Odd Fellows Benevolent & Charitable Ass'n v. City of Nashville

114 S.W.2d 791, 173 Tenn. 55, 9 Beeler 55, 1937 Tenn. LEXIS 13
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedApril 2, 1938
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 114 S.W.2d 791 (Odd Fellows Benevolent & Charitable Ass'n v. City of Nashville) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Odd Fellows Benevolent & Charitable Ass'n v. City of Nashville, 114 S.W.2d 791, 173 Tenn. 55, 9 Beeler 55, 1937 Tenn. LEXIS 13 (Tenn. 1938).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Chambliss

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The Association filed this bill seeking to enjoin the City from collection of municipal taxes for the year 1934 on a large office building, located on Seventh avenue in Nashville, known as the Medical Arts Building, some eight or ten floors being rented to various tenants as offices and stores, alleging that the property was exempt from taxation under Code, section 1085. This section reads as follows:

“ (2) Property of religious, etc., institutions. — All property belonging to any religious, charitable, scientific, or educational institutions, when used exclusively for the purpose for which said institution was created, or is unimproved and yields no income. All property belonging to such institution used in secular business and competing with a like business that pays taxes to the state shall be taxed on its whole or partial value in proportion as the same may be used in competition with secular business.”

It appears from the bill and proof that Walter P. Nelson and four associates, who were members and former *57 officers of the Order of Independent Odd Fellows, but who did not act in their official capacity, bnt as individuals only, applied for, and were issued, a charter under the laws of this state as a general welfare corporation, with the following declared purposes:

“(1) To support and maintain aged, infirm and indigent Odd Fellows, holding membership within the territorial jurisdiction of the Grand Lodge of Tennessee of the Independent Order of Odd Fellows; to support and maintain the indigent widows of Odd Fellows who died holding membership in the Order within such jurisdiction; and to care for, support, protect and educate the orphan children of Odd Fellows who died holding membership in the Order within such jurisdiction; and,

“(2) To support, and assist in the work of the Tennessee Oldd Fellows Widows and Orphans Home, and of other institutions, having, as their aim, objects included in the above stated purposes, which may be designated therefor by the Grand Lodge of Tennessee of the Independent Order of Odd Fellows:

“(3) To receive, accumulate, hold and administer funds and property for the above stated purposes; and,

‘ ‘ (4) To own and maintain suitable meeting place for the fraternal sessions of the Grand Lodge of Tennessee of the Independent Order of Odd Fellows.”

It appears that application for this charter was signed on the 8th day of January, 1934, and recorded on the 9th day of January, 1934; that on this 8th day of January a deed was executed in St. Louis, Mo., to this Association by the General American Life Insurance Company, recorded in Davidson county on the 10th of January, conveying to this Association, then in process of formation, the property above described for a total consideration *58 of $420,000, evidenced by a five-year note of the Association (no payment being made in cash), secured by a vend- or’s lien, and, contemporaneously, the Association re-conveyed the property to an officer of the Insurance Company, as trustee, additionally to secure the payment of the purchase money. The Association had no assets or resources whatever, and under the organization as formed by the incorporators no dues or assessments or other sources of revenue were to be paid in by the members. The property, which had been acquired by the Insurance Company some years before by, or following, foreclosure of a large mortgage, was regularly assessed for taxes as of the 10th day of January, the period fixed by law, and it is the taxes thus assessed that are sought to be enjoined. It appears from testimony of an attorney acting in the matter that the closing of the transaction was timed with a view to consummation before the 10th of January, the date fixed by law for tax assessments to take effect.

The contract provided for interest at 4 per cent, per annum, payable monthly, and for a minimum payment on the principal debt of $10',000 a year. The City taxes for the year amounted to $7,165.40, and if state and county taxes are added (not sought to be enjoined herein, but liability for which will be indirectly determined in this cause), the total taxes for the year exceed somewhat the annual payment of the $10',000 minimum on the principal debt of the Insurance Company.

The answer of the City denied the right of the complainant to the exemption claimed on the facts appearing, denied that the property was being used for charitable or other purposes within the purview of the statute, and challenged the good faith of the complainant and the In *59 surance Company as a manifest effort to avoid just taxation. Proof was taken, and the chancellor heard the cause and dismissed the bill. He filed an opinion reviewing the facts, and, while acquitting the organizers of complainant Association of actual fraud, or bad faith, he found that the Association “had no assets whatever at the time it was organized, the purpose being to acquire this building and devote the income therefrom primarily to paying for the building with the view of using-surplus funds in the future for charitable purposes”; that “an exemption may not be determined by the character of the charter of the corporation owning such property”; that the law exempts “property of a charitable corporation when used for the purposes for which it was incorporated, and from the record in this cause it is manifest that the main purpose of the organization was to acquire this property and use the net rentals for the purpose of paying for it at the rate of at least $10,000 per an-num in addition to the interest monthly.”

The bill herein was not filed until October, 1934, and the proof showed that at that time a donation of $750 had been made from the earnings of the property (out of gross rentals of approximately $4,000 per month), but that at that time the Association was in default for several months on its monthly interest payments to the Insurance Company of some $1,400' a month.

This office building had, since 1930, been operated by the Insurance Company owners as a business investment, with just what net result does not appear, but inferentially at a loss. It is not clear from the record from what source came the first suggestion of the plan of organizing a general welfare corporation and transferring the property to it, with the effect of freeing it from taxes. It *60 appears that a deficiency judgment in a large sum was entered against the ¡Grand Lodge of Tennessee, the former owners and mortgagors, when foreclosure took place in 1930'. This Grand Lodge became insolvent and subsequently withdrew from the state. The first documentary evidence we find in the record on the subject of the negotiations leading up to the closing of the transaction, in January, 1934, is a letter dated November 20', 1933, addressed to Mr. J. G. Driscoll, assistant secretary, General American Insurance Company, St. Louis, Mo., headed, “Be: Medical Arts Building,” and the opening paragraphs reading as follows:

“Your letter of November 4, 1933, setting forth proposed terms of sale of the above property, has been considered by a group of Odd Fellows interested; and they believe that some satisfactory plan may be reached through negotiations.

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Bluebook (online)
114 S.W.2d 791, 173 Tenn. 55, 9 Beeler 55, 1937 Tenn. LEXIS 13, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/odd-fellows-benevolent-charitable-assn-v-city-of-nashville-tenn-1938.