Hotel Dieu v. Williams
This text of 403 So. 2d 1255 (Hotel Dieu v. Williams) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
HOTEL DIEU et al.
v.
Erroll G. WILLIAMS et al.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fourth Circuit.
*1256 Otto B. Schoenfeld, Denechaud & Denechaud, New Orleans, for plaintiffs-appellants.
William J. Guste, Jr., Atty. Gen., Louis M. Jones, Robert L. Danner, Jr., Asst. Attys. Gen., Dept. of Justice, Salvador Anzelmo, City Atty., Joseph N. Naccari, Asst. City Atty., New Orleans, for defendants-appellees.
Before REDMANN, SCHOTT and KLIEBERT, JJ.
REDMANN, Judge.
The question in this case is whether a nonprofit hospital corporation generally exempt from taxation of its property is subject to property taxation upon part of its land and a medical office building and parking facility it built thereupon (through an alter-ego corporation). The answer involves construing, for the first time, the general exemption provided by La.Const. 1974 art. 7 § 21(B)(1) and the limitation on the exemption provided by the last paragraph of § 21(B).
Those provisions read:
(B)(1) Property owned by a nonprofit corporation or association organized and operated exclusively for religious, dedicated places of burial, charitable, health, welfare, fraternal, or educational purposes, no part of the net earnings of which inure to the benefit of any private shareholder or member thereof and which is declared to be exempt from federal or state income tax;
* * * * * *
None of the property listed in paragraph (B) shall be exempt if owned, operated, leased, or used for commercial purposes unrelated to the exempt purposes of the corporation or association.
We conclude that the language of art. 7 § 21(B)(1) will not support any other grammatical construction than that it exempts all "[p]roperty owned by a nonprofit corporation" which corporation (not which corporation's property) is "organized and operated exclusively" for specified benevolent purposes (including health purposes). It is only the last paragraph of § 21(B) that reduces the universality of that exemption, and that last paragraph denies the exemption only to property "owned, operated, leased or used for commercial purposes unrelated to the exempt purposes of the corporation ....". We conclude that the providing of medical office (and pharmacy and laboratory) spaces and parking space, in the immediate vicinity of a nonprofit hospital, by the hospital either directly or through a related nonprofit corporation created for that purpose, is not a "commercial purpose unrelated to the exempt purposes" of a hospital. We therefore reverse.
*1257 Facts
A hospital named Hotel Dieu has existed in New Orleans for over 100 years. In 1912 the hospital became a non-profit corporation, now named "Hotel Dieu," whose members are the West Central Provincial Council of the Daughters of Charity of St. Vincent de Paul. Hotel Dieu also operates, in conjunction with the hospital, a school of nursing and conducts, in cooperation with Louisiana State University, medical, educational and research projects as well as residencies and internships. Several years ago a new building was constructed for the hospital, adjacent to its old building. The old building was thereafter demolished, leaving an area of vacant land lying near the central business district of New Orleans. Hotel Dieu decided to erect a building (the Seton Professional Building here involved) upon that land "as a support facility for Hotel Dieu Hospital" to provide office space for doctors on the hospital's medical staff (as well as a pharmacy and snack bar) and to provide parking space for both the hospital's and the office building's purposes.
For that reason in July, 1974, Hotel Dieu's administrator, associate administrator, comptroller and "one other member who shall be a member of the religious community of the Daughters of Charity of St. Vincent de Paul in residence at Hotel Dieu Hospital ... selected by the other three ex-officio members" formed with themselves as its only members (a charter amendment in August 1978 expanded membership) a non-profit corporation named "Seton Professional Building, Inc."
Hotel Dieu then "leased" its vacant ground to Seton for $1 yearly rent plus any excess of income over costs Seton might realize from renting the building. Other provisions of this "lease" indicating the fact that Seton was nothing more than the agent of Hotel Dieu include the right granted to Hotel Dieu at any time, upon 15 days' notice, "to purchase all of the assets of [Seton], ... for which the consideration shall be, the assuming of all debts of Seton... by Hotel Dieu, without further or other consideration of any kind." (Hotel Dieu is also, under Seton's corporate charter, the nonprofit corporation to whom Seton's net assets go upon voluntary dissolution.)
Upon that leased land the Seton Professional Building was built in 1975 (financed, appellants' brief avers, by the Daughters of Charity). The building has been only 70 to 80% tenanted. As of December 31, 1979 there were 11 leases for doctors' private offices, one for the "L.S.U. Clinic" (the private practice of a group of faculty members of Louisiana State University medical school), one for a medical laboratory, one for the general office of the New Orleans Academy of Ophthalmology, one for a pharmacy and one (2,309 sq. ft., 3.72% of the building) for a restaurant. Most of the doctors (including the L.S.U. doctors) are on the Hotel Dieu medical staff (which means only that they are authorized to admit patients to Hotel Dieu; they may be on other hospital staffs, but 90% of the private physician tenants send all and the other 10% send a substantial portion of their patients for hospitalization to Hotel Dieu). The offices in the Seton building serve, neverthless, as the offices in which the tenant physicians see all their patients.
Discussion
We have previously stated our construction of the 1974 Constitution's pertinent provisions. That construction is supported by VIII Records of the Louisiana Constitutional Convention of 1973: Convention Transcripts.[1] The very examples of purposes *1258 not refused exemption by the language "commercial purposes unrelated to the exempt purposes" were a pharmacy, a pathology or x-ray laboratory, and a refreshment stand in a hospital. An example of a purpose refused exemption by the language was "if that hospital ... has a parking lot downtownfive blocks away [from the hospital]then they are in an unrelated business activity ... taxable for ad valorem tax purposes." (P. 2025.) The context makes it clear that the location of the parking lot where it would not serve the hospital was the decisive factor. ("That parking lot downtown has nothing to do with the activities, the exempt purpose" of the hospital.) Furthermore, the context makes it clear that the delegates understood the basic exemption of the specified nonprofit corporations' property was of all their property.
The 1974 Constitution's system of exempting all property (with exceptions) of specified non-profit corporations was a change from the 1921 Constitution's exempting specified property in art. 10 § 4, para. 2:
Places of religious worship ...; places of burial; places devoted to charitable undertakings...; schools and colleges; athletic or physical culture clubs ... being non-profit ...; but the exemption shall extend only to property ... used for the above mentioned purposes, and not leased for profit or income.
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403 So. 2d 1255, 1981 La. App. LEXIS 5291, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hotel-dieu-v-williams-lactapp-1981.