Ancient v. Board of County Commissioners

241 N.W. 93, 122 Neb. 586, 81 A.L.R. 1166, 1932 Neb. LEXIS 91
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 19, 1932
DocketNo. 27568
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 241 N.W. 93 (Ancient v. Board of County Commissioners) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ancient v. Board of County Commissioners, 241 N.W. 93, 122 Neb. 586, 81 A.L.R. 1166, 1932 Neb. LEXIS 91 (Neb. 1932).

Opinion

Eberly, J.

In complaints before the board of county commissioners and the board of equalization of Lancaster county, the Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite of Freemasonry of Lincoln, complainant, prayed for an order striking from the tax lists for 1929 the real estate consisting of the Scottish Rite Temple and grounds at the northeast corner of Fifteenth and L streets in the city of Lincoln, on the statutory ground that the property described is exempt from taxation, for the reason that it is used exclusively for educational, religious or charitable purposes, and not for financial gain or profit to either the owner or user. Comp. St. 1929, sec. 77-202. The legal title to the real estate is held by the Scottish Rite Building Company and in that name the property was entered on the tax lists in 1926 at the assessed valuation of $110,000 and will remain thereon for the year 1929, unless stricken off. The equitable or beneficial owner is alleged to be the Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite of Freemasonry, the legal title being held for convenience in the name of the Scottish Rite Building Company. The county board dismissed the complaints and allowed the property to remain on the tax lists for the purposes of taxation. Complainant appealed from the decision of the county board to the district court, where the alleged facts upon which the claims for exemption are based were put in issue by formal pleadings. Upon a trial the district court found that the Scottish Rite Temple and grounds were not used exclusively for religious, charitable or educational purposes within the meaning of the constitutional and statutory provisions re-' [588]*588lating to exemption of property from taxation, refused to strike the' property from the tax lists, and dismissed the complaints. From the judgment of the district court complainant appealed to the supreme court.

The question presented by the appeal is the asserted right, of complainant to a decree in equity striking from the tax lists the Scottish Rite Temple and grounds as property exempt from taxation under the following constitutional and statutory provisions:

“The legislature by general law may exempt property owned by and used exclusively for agricultural and horticultural societies, and property owned and used exclusively for educational, religious, charitable or cemetery purposes, when such property is not owned or used for financial gain or profit to either the owner or- user.” Const, art. VIII,.sec. 2.

“The following property shall be exempt from taxes: * * * Property owned and used exclusively for educational, religious, charitable or cemetery purposes, when such property is not owned or used for financial gain or profit to either the owner or user.” Comp. St. 1929, sec. 77-202.

The evidence discloses that the appellant is a subordinate body to the Supreme Council of the Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite of Freemasonry of the Southern Jurisdiction of the United States of America, the governing-organization, and is a part of the general masonic structure; that the foundation or Blue Lodge of masonry has three degrees; that appellant confers the degrees from fourth to thirty-second inclusive. Another branch of .masonry exists in the York Rite, commonly understood as Knight Templarism, which confers degrees peculiar to itself. The Scottish Rite Building Company is a Nebraska corporation, and holds title to the property here in suit for the sole use and benefit of appellant as representative of the subordinate bodies of the Valley of Lincoln, and has no power to devise or dispose of the same without the consent of the members of appellant organization and of the supreme authority governing subordinate bodies. The ap[589]*589pell-ant, as a practical matter, exercises full and complete control of the property in controversy, which consists of a building of stone and brick construction covering about 100 feet by 142 feet of ground. . This building contains general office quarters used solely for the administration of the order’s affairs, a reception room or parlor, a lobby, a small and also a large lodge room, a banquet hall, together with paraphernalia rooms, music room, rooms for storage and for coal and heating apparatus. It is ordinarily referred to as the Temple and will so be hereinafter designated. It also appears that no portion of this Temple building is ever used for commercial purposes, but is devoted exclusively to the furtherance of the purposes of masonry. ^ It is built with special reference to requirements of the work carried on by the Scottish Rite bodies, and is, with it's appointments, absolutely necessary to the efficient and appropriate accomplishment of their purposes. In it is conferred the Scottish Rite degrees from the fourth to the thirty-second, and there is also held therein the business meetings of the included Scottish Rite masonic bodies. It is also used without charge by the Order of De Molay, which may be said to be approved, sponsored, and promoted by appellant, and having as its purpose, in part, the training of young men and boys for a better life, and which will tend to qualify them later to meet the requirements of masonry. It is also used by the Order of the Nobles of the Mystic Shrine (a masonic order), to whom none but Scottish Rite masons of the thirty-second degree and Knights Templars are eligible, for their business meetings and their biennial ceremonial sessions. The Shrine band maintained by this last named organization use it as their place of instruction and practice. The Temple building is also used by the Order of the Eastern Star, without financial remuneration, for their lodge purposes. This order may be said to be in the nature of an auxilliary masonic organization. Excepting the Shrine band, these societies are all ordinarily known as secret orders, and the only affairs carried on therein pertain or [590]*590are incidental to their lodge work. Educational and charitable activities and purposes are common, in fact identical, in both craft masonry and that of Scottish Rite, and to that extent they work together.

It is also unquestioned in the record that the Temple property is not owned or used for financial gain of either the owners or users, or of the individuals of the membership comprising the same.

The appellant, considered as a “lodge,” is supported, maintained and carries on its work wholly out of the initiation fees, annual dues paid in by its membership, and voluntary contributions by them made. But membership as such, it appears from the evidence, is not the source of any financial return to the member.

A certain portion of the funds so received are, however, remitted to the Supreme Council, the parent body already mentioned. Indeed, the co-ordinated bodies of the Supreme Council, of whom the appellant is one, are the money gatherers of that body, and, excluding devises and other incidental contributions, are the sole and ultimate source of the funds distributed by that supreme organization. A summary of these expenditures comparatively recently made discloses not only the extent of this work on the part of the “co-ordinated bodies,” but also the purposes to which the proceeds of the same were largely devoted by the Supreme Council, and is as follows: Paid directly for educational purposes $1,285,413.22 (including one million dollars to George Washington University, Washington, D. C.) ; for maintenance of hospitals $205,125.76; for masonic and other charities $307,779.22; for charitable relief $165,-740; for disasters, floods, fires, wherever occurring, $111,-565.09.

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Bluebook (online)
241 N.W. 93, 122 Neb. 586, 81 A.L.R. 1166, 1932 Neb. LEXIS 91, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ancient-v-board-of-county-commissioners-neb-1932.