Bay Path College v. Board of Assessors
This text of 786 N.E.2d 1223 (Bay Path College v. Board of Assessors) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Appeals Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Bay Path College (college), a charitable educational institution located in Longmeadow, has a “Main Campus” that consists of a single parcel of land that lies along Longmeadow Street. A college library is across the street. In 1997, the college acquired a twelve-acre parcel of land along Farmlea Road, about one-third of a mile from the Main Campus. On the latter parcel, called the “South Campus,” the college established its athletic fields and facilities, including a clubhouse at 45 Farm-lea Road and a house at 33 Farmlea Road that is the residence for the athletic director.
The major question that the parties present is whether the residence for the athletic director (locus) qualifies for an exemption from local real estate taxation because it is used for the charitable purpose of the college and is “contiguous to real estate which is the principal location” of the college. G. L. [808]*808c. 59, § 5, Third (e).
1. Principal location of the college. In aid of their position that the locus is not entitled to exempt status, the assessors argue that the Main Campus is the principal location of the college. Even if the South Campus, as the board said in its decision, “is accessible from the Main Campus by an easy walk down residential and scenic Longmeadow Street,” the assessors contend that the South Campus must be something other than the principal location; otherwise, they say, the college has two principal locations, which, they submit, is incongruous with the word “principal” in the adjectival sense of “first.”2 We think that an excessively rigid reading of the statutory phrase “principal location.”
In Trustees of Boston Univ. v. Assessors of Brookline, 11 Mass. App. Ct. 325, 327-328 (1981), we remarked that the Legislature left the term “principal location” “undefined in the statute, undoubtedly because of the practical difficulties inherent in fashioning a definition which could be uniformly applied in the Commonwealth’s numerous educational institutions, several of which ... are dispersed throughout large urban areas.” A principal location of an educational institution may consist of parcels that do not necessarily abut but are clustered in sufficient proximity so that, from a bird’s-eye view, they present a coherent whole. So it was that in Trustees of Milton Academy v. Assessors of Milton, 391 Mass. 1017, 1018 (1984), the court [809]*809said that, “There is no requirement that a school’s ‘principal location’ . . . must consist of one integral parcel.”
In the Boston University case, the board found that the core of the institution lay north of the Massachusetts Turnpike and Commonwealth Avenue (in Boston) in a number of noncontiguous clusters that together constituted the university’s principal location. Trustees of Boston Univ. v. Assessors of Brookline, supra at 327. We decided that the board’s resolution of the principal location issue was consistent with the governing statute. The real estate in controversy in that case was an isolated parcel along Carlton Street, Brookline, on which stood a single house, used as the university president’s residence. It was located one-third of a mile from the nearest point of the principal location and was separated from it by several public streets, railway tracks, other privately owned parcels of land, and the major barriers of Commonwealth Avenue and the Massachusetts Turnpike. Id. at 330. On those facts, we held that the board had established that it lay within the discretion of the board to resolve that the Carlton Street parcel was not part of the principal location of the university and manifestly not contiguous to it, applying the lexical definition of the word “contiguous”; i.e., it did not touch. Id. at 327-329.
In the case at bar, the distance of the South Campus from the Main Campus is, similarly, one-third of a mile, but the South Campus, in contrast to the presidential residence in the Boston University case, is far from an isolated lot. Rather, the South Campus is a twelve-acre area with playing fields on which the college conducts its athletic program, including intercollegiate and intramural games. In the clubhouse building on the South Campus, the college stores athletic equipment, and student teams meet. There is also, of course, the locus, around which the instant case revolves. In view of the size, relative proximity, and use of the South Campus, the board was warranted in finding that the activity on the South Campus was integral to the activity on the Main Campus, and that the two parcels together constituted the principal location of the college.
2. Contiguity. As the locus is located within the perimeter of the South Campus, Bay Path satisfies the requirement of G. L. c. 59, § 5, Third (e), that, to secure tax exemption, real property [810]*810used for the residence of a college officer must be part of or contiguous to the principal location of the charitable institution.
3. Purpose of occupancy. The primary statutory criterion for exemption of real estate from local taxation is that it be occupied for purposes congruent with those for which the charitable institution was organized. See the statutory text set out in note 1, supra. Housing faculty and other officers of an academy is such a purpose. See Trustees of Milton Academy v. Assessors of Milton, 391 Mass. at 1017. It is icing on the cake that a condition of the job of athletic director at the college was for the occupant of that position to reside on the South Campus in the house at 33 Farmlea Road, the locus.
Order of the Appellate Tax Board affirmed.
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786 N.E.2d 1223, 57 Mass. App. Ct. 807, 2003 Mass. App. LEXIS 484, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bay-path-college-v-board-of-assessors-massappct-2003.