In re Assessment of Properties of Fite Foundation

1951 OK 298, 237 P.2d 427, 205 Okla. 269, 1951 Okla. LEXIS 646
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 6, 1951
DocketNo. 34290
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1951 OK 298 (In re Assessment of Properties of Fite Foundation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Assessment of Properties of Fite Foundation, 1951 OK 298, 237 P.2d 427, 205 Okla. 269, 1951 Okla. LEXIS 646 (Okla. 1951).

Opinions

WELCH, J.

Proceedings were commenced with the filing of protest by Fite Foundation, a corporation, against the assessment of its certain described real estate for taxation for the year 1948. The protest was denied by the board of equalization of Muskogee county, and the corporation appealed to district court.

This is an appeal by the county assessor of Muskogee county from a judgment and order of the district court sustaining the said protest of Fite Foundation and directing that said assessor alter or correct the assessment rolls of Muskogee county to show the properties involved to be exempt from taxation.

The record reflects the following state of facts:

The Fite Foundation was incorporated in April, 1938. The Articles of In[270]*270corporation recite a purpose to carry on certain scientific, educational and charitable activities. Article VII provides:

“ . . .no part of the net income of this corporation or of its property or assets upon dissolution or liquidation shall ever enure to the benefit of any of its members or any private individuals.”

The corporation received gift of the property involved on December 31, 1947. On the same day it executed an agreement to make use of said property for the purposes outlined in its Charter of Organization, with provision that upon failure to so make use of the property before a lapse of five years, that it would transfer the prop- ■ erty to a charity or public usage to be designated by the original donors, or by the district court of Muskogee county, if the first designation fail.

The property consists of four certain city lots with improvements thereon, consisting of a large two-story stone building and adjacent outbuildings. The premises were developed as a residential property and were formerly used in such purpose and constituted the ancestral home of the donors. The property was not in active use during the year 1948, except as a place of habitation of a caretaker and his wife.

. The corporation employed architects to make plans for altering the buildings to suit its purposes, but no construction was commenced.

In its written protest the corporation stated that it was presently without funds with which to operate and that the upkeep of the property is paid by persons interested in the corporation. The record discloses, in fact, that' the corporation since its creation has been without funds to engage in any operation. Thus it appears that the corporation intends, and has intended since 1938, to engage in charitable and benevolent activities at some indefinite future time, but it thus far has not so operated, and has not yet actively used this property or any other property in carrying out the corporate purposes.

It was further stated in the corporation protest:

“The above property is directed wholly and entirely to the charitable and educational endeavors of this corporation. . . . Until some operating arrangement can be made it is unable to place the property in active use but such property is held to be used for the purposes above set forth.”

The appellant contends that property owned by a charitable corporation must be used exclusively for charitable purposes before it can be exempt from taxation. Appellant asserts the contract entered into by the Fite Foundation and its occupation of the property by maintenance personnel and its employment of an architect was not a sufficient use of the property during the year 1948 as to bring the property within the terms of the constitutional provision for tax exemption.

Section 6, art. 10, of the Constitution provides that all property used exclusively for charitable purposes, and other certain designated purposes, shall be exempt from taxation.

It is well settled that the test as to whether certain properties come within an exempt class is the use to which said properties are put. Beta Theta Pi Corporation v. Board of Com’rs of Cleveland County, 108 Okla. 78, 234 P. 354; Southwestern Osteopathic Sanitarium v. Davis, Co. Treas., 115 Okla. 296, 242 P. 1033; In re Parks College, 170 Okla. 132, 39 P. 2d 105; Oklahoma County v. Queen City Lodge No. 197, I.O.O.F., 195 Okla. 131, 156 P. 2d 340.

In Southwestern Osteopathic Sanitarium v. Davis, supra, said the court:

“In determining whether property claimed to be used exclusively for educational, scientific, and charitable purposes is exempt from taxation, each case must stand upon its own merits, and the use to which the property is in fact dedicated is the test as to whether such property is exempt from taxa[271]*271tion, and such úse is a question of. fact to be determined from the evidence.”

In Oklahoma County v. Queen City Lodge, supra, it is said:

“By virtue of the Constitution a building and the grounds thereof owned by a nonprofit benevolent institution or corporation and used by such owner for the appropriate purposes and objects thereof is exempt from ad valorem taxation. But real estate, though so owned, is not so exempt if it is not used by the owner as above stated,

Herein, admittedly, the property was not put to an actual physical use by this corporation in the dispensation of any benevolences or public good at the beginning of the year 1948, or at any time during the year, nor was any other property so used, since the corporation had not yet engaged in any operations at all.

Appellee, on a premise that it is a nonprofit benevolent corporation, contends the holding of the property during a reasonable period of time while making plans for its use and arrangements for funds is “use” within the terms of the Constitution and statute providing tax.

In argument in support of the contention the appellee cites the following cases: Hibbing v. Commissioner of Taxation, 217 Minn. 528, 14 N.W. 2d 923, 156 A.L.R. 1294; El Jebel Shrine Association v. McGlone, 93 Colo. 334, 26 P. 2d 108; Smith, Co. Assessor, v. Zion Evangelican Lutheran Church, 202 Okla. 174, 211 P. 2d 534.

In the Hibbing case it was said "by Minnesota court:

“The right of exemption carries with it, as an incident, a reasonable opportunity by an institution entitled to tax exemption of its property, in execution of an intention so to do, to adapt and fit property acquired by it for the use upon which the right of exemption rests.”

In the El Jebel case the Colorado court held lots owned by the Shrine Association exempt from taxation where a portion of a building had been erected; said building being dedicated to a use for benevolent purposes.

In the .Lutheran Church case, supra, this court held:

“Where a church purchases vacant lots with the intention of constructing a building thereon to be used solely and exclusively for religious purposes and such* lots are not used for any other purpose, they are exempt from taxation under the provisions of section 6, art. 10 of the Constitution of the State, notwithstanding construction of the new building had not been started because of economic conditions created by war and thereafter because of injunction proceedings commenced against the church to prevent the construction of a building on the lots, where the church retained a bona fide continuous intention to construct such building on the lots.”

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Related

Opinion No. 73-126 (1973) Ag
Oklahoma Attorney General Reports, 1973

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1951 OK 298, 237 P.2d 427, 205 Okla. 269, 1951 Okla. LEXIS 646, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-assessment-of-properties-of-fite-foundation-okla-1951.