Evangelical Lutheran Synod v. Hoehn

196 S.W.2d 134, 355 Mo. 257, 1946 Mo. LEXIS 449
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedAugust 1, 1946
DocketNo. 39744.
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 196 S.W.2d 134 (Evangelical Lutheran Synod v. Hoehn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Evangelical Lutheran Synod v. Hoehn, 196 S.W.2d 134, 355 Mo. 257, 1946 Mo. LEXIS 449 (Mo. 1946).

Opinion

*260 ELLISON, P. J.

This is an appeal from a judgment of the circuit court of the City of St. Louis iii favor of the defendants-respondents and against the plaintiffs-appellants, in a suit brought by the latter in November, 1944, seeking an adjudication that their real estate in that city was exempt from 1944 city taxes under Sec. 6, Art. X of the Constitution of Missouri, 1875, and Sec. 10937 of the statutes, 1 on the ground that the real estate was and is exclusively used for religious worship and purposes purely charitable; and praying a mandatory injunction requiring the expungement of the city record showing the assessment of those taxes, and a perpetual injunction enjoining their certification and collection.

The plaintiffs-appellants are the Evangelican Lutheran Synod of Missouri, Ohio and Other States, and Concordia Publishing House. Both are Missouri corporations organized under Art. 10, Chap. 33, Sec’s 5436-5465 covering benevolent, religious,- educational and other like corporations. For convenience we shall refer throughout this opinion to the first named corporation as the Synod, and to the second as the Publishing House. The defendants-respondents are the Assessor, The Comptroller and the Collector of Eevenue of the City of St. Louis.

The Publishing House is a subsidiary corporation of the Synod, the latter controlling, through the board of directors elected by it, all the activities of the former. It is conceded that in their activities the two corporations constitute a single unit. The Publishing House does a specialized printing and publishing business, and holds title to the real estate involved for the use and benefit of the Synod. For record purposes it should be stated the real estate consists of eighteen lots described as: Lots 1 to 12, inclusive, the south 15 feet of Lot 21, and all of Lots 22, 23 and 24, all in block 1 of Henry T. Blow’s Subdivision; also Lots 11 -and 12 in block 1 of Belt'and Priest’s Subdivision ; all in City Block 1562 of the City of St. Louis.

The aforesaid lots 1 to 12 in the Blow subdivision and lots 11 and 12 in the Belt and Priest subdivision all lie together, making 14 lots facing west on Jefferson Avenue with a total frontage of 345 feet 1-Yl inches, and a depth'of 122 feet 6 inches facing south on Miami Street. On these lots are four abutting brick buildings. The first three are three stories high, and the fourth is one story high. Though built at different times they constitute one unit. Across a fifteen foot *261 alley to the east are lots 24, 23, 22 and the south 15 feet of lot 21 in the Blow subdivision, facing east on Indiana Avenue with a total frontage of 85 feet 5-½ inches, and a depth of 122.5 feet facing south on Miami Street. On the south 70 feet 5-½ inches of these four lots are two abutting brick buildings, the former being three stories high and the latter one story. These two buildings constitute another unit. The north 15 feet of these lots is vacant.

All the buildings are used solely for the purposes of the two corporations. They contain various offices of the Synod, the Publishing House and church organizations; a book library and a sacred music library, used by the clergy, teachers and musicians; a large auditorium used by the Synod; a large book display room where books may be purchased at retail; a printing plant, and bindery; stock room; storage and warehouse rooms; engine, boiler and heating plant rooms. ■ All the lots were purchased and the improvements thereon constructed solely out of the profits and surplus of the Publishing House.

Part of the books sold by the Publishing House are printed and published by it, and part by others. Most of them are religious books. Some are secular, mainly English Classics and Webster’s Dictionary, all these being approved by the Synod. It also prints religious periodicals and supplies material to the denominational churches and' parochial schools. The Synod’s Regulation No. 10 governing publications by the Publishing House, provides: “The Board (of Directors) shall fix the price of books in accordance with the' market and in general, through the General Manager, direct the sale, of books and periodicals in a businesslike way.” Sundry Regulation No. 1 provides “large and small Bibles” (in t^ German language) shall be sold at cost. And Sundry Regulation No. 2 admonishes that anyone who does not pay his debts after repeated admonitions shall be refused further credit. Without question, the business of the Publishing House is conducted like a business, but its profits have been used for the extension of its properties, or' paid to or held for the Synod. In 1944 there were 2,320,860 cubic feet in all the buildings, of which it appears about 90% were used by the Publishing House.

The gross sales of secular books in 1944 amounted to $9,477.98 which was only .6% of the. gross receipts of the Publishing House that year, the latter being $1,560,741.54. The net assets were $1,332,290.30, and the net income was $225,889.89, being a 17% return on those assets. There is, of course, no capital stock. Of the.net income of the Publishing House $125,000 was turned over to the Synod in 1944. But the budget receipts of the Synod that same year were $2,580,628.64, of which oveR 83% was paid out foR foreign and home missions, colleges and seminaries, pensions, etc. Practically all this except the aforesaid $125,000 came from budget contributions from 5,271 congregations of the denomination in the Hnited States, Canada and South America, and from endowments, interest earnings, etc. *262 The aforesaid net income of the Publishing House in 1944 was 8.75% of the total receipts of the Synod. Neither the Synod nor the Publishing House is operated for the financial profit or benefit of any of its members. Salaries or wages are paid to officers and employees, but it is not contended these are so great as to constitute concealed profits.

The 5,271 congregations of the Evangelical Lutheran Church, which stresses evangelism, are the base of the pyramidal structure of the denomination. The Synod is their nerve center and the co-ordinator of their activities. The Publishing House furnishes books, periodicals and supplies and contributes substantially in a financial way, as shown above. Some colleges, seminaries and parochial schools are maintained. The Synod originally' was a voluntary association formed in 1847. It was incorporated in 1894 by pro forma decree in St.- Louis under the then statutes which are now numbered as cited in the beginning. Sec. 5436 authorizes the incorporation of associations for religious purposes, and Sec. 5439 covers church organizations formed for religious purposes and purely charitable societies. The decree simply granted a charter under the whole Article without specifying whether the corporation was religious or purely charitable.

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Bluebook (online)
196 S.W.2d 134, 355 Mo. 257, 1946 Mo. LEXIS 449, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/evangelical-lutheran-synod-v-hoehn-mo-1946.