Horton v. Fountain Valley School

56 P.2d 933, 98 Colo. 480
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedApril 6, 1936
DocketNo. 13,650.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 56 P.2d 933 (Horton v. Fountain Valley School) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Horton v. Fountain Valley School, 56 P.2d 933, 98 Colo. 480 (Colo. 1936).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Holland

delivered the opinion of the court.

The Fountain Valley School of Colorado is a corporation which was organized in 1929 under the Colorado laws governing such organizations for religious, educational and benevolent purposes. Its articles of incorporation disclose its purposes to be other than for pecuniary profit, the object being the maintenance of a school for boys and their preparation for college. To further the purposes, it may acquire suitable lands and erect thereon and equip, furnish and maintain all necessary and proper buildings for conducting the school. In 1930, it purchased a ranch containing about 1,600 acres, with buildings thereon, located eleven miles from Colorado Springs in El Paso county. About 75 acres of this land adjacent to the tract upon which the buildings are constructed is irrigated land, the residue being dry land. The taxing authorities of the county levied taxes against the entire property. These taxes for the years of 1931 and 1932 were not paid and at a tax sale held in due course, the *482 property was sold to the county. This suit was filed in the district court to enjoin the hoard of county commissioners from selling the tax certificates issued at the sale; the county treasurer from collecting further taxes; the county assessor from further assessing the property; and for such relief as would wholly exempt the property from taxation. This relief was sought upon the theory that the property was exempt under applicable constitutional provisions and statutes. The defendants, being the treasurer, assessor and board of county commissioners, answered, alleging in effect that the school and its property did not fall within the exemption, and denying it was not for pecuniary profit. The Colorado Tax Commission was permitted to intervene. The issue was submitted to the court, which found that the school was entitled to have 175.75 acres of its land with the improvements thereon exempted from taxation, but that the balance of its acreage was not exempt. It held that all acts of the officials in attempting to collect taxes on the exempt property were void, and that future similar acts should be enjoined. Judgment was entered on the findings, and the taxing authorities — board of county commissioners and the tax commission — appear here as plaintiffs in error seeking a reversal of that judgment. The school assigns cross-error on the finding and judgment holding the residue of its property taxable.

There is no dispute concerning the following facts: That the interests in this school corporation are represented by membership instead of stock certificates; that membership is held only by those having an altruistic interest in the particular line of education here attempted to be fostered; that no member has received any pecuniary benefit by reason of the membership; that the school, after deduction of teaching costs, interest and overhead expenses, has operated at a loss; that in the discretion of the master and directors, all of the land is used by the school and its students and is necessary for the accomplishment of the purposes conceived for this *483 particular kind of school; that it was designed and is used as a ranch school with the object of supplying the course of study to students who are able to pay a rather high tuition and who desire a location away from undesirable environments; that it was organized as a not for profit corporation, and that there is no showing that the terms of its charter have been violated in that respect; that the school has an enrollment of at least forty students who pay tuition.

The taxing authorities contend that the school has not by its pleadings, brought itself within the exempt class, in that it has not shown that a profit is not possible and ultimately likely, and they urge that the use of the residue of said lands, held by the trial court to be taxable, is so insignificant that such residue should not be exempted.

Part or all of the real property of this school is either exempt or taxable according to the application of the following constitutional or statutory provisions.

Section 5, article X, of the state Constitution provides: “Lots, with the buildings thereon, if said buildings are used solely and exclusively for religious worship, for schools, or for strictly charitable purposes, also cemeteries not used or held for private or corporate profit, shall be exempt from taxation, unless otherwise provided by general law.”

Section 7198, Compiled Laws of 1921, being the tax exemption statute, provides in part: “Third. Grounds with the buildings thereon, if said buildings are used exclusively for schools, other than schools held or conducted for private or, corporate profit.”

The above section was amended May 29,1933, by chapter 158, Session Laws of 1933, and so far as the amendment relates to the question before us, it is as follows: “Third. Grounds with the buildings thereon, if said buildings are used exclusively for schools, other than schools held or conducted for private or corporate profit. A school within the meaning of this Act is hereby defined to mean an educational institution requiring daily attend *484 anee, having a curriculum comparable to a grade, grammar school, junior high, high school or college or any combination thereof and having an enrollment of at least forty (40) students and charging a tuition fee.”

There is no contention that the school here concerned does not come within the above statutory definition, and the trial court apparently so found; also that acreage or grounds to the extent of approximately 175 acres were used in connection with the operation of the school and therefore exempt. In arriving at this conclusion, the trial court necessarily had to, and did, determine that the school was not held or conducted for private or corporate profit. On each of these questions the court’s finding is amply supported by the evidence and therefore will not be disturbed.

Having affirmed the judgment of the trial court to this end, it is needless to discuss the question of the exemption or taxability of the residue of the land, other than to determine whether or not it is used in connection with the school as such. There is no constitutional limitation as to the number of lots that may be held by schools; neither is there any statutory limitation as to the extent of grounds, as such term is used in the statute, that may be used in connection with schools. The latter term means no more than “lots” could mean. In effect, “lots” have been defined to mean or include “grounds,” when the matter of exemption has been considered by this court in similar cases. Kemp v. Pillar of Fire, 94 Colo. 41, 27 P. (2d) 1036, and Colorado cases therein cited with approval.

As applied to the facts in the case before us, we find the following appropriate language in Bishop, etc. v. Treasurer, 29 Colo. 143, 68 Pac. 272: “If the use of property utilized for a school is limited to that which is indispensable for this purpose, the extent to which institutions of this character are benefited by exemption from taxation is confined to the narrowest possible limits, and every use which could be dispensed with and yet permit *485

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Bluebook (online)
56 P.2d 933, 98 Colo. 480, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/horton-v-fountain-valley-school-colo-1936.