Cincinnati Gymnasium & Athletic Club v. Edmondson

13 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 489
CourtCourt of Common Pleas of Ohio, Hamilton County
DecidedNovember 26, 1912
StatusPublished

This text of 13 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 489 (Cincinnati Gymnasium & Athletic Club v. Edmondson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Common Pleas of Ohio, Hamilton County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cincinnati Gymnasium & Athletic Club v. Edmondson, 13 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 489 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1912).

Opinion

Dickson, J.

The issue is — Is the property of the plaintiff, the Cincinnati Gymnasium & Athletic Club, being two parcels of real estate, one in the center of the city of Cincinnati, Ohio, and the other on the outskirts thereof, taxable? The defendant auditor seeks to compel payment of taxes on this property, heretofore on the exempt list, because all real and personal property must be taxed, unless exempted from taxation by the Constitution of [490]*490Ohio or its appendant, the General Assembly, and cites the Constitution, Article XII, Section 2: •

' “Laws shall be passed taxing by a uniform rule * * * all real and personal property * * * but, * * * houses used exclusively for public worship, institutions of purely public charity, public property used exclusively for any public purpose, * * * may by general laws be exempt from taxation. ’ ’

And, also, Section 2732 of the Revised Statutes, as amended by Act of May 9th, 1908, Ohio Laws, V. 99, p. 449:

“The following property shall be exempt from taxation. * * #
“Sixth. All property belonging to institutions of purely public charity * * * and all moneys and credits appropriated solely to sustain, and belonging exclusively to said institutions. ’ ’ * * *

The General Code, Section 5353, passed February 14, 1910, approved February 15, 1910, reads:

“Lands, houses and other buildings belonging to a county * * * and property belonging to institutions of public charity only shall be exempt from taxation.”

Purely public charity has been changed to public charity only. It is difficult to see why this change was made. If the new phrase be intended to have a different meaning from the old it is against the Constitution and void. The new means the same as the old — is read with it, into it, or it is void. If void the old phrase remains. We shall construe the law to be “purely public charity,” the language of the Constitution.

The auditor says the property of the plaintiff is not exempt under any law and has placed it on the duplicate.

The plaintiff asks that the defendant auditor be enjoined from asserting any taxation rights against this property because it is an institution of purely public charity and its property is exempt under the act of May 9th, 1908, supra.

The issue, in another form is, is the plaintiff, the Cincinnati Gymnasium & Athletic Club, an institution of purely public [491]*491charity? The word institution means either the organization or its property. There is no, provision to tax the organization, hence the law must mean to tax the property. Where property is used for purely public charity the form or name or character of the organization controlling it is not important and can in no way affect its taxability.

The issue demands an interpretation of each of the three words, purely — public—charity. First in importance is: what is meant, in law, by the use of the word charity ?

Charity is not strained, is unlimited, is not alone aid to the needy, is rather, broad; means love, the brotherhood of man, and embraces, includes, all which aids mankind and betters his condition. Profanely, the chief end of man is a sound mind in a sound body. The one depends upon the other — can not survive without the other. Therefore everything which tends to produce this end aids mankind, is love, brotherhood — charity.

Plaintiff does not claim to be an institution of learning — an aid to the sound mind; but rather to be an institution of physical culture, calisthenics, hygienes, including bathing, swimming — an aid to the sound body.

Institutions of learning have long been held fit for charity. In recent years culture of the body has become a part and parcel of institutions of learning — a necessary adjunct thereto, and the court does not see why there can not be then an institution of physical culture separate from one of learning and quite as fit for charity.

And second: what is meant, in law, by the use of the word public? Public does not mean free; but rather that which is open to a class or kind on equal conditions, or rather where all may go who can comply with certain necessary and reasonable requirements — restrictions.

And third: what is meant, in law, by the use of the word purely ? After having defined public as not free, and charity as an aid to mankind, rich as well as poor, the word purely has little meaning, little relevancy and little significance. At all events, it means something different from exclusive, because exclusive is used in the Constitution when speaking of public wor[492]*492ship, public property, and manifestly means something less strict.

Every charitable institution must have support — must have money either from the state, or from gifts, or from its own earnings, or from all three. An institution supported exclusively by its own earnings may be purely public charity, and its moneys and credits and its property exempt from taxation. Clearly the Constitution in its present form does not intend that an institution otherwise fit which has even a small earning capacity, or has any.restriction as to membership, shall forfeit its right to be classed as an institution of purely public charity, and thus its right to exemption. If this were the law, the property of every charitable institution in Ohio would be listed for taxation.

• Is the plaintiff an institution of purely public charity ? It is a corporation organized not for profit. Its purpose is to maintain a gymnasium and athletic grounds where the culture of the body is taught — to obtain physical improvement. It has no capital stock. It has no salaried officers — only servants or employes. It is supported by nominal initation fees and dues and by donations in the form of life memberships. The membership is limited, but only to capacity of its property. Males above a certain age and not diseased or immoral are admitted. The membership has no pecuniary value.

A small charge is made for the use of billiard tables, but only sufficient to maintain them. Certain athletic goods are sold to members at a price only to cover the cost, and chiefly sold by the institution to insure uniformity in kind among its members. Exhibitions are held at which a charge of admission is made, but only to cover the necessary expenses. The athletic grounds are occasionally rented to encourage culture of the body in the vicinity, and the rental is only nominal to cover expenses in keep of grounds, with no view to profit.

The evidence clearly shows the institution has kept within its class as a corporation not for profit. Any charges which have been made are simply incidental and subsidiary to its use — the cultivation of the body — and never with a view to profit.

This court has held that the purpose of the institution is purely public charity and the court must hold from the evidence [493]*493that the property in question has been used for a purely public charity. This property is neither held nor used for the purpose of profit. If any part of this property — that is the real estate, not money or credits — were set apart to produce an income or to be held as an investment, that part would not be exempt.

Exhibitions by its members have been held in public halls to make a profit for the plaintiff.

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Bluebook (online)
13 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 489, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cincinnati-gymnasium-athletic-club-v-edmondson-ohctcomplhamilt-1912.