Watterson v. Halliday

2 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 693

This text of 2 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 693 (Watterson v. Halliday) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Common Pleas of Ohio, Franklin County, Civil Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Watterson v. Halliday, 2 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 693 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1904).

Opinion

Tbe plaintiff is now deceased, and the canse has been revived in the name of his successor as Bishop of the Roman Catholic [694]*694Church in and for the Diocese of Columbus. By virtue of his appointment as such bishop, and under the laws' of said church, all the property of the Roman Catholic Church in said diocese, except such as is vested in certain incorporated societies, is held by him in his own name in trust for the sole use of the said church.

The question presented by the record is, whether certain real estate held and used by the plaintiff as such bishop and trustee, for the purposes of said church, but not for profit, is exempt from taxation under the Constitution and laws of Ohio.

Plaintiff by his petition seeks to enjoin the defendant, as auditor of this county, from assessing and levying any amounts as taxes on the real estate described in the petition, and to enjoin the treasurer of said county from demanding or collecting from plaintiff the amounts of taxes levied thereon, and for an order directing said officers to correct the tax lists and duplicates, by striking therefrom the several amounts assessed against said real estate.

Said petitioner claims: That the only purpose of acquiring and holding real estate in such manner is to erect and permanently establish thereon houses used exclusively for public worship, with offices and dormitories and places of instruction, and the distribution of public charity, used in connection with and a part of such house of public worship, and the grounds attached to such buildings necessary for the proper occupancy, use and enjoyment of the same; to establish public institutions of learning, with the lands connected therewith, and necessary for the proper occupancy, use and enjoyment of the same, to erect and establish other buildings belonging to institutions of purely public charity, and to be used for purely public charitable purposes in connection with said other buildings, with the lands occupied by such institutions; and to establish and maintain graveyards' or burying grounds. Said property is classified as church buildings used exclusively for public worship; school-buildings as public institutions of learning, and belonging to institutions of purely public charity; other buildings belonging to and a part of said church and school buildings and necessary thereto, and belonging to institutions of purely public charity; [695]*695that none of said houses or lands are. leased or otherwise used with a view to profit, and no profit is or has been derived therefrom. It is also claimed that said Roman Catholic Church is an institution of purely public charity; that all of said schools are open for the admission of children of parents of all denominations, and the instruction afforded them is substantially gratuitous, no compensation being enacted, and 'no conditions imposed, except those of good behavior and the observance of the rules of discipline of the school. Small contributions of twenty-five or fifty cents per month are expected from parents who are able to contribute, but the aggregate amount of these contributions is small; that the schools are substantially supported out of the revenues of the church, and are not carried on with a view to profit; that the number of children attending said schools in Columbus average about three thousand. That the'public at large is freely admitted to all said places and buildings without distinction or discrimination.

That the priests of said church are celibates and the houses wherein they lodge are not the residences of families, but are the. public places where they freely and gratuitously teach and do teach many persons in the knowledge of the doctrine and principles of the religion of said Catholic Church; where alms ■are given to the poor and needy; where family or neighborhood disputes are settled; where charitable, temperance and other worthy societies are originated, organized, fostered and directed.

That said houses are also the public offices or places where the ministers are expected to be called upon at any hour of the day or night by all who may be in distress or requiring their ministerial or other charitable services, to which said ministers are bound to respond by their vows and the rules of the church; that they hold themselves ready, and to respond willingly to all such calls free of charge.

That such buildings are also used as places where other affairs of the parish are' conducted, and accounts kept; that baptisms, marriages and burials are ther.e conducted, pew rents paid and that they are houses of and belonging to institutions of purely public charity and learning; that all of said real [696]*696estate was donated or paid for by voluntary contributions and offerings of the members of said church, and others interested in said religious, educational and charitable purposes of said church.

That in the year 1890, all or nearly all of said real estate was duly entered and valued by the district assessors as required by Revised Statutes, 2799, and the same was duly entered on a separate list or duplicate as exempt from taxation, and the same was duly exempted by the predecessor in office of said defendant, and by said defendant from October, 1894, until 1896, when a large portion of the same was entered upon the tax duplicates of said county and taxes and penalties charged against the same as far back as the decennial appraisement of 1890.

The property described in the petition contains some thirteen separate parcels, located in different sections of the city of Columbus. It is not claimed that any portion of the premises occupied by the church proper and its appurtenances is sought to be taxed, and such is placed on the tax duplicate as exempt property.

The same is true of property used in part as parochial schools and in part as a church, and such is marked on the duplicate as exempt property, and all parts of premises used for parochial schools, and for academical purposes and for 'the cathedral, are exempt.

It being conceded that certain lands described in the petition are not sought to be taxed, and are exempt, I shall, therefore, not discuss the question of taxing any lands occupied by houses used exclusively for public worship, nor the grounds appurtenant thereto, nor public parochial school houses and buildings, nor grounds appurtenant thereto. But it is contended that priests’ houses, the bishop’s house, and the lots on which they are erected, lots occupied by houses used as places of domicile for the sisters or lay teachers for the parochial schools, vacant lots, and lots covered by buildings occupied by tenants, and the old Catholic graveyard, are not exempt, and that such should be taxed.

[697]*697The defendant by his cross-petition also seeks to recover from the plaintiff certain special assessments for the improvement of streets on which certain property described in the petition abuts, all of which is controverted by the reply.

The case is submitted to the court on exceptions by both plaintiff and defendants to the findings of the master.

The evidence in the ease, as well as the briefs of counsel, are voluminous, and I have spent a long time in reading and digesting the evidence, the arguments and the authorities. It' will not be possible for me to embody in the opinion more than-a conclusion as to that part of the evidence and argument necessary to advert to, and to refer to such authorities as, in my opinion, control in determining the questions of law.

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Bluebook (online)
2 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 693, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/watterson-v-halliday-ohctcomplfrankl-1904.