Bozeman Deaconess Foundation v. Ford

439 P.2d 915, 151 Mont. 143, 37 A.L.R. 3d 558, 1968 Mont. LEXIS 297
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedApril 23, 1968
Docket11257
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 439 P.2d 915 (Bozeman Deaconess Foundation v. Ford) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bozeman Deaconess Foundation v. Ford, 439 P.2d 915, 151 Mont. 143, 37 A.L.R. 3d 558, 1968 Mont. LEXIS 297 (Mo. 1968).

Opinion

HONORABLE CHARLES LUEDKE, District Judge

sitting in place of MR. CHIEF JUSTICE JAMES T. HARRISON, delivered the Opinion of the Court.

By this action Bozeman Deaconess Foundation, as owner and operator of Hillcrest Homes, a home for the aged, sought recovery of 1965 taxes assessed on approximately 21 acres of land occupied and used by that facility. Such taxes were paid under protest and in response to timely action taken, the district court gave judgment in favor of the Foundation, ordering refund of $12,825.85 and enjoining the assessment and collection of taxes in the future. The basis of the district court decision was that Hillcrest Homes, being for the care of the retired or aged or chronically ill, and organized and *145 operated on a nonprofit basis, qualified purely as a public charity which is tax exempt by statute. The defendant officials of Gallatin County have appealed.

Of first concern, prior to considering the statute involved, is the nature of the entity, Bozeman Deaconess Foundation, and the manner and purposes of its operation of Hillcrest Homes.

Bozeman Deaconess Foundation is a nonprofit Montana corporation, having no capital stock. Its purposes, as prescribed by its Articles, are to establish, equip, operate and maintain benevolent and charitable institutions without contemplating pecuniary gain or profit to its members. Specifically, it is authorized by Article 11(a) :

“To provide elderly or infirm persons on a nonprofit basis, with housing and hospitalization facilities and services, specifically designed to meet the physical, social and psychological needs of the aged, and contribute to their health, security, happiness and usefulness in longer living.”

In furtherance of this specific purpose it has built Hillcrest Homes at a cost of approximately $2 million. $1,820,000 of this amount was borrowed from the Advance Mortgage Corporation and insured under authority of the National Housing Act through the Federal Housing Administration, with the balance coming from the Foundation and from individual Methodists in. Montana. The government loan is secured by a mortgage on the Hillcrest Homes land.

Residents of Hillcrest Homes enter into lifecare contracts, under several types of plans, requiring the payment of occupancy fees ranging from $7,000 to $32,000 and single monthly maintenance charges of from $150 to $250, each depending upon the type of facility desired. Under the payments, as scheduled, the amount of income will not be sufficient to pay the mortgage indebtedness at the end of the mortgage period. Charitable donations will be required to make up the difference. Since inception, to date of trial, Hillcrest Homes had in *146 curred net losses of $350,000. As organized, any profit, if any ever occurred, would not be distributed to its members, but be applied to further benevolent and charitable purposes.

The Foundation is oriented to the Methodist Church, which elects its trustees, and reversion of the property, when its intended use ceases, is to the Methodist Church. Hillcrest Homes, however, is open to applicants without regard to race or religion, the only requirements being that the applicant be of 62 years of age, unless he is married to one over 62, or is chronically ill. There are the occupancy and maintenance charges to be met, but some persons are admitted who are unable to pay the full charges and they receive financial assistance from the Foundation or other sources.

The issues in this case concern the following constitutional and statutory provisions: Section 2 of Article XII of the Montana Constitution specifies that property which the legislature may declare tax exempt and includes “* * * institutions of purely public charity. * *

Under this authorization, the legislature, since 1891; has granted an exemption in the same language stated in the constitution, i.e., to institutions of purely public charity. (See Section 84-202, R.C.M.1947).

Prior to 1965 uncertainty and difference, of opinion existed as to whether a home for the aged, organized and operated in the manner of Hillcrest Homes, could be considered an institution of purely public charity and therefore be free from property taxes. To clarify the matter, legislation was successfully sought in 1965, resulting in the passage of Chapter 85, Laws of 1965, which amended Section 84-202, by adding a provision as follows:

“* * * provided, the term ‘institutions of purely public charity’ as used in this act shall include organizations owning and operating facilities for the care of the retired or aged or chronically ill which are not operated for gain or profit # # # !>

*147 Appellants contend that this amendment is an -unlawful attempt by the legislature to exand the exemptions allowed by the constitution through indirection and definition; in other words, that the definition given by the 1965 amendment declares as a purely public charity that which may not be so in fact.

The essence of their argument is that the constitution is not a grant of authority, but a limitation upon the powers of government so that legislation may exempt property enumerated but cannot go further or include any other (Cruse, et al. v. Fischl, 55 Mont. 258; 175 P. 878). That the- constitutional provision must be strictly construed (Town of Cascade v. County of Cascade, et al., 75 Mont. 304, 243 P. 806) for taxation is the rule and not the exception. That the legislature cannot do indirectly that which is prohibited when done directly. (61 A.L.R.2d, pg. 1064).

The validity of these contentions in an appropriate case must be conceded. However, to support appellants’ view that they are decisive of this case means it must be assumed that a facility such as Hillcrest Homes is not and cannot be classified as an institution of purely public charity except through the aid of the 1965 amendment. This assumption overlooks the possibility that it might be a purely public charity in fact; and, if so, that the validity or non validity of the 1965 amendment is not put at issue and is not material. Only if the facts appearing in the record demonstrate that the Hillcrest Homes operation is not a qualifying charity is the constitutionality of the 1965 amendment put to test.

Eesort to the record shows that all of the evidence submitted was offered by the- Foundation and none of it is controverted by any evidence offered by appellants. In this circumstances the nonprofit status of the Hillcrest Homes facility, its alleged charitable character and the public nature of its benefits are all unchallenged. There is no showing made, nor any argument presented by appellants, that Hillcrest Homes *148 is not a charity because it charges fees, or is not public because of its requirements for applicants, or that its use as a home for the aged is not the exclusive use to which the property is devoted. It is left to the court to assume that the facts before it raise, as a matter of law, questions which verify that Hillcrest Homes may not be a purely public charity in fact, but is classified as such only because of the provisions of the 1965 amendment.

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Bluebook (online)
439 P.2d 915, 151 Mont. 143, 37 A.L.R. 3d 558, 1968 Mont. LEXIS 297, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bozeman-deaconess-foundation-v-ford-mont-1968.