St. Louis County v. Christian Hospital Northwest St. Louis County

589 S.W.2d 246, 1979 Mo. LEXIS 311
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedNovember 14, 1979
DocketNo. 60667
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 589 S.W.2d 246 (St. Louis County v. Christian Hospital Northwest St. Louis County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
St. Louis County v. Christian Hospital Northwest St. Louis County, 589 S.W.2d 246, 1979 Mo. LEXIS 311 (Mo. 1979).

Opinion

DONNELLY, Judge.

This is an appeal by St. Louis County from a judgment of the Circuit Court of St. Louis County entered on February 10, 1978, which affirmed a decision of the State Tax Commission declaring hospital property belonging to Christian Hospital Northwest St. Louis County exempt from taxation under Mo.Const. art. X, § 6 and § 137.100, RSMo 1978, and ordering the assessor of the County to remove the property from the assessment rolls for the year 1976.

Christian Hospital Northwest St. Louis County (Christian) is a general not-for-profit corporation with its principal place of operation in St. Louis County. Christian Hospital Northwest (the name was later changed to Christian Hospital Northeast-Northwest) is also a general not-for-profit [247]*247corporation and is the lessee and operating arm of the hospital. Christian was organized in 1972 to issue bonds to finance construction of a hospital for the benefit of St. Louis County, to lease its property to a tax-exempt corporation, and to give St. Louis County (or if the County is unable or unwilling to accept such gift, another body corporate or politic or political subdivision) all right, title and interest to the hospital after all bonds are fully paid. Financing of the hospital’s construction was obtained by the issuance of $27,500,000 tax-exempt First Mortgage Bonds, series 1973. Rental payments by the lessee are sufficient to pay the principal and interest payments on the bonds.

The hospital owned by Christian and leased to Christian Hospital Northeast-Northwest opened in 1975. The main building contains approximately 363,249 square feet and has 400 acute-care beds and eighteen intensive-care beds, equipment, complete ancillary facilities, operating suites, emergency room facilities, a surgi-center for minor operations, administrative offices and physicians’ offices. The facility is operated as a private not-for-profit charitable hospital for the benefit of patients residing in the service area.

The hospital building is an eleven-story building designed with a nine-story tower housing the patients’ rooms and administrative offices. On the two floors of an outer structure surrounding the tower are eleven offices totalling 9,859 square feet leased to various physicians and to Northwest Radiologists, Inc. and Professional Opticians, Inc. These offices comprise 2.6% of the total floor space of the hospital facility. The corridors connect the hospital proper to the physicians’ offices, and in-patients frequently travel between the hospital and physicians’ offices. The expense of maintaining these offices exceeded revenue by $38,762 for the period January 1, 1976, through October 31, 1976.

There are some 325 physicians on the staff of the hospital and 115 employed physicians. The physicians who lease office space in the hospital must be in a practice which “lends itself to comprehensive care.” Specialists are sought for the hospital office space to supplement the general emergency room and employed physicians. Otherwise the hospital would be forced to hire these specialists if complete health care comparable to that in larger teaching hospitals, which have the benefit of residents, is to be achieved. Physicians in specialties which are already located in the offices have been refused as tenants. The physicians pay $7.50 per square foot per year for the offices they lease which is comparable to market rents in the area.

Physicians permitted to lease space in the hospital must also be members of the hospital staff. A physician must make application for staff privileges. When a physician is accepted to the staff, the physician must agree to serve on staff committees and to be on call on a rotation basis for emergencies in accordance with his speciality. The physicians leasing space perform work for hospital in-patients on behalf of their colleagues when the cannot be present, and are sometimes called in dire emergencies when it would take too long for the “on-call” physician to arrive, as opposed to three minutes for the officed physicians. This advantage becomes more marked when it is noted that respondent hospital has the busiest emergency room in the entire St. Louis area, treating 6,000 emergency patients each month.

The practice of including offices of private physicians in the hospital is a relatively new concept which has developed within the last ten years because it is considered “very important” to have physicians immediately available. Testimony at trial indicated that hospitals which have such offices are better “as far as the patient goes than the ones which don’t,” and “practically every hospital that has been built in recent time has incorporated physicians’ offices.” Seminars have been held by, for example, the American Hospital Association which advocate the utilization of medical office buildings in conjunction with hospital facilities. Statistics deduced at such seminars indicate that physicians with offices in a [248]*248hospital complex admit approximately 80% more patients to that hospital than do physicians with offices elsewhere. Also, the length of stay of patients that are being treated by a hospital-based physician has been found to be 1.8 days less than those being treated by outside physicians.

In June 1976 the St. Louis County Assessor notified Christian that an assessment of $246,540 was being made solely for the physicians’ offices in the hospital. Two acres of the 24.58 acre tract, supposedly representing the doctors’ suites, were assessed at $13,360 and the improvements were assessed at $233,180.

An appeal was taken to the St. Louis County Board of Equalization and in a majority decision (one judge dissenting) on August 6, 1976, the Board denied the request for tax exemption. Thereafter, respondent petitioned the State Tax Commission for review of the assessment, contending that exemption should be allowed because, inter alia: (1) the doctors’ offices are an integral part of the hospital, (2) the use of a small portion of the facility for doctors’ offices is a mere secondary and incidental use and does not deter from the primary or inherent use of the facility for charitable purposes, but is in furtherance of the charitable purposes and promotes the efficient operation thereof, and (3) previous decisions of the Commission are dispositive of the issue.

The State Tax Commission held a hearing at which a stipulation was filed, several witnesses testified and several exhibits were introduced. The Commission stated the issue to be “whether the use of a certain portion of the hospital facility as medical office space vitiates the tax exempt status of the entire facility.” The Commission summarized the benefits of having offices within the hospital complex: to improve the quality of patient care, to provide consulting and follow-up services by specialists for emergency room treatment, to more economically use high-cost medical care equipment, and to reduce the number of full-time physicians, thereby cutting hospital costs.

The Commission concluded in its decision and order of September 26, 1977, that the evidence established that the use of the leased doctors’ offices does not interrupt the exclusive use of the real estate for charitable purposes, and that it furthers, expedites, dovetails into and rounds out the charitable purpose of the hospital. It was noted that no profit is derived from the office rents and that the leased offices occupy only a small percentage of the hospital floor space.

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Related

Village North, Inc. v. State Tax Commission
799 S.W.2d 197 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1990)

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Bluebook (online)
589 S.W.2d 246, 1979 Mo. LEXIS 311, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/st-louis-county-v-christian-hospital-northwest-st-louis-county-mo-1979.