State Teachers Retirement Board v. Kinney
This text of 429 N.E.2d 1069 (State Teachers Retirement Board v. Kinney) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
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Government and public property, in certain circumstances, is exempt from real property taxation, as provided in R. C. 5709.08.1 This court has held that for property to be exempt from taxation under R. C. 5709.08, three conditions must be met. The property must be public property, the use thereof must be for a public purpose, and the property must be used exclusively for a public purpose. Carney v. Cleveland (1962), 173 Ohio St. 56, paragraph one of the syllabus. Since the parking lot at issue is owned by a state agency, the first condition for exemption has been met. Muskingum v. Walton (1970), 21 Ohio St. 2d 240.
The retirement board, by investing, conserving and disbursing funds contributed by our state’s teachers, indisputably serves a public purpose, helping to secure and retain qualified teachers, and thereby improving the quality of instruction in the public school system. See State Teachers Retirement Bd., supra, at 62. The issue facing this court, however, is whether a parking lot designed to be used only by employees of the retirement board, is property used for a public purpose, and exclusively for such public purpose. We conclude it is not.
General laws exempting real or personal property from taxation are to be strictly construed and exemption may not be granted unless the right thereto is clearly shown. Youngstown Metro. Housing Auth. v. Evatt (1944), 143 Ohio St. 268, paragraph two of the syllabus. See, also, White Cross Hospital Assn. v. Bd. of Tax Appeals (1974), 38 Ohio St. 2d 199, 201. Goldman v. Bentley Post No. 50 (1952), 158 Ohio St. 205, 207. The property sought to be exempted here is used to provide free parking for employees. Access is limited by a fence and by control gates which are operated by inserting a plastic “key card.” There is no evidence in the record which indicates that anyone but employees have been issued such cards. We fail to see how this employee-only parking lot constitutes a use exclusively for a public purpose. While this court has, in the past, granted exemptions for parking structures, such structures [197]*197were found essential to the function of the public facility, and were accessible to the public using the facility. Bowers v. Akron City Hospital (1968), 16 Ohio St. 2d 94, 96.2 There is no evidence here that provision of a free parking lot is essential to retaining high caliber employees. The central business district in which the retirement board headquarters is located contains numerous parking facilities, and is well served by the regional transit system.
Additionally, R. C. 5709.1213 specifically defines what constitutes exclusive use of real property and tangible personal property belonging to a charitable institution or an educational institution, or to the state, or to a political subdivision of the state. As one of the criteria for the determination of the exclusive use, this section provides that property belonging to any of the above entities shall be considered as used exclusively for charitable or public purposes if “(B) otherwise made available under the direction or control of such institution, the state, or political subdivision for use in furtherance of [198]*198or incidental to its charitable, educational, or public purposes and not with the view to profit.” (Emphasis added.)
This definition, or explanatory section of law, was obviously enacted by the General Assembly to define the term “used exclusively for charitable purposes,” and the term “used exclusively for public purposes” as such terms are found within the total Chapter 5709, not just applicable to R. C. 5709.12.4 Those terms are used in a number of sections within Chapter 5709.
The five parcels comprising a parking lot owned by the State Teachers Retirement Board constitutes “real property belonging to the state” as that term is used in R. C. 5709.08. The language of subsection (B) of R. C. 5709.121 is applicable to real property “belonging to the state” as that term is used in R. C. 5709.08, but a new parking lot owned by the State Teachers Retirement Board restricted to exclusive use by its employees is not “in furtherance of or incidental to its * * * public purposes and not with the view to profit” as provided in R. C. 5709.121(B). (Emphasis added.)
Subsection (A) of 5709.121 also requires real property belonging to the state, in order to be exempt from taxation, to be “[ujsed by * * * the state * * * (2) [f]or other charitable, educational, or public purposes. ” For the same reasons ap-pellee’s parking lot does not meet the public purpose test of subsection (A).
There is no nexus between a parking lot owned by the retirement board and used exclusively for its employees and the public purpose served by the board. We conclude, therefore, that the five parcels comprising a parking lot owned by the retirement board are not exempt from taxation. The decision of the Board of Tax Appeals determining otherwise is unreasonable and unlawful, and is, therefore, reversed.
Decision reversed.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
429 N.E.2d 1069, 68 Ohio St. 2d 195, 22 Ohio Op. 3d 434, 1981 Ohio LEXIS 643, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-teachers-retirement-board-v-kinney-ohio-1981.