Benevolent & Protective Order of Elks No. 85 v. Tax Commission

536 P.2d 1214, 1975 Utah LEXIS 717
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedJune 10, 1975
Docket13826
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 536 P.2d 1214 (Benevolent & Protective Order of Elks No. 85 v. Tax Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Benevolent & Protective Order of Elks No. 85 v. Tax Commission, 536 P.2d 1214, 1975 Utah LEXIS 717 (Utah 1975).

Opinions

MAUGHAN, Justice:

This is an action in certiorari to review the proceedings and order of the Tax Commission of the State of Utah. Petitioner made application to the Salt Lake County Board of Equalization for an exemption from an ad valorem property tax levied for the year 1973, against its property located at 139 East South Temple, Salt Lake City, Utah. This application was de[1215]*1215nied by said Board, whereupon petitioner appealed to the Tax Commission for the State of Utah, and after a formal hearing there the Tax Commission sustained the decision of the Salt Lake County Board of Equalization. It is from this latter decision that petitioner appeals to this court and asks that the Tax Commission be overruled, or in the alternative that a partial tax exemption be granted.

The pertinent findings of the Tax Commission are:

4. The Elk’s Lodge building in question is made up of five floors, plus a basement constituting six floors — the use of which includes a large variety of social functions, including dinner, dancing, liquor consumption, organization meetings, as well as some charitable functions, which take place in the Elk’s Lodge building each year.
5. The third floor of the Elk’s Lodge building, known as the Goodwill Room, is operated exclusively for charitable purposes and the distribution of clothing to the needy.
6. Proceeds from food sales, liquor and cigar consumption on the premises, after expenses, go into a general fund to be, in part, used for the benefit of different charitable programs of appellant’s.
7. In fiscal 1973, approximately $300,000 gross revenue was received by appellant, $39,000 of which was received specifically for charitable purposes and $29,000 of which was actually expended for charitable purposes.
8. Appellant performs patriotic, charitable and civic functions, which include an annual Christmas party for the crippled and the handicapped; Elk’s Boys’ and Girls’ Club, scouts, youth scholarship programs, foreign exchange students’ programs, and veterans’ remembrance programs — all of which renders a great service to the community.
9. The majority of charitable functions fulfilled by appellant are through cash donations of members, plus a multitude of man-hours contributed outside of the premises in question.
10. Other than the Goodwill Room on the third floor of the building, and other than some organizational functions, most other charitable functions are held at locations and buildings other than the building here in question.
11. The appellant participates in many other civic, patriotic, and worthwhile activities, but such participation does not constitute the exclusive charitable use of the property.

From these findings the Tax Commission concluded:

1. Article XIII, Section 2 of the Utah State Constitution, providing that lots with buildings thereon used exclusively for either religious worship or charitable purposes shall be exempt from taxation (see, also, Utah Code Annotated, Section S9-21-1 (1953)) is applicable to the case at hand.
2. Appellant’s case of Elks v. Groesbeck, 40 Utah 8 [sic] [120 P. 192], is not applicable to the present situation, since a substantial portion of appellant’s area is used for membership, social and recreational or is unused for any purpose, and the above-cited case held that members’ activities were incidental to its charitable use and is, therefore, differentiated from the present situation.
3. Exemption from ad valorem property taxes in the State of Utah is based upon actual use of the property in question and not on the use of income derived from the operations thereon, or on participation in civic and patriotic functions.
4. Appellant’s property in question during the calendar year 1973 was not used exclusively for charitable or religious purposes. The decision of the Salt Lake County Board of Equalization should be, therefore affirmed.

At the outset it should be noted that petitioner is a nonprofit organization with a [1216]*1216charitable object. Article 4 of its articles states:

That the purposes for which this corporation is formed are fraternal, charitable, patriotic, historical and educational.

The record further shows that, in the event of dissolution, no equities would remain with its members.

Our constitutional provision Article XIII, Section 2, provides:

. lots with the buildings thereon used exclusively for . . . charitable purposes, . . . shall be exempt from taxation.

Two questions confront us. They are: (1) What is charity? (2) Is the subject lot with the building thereon used exclusively for charitable purposes ?

This court in Salt Lake Lodge No. 85 B. P. O. E. v. Groesbeck,1 applied this same constitutional provision to the activities of this same petitioner sixty-four years ago, and determined a tax exemption proper. It did so after determining the intent of the Constitutional Fathers to be one of encouragement for charitable works; and that the weight of authority evidenced by cases from other jurisdictions with like, or similar, constitutional and statutory provisions supported that conclusion. The court said :

The general rule is that when private property is claimed to be exempt from taxation the law under which the exemption is claimed will be strictly construed. . . . There is, however, an exception to this general rule, and statutes exempting property used for educational and charitable purposes or for public worship, under the great weight of authority, should receive a broad and more liberal construction than those exempting property used with a view to gain or profit only. The reason for the rule is that the state, by exempting property used exclusively for one or more of the purposes mentioned from taxation, is presumed to receive benefits from the property equivalent at least to the public revenue that would otherwise be derived from it. And manifestly the purpose of the statute in exempting property used exclusively for charitable purposes is to encourage the promotion of institutions and organizations having for their object the care and maintenance of the indigent and destitute citizen, the helpless orphan and the poor who are sick and afflicted, and whose charity and ministrations in these respects correspondingly relieve the State of such burdens.

In Stockton Civic Theatre v. Board of Supervisors,2 the court observed that:

. . . charity is not confined solely to the relief of the needy and destitute, but comprehends “ ‘as well activities which are humanitarian in nature and rendered for the general improvement and betterment of mankind, . . the exemption is granted for charitable purposes, . . .

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Bluebook (online)
536 P.2d 1214, 1975 Utah LEXIS 717, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/benevolent-protective-order-of-elks-no-85-v-tax-commission-utah-1975.