People ex rel. Trustees of Masonic Hall & Asylum Fund v. Miller

164 Misc. 726, 1 N.Y.S.2d 267, 1937 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1074
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMay 29, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 164 Misc. 726 (People ex rel. Trustees of Masonic Hall & Asylum Fund v. Miller) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People ex rel. Trustees of Masonic Hall & Asylum Fund v. Miller, 164 Misc. 726, 1 N.Y.S.2d 267, 1937 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1074 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1937).

Opinion

Brewster, J.

This is a certiorari proceeding wherein relator seeks to have canceled and set aside an assessment of taxes made and levied for the year 1935 upon certain real estate owned by it in the city of New York, viz., at Twenty-third street and Sixth avenue and extending through to Twenty-fourth street, in the borough of Manhattan. Said property is known on defendants’ tax maps as Lot 1 (Twenty-third street) and Lot 76 (Twenty-fourth street). Relator thus proceeds upon the ground that its said property is wholly exempt from taxation.

The commissioners of taxes and assessments assessed this property on October 1, 1934, for $2,580,000. On relator’s application to the defendants for a cancellation thereof, and after a hearing by it, the application was refused but the assessment was reduced to one of $1,500,000 on said property as an entirety.

Relator claims that said property is exempt by virtue of subdivision 6 of section 4 of the Tax Law, and, in the alternative, that its exemption obtains under a special act, viz., chapter 249 of the Laws of 1871. Defendants contend that, notwithstanding the fact that the assessment now reviewed is the first one which was ever made on this property since owned by the relator (a substantial portion" thereof having been acquired by it in 1868), still that neither under the act of 1871 nor the Tax Law is it entitled to any exemption whatsoever in view of the actual, direct uses to which, as a matter of conceded fact, said property is now and for many years past has been made subject by relator.

[728]*728A somewhat extended chronology of the origin and history of relator, the legislation with reference to it and its temporalities, and its acts and conduct with respect thereof seems necessary as a preface to the views which form the basis of the conclusions hereinafter stated.

The Grand Lodge of Free and Accepted Masons of the State of New York was created and organized in the year 1791 under and pursuant to a charter from the Grand Lodge of Free and Accepted Masons of England. Under this charter and the general laws of Masonry, the first-named Grand Lodge was empowered to charter subordinate lodges composed of Free and Accepted Masons. It exercised this power from time to time to October 1, 1934, on which date there were in existence in the State of New York 1,034 of such subordinate lodges composed of members of the Masonic fraternity, the total number on said date being approximately 300,000. From its formation to date this Grand Lodge was composed of a grand master, deputy grand master, senior grand warden, junior grand warden, grand treasurer and a grand secretary, all of whom were elected by its subordinate lodges at annual communications of said Grand Lodge, and of numerous other appointive officers and committees, and representatives of each and every lodge in the State, all engaged in the administration of the affairs of said Grand Lodge.

In 1842 Greenfield Pote, a man advanced in years, dependent upon the labor of his hands for support of himself and family, and a member of the Masonic fraternity, deposited upon the altar of the Grand Lodge one dollar as the first contribution toward the building of a home for indigent Masons and their families. This contribution was turned over to a committee appointed by the Grand Lodge, called the Committee on Hall and Asylum Fund,” and charged with the duty of soliciting funds from the members of the Masonic fraternity for the purpose of erecting a Masonic hall in the city of New York for the accommodation of said Grand Lodge and another Masonic, bodies, the income therefrom to be used for building and maintaining such a home for indigent Masons and their families. This committee was continued from year to year until the year 1864, when and for some years prior thereto it was composed of the five principal officers of Grand Lodge, and at that time they had collected for the purposes for which they were appointed as such committee, a sum in excess of $49,000.

In that year (1864) the Legislature enacted an act incorporating the members of this committee and their successors in office as a body politic and corporate and which said corporation is the relator herein. (Laws of 1864, chap. 272.) This act, and the several amendments thereof, viz., Laws of 1873, chapter 503; Laws of 1877, [729]*729chapter 350; Laws of 1885, chapter 55; Laws of 1890, chapter 105; Laws of 1898, chapter 666; Laws of 1923, chapter 264, defined its powers and declared its purposes. The objects as stated in this original act of incorporation were: “to build and maintain a Masonic Hall in the City of New York, for the meeting of the Grand Lodge or General Assembly of Masons, and for the accommodation of other Masonic bodies or associations; and out of the funds derived from the rent or income thereof, or other source, to build, establish and maintain an asylum or asylums, school or schools, for the free education of the children of Masons, and for the relief of worthy and indigent Masons, their widow and orphans.” Shortly thereafter and in 1868 the relator purchased that portion of the premises in question situate at the northeast corner of Twenty-third street and Sixth avenue, being the land described as Lot No. 1, block 825, section 3, on the assessment rolls of the city, and received a deed thereof which was duly recorded on September seventh of that year.

Three years later, in 1871, came the enactment of an act entitled, “ An Act to exempt the real estate of the Trustees of the Masonic Hall and Asylum Fund from taxation.” This was contained in chapter 249, passed April 1, 1871, and section 1 thereof reads as follows: “ The real estate now owned, or which may hereafter be acquired, for the construction and maintenance of an asylum by the Trustees of the Masonic Hall and Asylum Fund, a corporation created for benevolent purposes, so long as the entire income from the same shall be exclusively used for benevolent and charitable purposes, shall be and remain exempt from taxation.” Next came the enactment of 1873 which amended the original act of relator’s incorporation by enlarging its powers so as to permit it “ to rent such part or parts of said Masonic Hall, now being erected by them, on the corner of Sixth avenue and Twenty-third street * * *, and such part or parts of any other building or buildings erected or to be erected and owned by such corporation, as in their judgment shall not be required for actual use and occupancy for Masonic objects and purposes, to such individuals or corporations as they may select, for mercantile or other purposes, and to sue for, recover and collect the rents from time to time accruing thereon, and to use and appropriate the funds to be derived from such renting, for the benevolent, educational and charitable purposes mentioned and provided in said act hereby amended.” (Laws of 1873, chap. 503.) The “ Masonic Hall ” referred to in the act of 1873 as then “ being erected ” was completed in the year 1875 at an approximate cost of $1,680,000.

[730]*730Two years later and in 1877 came the act of that year which amended relator’s act of incorporation by changing its personnel from that of the aforesaid elective Grand Lodge officers to officials elected from time to time by the Grand Lodge. (Laws of 1877, chap. 350.) It is to be noted that at all times from its incorporation as a fraternal corporation to date, the relator was the operating body to carry out the purposes of the Grand Lodge, under its control and subject to its direction, and at all of said times it was a part of, and its acts and conduct were those of, the Grand Lodge.

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Bluebook (online)
164 Misc. 726, 1 N.Y.S.2d 267, 1937 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1074, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-trustees-of-masonic-hall-asylum-fund-v-miller-nysupct-1937.