Ev. Lutheran Good Samaritan Society v. Department of Revenue

5 Or. Tax 14, 1972 Ore. Tax LEXIS 41
CourtOregon Tax Court
DecidedFebruary 10, 1972
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 5 Or. Tax 14 (Ev. Lutheran Good Samaritan Society v. Department of Revenue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Tax Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Ev. Lutheran Good Samaritan Society v. Department of Revenue, 5 Or. Tax 14, 1972 Ore. Tax LEXIS 41 (Or. Super. Ct. 1972).

Opinion

Carlisle B. Roberts, Judge.

The plaintiff has appealed from the Department of Revenue’s Order No. VL 71-355 which affirmed the Lane County Assessor’s denial of the plaintiff’s tax exemption for the tax year 1970-1971 on certain real and personal property located in Lane County. The plaintiff seeks to reverse the order and obtain a de *15 termination that the subject property was exempt under the provisions of OES 307.130 as property owned by an incorporated benevolent, charitable institution, actually and exclusively occupied or used in the benevolent and charitable work carried on by the plaintiff.

The plaintiff, the Ev. Lutheran Good Samaritan Society, is a nonprofit corporation incorporated in the state of North Dakota and authorized to engage in activity in Oregon pursuant to OES chapter 61. It was organized in 1922 to handle a surplus of funds contributed by a Lutheran Church congregation to help a crippled boy. Its original purpose was to provide “Christian homes for epileptics, cripples and other defectives.” The purposes have been enlarged in subsequent years to include nursing homes, hospitals and convalescent hospitals, homes for the aged, retirement homes, homes for troubled boys and orphans and homes for mentally retarded adults. In 1970, it operated institutions in 142 locations, in 16 central and western states. Approximately 70 percent of these institutions were nursing homes.

The real property here involved is a combined nursing home and convalescent hospital, located on a six-acre tract at 3500 Hilyard Street, Eugene, Oregon. The building was built and occupied in 1959 by the Severson Memorial Home Association, a Lutheran related organization which found itself in financial difficulties in 1967 and arranged for the plaintiff to take over the facility on the payment of arrears in the amount of $35,174.82 on mortgage payments and indebtedness to local creditors in the approximate amount of $75,000. The net worth of the nursing home, at that time, was computed at $360,000. The corporation *16 has continued to operate the property as a licensed convalescent hospital and nursing home under the name of the Eugene Good Samaritan Center. Although wholly owned by the corporation, the Eugene facility has been largely managed and its records kept on a segregated basis, although closely supervised by the corporation.

The Eugene Good Samaritan Center has been operated at a deficit each year since Good Samaritan took it over. In 1967 the deficit was $4,349, in 1968 it was $53,942, in 1969 it was $42,088, and in 1970 it was $62,293. These losses were in part due to rendering services beyond income. Because of these financial losses, the Good Samaritan Society has subsidized or underwritten the operation of the Eugene Center each year, making advances through 1971 in the total of $195,932.50.

The Eugene Good Samaritan Center is a medical-type facility and is not a retirement home. The court recognizes that care of the person can vary in degree over a wide range, including hot meals sent in to a person’s home to insure proper nutrition, intermediate or chronic custodial care on a continuous basis (in nursing homes), intense care in hospitals for limited periods, prolonged remedial or terminal care in convalescent hospitals and nursing homes, and the like. These can all be differentiated from retirement homes for the ambulatory aging, such as were considered in Methodist Homes, Inc. v. Tax Com., 226 Or 298, 360 P2d 293 (1961), and Friendsview Manor v. Tax Com., 247 Or 94, 420 P2d 77, 427 P2d 417 (1967).

In Methodist Homes, Inc. v. Tax Com., supra, the court pointed out that taxation is the rule and exemption from taxation is the exception and statutes such as ORS 307.130 will be construed most strongly against *17 those petitioning for the exemption. The court then reviewed the main “hospital” cases and pointed out that the following elements received chief consideration in determining whether or not a given facility was or was not a charity: "Whether the receipts are applied to the upkeep, maintenance and equipment of the institution or are otherwise employed? "Whether patients or patrons receive the same treatment irrespective of their ability to pay? "Whether the doors are open to rich and poor alike and without discrimination as tq race, color or creed? "Whether charges are made to all patients and, if made, are lesser charges made to the poor or are any charges made to the indigent? "Whether there is a charitable trust fund created by benevolent and charitably minded persons for the needy for donations made for the use of such persons? "Whether the institution operates without profit or private advantages to its founders and the officials in charge? "Whether or not the articles and bylaws of the corporation make provision for the disposition of surplus assets on dissolution to prevent the enrichment of the incorporators, stockholders or private individuals?

"While the Supreme Court decision goes on to say (page 310) that it does not require all the foregoing factors to be present before a given institution can be declared one of charitable or of noncharitable pursuits, this court finds the plaintiff to be a charitable institution with respect to each of the criteria set out. But this does not decide the present case. It will be noted that, on the same page, the Supreme Court adds:

“* * * Nor do we say that the list includes all items which may assist in a conclusion respecting the charitable or noncharitable status of a given corporation. The itemization represents only those particulars which have been in the past employed *18 by this court in discovering if a given hospital is or is not in fact eleemosynary.”

The Department of Revenue, in its Order No. VL 71-355, concluded: “It is the opinion of the Director that the Petitioner is in competition with other similar homes operating for profit and that the subject property is not actually and exclusively used in charitable work as required by ORS 307.130(1) and that therefore the petition should be denied.” This conclusion apparently stems from two aspects of the case, as follows:

First, the financial report of the corporation for the year ending December 31, 1970, covering 137 facilities, showed a total income of something over $28,000,000 and a net income, after depreciation, of slightly more than $1,000,000. (This consolidated report included the accounting of the Eugene Good Samaritan Center.) The second aspect relates to whether charges are made to all patients and, if made, are lesser charges made to the poor or are any charges made to the indigent.

The facts show that the Eugene Good Samaritan Center has a regular scale of charges which are imposed upon any patient able to pay his way (Plaintiff’s Exhibit 49). A substantial percentage of the patients (ranging from 25 to 33 percent of the average population) have been welfare patients, taken by the nursing home under contract with the State Public Welfare Division.

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5 Or. Tax 14, 1972 Ore. Tax LEXIS 41, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ev-lutheran-good-samaritan-society-v-department-of-revenue-ortc-1972.