Young Men's Christian Ass'n v. County of Los Angeles

221 P.2d 47, 35 Cal. 2d 760, 1950 Cal. LEXIS 377
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 18, 1950
DocketL. A. No. 21208
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 221 P.2d 47 (Young Men's Christian Ass'n v. County of Los Angeles) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Young Men's Christian Ass'n v. County of Los Angeles, 221 P.2d 47, 35 Cal. 2d 760, 1950 Cal. LEXIS 377 (Cal. 1950).

Opinions

SPENCE, J.

Plaintiff, the Young Men’s Christian Association of Los Angeles, brought this action to recover certain taxes and assessments paid under protest for the taxable year 1946-1947. The controversy involves the application of the recently enacted welfare exemption law (Cal. Const., art XIII, § lc; Bev. & Tax. Code, § 214) to five buildings owned by plaintiff and nsed in carrying on its work. The county assessor refused to exempt from taxation such portions of plaintiff’s buildings as were used for dormitories, restaurant and dining-room accommodations, barber shops, valet shops, a particular type of merchandise store, and office space rented to a government agency; and, in addition, he deemed each of plaintiff’s pieces of property liable for a Los Angeles County Flood Control District assessment.

The cause was tried upon an agreed statement of facts, and by the judgment thereupon entered plaintiff’s exemption claims were sustained as to the tax payments made on the disputed portions of its buildings but denied as to the flood control district assessments made against its property. The judgment is assailed by both parties, defendants having appealed from that portion allowing plaintiff a refund of the tax payments, and plaintiff having appealed from that portion disallowing recovery of the flood control district assessments.

Various aspects of the scope of the welfare exemption law in relation to particular claimants seeking the benefits thereof have been discussed in the case of Cedars of Lebanon Hospital v. County of Los Angeles, L. A. No. 20610, this day filed, ante, p. 729 [221 P.2d 31], and reference is made to such opinion for such bearing as it may have on the consideration of [762]*762the general problem. The parties have resolved their controversy here to turn principally on these points: (1) whether the portions of the buildings in question, as property belonging to plaintiff, coneededly a nonprofit organization, were “used exclusively for religious ... or charitable purposes” as a basic prerequisite (Const., art. XIII, § lc; Rev. & Tax. Code, § 214), and (2) the effect of the further proviso that the “property [be] not used or operated by the owner . . . for profit regardless of the purposes to which the profit is devoted” (Rev. & Tax. Code, § 214, subd. (3)). Upon an analysis of the agreed factual basis of plaintiff’s several exemption claims, it appears that plaintiff (1) properly invoked the “welfare exemption” with respect to the tax levy made on the dormitory facilities it furnished in its respective buildings but (2) was not entitled to such exemption with respect to (a) tax levies made on the restaurant and dining-room accommodations, barber shops, valet shops, the particular merchandise store involved, and the office space rented to the government agency; or (b) flood control district assessments made against its property.

The record identifies the five buildings owned by plaintiff as the Downtown Branch, San Pedro Branch, Hollywood Branch, 28th Street Branch, and East Los Angeles Branch. In each instance exemption was accorded generally to the portions of these buildings devoted to locker rooms, swimming pools, gymnasiums, club rooms, social rooms, classrooms, storage and maintenance rooms; and the parties are in dispute only as to the tax status of the following physical facilities in their respective locations:

(1) Downtown Branch, an 11-story structure, with basement and subbasement, and situated in the central business section of Los Angeles: dormitory rooms provided on the sixth to tenth floors; a small barber shop; and a valet shop. These two shops are located in a small adjoining structure, each having entrances from the street and through a court from the lobby of the main building. The valet shop maintains a small room on the basement level in the main building for the performance of its cleaning and pressing services. Both shops serve the public, as well as dormitory residents and Y.M.C.A. members generally. The barber shop is operated by Y.M.C.A. employees, who are paid by plaintiff on the basis of an agreed percentage of the gross receipts. The valet shop is operated by an independent contractor, who pays plaintiff [763]*763a monthly rental of $100. The charges made by both shops for their services are equivalent to standard commercial prices in the community.

(2) San Pedro Branch, a five-story structure, with a basement, and situated close to the business center and harbor channel of San Pedro : dormitory rooms provided on the third to fifth floors, and also a portion of the second floor; a restaurant on the first floor, a room approximately 1,600 square feet in area, with counters and seats accommodating 38 persons and 7 tables serving 28 persons—66 persons in all; Cluverius Hall, a special meeting room on the second floor containing an area of 1,800 square feet and used by non-Y.M.C.A. groups, where meals are served to a maximum of 100 people in conjunction with scheduled meetings; a barber shop and a valet shop, each located at the rear of a small court in the interior of the building and reached only through the main lobby; and a small store located in the rear of the first floor, and without a direct street entrance.

The restaurant is operated by Y.M.C.A. employees, and meals are served to the general public, as well as to resident and nonresident Y.M.C.A. members, with a price range of 45 cents to 95 cents for breakfast and 70 cents to $1.05 for lunch and dinner. In Cluverius Hall meals are served to various civic groups at a charge varying from $1.00 to $1.50 per person, according to the choice of menu. Both the barber shop and the valet shop are open to the public, as well as to dormitory residents and Y.M.C.A. members generally. The barber shop is operated by an independent contractor, who pays plaintiff a weekly rental of $10. The valet shop is operated by a Y.M.C.A. employee, a tailor, whose compensation consists in a fixed percentage of the gross receipts. In both shops standard prices prevail. The small store was started as a “gym store” for the sale of athletic equipment and clothing pursuant to plaintiff’s uniform policy to provide such merchandise for use in athletics at all branches having gymnasium, swimming or similar physical training facilities. This particular store was so operated since the opening of the present building in 1926, but during World War II as a convenience to the large number of servicemen visiting the San Pedro Branch, the store began to stock various other items of merchandise, principally toilet articles, drugs, and various kinds of trinkets and curios. This augmented line of purchasable articles was still being offered in the store during [764]*7641946, the tax year in question, but apparently was allowed to dAvindle in 1947 and 1948, at Avhich time the stock of the store returned to its prewar status as a true “gym store.”

(3) Hollywood Branch, a four-story structure and situated in the center of Hollywood: dormitory rooms provided mainly on the third and fourth floors, with a few accommodations on the second floor.

(4) 28th Street Branch, a four-story structure, with a basement, and situated near Central Avenue in a district in Los Angeles populated largely by Negroes: dormitory rooms

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221 P.2d 47, 35 Cal. 2d 760, 1950 Cal. LEXIS 377, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/young-mens-christian-assn-v-county-of-los-angeles-cal-1950.