Court Opinion

ID: 7133505
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-24 15:21:30.40462+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:14:32.346133
License: Public Domain

JUDGE HAZELRIGG
detjveeed the opinion of the court-
The question involved on this appeal is whether or not certain real estate situated in the city of Louisville and belonging to the Kentucky Female Orphan School, located at Midway, in Woodford county, is exempt from State, county and municipal taxation under the provisions of the Constitution on that subject.
The petition of the trustees seeking to enjoin the *475collection of the taxes was dismissed on demurrer, and the facts to be considered are, therefore, undisputed.
It appears that the appellant was incorporated by the Kentucky Legislature in 1847, and its trustees were given the ordinary powers, rights and privileges of trustees of any other seminary of learning or academy in the State, with power to acquire by purchase, «donation, etc., lands and other property to the extent ■of not exceeding $50,000. This limit has been increased to $100,000 by subsequent legislative enactment.
Section 7 of the charter provides “that the beneficiaries of the institution shall be female orphan children; and the board of trustees shall have power to determine the number that shall, at any time, be admitted into the institution; and, out of any number of applicants, they shall decide which shall be admitted; and shall also prescribe the time for which each beneficiary shall remain in the institution; and shall admit no one under nine years of age; and shall permit no one to remain longer than four years.”
Section 8 is as follows: “That the board of trustees ■shall be the guardian of each beneficiary of the institution until she shall arrive at the age of eighteen years; and shall have all such power to control the conduct and actions of each beneficiary, as guardians now have by law to control the conduct and actions of their wards.”
Section 9: “That pay pupils may be admitted into *476the institution, the number and terms of admission being decided by a majority of the board of trustees.”
A charter amendment of March, 1862, provides “that the property owned by the Kentucky Female Orphan School, at Midway, Woodford county, shall be exempt' from all taxes whatever so long as it exists as a school of charity,” and by further amendment (March 3, 1876)> it is provided that the trustees shall fill vacancies in their board with “persons who are members in good standing of some congregation of the Church of Christ in the State of Kentucky.”
It is alleged in the petition that the real estate sought to be sold for taxes was acquired by devise many years ago, and had been continuously rented out and the annual income used solely for the purpose of educating female orphans at its institution of learning; at Midway, and that its property, both real and personal, from which it derives any income, including; that in Louisville, constitutes an endowment fund for the purpose of carrying on its school of charity. That the pupils received are boarded and educated, and where they are indigent, and not otherwise provided for, are also clothed, wholly or in part, by the appellant while attending its institution; and that no part or parcel of its property has ever been used for gain by it or any person, and its income has always been devoted solely to the cause of education.
The provisions of the Constitution upon which the claim to exemption is based are as follows:
“Section 170. There shall be exempt from taxation *477public property used for public purposes; places actually used for religious worship, with the "grounds attached thereto and used and appurtenant to the house of worship, not exceeding one-half acre in cities or towns, and not exceeding two acres in the country; places of burial not held for private or corporate profit, institutions of purely public charity, and institutions of education not used or employed for gain by any person or corporation, and the income of which is devoted solely to the cause of education; public libraries, their endowments, and the income of such property as is used exclusively for their maintenance; all parsonages or residences owned by any religious society, and occupied as a home and for no other purpose by the minister of any religion, with not exceeding one-half acre of ground in towns and cities, and two acres of ground in the country appurtenant thereto; household goods, etc., etc., etc., and all laws exempting or commuting' property from taxation other than the property above mentioned shall be void. The General Assembly may authorize any incorporated city or town to exempt manufacturing establishments from municipal taxation for a period not exceeding five years, as an inducement to their location.”
Upon the admitted facts, and they are attested in the current history of this beneficent institution, we are of opinion that the appellant is an institution of ■“purely public charity,” within the meaning of the foregoing constitutional provision, as well as an institution of education “not used or employed for gain by *478any person or corporation, and the income of which is devoted solely to the canse of education.”
The name of the appellant is a significant index to its character, and the provisions of its charter sufficiently indicate its aims and purposes. It is true that “pay pupils may be admitted into the institution,” but manifestly this is merely that the “pay may be devoted to the general and main purpose of educating and supporting those who are unable to provide for their own support and education. It is an exception, as is clearly inferable from the insertion of the provision, and not the rule that pay pupils are admitted. An instructive definition of a “purely public charity” is found in Episcopal Academy v. Philadelphia, 150 Pa. St., 565, and is thus stated:
“1st. Whatever is done or given gratuitously in relief of the public burdens, or for the advancement of the public good, is a public charity. Where the public is the beneficiary, the charity is public, and where no private or pecuniary return is reserved to the giver or to any particular person, but all the benefit resulting from the gift or act goes to the public, it is a purely public charity, the word ‘purely’ being equivalent to-wholly.
“2d. A denominational school property, vested in trustees for the purpose of affording encouragement to the education of youth, is a purely public charity, although the school is not open in the same way to the general public as to persons connected with the religious denomination, but the general public are admit*479ted as vacancies occur, and, when admitted, upon the same terms with all other pupils.
“3d. An institution founded and endowed as a purely public charity does not lose its character as such under the tax laws if it deceives a revenue from the recipients of its bounty sufficient to keep it in operation.”
A most satisfactory discussion of this question is found in the case of Burd Orphan Asylum v. The School District of Upper Darby, 90 Pa. St., 21, where a testatrix, by her will, provided for the establishment of an asylum, whose object should be the maintenance and education of white female orphan children, first, who shall have been baptized in the Protestant Episcopal Church in the city of Philadelphia, or in the State of Pennsylvania; and, second, all other white female orphan children, without respect to any other qualification except that the orphan children of clergymen of that church should have the preference. The discussion of the right to tax the property of the asylum takes a wider range than is needed for the purposes of this case, but it is pertinent particularly to cases being considered in connection with the present one, and we, therefore, quote liberally from it. The reasoning of the court in that case is as follows:
“It is conceded that the devise in question has created a charity which is public in the strict sense of that expression. But it is urged that it is not purely public, and hence that to apply the language of the act to this particular case would be a violation of the constitutional provision. Now it must be conceded, and it *480lias been decided here and elsewhere, that the word ‘purely’ is not to have its largest and broadest significance when used in this connection. In the opposing line of thought it is admitted that the word is to have a limited meaning. It is not contended that a charity to be purely public must be open to the whole public, nor to any considerable portion of the public. Without doubt an asylum for the support of fifty blind men, or an equal number of paupers, would not be obnoxious to the objection that it was not purely “public.” A charity, for the maintenance of disabled seamen, or of aged and infirm stonemasons, resident in the city of Philadelphia, would undoubtedly be a purely public charity. ' And so also would a charity for the education and maintenance of the children of such persons. And if such a charity should be limited to the white female orphan children of such persons between the ages of four and eight years, such limitations, though they would very greatly restrict the class and the number of the beneficiaries, would constitute no valid objection to the purely public character of the charity. But seamen and stonemasons are only designated classes of persons distinguished by their occupations. A charity for the support of poor widows, or indigent old men, or the insane poor, of a city, county, borough or township would be equally a purely public charity, no matter how small would be the number of the beneficiaries or hoAV limited the class.
“Why then would not a charity for the support of poor Episcopalians, Catholics, Jews or Presbyterians *481of a State or city be purely public; or a charity for the education and maintenance of the orphan children of such persons? No private gain or profit is subserved; the objects of such a charity are certain and definite, and the persons benefited are indefinite within the specified class. The circumstance that the beneficiaries are to be of a particular religious faith is only of importance as designating the class. It indicates a certain portion of the whole community who are to be recipients of the charity. It has the same effect in this respect as the words seamen, stonemasons, blind persons, poor widows, etc., in the* cases already mentioned. For the purpose of defining the class of persons who, as distinguished from all other persons in the community, are to enjoy the benefit of the donor’s bounty the legal effect is the same, whether the words used be seamen, Episcopalians, blind persons, Catholics, poor widows, Jews, stonemasons or Presbyterians. The argument that to sustain, as purely public, a charity in favor of persons of a particular religious faith would be to maintain sectarianism, is of no weight. It is not discrimination in favor of a sect, for it is treating all sects alike. It is not even extending a preference to sectarians; it is merely recognizing them as a class of persons. We see no reason why that community which ranges persons into classes, so far as this subject is concerned, may not be a community of religious faith, as well as of occupation, condition in life, sex, color, age, disability, physical or mental, or *482nationality. As to the meaning of the word 'purely,’ when used in this connection, we concur in the construction which was given by the Supreme Court of Ohio in the case of G-erke v. Purcell, 25 Ohio,St. Rep., 229, that ''when the charity is public the exclusion of all idea, of private gain or profit is equivalent in effect to the force of 'purely,’ as applied to public charity in the Constitution.”
See also Donohugh v. Library Company, 86 Pa. St., 306; and Philadelphia v. Women’s Christian Association, 125 Pa. St., 572. In the latter case the court (page 579) said:
“Tt will be seen from the foregoing that the object of the association is to improve the temporal, moral and religious welfare of young females who are obliged to earn their own support, and that as a means to this end it furnishes them with food and lodging, not as paupers, but for a compensation which, while it does not compensate, aids in defraying the expenses, and thus preserves the self-respect of the recipients, while to others, who'are unable to pay, temporary shelter is furnished free, and aid extended to them in the way of procuring employment. All this and much more is done by a band of devoted women who labor unselfishly, in season and out of season, giving their time and labor freely, and supplying the annual deficit in the treasury by contributions from themselves and their friends. There is no element of gain in the object or operations of this association. It is a public charity, and I regard it as a short-sighted policy in the *483city of PMladelpMa to seek to burden suck an institntion with taxation.”
Again the court observes (page 581): “In the case in hand the stamp of charity is indelibly fixed upon the association. It appears in its charter, and is developed at every stage of its proceedings. Does the mere fact that it charges a small sum to a portion of those who feed at its table and enjoy the shelter of its roof, destroy its character as a purely public charity? * * * This whole subject was carefully considered in Donohugh’s App., 86 Pa., 306. That was the case of the Philadelphia Library, an institution maintained by the annual contributions of members, from the income derived from such property as has been given to it, and from fees paid for the use of the books. The test in that case was the object of the corporation. That was found to be the general public good, and not private gain.”
Regarding as settled that the appellant is such an institution as is entitled to the exemption under the terms of the Constitution, the question remains, what is meant by the word “institution” in that instrument? The chancellor seems to have conceded that appellant was an institution of purely public charity, and an institution of education such as is contemplated by the Constitution, but argues that if the different' educational or charitable institutions of the State see fit to invest their endowment funds in real estate in the city, then to grant the appellant’s contention might secure substantially the exemption of all the realty in the *484city. He, therefore, limited the meaning of the word “institution,” and held it to embrace only local property, buildings, grounds, etc., so situated as to constitute a part of the institution itself. While the imaginary case put is altogether improbable, and can afford but slight clue to the meaning of the language used, it must be admitted the word “institution” is often used in the sense pointed out by the chancellor. Thus in Appeal Tax Ct., &c., v. St. Peter’s Academy, &c., 50 Md., 345, in discussing the use of this word in an exemption statute, the court said: “The term ‘institution’ is sometimes used as descriptive of the building, establishment or place where the Business or operations of a society or association are carried on, and at other times it is used to designate the organized body.” The words under discussion there were “hospitals or asylums, charitable or benevolent institutions, so far as used for the benefit of the indigent and afflicted, and tb,e ground which the buildings used as such hospitals, asylums, charitable or benevolent institutions actually cover.” It was held that the language was appropriately descriptive of a building, establishment or place where the operations of an association or corporation are conducted, but wholly inappropriate as the designation of organized corporate bodies or associations.”
In the case of Gerke, &c., v. Purcell, 25 Ohio St., 240, the constitutional provision was “but burying grounds, public schoolhouses, houses used exclusively for public worship, institutions of purely public char*485ity, public property used exclusively for auy public purpose, * * * may be exempt, etc.”
It was held that in a statute providing for the exemption of “all lands connected with public institutions of learning, not used with a view to profit,” the word institution was used as descriptive of the establishment or place where the business or operations of a society or association is carried on, but in another section of the statute, where the property referred to is described as belonging to the institution, the word was used to designate the organized body. This case is instructive also in considering the feature first discussed, the court saying that the word charity, in its legal sense, “includes not only gifts for the benefit of the poor, but endowments for the advancement of learning, or institutions for the encouragement of science and art,” and it was held that schools established by private donations, and which are carried on for the benefit of the public and not with a view to profit, are institutions of purely public charity within the meaning of the Constitution, which authorizes such institutions to be exempt from taxation. The court further said: “The maintenance of a school is a charity. Gifts for the following purposes have been declared to be charities: For schools of learning, free schools and scholars of universities (2 Story’s Eq. Jur., section 1160); to establish new scholarships in a college (Attorney-General v. Andrews, 3 Ves., 633); to found and endow a college. (Attorney-General v. Boyar, 3 Ves., 714),” etc.
*486In the case of County of Nobles v. Hamline University, &c., 46 Minn., 316, the act considered provided that “all corporate property belonging to the institution, both real and personal, is and shall be free from taxation, and to the claim that “only the university itself and the necessary ground for its use” was exempt, the court replied as follows: “The proposition is based upon an untenable attempted distinction between the ‘institution’ and the ‘corporation.’ * * * The term ‘institution,’ although sometimes used as descriptive of the establishment or place, where a business is carried on, properly means an association or society organized or established for promoting some specific purpose. The institution, as distinguished from the corporation, has no being, and is incapable of owning property. Had it been intended to limit the exemption to property directly used and occupied by the university, different language would have been used.”
Many other cases are cited by counsel falling upon the one side or the other in the definition and use of this term, according to the language of the statute to be construed; and upon the whole it would seem that when the statute exempts the “institution” from taxation, and no qualifying words are used showing or tending to show that only the property “used” by the institution, or “connected” with the institution, is to be exempt, then the associated entity — the corporate being — with its estate as an entirety, is embraced by the word “institution.”
*487. The exemption of the institution would thus embrace its endowment fund and property in whatever form these assets might be found. This is precisely what we find in the section under consideration, so far as reference is made to “institutions of purely public charity.” Thus “there shall be exempt from taxation * * * institutions of purely public charity,” and there is to be found no qualifying clause or expression anywhere in the entire section. There is no allusion to “buildings,” or “grounds” used by or connected with “institutions of purely public charity,” as is the case in many of the authorities referred to by counsel. Finding no exception to the rule indicated, that where an “institution” of the character named is exempted, the charitable being, including necessarily the whole of its estate, is to be exempted, and, having determined the “Kentucky Female Orphan School” to be an institution of purely public charity, we might rest here with our investigation. But it is proper in this case, and necessary in some of the others connected with it, to consider the succeeding clause of the section, “and institutions of education not used or employed for gain by any person or corporation, and the income of which is devoted solely ‘to the cause of education.” Here it may be said, and with a show of technical accuracy, that whatever is meant by the words “institutions of education,” something is meant which may be used or employed by a person or corporation. And this can more fitly be said of the buildings and appurtenant grounds than of the corporate being. For example, *488we may appropriately say that the building, establishment or place where the business of the corporation is carried on shall not be “used or employed for gain by any person or corporation,” while it would be rather inappropriate to say that the organized corporate body shall not be used or employed by any person or corporation. On the other hand, the clause, “and the income, of which is devoted,” etc., could hardly mean .income from the buildings, grounds, etc., but rather the income of the corporate body. Besides, we may notice that the attention of the framers of the section was called directly to the question of exempting the grounds attached to and appurtenant to certain places and houses used for certain purposes, but failed to provide any such limitation with respect to charitable and educational institutions.
Perhaps a brief reference to the origin of these provisions in our Constitution may be of assistance here. As originally proposed the section on the point involved only included the clause “institutions of purely public charity.” There was no reference to institutions of education eo nomine. And upon a suggestion that institutions of this character ought to be provided for, it was argued at length by a distinguished delegate that the language already in the proposed section fully covered the question.
In support of this position that “institutions of purely public charity” embraced institutions of education not operated for private gain, a distinguished .delegate read on the floor of the convention copious *489extracts from the Pennsylvania cases cited. While not controverting this position, the particular friends of education argued that the Kentucky courts might not adopt the Pennsylvania construction, and secured the insertion of the clause, as it now appears in the section, in order to make it certain that educational institutions not controlled for private gain and the income of which was devoted to that cause, should be exempt. And while the endowments of some of the more prominent institutions of learning in the State were referred to during the discussion as fit subjects for exemption, if there was any objection raised or difference of opinion suggested as to the propriety of the proposed exemptions, there seems to have been no record of it. We are aware that the weight to be given the declarations of members of the convention is not to be taken as controlling. Mr. Endlich says of these declarations: “They give us no light as to the views of the large majority who did not talk; much less of the mass of our fellow citizens whose votes at the polls g’ave that instrument the force of fundamental law.” (End. In. Stat., 510.)
Yet confessedly it must be a source of satisfaction to those who are called on to ascertain the intention of doubtful provisions to find the conclusions arrived at to be in accord with, and not in opposition to, the views of the framers of the law so far as expressed. ■
We think, therefore, a proper construction of the language used in the section requires the exemption of the entire property of this institution wherever situ*490ated, and in whatever form its investments majj be found.
This construction of the language of the Constitution is in accord with the long-settled policy of the State.
By the Kentucky act of December 17, 1825 (2 More-head & Brown Statutes, section 1080), it was provided: “Hereafter the trustees or managers of such schools or seminaries of learning within this Commonwealth shall not be bound to list such lands for taxation or to pay any taxes on the same. Nor shall any taxes be demanded by the State for any such lands, so long as the same shall absolutely and tona fide belong to a seminary or school of learning.”
This statute, and the public policy it recognized and enforced, was continued in the Revised Statutes of 1852, chapter 58, article 1, section 1, as follows: “Be it enacted by the General Assembly of the Commonwealth of Kentucky, that lands held by a school or seminary shall not be subject to taxation or forfeiture for any cause whatsoever.”
And the same policy, exempting all the property of institutions of learning, was continued in the General Statutes, as follows: “The real estate and investments devoted to public schools, seminaries, universities, colleges, courthouses, clerks’ offices, jails, public graveyards, lunatic, orphan and deaf and dumb asylums, hospitals, infirmaries, widows’ and orphans’ asylums, foundling asylums.” (General Statutes, chapter 92, article 1, section 3, pages 709-710, original edition of 1873.)
*491And the Hewitt revenue law of 1886 provided: “The following property shall be exempt from taxation: Public schools, churches and all property of seminaries, asylums, hospitals, infirmaries and colleges, and all other funds devoted to charitable purposes * * * except those owned by joint stock companies or associations which declare dividends: Provided, that nothing herein shall be construed as exempting any property which is used or employed for gain of any person, nor any property of which the products, rents or uses are not devoted solely to the objects of the institution, as distinguished from personal gain of the individuals connected with the institution.”
Under these statutes we are not aware that endowments of asylums, colleges, etc., not operated for the personal gain of individuals connected with the instition, have ever been taxed; and it is inconceivable that an intention to reverse the policy of the State in this respect should have been declared in language so poorly expressive of such intention.
As said by the Supreme Court in United States v. Ryder, 110 U. S., 729: “The revisers would not have proposed, nor would Congress har e made, such a fundamental change in the law * * * without employing more appropriate terms for that purpose than those which the section contains. It will not be inferred that the Legislature, in revising and consolidating the laws, intended to change their policy unless such intention be clearly expressed.” Except for the con*492stitutional enactment the contention of the appellees that such exemptions would be subversive of the principles announced in the Bill of Rights might be of some force, but the Constitution must be held to be consistent with itself, and the policy adopted must be carried out. But even before the present Constitution was adopted this policy was recognized and enforced in the courts. In Higgins v. Prater, 91 Ky., 18, in sustaining a tax for the Agricultural & Mechanical College, this court said: “Other institutions of an educational character, and which do not constitute a part of our common school system, have for years been supported by general taxation. * * * The framers of our Constitution and the people adopting it were not moved by a fear of too much education, but of too little.”
In Taber v. Louisville Baptist Orphans’ Home, 92 Ky., 91, it is said: “It is the duty of the State to care for its indigent orphans, and if done by another, he renders what is a public service, and the Legislature may, therefore, without regard to the extent of it, exempt the property devoted to such use from taxation.”
We have already considered — perhaps sufficiently — ■ the nature of this institution, but in view of the appellee’s appeal to the Bill of Rights, it is not improper to note from the year book of the institution (1892) the objects it has in view". “The primary object of this institution is to educate such orphan girls as can not obtain an education in any other wray, and to qualify them for teaching. * * * We receive three classes of girls, as follows:
*493“1st. Destitute orphans, who have no relatives or friends to aid them.
“2d. Orphans destitute of means and of relatives able to aid them, but whom churches or benevolent societies are willing to sustain at the school.
“3d. Orphans who have some means, but not enough to support them in other schools.
“Precedence is given the first class, and as many of them are received as the proceeds of the endowment will justify.”
If this be not an institution of “purely public charity,” and entitled to the aid of the State, one can hardly be found in the State. Other reasons for the exemption are urged by the appellant, but it is deemed unnecessary to consider them.
For the reasons given the judgments are reversed for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Judges Guffy and DuRelle dissenting.
After the re-argusient of tiie case