," "but to pay for the opening of a street in the ratio of the benefit or advantage derived from it is no burden." Another case is in 13 Penn. St. 104, TheNorthern Liberties v. St. John's Church, decided in 1850. In this case the church claimed exemption from all assessments for paving streets, laying pipes, c., upon the ground of a general law exempting them from city taxes. The court held "that taxes are public imposition levied by authority of the government for the purpose of carrying on the government, and all its machinery and operations." The assessment or charge is an equivalent from the owner for the improvement made to the value of his property. This court, like the court in the 11th of Johnson, inferred from certain acts of the legislature that this distinction between taxes and assessments was intended by the law-making power. Another western case was decided in 1851, 12 Illinois, 403 —Canal Trustees v. City of Chicago; assessments for widening streets — exemption claimed under a provision against "taxation of every description." The court citing 11 Johns., Bleeker v.Ballou, 3 Wend. 263, and 13 Penn. St., say that a tax "is a charge upon an estate that lessens its value;" whereas an "assessment is but an equivalent of compensation for the increased value the property derives from the opening of the streets," and decide against the claim for exemption.
Still another case in the Western States was decided in 1853,2 Mich. 586, Lefevre v. Mayor of Detroit. Exemption from assessment for paving streets claimed under a general exemption of houses of public worship from taxation. The court criticising the distinction taken in 11th of Johns between the words taxes and assessments, as having led to embarrassment and confusion, decide the case against the claim for exemption upon *Page 481 
the idea that the exemption in the general law was intended to apply to the kind of taxation provided for in that law. "No good reason," they say, "is perceived for supposing the legislature intended to extend the exemption further." This decision, in its criticisms upon the 11th Johnson, and in the conclusion at which it arrives, coincides with that of the People v. the Mayor ofBrooklyn, 4 Comst. 420, decided in 1851, a case in which the constitutionality of a street assessment law was maintained upon the ground that it was an exercise of the taxing power. The court in that case necessarily reject the distinction between the words taxes and assessments, which we have quoted in the 11th of Johnson, but they sustain the decision "that a street assessment was not such a tax as the exemption contemplated." All the cases, therefore, concur in the conclusion at which they arrive upon the subject, even where they differ in their reasons for it.
The next case is in New Jersey, 4 Zab. Rep. 385: The City ofPaterson v. Society for Establishing Useful Manufactures,
decided in 1854. This was a claim for exemption from assessment for improvements in streets, upon the ground of an exemption in the charter of the defendant "from all taxes, charges and impositions." The court shortly says: "The taxes, charges and impositions specified are those for public use. The design of the charter was to relieve the corporation from such burdens only."
Another case is found in 7 Maryland Rep. 517: The Mayor andCity Council of Baltimore v. Greenmount Cemetery Co., decided in 1855. The exemption from a paving tax was there claimed, upon the ground of a charter exemption from any tax or public imposition whatever. The court overruled the objection, upon the ground stated in the 11th of Johnson, upon which it relies. The next case, and one which gives a more elaborate consideration to the subject than either of the preceding, is in 3 Dutcher's Rep. 186: State v. City of Newark, decided in 1858. The exemption claimed in this case was from an assessment for opening and widening streets, upon the ground of a charter exemption from any tax or imposition. The court, after *Page 482 
reviewing the preceding cases, state: "That they deem such an assessment for benefits conferred upon the property of an individual is not a tax," upon the analogy of other statutes whose primary design was the improvement of private property and in which the public interest was merely incidental. But they hold, in the same case, that an assessment for the same purpose upon the Railroad Company, as distinct from an assessment upon its estate especially benefited, is void, as being in fact a tax.
In the Second Universalist Society v. City of Providence,6 R.I. 235, our own court decide in regard to assessments upon a religious society, under the same law and the same exemptions as claimed in the present case, as follows: "They were not collected by virtue of the general tax act, nor are the plaintiffs privileged from them by its exemptions. Such assessments represent, on the theory of the special act which authorizes them, values received from a public improvement by the estate assessed for it. And there is no reason why a religious society should not pay the just price of a special value thus conferred upon its property, as well as any other society or individual." This case was decided in 1859, and does not, either in the argument of counsel or the opinion of court, refer to any of the other decisions we have cited, but they all rest substantially upon the same ground. We have not been referred to, nor have we found, any decisions to the contrary.
It is our duty, therefore, to declare, that assessments made upon estates used for religious and educational purposes for the benefits conferred upon those estates by the opening and widening of streets under this act, provided the assessments do not exceed the benefits, are valid in law. This proviso, or condition as to the validity of the assessment, should be steadily kept in mind in the administration of this law. It is not intended that one-half of the expense of these improvements is to be assessed upon the adjoining estates, but that out of the benefits specially conferred upon them, over and above the benefits they share in common with other property, a contribution as it were should be exacted of them towards the expense of the improvement. *Page 483 
The benefit must therefore first be found in point of fact, before the assessment can be made; and the assessment must not exceed the benefit. But these are questions of fact, and if the commissioners have erred in regard to these facts, their report may be corrected in those particulars through the verdict of a jury.
It has been very properly and strenuously urged upon our attention, by the counsel for the University, that the provisions of the charter in regard to taxation cannot be abrogated by legislation except by the consent of the Corporation; and that all the provisions of the charter "shall be construed, reputed and adjudged in all cases most favorable and for the best benefit and behoof" of that institution. But the ground upon which our own court heretofore, and the many other decisions which we have seen have been rendered in other States upon this subject, all proceed is, that the term taxes in general law and in charters, even where coupled with most expressive words, as in the case in Illinois, "taxes of every description," are to be construed as taxes which are simple burdens upon property, and that these terms, when thus employed in clauses of exemption, do not apply to those taxes or assessments, or whatever they may be termed, which are, both in the theory of the law and in fact, but the return of a portion of the benefit specially conferred by the improvement.
From the view that has been taken of this subject by every court which has had occasion to consider it, it will be seen that the decisions turn upon the question as to the construction and meaning of the terms of the statutes and charters, and not at all upon the question of power of the legislature to pass laws inconsistent with charters previously granted. They all hold that the provisions for exemption from taxes or impositions, whether existing in general statute laws or in special charters, are not to be deemed to include assessments for the improvement primarily of certain special localities, and derived from and carved out of the benefits conferred upon those special localities by those improvements. The principle upon which all these decisions rest, does not authorize any distinction in the *Page 484 
meaning of the same words of exemption when used in a private charter, from that which they have when used in a general statute. The two decisions in New Jersey, the decisions in Maryland and in Illinois, are given upon words used in private charters. We are, therefore, not authorized to make any such distinction in the present case. If, indeed, in view of the many and uniform decisions in this country, including the decision in our own State, we could consider it doubtful whether the law deemed such assessments to be included among the taxes from which this corporation is freed and exempted by its charter, it might be our duty to determine such doubt in favor of the corporation. The law generally requires a strict construction of the privileges of a private corporation when in conflict with general public rights, but the charter of Brown University requires in case of doubt as to the true construction of the charter, that doubt is to be adjudged for the benefit of the Corporation. But that doubt must first exist, before that provision of their charter can be invoked in their behalf. We cannot see that such a doubt exists. It is our duty, therefore, to hold that those who introduced, and have for many years sustained the statute in question, must be presumed to have known the construction put upon analogous statutes in the States whence this was derived, and the construction put upon our own statute in our own courts, and in our practice for many years. If the law is hard or impolitic, or against the tenor and policy of other laws and charters of the state, it is for those to change it in whose power it is to make and unmake the laws of the State. We have no power to do aught else than to declare the law as it is in cases that come before us. We therefore decide that the objections filed by these corporations against these assessments as invalid in law, ought to be and are hereby overruled, and we leave these parties to try the questions as to the proper amount of these assessments in the mode pointed out by the statute, by a jury under the direction of the court. *Page 485