Yale University v. Town of New Haven

42 A. 87, 71 Conn. 316, 1899 Conn. LEXIS 1
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJanuary 4, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by105 cases

This text of 42 A. 87 (Yale University v. Town of New Haven) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut 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 of New Haven, 42 A. 87, 71 Conn. 316, 1899 Conn. LEXIS 1 (Colo. 1899).

Opinion

Hamersley, J.

In 1887 the corporation of the President and Fellows of Yale College in New Haven was authorized to use the title “Yale University,” and gifts received and contracts made under either of said names were declared to be valid. The powers of the corporation were not otherwise changed. 10 Special Laws, 467.

In October, 1895, the University filed with the assessors of the town of New Haven a list of the property owned by it subject to taxation for the year 1896. The list contained seven pieces of land valued at $57,680. To this list the assessors added certain buildings used for dormitories and dining-hall, with the land on which they stood, valued at $214,990; and also added certain vacant building lots, dwelling-houses and factories, valued at $167,112. The plaintiff appealed to the board of relief, which confirmed the action of the assessors. This appeal is an application to the Superior Court, alleging that the board of relief acted illegally in confirming the action of the assessors, and praying for appropriate relief.

The alleged illegality depends on the meaning given to two statutes, vis., § 3820 of. General Statutes, and the Act of 1834 amending the charter of the College, which appears also in § 3822 of the General Statutes.

First. Section 8820 of the General Statutes provides that “ buildings or portions of buildings exclusively occupied as [322]*322colleges, academies, churches or public school-houses or infirmaries,” shall be exempt from taxation. If buildings used by the College exclusively as dormitories and dining-halls for its students, are buildings exclusively occupied as a college, then the action complained of in adding to the list dormitories and dining-hall, was illegal; if such use is not a college occupation, then said action was legal.

The word “college,” used to denote a constitutent of or the equivalent of “ university,” has acquired a definite meaning. As first used “ college ” indicated a place of residence for students, and occasionaly an “ universitas ” or “ studium generale.” The expressions “ universitas stiidii ” and “ universitatis collegium,” occur in early official documents. A suggestion of the modern university appears in the college and library of Alexandria founded and endowed by Ptolemy Soter. Here the Museum provided, from the first, lodgings and refectory for the professors, and later similar provisions were made for the students. A writer of the 12th century speaks of the “ handsome pile of buildings, which has twenty colleges whither students betake themselves from all parts of the world.”

The university in Europe developed about the year 1200. It was a community organized for the study of all branches of knowledge and authorized by Pope, King or Emperor to confer degrees upon those found competent to instruct others. At Bologna; perhaps the earliest organized university, we find colleges almost from the beginning. Such college was a separate house with a fund for the maintenance of a specified number of poor students. Similar colleges existed in Paris, Oxford and other universities. At first little more than lodging rooms and refectory, they grew, especially in England, to be the home of the students for all purposes. The instruction and discipline of the university was through the colleges. The conditions of the early universities were peculiar. Vast throngs of students were gathered at one place; they were divided into “nations,” each, as at Paris, with its own proctor or procurator; they were further divided among faculties each with its dean. The divisions into nations and faculties were [323]*323cross divisions; and another cross division was that into colleges and halls (hall sometimes meaning an unorganized college, and sometimes used as synonymous with college). With changes in conditions, the college was largely eliminated from the continental universities, while in England the university became practically the associated colleges. Merton College, Oxford, founded in 1264, was the prototype of the English college. That college consisted of the chapel, refectory and dormitories. Here the scholars called fellows, in token of the spirit of equality and companionship, lived under one government, educational and moral, and prepared to take the degree granted by the university. As the colleges increased all non-collegiate students were driven away. The vagabonds or chamber-dekyns, i. e. camera degens, living in lodgings as opposed to those who lived in a college, disappeared. Each student in a college must belong to the university, and each student of the university must be attached to a college. And the heads of the colleges administered the university. Thus was developed the English theory of the university, where the honors and influence of the studium generóle are gained and enjoyed by students living and working under the government of their respective colleges. As Newman says, the university to enforce discipline developed itself into colleges, and so the term college “was taken to mean a place of residence for the university student who would there find himself under the guidance and instructions of superiors and tutors, bound to attend to his personal interest moral and intellectual.” (See passim, Vol. 3, Newman, Hist. Sketches; Lyte’s History of University of Oxford; Vols. 1 and 2 Huber’s English Universities; Ency. Brit., University.) The college and university however were sometimes united in one corporation. Newman says, “The University of Toulouse was founded in a college; so was Orleans.” Trinity College, Dublin, styled in its charter (1591) “ The College of the Holy undivided Trinity of Queen Elisabeth near Dublin,” is both university and college. It was founded by the Queen as a “ mater universitatis ; ” but the hope was not realized and the university and college have ever since re[324]*324mained one, called in common speech indiscriminately “ Trinity College, Dublin,” “Dublin University,” “The University of Trinity College, Dubliu.” Marischal College, Aberdeen, was founded in 1593 as a college and a university, with power of conferring degrees. And so at the beginning of the 17th century the students of an English university lived in. colleges, were instructed and governed through colleges, whether the university included a number of colleges or a single college; and among the buildings indispensable for every college were the great hall or dining-room, and the living rooms or dormitories.

In establishing universities in the new world, the limitations of the people compelled the founders to follow the example of Trinity College, Dublin, and Marischal College, Aberdeen, and not that of Oxford and Cambridge. Upon the same corporation wak conferred the power of the university in granting degrees, and of the college in government; and such c.ommunity and the buildings required for its use were known as “ the College.”

The first appropriation to endow a “University” in Virginia, was made in 1607. In 1660 an Act of the colonial legislature endowed “the College,” and in 1693 William III. established the University, described in the charter as “ a certain place of universal study or perpetual college of divinity, philosophy, languages and other good arts and science,’’-and named it “The College of William and Mary in Virginia.”

The settlers of New England early felt the need of a local university, and the first step was the erection of a college, i. e. a building where the students were to be lodged, fed and instructed while pursuing the university studies and qualifying for its degrees.

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Bluebook (online)
42 A. 87, 71 Conn. 316, 1899 Conn. LEXIS 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yale-university-v-town-of-new-haven-conn-1899.