District of Columbia v. Sisters of Visitation

15 App. D.C. 300, 1899 U.S. App. LEXIS 3515
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedOctober 25, 1899
DocketNo. 896
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 15 App. D.C. 300 (District of Columbia v. Sisters of Visitation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
District of Columbia v. Sisters of Visitation, 15 App. D.C. 300, 1899 U.S. App. LEXIS 3515 (D.C. Cir. 1899).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Shepard

delivered the opinion of the Court:

1. This is an appeal from a decree of the Supreme Court of the District canceling an assessment made against the property of the appellee, the Sisters of the Visitation of Washington, for a proportion of the cost of a local improvement, and enjoining the District of Columbia and its officers from hereafter assessing the same.

The hearing was on a demurrer to the bill, the allegations of which are: That the complainant, an incorporated educational institution having no object of private gain, is the owner of Sublot 1, in Square 162, of the city of Washington, whereon its buildings are situated; that by Act of Congress of June 17, 1870, it was exempted from the payment of all taxes and assessments whatsoever, and until the acts hereinafter complained of this exemption had been fully recognized; that the District of Columbia now claims that the exemption aforesaid is from general public taxes and does not apply to assessments for local improvements made under authority of Congress; that pursuant to said claim the District has assessed against the aforesaid property of complainant the sum of $371.14 as its proportion of the cost of constructing a curb and sidewalk adjacent thereto; that complainant made no request for said improvement, had no notice of the order for its construction, and gave no consent thereto; that notwithstanding its exemption from said charge the same has been assessed against said property, and unless restrained the defendant will proceed to execute its threat to sell said property to enforce payment.

2. The Act of Congress approved June 17, 1870, under which the exemption from the payment of this assessment is claimed, reads as follows: “From and after the passage of this.act all churches and school houses afad all buildings [305]*305and grounds and property appurtenant thereto and used in connection therewith in the District of Columbia shall be exempt from any and all taxes or assessments, national or municipal or county.” 16 Stat. 153.

By a subsequent act, approved June 11, 1878 (20 Stat. 108), it was declared that the term “school houses” in the act aforesaid was intended to embrace all collegiate establishments “ actually used for educational purposes and not for private gain.”

It may be added, also, that since 1870 many special acts have been passed extending exemptions, in words more or less general, to the property of specially named charitable, educational and religious institutions situated in the District. See Compiled Stat. D. C. 519, 520, for some of these.

3. The first contention of the appellant is that the exemption of the statute applies only to taxes that may be imposed and assessments thereof that may be made for general public purposes and to no others.

The argument is that the word “assessment” is generally used as descriptive of the amount of the tax assessed or the valuation of the property for the purpose of ascertaining the tax or the act of assessing or fixing the amount of the tax, and that the words “taxes or assessments” as used in the act of 1870 do not plainly apply to special assessments for the local and direct improvement of property.

Bearing well in mind the established rule, upon which great stress has been laid on the argument, that a claim of exemption from common public burdens or a grant of exceptional privileges must be founded in plain and unequivocal terms in the grant, and that reasonable doubts are to be resolved against the claimant, we are nevertheless unable to accede to the contention of the appellant.

We find no such ambiguity in the language of the statute, no such reasonable doubt in respect of the intention of Congress, as requires us, in accordance with the rule above [306]*306stated, to declare against the validity of the exemption as claimed in the bill.

The word “taxes,” in its ordinary sense, embraces all those regular impositions or burdens laid by government upon property and persons for the purpose of raising revenue for its general needs.

The term “ assessments ” has two different and well known significations, both in common speech and legal language. In one sense, it means, as contended by appellant, the act of appraisement, of the valuation of property, and its entry upon the tax lists for the regular collection of its ascertained proportion of the tax levy.

In another, it means the cost or expense of some particular local improvement, for example, a new street, a sidewalk, a sewer, and the like, that shall have been authorized by the legislature and declared and established as a special benefit to the adjacent premises of a private owner.

This.latter signification would seem to be that with which the term has been most commonly used in modem legislation. Emery v. Gas Co., 28 Cal. 346.

It certainly has this meaning in common speech in the District of Columbia, and is a use derived' from the frequent legislation of Congress providing for works of local improvement therein, and the constantly resulting litigation. The item of the general appropriation bill to which the proviso regulating the assessment as made in this case is annexed, has the special heading, “Assessment and permit work;” the appropriation is specially designated therefor (28 Stat. 247), and the local improvements are to be at the discretion of the Commissioners, as well upon, as without, the application of interested lot owners. “Assessments,” then, having this distinct, two-fold meaning, can not be regarded as a mere synonym for “taxes.”

The court of last resort in New Jersey, in reaching the conclusion that a statute declaring that certain classes of property “shall not be subject to taxes or assessments,” [307]*307applied as clearly to assessments for special benefits as to general public taxes, aptly said: “In proper acceptation, in legislative enactments and in judicial decisions, these words have a different meaning, apply to different matters, and can not be treated as synonymous terms. This being so, no supposed impolicy of the exemption itself can be available to govern the judicial construction of the words.” The State Protestant Foster Home v. Newark, 36 N. J. L. 478. Reversing decision reported 35 N. J. L. 157.

A similar construction has been given by other courts to statutes exempting “from all assessments and taxes whatsoever” (First Div. St. Paul, etc., Rwy. Co. v. City of St. Paul, 21 Minn. 526; City of St. Paul v. St. Paul, etc., Rwy. Co., 23 Minn. 469; Brightman v. Kirner, 22 Wis. 54, 58); also, from “all public taxes and assessments” (State v. City of St. Paul, 36 Minn. 529),and from “all civil impositions, taxes and rates.” Harvard College v. Boston, 104 Mass. 470, 482.

We are of the opinion that the intention to exempt the designated classes of property from both general taxes and special assessments for local improvements is, if possible, more clearly shown in the Act of Congress than in any of the State statutes above referred to.

In the first place, there is another familiar rule of construction, applicable as well to statutes conferring exemptions of this class as to others, that, unless the contrary intention be manifest, no sentence, clause or word is to be disregarded or treated as superfluous or insignificant. 23 Am. & Eng. Encyc. L. 364.

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Bluebook (online)
15 App. D.C. 300, 1899 U.S. App. LEXIS 3515, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/district-of-columbia-v-sisters-of-visitation-cadc-1899.