St. Margaret Seneca Place v. Board of Property Assessment

640 A.2d 380, 536 Pa. 478, 34 A.L.R. 5th 845, 1994 Pa. LEXIS 108
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 20, 1994
Docket65 W.D. Appeal Docket 1993
StatusPublished
Cited by64 cases

This text of 640 A.2d 380 (St. Margaret Seneca Place v. Board of Property Assessment) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
St. Margaret Seneca Place v. Board of Property Assessment, 640 A.2d 380, 536 Pa. 478, 34 A.L.R. 5th 845, 1994 Pa. LEXIS 108 (Pa. 1994).

Opinions

OPINION OF THE COURT

FLAHERTY, Justice.

This appeal from the order of the Commonwealth Court, 145 Pa.Cmwlth. 615, 604 A.2d 1119, involves a determination of whether a nursing home meets the criteria to be exempted from payment of property taxes. The trial court determined that St. Margaret Seneca Place, a nursing home in Penn Hills, meets all the criteria for classification as a purely public charity set forth in Hospital Utilization Project v. Commonwealth, 507 Pa. 1, 487 A.2d 1306 (1985). The Commonwealth Court reversed, holding that the Seneca Place nursing home does not meet any of those criteria, representing a serious departure from our decisions in this area and having broad implications with respect to the status of other health care providers and nursing homes; thus we granted allocatur.

[482]*482Seneca Place is a subsidiary of the St. Margaret Health System, Inc., a tax-exempt charitable organization. The system’s other subsidiaries are St. Margaret Memorial Hospital, an acute care hospital, and St. Margaret Foundation, the fundraising arm of the health system, also tax-exempt charitable organizations. The Seneca Place home was established in the 1980’s with an initial donation of $1.5 million from St. Margaret Health System. It secured additional funding through a tax-exempt bond issue of $6 million, guaranteed by St. Margaret Hospital. In addition to the initial donation from St. Margaret Health System, St. Margaret Hospital has given the nursing home interest-free loans of approximately $850,-000 to help cover start-up costs and operating expenses. Seneca Place operates a 156-bed facility offering a variety of skilled care, long-term care, and personal care services for elderly residents.

The home opened in 1989. It applied for an exemption from real estate taxes that year. The Allegheny County Board of Property Assessment, Appeals and Review denied the application. On appeal, the Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County reversed, granting the exemption, but was reversed again by the Commonwealth Court. The tribunals all agreed that Hospital Utilization Project v. Commonwealth (HUP), supra, establishes the criteria for tax exemption as a purely public charity, but differed in their application of the standard.

Under HUP, an entity may be classified as a purely public charity if it: 1) advances a charitable purpose; 2) donates or renders gratuitously a substantial portion of its services; 3) benefits a substantial and indefinite class of persons who are legitimate subjects of charity; 4) relieves the government of some of its burden; and 5) operates entirely free from private profit motive.

The trial court found that the nursing home advances a charitable purpose in providing shelter and care for many residents who cannot pay the cost of their care. It found that in May, 1990, over forty-eight percent of the nursing home residents were Medicaid recipients. For those [483]*483patients, government payments cover about two-thirds of the patients’ costs, and the nursing home makes up the difference. The care of elderly residents who cannot pay their full costs serves a charitable purpose. In re Tax Appeals of the United Presbyterian Homes, 428 Pa. 145, 236 A.2d 776 (1968). The trial court further found that the home operates at a loss and will continue to do so as a result of its commitment to serve all applicants without regard to their financial means, their insurance, or the adequacy of government payments on their behalf.

The Commonwealth Court held that the nursing home does not advance a charitable purpose for two reasons: 1) all of the residents are either self-paying or are paid for by Medicare or Medicaid; and 2) the home, which has at all times run at a loss, intends to make a profit. Neither reason is correct. As to the first reason, the absence of indigent residents who receive no government support is not surprising, and is certainly not, standing alone, enough to disqualify a nursing home from an exemption as a purely public charity. In modern America it is hard to find any person in need of nursing home care who is uninsured, unable to pay, and wholly ineligible for government support in the form of Medicare or Medicaid coverage. Our prior decisions do not equate the acceptance of Medicaid payments as the equivalent of conducting a business for profit. The decision to accept Medicaid payments to help defray the cost of care for residents is perfectly consistent with a finding that the nursing home advances a charitable purpose.

With respect to the second reason, that Seneca Place intends to make a profit, the Commonwealth Court impermissibly substituted its own finding of fact for that of the trial court, when the latter was supported by substantial evidence. The Commonwealth Court found that Seneca Place “expects to make a profit in tax year 1991.” 145 Pa.Cmwlth. 615, 628, 604 A.2d 1119, 1126. In fact, the “budget” on which the court relied was not a budget but a pro forma study of the consequence of designated operating changes which the home considered but did not adopt. Moreover, the study did not [484]*484include debt service which would have eaten up the hypothetical “profit.” The Commonwealth Court should have accepted the trial court’s finding that the program is not designed to operate at a profit, which was based upon substantial evidence of record, rather than substituting its finding that the home expects to make a profit. Commonwealth, Dept, of Transportation v. O’Connell, 521 Pa. 242, 555 A.2d 873 (1989) (as long as sufficient evidence exists in the record to support the finding made by the trial court as factfinder, we are precluded from overturning that finding); cf. Estate of McGovern v. State Employees’ Retirement Board, 512 Pa. 377, 517 A.2d 523 (1986) (under agency law, a reviewing court shall affirm the adjudication unless ... any finding of fact made by the agency and necessary to support its adjudication is not supported by substantial evidence).

HUP’s second criterion is that the subject entity must donate or render gratuitously a substantial portion of its services. The trial court held that Seneca Place satisfies this criterion by providing for the forty-eight percent of its residents who are only partially paid for by Medicaid. It also found that many of the residents whose costs are paid by Medicare or private insurance will eventually exhaust their means and their other insurance. They will then add to the number of residents on Medicaid who are recipients of significant gratuitous services at Seneca Place.

The Commonwealth Court held, conversely, that Seneca Place makes no:

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Bluebook (online)
640 A.2d 380, 536 Pa. 478, 34 A.L.R. 5th 845, 1994 Pa. LEXIS 108, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/st-margaret-seneca-place-v-board-of-property-assessment-pa-1994.