Alonzo Cudworth Post No. 23 v. City of Milwaukee

165 N.W.2d 397, 42 Wis. 2d 1, 1969 Wisc. LEXIS 1094
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 7, 1969
Docket12
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 165 N.W.2d 397 (Alonzo Cudworth Post No. 23 v. City of Milwaukee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alonzo Cudworth Post No. 23 v. City of Milwaukee, 165 N.W.2d 397, 42 Wis. 2d 1, 1969 Wisc. LEXIS 1094 (Wis. 1969).

Opinion

Robert W. Hansen, J.

The law of this state as to tax exemptions for religious, educational, charitable, benevolent associations and veterans’ organizations is clear. 1 Memorial halls occupied by organizations of United States war veterans are specifically exempted from property taxation with provision for “taxing in part” any portion of such memorial hall not used for exempt purposes and used for pecuniary profit. 2 It is, however, not always clear how these statutes apply to a particular fact situation. To help in such application of the law to the facts of this case, we begin with a brief legislative history.

*7 Legislative history.

Since 1849 the legislature has granted tax exemption to property of religious, educational, charitable and benevolent associations if not leased or not otherwise used for pecuniary profit. 3 In 1909, there was added a specific exemption for all memorial halls of war veterans’ organizations. 4 In an early case, this court held the property of the Turners Society to be a “single indivisible piece of property” to be taxed in toto if any part of it was *8 used for nonexempt purposes and for profit. The court rejected the “taxed in part” approach unless or until “. . . some procedure for severance [is] authorized by the legislature. 5 Such legislative authorization, in fact, a legislative mandate to tax only those portions of otherwise exempt property that were in fact being used for nonexempt purposes came in 1931. 6 Additionally, the legislature has provided that renting memorial halls for public purposes shall not render them taxable “provided that all income derived therefrom be used for the upkeep and maintenance thereof.” 7 The case before us hinges upon the application of the “taxed in part” statute to the bar and dining room of Alonzo Cudworth Post.

What is the test?

The first interpretation of the “taxed in part” statute as applied to club, lodge or post property involved a fraternal organization, the Knights of Pythias. 8 However, the test there spelled out applies as well to tax-exempt memorial halls of war veterans’ organizations. Here is that test:

“Under the statute two things operate to defeat the exemption: (1) The use of any part of the building by nonmembers for which compensation is received; (2) its use by members for purposes outside of the object of such organization.” 9

*9 Use by members only.

Where the clubhouse of a veterans’ post is used only by its members, or nearly exclusively so, the exempt status is defeated only if such use by its members is for purposes outside the objectives of the organization. The maintenance of clubroom facilities for members, including the serving of food and drinks, is not outside the purposes and objectives of a veterans’ post which include the promoting of the spirit of comradeship among its members. As this court stated in the Knights of Pythias Case:

“So long as the use is confined to members, the property does not lose its status as exempt property unless it is used for some purpose ‘outside of the objects of such organization.’ Certainly recreation is one of the objects of all fraternal associations. The use therefor of the lower floor by members of the lodge did not destroy the exemption. . . .” 10

Patronage by 'public.

It is equally settled law in Wisconsin that public patronage of club facilities where money is exchanged for services on a regular basis takes such publicly patronized facilities out of tax-exempt status. This was made clear in a case involving the club home of the Fraternal Order of Eagles Aerie in Madison. There the club operated a dining room, bar, and bowling alley. The dining room was open to the public each day for certain hours; the bowling alley was open to the public on weekends and to outside leagues at other times; the bar was open to nonmembers at the times when they used other facilities. This court upheld a board of review finding that “. . . *10 during public hours the dining room is a public dining room ... At the times when the various leagues mentioned above are bowling . . . the bowlers are present not because they are Eagles but because they are league members . . . And so it goes, with the bar and those other parts of the clubhouse which are used at times exclusively for members and at other times nonexclusively for compensation and pecuniary profit.” 11 Public patronage of a separable facility within a tax-exempt building renders the publicly patronized portion of the building taxable. As this court then said:

“. . . there was both availability of club property for public use plus use by the public; an offer to and an acceptance by the public . . . the Eagles’ offer to the public followed by the public’s acceptance, manifested by its use of the facilities, for the time being created the facility a public one and destroyed the entire exemption during the period of such use.” 12

Rental of premises.

The question of rental of Post premises to outside groups for public purposes is not before us. It is unchallenged that the policy of Alonzo Cudworth Post is that no part of its building is made available for general public functions although a charitable or civic organization may on occasion be allowed to use a hall or room without charge. In any event, it is clear that the exemption statute provides with respect to memorial halls of veterans’ organizations, that “the renting of such halls or buildings for public purposes shall not render them taxable, provided that all income derived therefrom be used for the upkeep and maintenance thereof.” 13

Guest privileges.

There is no trouble at the two ends of the spectrum. Clubroom facilities maintained for members only do not *11 affect the otherwise tax-exempt status of an association’s property. Club facilities to which the public is invited become public facilities during the times they are so used. The situation here is somewhere in between the two extremes.

We deal here with an established Post policy that members may invite up to nine guests to use the facilities. There is no restriction as to the number of visits such nonmember guests may make to the Post. The very term, guest privileges, can have broad or narrow implications.

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Bluebook (online)
165 N.W.2d 397, 42 Wis. 2d 1, 1969 Wisc. LEXIS 1094, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alonzo-cudworth-post-no-23-v-city-of-milwaukee-wis-1969.