Lutheran Home Tax Assessment

64 Pa. D. & C.2d 185, 1971 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 4
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Berks County
DecidedDecember 13, 1971
Docketno. 221
StatusPublished

This text of 64 Pa. D. & C.2d 185 (Lutheran Home Tax Assessment) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Berks County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lutheran Home Tax Assessment, 64 Pa. D. & C.2d 185, 1971 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 4 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1971).

Opinion

HESS, P. J.,

The Lutheran Home at Topton, Pa., has appealed from an assessment placed on a portion of its real property by the Board of Assessment and Revision of Taxes. In fact, separate appeals were filed, three appeals involving parcels- of property upon which the board placed assessments for the year 1969, and 25 appeals involving assessments for the year 1970. Counsel have entered into a stipulation that all appeals present the same issues of law and of fact, and that the final determination in the present case shall be applicable to all other appeals.

The Lutheran Home at Topton was founded in 1897 as a “charitable and benevolent” orphanage. In 1940, the home began admitting the aged into care, and in subsequent years this service has substantially increased with a concomitant decrease in the number of children served. Presently, the home is open to children and the aged of all faiths and races. In addition to the cottage residents, the home serves a total of 180 aged people in ambulatory self-care, sometimes referred to as group living, and infirmary care. At Topton, the Heilman Cottage accommodates 24 ambulatory residents, and the Annie Lowry cottage, 10. The Henry infirmary at Topton now provides for 100 patients, and in addition, the home operates another facility in Reading called the Caum Memorial Building [187]*187with 34 people in infirmary care and 16 in ambulatory group care.

The home began to provide cottages for the aged about 1962, not as “a separate retirement development for older people but an integral part of the total program of serving the aged.” Construction was paid for out of the home’s unrestricted endowment funds. At the present time, the home owns 36 separate retirement cottage buildings, of which 28 are single residences, six contain two apartments, and two contain three apartments. These facilities are presently inhabited by 66 aged persons, one is occupied by a retired man whose wife is employed by the home as Director of Activities, and one is occupied by the home’s caretaker and his wife and daughter.

Physically, the cottages are adapted to the needs of the elderly. They are ranch-type, i.e., all on one floor. As many steps as possible have been eliminated with the substitution of ramps, and all doorways have been constructed with sufficient width to accommodate wheelchairs. The bathrooms are fitted with bars within reach of the fixtures in order to assist the residents in using them. All of these features have been included with the idea of “making it as easy for (the aged) ... as possible to manage their own daily activities . . . with the infirmities of age, as they come on . . .”

To be eligible for admission as a cottage resident of the home, a person must be at least 65 years old, or in the case of a couple, at least one of the spouses must be 65. Also, an applicant must submit a health report which is reviewed by the home’s physician. Similarly, a statement of the applicant’s financial condition is submitted to the home’s board of directors. The primary purpose of the fiscal and physical reports is to assure that the applicant will be able to five inde[188]*188pendently and thus obtain the benefit of the cottage situation.

While the resident occupies his cottage, the home renders his life as carefree as possible by providing indoor and outdoor maintenance, snow and garbage removal, grass cutting, and insurance. The home attempts to keep several beds in the infirmary unoccupied in order that Cottage residents may be transferred to the infirmary for temporary care. Not only does the home have arrangements with the Reading and Allentown Hospitals if a cottage resident requires hospitalization, but also the home has indicated a willingness to pay the costs outstanding after Medicare and the resident’s resources are exhausted. Similarly, the home is willing to move a widow or a widower who finds the cottage lonesome after the death of a spouse into the group living program. Since the initiation of cottage living, transfers to group living have, in fact, occurred for this reason.

A cottage resident of the home becomes a part of a family or community of aged people. The home has its own Lutheran religious congregation and a chapel on the premises at Topton. There are services every Sunday morning, and at least 80 percent of the cottage residents, including some non-Lutherans, attend. In addition, there are midweek services during Lent, and throughout the year the superintendent carries out the normal pasional duties of visiting and counseling among the cottage residents, as with the other members of the home’s family. Meals are available in the home’s dining room to cottage residents at modest cost.

The home has an extensive program of volunteer service in which about three-quarters of the cottage residents participate. This includes assistance in the home’s infirmaries — feeding patients, hairdressing for [189]*189female patients, and the like. In 1969, the home recorded approximately 85,000 hours of volunteer service of which the cottagers contributed over 11,000. Cottage residents also participate in the crafts program.

When an applicant for cottage residence is accepted, he pays an admission fee which represents two factors. One is the basic cost of erecting the building and the other is a portion of the total cost of developing the entire tract of cottages for construction, called land development cost. The land development cost has arbitrarily been fixed at $3,600 for each unit.1 The home treats the admission fee as a liability and takes into current income for the cottage program five percent of the admission fee per year as an offset to the annual cost of insurance and services provided by the home, including indoor and outdoor maintenance of the building, snow and garbage removal and lawn care. Should a cottage resident require either temporary or permanent infirmary care, he is charged 50 percent of the prevailing rate and the other 50 percent is deducted from the remainder of the admission fee. In addition to the foregoing, the resident pays a monthly charge of $15 to the home to cover “normal” electric use, sewage, water, and garbage removal. An additional $10 a month is charged for cottages which are heated by electricity which comes through one meter for the entire home. (In the case of cottages heated by gas, the resident pays directly to the utility company.) In the case of a unit occupied by a single person, the $15 charge is reduced to $10.

The home has three financial plans for noncottage residents. About 58 percent are cared for under Plan [190]*190III, which means that the resident turns over to the home whatever public assistance and/or Social Security he has and pays nothing further. About 22 percent of the residents are under Plan I whereby the individual turns over all of his assets and thereafter has his monthly board charge deducted until the assets are exhausted. He then continues under Plan III. Twenty percent of the residents are under Plan II: they pay the regular monthly board charge and also make a payment of $25 per month to the home’s capital fund.

Prior to the calendar year 1969, the home did not report the results of the cottage program separately in its financial statements. However, in 1969 the program showed a loss of almost $9,000.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Vanguard School Tax Exemption Case
243 A.2d 323 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1968)
Methodist Old Peoples Home v. Korzen
233 N.E.2d 537 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1968)
Young Men's Christian Ass'n v. Reading
167 A.2d 469 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1961)
The Presbyterian Homes v. Division of Tax Appeals
261 A.2d 143 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 1970)
Presbyterian Homes Tax Exemption Case
236 A.2d 776 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1968)
University of Pittsburgh Tax Exemption Case
180 A.2d 760 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1962)
Albright College Tax Assessment Case
249 A.2d 833 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1968)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
64 Pa. D. & C.2d 185, 1971 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 4, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lutheran-home-tax-assessment-pactcomplberks-1971.