Milton Hospital & Convalescent Home v. Board of Assessors

271 N.E.2d 745, 360 Mass. 63, 1971 Mass. LEXIS 707
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedJune 30, 1971
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 271 N.E.2d 745 (Milton Hospital & Convalescent Home v. Board of Assessors) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Milton Hospital & Convalescent Home v. Board of Assessors, 271 N.E.2d 745, 360 Mass. 63, 1971 Mass. LEXIS 707 (Mass. 1971).

Opinion

Quirico, J.

This is an appeal by the Milton Hospital and Convalescent Home (hospital) from a decision of the *64 Appellate Tax Board (board) upholding the action of the board of assessors (assessors) of the town of Milton in refusing to abate the taxes on a portion of the hospital’s real estate for the years 1967 and 1968. Although the controversy involves the taxes for the two years, the record before us is limited to the proceedings on the 1967 taxes, with a stipulation that the decision of this court thereon will be binding on the parties as to the 1968 taxes.

The question is whether G. L. c. 59, § 5, Third, as amended through St. 1957, c. 500, § 1, which exempts from taxation the “real estate owned by or held in trust for a charitable organization and occupied by it or its officers for the purposes for which it is- organized,” entitles the hospital to exemption for a portion of its hospital building which it rents to physicians on its staff for their use for their private practices. The appeal to the board was under the formal procedure (G. L. c. 58A, § 7, as amended), and at the request of the hospital filed after the board’s decision in favor of the assessors, the board filed its findings of fact and report and also an opinion in accordance with G. L. c. 58A, § 13, as amended.

The hospital contends that there are inconsistencies in the various findings of facts made by the board. The findings include many made expressly by the board and also many which result from the board’s allowance of fifty-three of the hospital’s fifty-nine requests for findings. We shall summarize the findings only to the extent necessary for our decision.

The hospital is an incorporated “charitable organization” within the meaning of such words as used in G. L. c. 59, § 5, Third, with reference to exemption from real estate taxes. In 1966 it added a five story wing to its existing hospital building and renovated its original building, bringing its total floor space to 113,833 square feet. Eighty per cent of the first floor of the new wing was designed to include six suites having a total of twelve offices to be rented to physicians. As of January 1, 1967, five of the six suites having a total of 6,992 square feet were rented to physicians, *65 and by January 1, 1968, the sixth suite was also rented to physicians. The rest of the first floor of the new wing contained rooms for the Visiting Nurse Association, the Red Cross and. for hospital records and activities. Other floors of the wing were devoted to bed space, maintenance and storage rooms and other hospital uses.

The total amount received by the hospital from the rental of offices to physicians was $31,821 in 1967 and $33,135.29 in 1968. The portion of the hospital’s building which was rented to the physicians was assessed at $50,200 and the hospital was billed for a tax thereon of $3,765 for 1967 and $4,467 for 1968. We are not concerned with the amount of the assessment, but only with the hospital’s claim that the entire building is exempt from taxation.

The offices in question were rented under written leases to physicians who were members of the hospital’s staff. The rent charged by the hospital was at a rate estimated to be sufficient to cover its expenses connected with the area rented, and also to cover the amortization of its investment in that area. The rent was also roughly equivalent to that charged for similar space in commercial office buildings in comparable locations in the town.

Under the written leases the physicians were free to conduct their private practices therein as they saw fit, treating whatever patients and as many patients as they wished, and charging them for professional services whatever sum the physicians determined, all without any supervision, control or limitation by the hospital. If a physician ceased to be a member of the hospital staff, the hospital could, at its discretion, continue to lease the office to him. The lease did not require the physicians to perform any services of any kind on behalf of the hospital. 1 The leases transferred complete possession and enjoyment of the leased offices to *66 the lessee-physicians who used and occupied them for the treatment of their own private patients.

The board, either expressly or by its allowance of numerous of the hospital’s requests for findings of facts, found many additional facts about the hospital’s many problems and difficulties with respect to or resulting from the unavailability of physicians at the hospital when needed before it built and leased offices to them, and about the great improvement in conditions and advantages to the hospital, its patients and to the lessee-physicians after the offices were leased to the physicians. It is -undisputed that the hospital became a better hospital by reason of the proximity of the offices rented to physicians and the greater availability of the doctors, particularly when needed in emergencies. We do not recite the many findings of this type because in our view of the case they would not require a decision different from that which we reach in this case.

Before proceeding to the application of G. L. c. 59, § 5, Third, to the facts of this case it will be helpful to consider briefly the basic rules to be followed in construing tax statutes, and particularly the provisions thereof granting-exemptions from taxation. The hospital urges that we follow the rule stated in Trustees of Phillips Academy v. Andover, 175 Mass. 118, 125, with reference to the 1897 counterpart of the present § 5, Third: “The statute is not to be construed narrowly but in a fair and liberal sense and so as to promote that spirit of learning, charity, and benevolence which it has always been one of the fundamental objects of the people of this State to encourage.” If that statement was intended to state a rule that statutes granting exemptions from taxation should be construed liberally, it has not survived in the many subsequent judicial decisions which have shown a concern for the increasing proportion of our real estate enjoying exemption from taxation with the corresponding increase in the burden being imposed on the shrinking proportion which is taxable.

In view of the frequent public statements and discussions on the subject of tax exempt real estate, we repeat *67 what we said on this subject in Animal Rescue League of Boston v. Assessors of Bourne, 310 Mass. 330, 332: “All property is benefited by the security and protection furnished by the State, and it is only just and equitable that expenses incurred in the operation and maintenance of government should be fairly apportioned upon the property of all. An exemption from taxation releases property from this obligation to bear its share of the cost of government and serves to disturb, to some extent, that equality in the distribution of this common burden upon all property which is the object and aim of every just system of taxation. While reasonable exemptions based upon various grounds of public policy are peimissible, yet taxation is the general rule. ... It is for this reason that statutes granting exemptions from taxation are strictly construed.

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Bluebook (online)
271 N.E.2d 745, 360 Mass. 63, 1971 Mass. LEXIS 707, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/milton-hospital-convalescent-home-v-board-of-assessors-mass-1971.