Yale University v. Town and City of New Haven

17 Conn. Super. Ct. 166
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedDecember 2, 1950
DocketFile No. 42721
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 17 Conn. Super. Ct. 166 (Yale University v. Town and City of New Haven) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Yale University v. Town and City of New Haven, 17 Conn. Super. Ct. 166 (Colo. Ct. App. 1950).

Opinion

This is an appeal from the board of tax review of the city of New Haven for its refusal to exempt from taxation sixteen items of property, set forth in exhibit B attached to the appeal, which the plaintiff claims were illegally added to the tax list of June 1, 1949.

The matter was heard upon a written stipulation of the parties, on file, supplemented by oral evidence presented.

The main question is whether these sixteen items of property, owned by Yale University and used by it for the housing of married veteran students, with wives and families, are non-taxable.

The properties involved are the land and buildings at 37 Hillhouse Avenue, 51 Hillhouse Avenue, 40-2 Lake Place, 46-8 Lake Place, 56-8 Lake Place, 62-4 Lake Place, 68 Lake Place, 72-4 Lake Place, 310-2 Temple Street, 325-7 Temple Street, 74, 76 and 78 Wall Street, 125-7 College Street, also known as 96 Wall Street, and thirty-two Quonset huts on Pierson-Sage Square, Whitney Avenue (exclusive of the tax-exempt land connected therewith) and sixty-eight Quonset huts on the Yale Armory tract, Forest Road (exclusive of the tax-exempt land connected with it). Until 1949, all sixteen units were tax exempt because of the educational nature of their use made. Of these, the fourteen units involving land and buildings were acquired by purchase between 1917 and 1935, of which one became a dormitory and tax exempt in 1946 when a pre-existing *Page 168 lease expired; a second unit became tax exempt in 1949 because of its use with the museum; and the other eleven units were tax exempt because used as dormitories for periods of from fourteen to twenty-seven years. The land of the two units having the Quonset huts was tax exempt because of the educational nature of their use since acquisition thirty-seven to forty-one years ago.

The use of the Quonset huts was acquired in 1946 by contract with the federal housing administration. The title to these huts was later given to Yale.

Had these properties continued being used as formerly, apparently no question would have arisen as to their taxability.

The total assessed valuation of the properties involved in this action, added to the tax list of 1949, is $730,300.

On the tax list of 1949, the assessed value of Yale's property which was exempt from taxation was $63,972,440. However, taxes on the list of 1949 upon taxable property of Yale, payable in 1950, amount to over $140,000.

Beginning in the fall of 1945 and through 1946, the properties here in question were reconverted and subsequently occupied and used by married veteran students with their wives and children.

The claims of the city are that the use of the property here involved was thus converted to a private purpose for which Yale charged prevailing rentals, that the use made of the same is not for a public educational purpose, that the properties involved were not "granted" or "given" within the meaning of the exempting laws (General Statutes § 1775) and that the properties in question should be taxable so long as student-family use is continued.

The determinative issue is whether the property in dispute in being used by married students and their wives and families, is nevertheless devoted to the public use of education. If so, it is not taxable. If it is not so devoted and it comes within the proviso clause of § 1775, it would be taxable as so-called "productive land," as explained in Yale University v. New Haven,71 Conn. 316, 337, it being agreed that the university has and will continue to hold real estate the income of which is more than $6000 annually. *Page 169

The parties agree that Yale University is a corporation organized under a charter granted by the colony and state of Connecticut, that Yale is now and has since 1701 been engaged in educating and instructing young men and women, residents of this and other states in the arts and sciences in conformity with its charter and with the statutes of the state of Connecticut; that the property of Yale devoted to such educational purposes is not and has not been taxable property and has been exempt from taxation under the provisions of § 1775, together with provisions of other statutes and of the charter of Yale and the constitution of the state of Connecticut; and that Yale was for many years largely supported by grants of public funds through acts of the General Assembly and that in more recent years operating deficits incurred by deficiencies in tuition fees to meet expenses have been wholly or partially met by gifts of charitably minded persons.

All the property of Yale is held and devoted to educational and charitable uses, as is declared in Yale University v. NewHaven, supra, in Corbin v. Baldwin, 92 Conn. 99, and other decisions.

All of the personal and real property of Yale held for the use of the institution is nontaxable, as is declared by § 1775, excepting only the real property described in the proviso of this section.

All the property of Yale is and always has been held, possessed, operated and managed by it subject to the public charitable trust of instructing youth "in the arts and sciences." (Act for liberty to Erect a Collegiate School, 1701).

Before and ever since the adoption of the constitution of 1818 of this state, and particularly ever since the passage in the year 1745 by the General Assembly of the "Act for the more full and Complete Establishment of Yale College, in New Haven and for enlarging the powers and privileges thereof," the property of Yale has been and now is sequestered to the public use of education (excepting only "productive real estate" described in the proviso in § 1775) and is not and has not been taxable property.

The provisions thus made for the charitable purposes of education in the case of Yale were all in pursuance of the general public policy of Connecticut declared by the General Assembly in the year 1684, ever since maintained, and now contained in the General Statute known as § 7082, sometimes variously known as the "Statute of Elizabeth" or as "The Statute of Charitable Uses" or as "The Statute of 1702." *Page 170

The tax exemption provided for in § 1775 does not require a strict construction in favor of the sovereign but only a reasonable construction of its underlying policy.

In Yale University v. New Haven, 71 Conn. 316, 329, the court states: "The rule that laws exempting property from taxation should be strictly construed, is well-settled and is based on solid reason. But it is often referred to ... in cases where it has no application and is not in fact applied.... The rule is limited by the reasons which brought it about.... These reasons do not fully apply to the law under discussion. The non-taxation of public buildings is not the exception but the rule. The corporations, whether municipal or private, which own and are by law charged with the maintenance of such untaxed buildings, are not the recipients of special privileges, in any sense obnoxious to the law. This clause of § 3820 [Rev. 1888; see Rev. 1949, § 1761(7)] does not exempt any individuals from the burden of taxation that is common to all; it does not grant to one, particular privileges denied to all others; it declares that lands and buildings sequestered to certain public uses, i. e. taken out of the body of private property and devoted exclusively to the common good, from which no individual can derive any profit, are not taxable property.

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Related

Yale University v. City of New Haven
363 A.2d 1108 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1975)
State v. Laurel Crest Academy
198 A.2d 229 (Connecticut Appellate Court, 1963)

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Bluebook (online)
17 Conn. Super. Ct. 166, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yale-university-v-town-and-city-of-new-haven-connsuperct-1950.