Washelli Cemetery Ass'n. v. King County

292 P. 109, 158 Wash. 599, 1930 Wash. LEXIS 992
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 29, 1930
DocketNo. 22376. Department Two.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 292 P. 109 (Washelli Cemetery Ass'n. v. King County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Washelli Cemetery Ass'n. v. King County, 292 P. 109, 158 Wash. 599, 1930 Wash. LEXIS 992 (Wash. 1930).

Opinion

Fullerton, J.

In this action, the appellant, Wash-elli Cemetery Association, sought to restrain the county of King from selling for delinquent taxes certain property owned by it, which it has devoted to cemetery purposes, and to recover from the county certain sums which it alleges it had paid the county as taxes on the property to prevent its distraint and sale.

The record discloses that, for some years preceding the year 1918, one Victor Denny owned a tract of land *600 situated iu King county, which he had used or permitted to be used as a place for the burial of the dead. In the year named, Denny sold and conveyed the property to the American Necropolis Company, a corporation organized under the general incorporation laws of the state. This corporation platted the greater part of the land into burial lots, with suitable paths and roadways usual in such cases, and certain tracts to be used for ornamental purposes, dedicating these paths and ways and the ornamental tracts to the public use forever.

In 1920, the corporation erected a building on a part of the land, called a mausoleum, and, in the next year, another building called a columbarium. These were somewhat massive structures, built of concrete with granite facings, and cost upwards of one hundred and thirty thousand dollars. Both buildings were designed solely as depositories for bodies of the dead and ashes of bodies of the dead, and were not suitable for, and could not be used for, any other purposes. The first of the structures was designed entirely for burial purposes. It contained eight hundred and sixteen crypts, each of a size sufficient to hold a single casket containing a human body. The second contained both crypts and niches, the latter being intended as depositories for the ashes of the dead who had been cremated. The corporation, while organized for the purpose of conducting a cemetery, was organized for profit. It expected and intended to sell the burial lots included in its general plat, and the crypts and niches in the structures, at a price exceeding their cost to those desiring to purchase and use them for the particular purpose for which they were intended. ■

Sometime after the organization of the corporation just mentioned, the Washelli Cemetery Association, the corporation who is plaintiff and appellant in the *601 action before ns, was incorporated. It, however, is incorporated under the special statutes (Rem. Comp. Stat., § 3758 et seq.) as a non-profit organization, having as its sole object and purpose the procuring and establishing of a burying ground and place of sepul-ture for the dead.

Subsequent to the erection of the structures mentioned, the American Necropolis Company conveyed all of the burial lots in its entire tract to a cemetery association conducting a cemetery on an adjoining tract, reserving therefrom the paths and roadways mentioned, the structures and the land upon which they stood, and the certain other tracts designed to be improved for ornamental purposes. Later it conveyed to the appellant corporation all of its reserved interests in the property, except the right to receive ninety per cent of the sale price of all of the unsold crypts and niches in the structures as they should subsequently be sold. By the contract of sale, it was provided that ten per cent of the sales was to be the property of the appellant corporation and by it placed in a permanent fund, the interest on which was to be used in the upkeep of the cemetery generally. A like ten per cent was reserved for the same purpose from the sale of the burial lots when made by the cemetery association to which the corporation had conveyed them, and the right to receive these sums also passed to appellant by the contract of sale.

After the sale of its property as stated, the capital stock of the American Necropolis Company was gathered into the hands of one person, who assumed ownership of all the remaining interests the company had in the property. The corporation thereupon ceased to function as a corporation, and the person mentioned, by will, vested the interests in a trustee for the benefit of her heirs.

*602 Beginning with the year 1924, and continuing with the subsequent assessment years, the county assessor of King county assessed the structures and the land upon which they were situate as taxable property of the appellant, placing a valuation thereon of thirty-five thousand dollars. On this valuation, a yearly tax was levied approximating $2,000.

The taxes paid under protest were taxes assessed for the year 1925, and were paid after the structures had been distrained and offered for sale by the tax collector. It is the sum so paid that the appellant seeks to recover in the present action. It seeks also to cancel and set aside the taxes levied thereon which still remain unpaid.

The trial court held that neither the structures as such nor the land upon which they are situated are subject to taxation. It held, however, that the unsold crypts and niches in the buildings were so subject. It thereupon entered a decree to the following effect:

“It Is Hereby Ordered, Adjudged and Decreed as follows:
“(1) That Washelli Cemetery Association, a corporation, plaintiff herein, is the owner of the following described real property, to wit: [describing the property] and is the owner of the mausoleum and colum-barium located thereupon.
“(2) It is further ordered that the taxes heretofore assessed against the said property, mausoleum and columbarium, be declared invalid and of no legal force and effect, and that the assessor of King county, Washington, defendant herein, be and he is hereby directed and required to re-assess for the year 1924 and subsequent years each of said buildings separately to the extent and in the proportion that the unsold niches and. crypts bear to the whole number of niches and crypts in each building. . . .
“ (4) It is further ordered, that the amount of the 1925 taxes assessed against said property which were heretofore paid under protest by the plaintiff herein *603 shall be applied towards the satisfaction and payment of the taxes for the year 1924 and subsequent years under the re-assessment hereinabove ordered.”

The special statute regulating the formation of corporations for cemetery purposes provides that ten or more persons residing within a county may form such a corporation, and further provides that:

“Such associations shall be authorized to purchase or take by gift or devise, and hold land exempt from execution and from any appropriation to public purposes, for the sole purposes of a cemetery not exceeding eighty acres, which shall be exempt from taxation if intended to be used exclusively for burial purposes, and in no wise with a view to profit of the members of such association.” Eem. Comp. Stat., § 3766.

It further provides that burial lots sold by such association shall be kept for the sole purposes of interment, “and shall be exempt from taxation,” execution and other methods of forced sale.

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Related

Westminster Memorial Park v. County of Orange
354 P.2d 247 (California Supreme Court, 1960)
Oakwood Co. v. Tacoma Mausoleum Ass'n
157 P.2d 595 (Washington Supreme Court, 1945)
San Gabriel Cemetery Ass'n v. County of Los Angeles
122 P.2d 330 (California Court of Appeal, 1942)

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Bluebook (online)
292 P. 109, 158 Wash. 599, 1930 Wash. LEXIS 992, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/washelli-cemetery-assn-v-king-county-wash-1930.