The Evangelical Lutheran Synod of Missouri, Ohio and other
States (Defendant) Appellant;
and
The City of Edmonton (Plaintiff) Respondent
1933: October 6, 10; 1934: February 6.
Present:—Duff
C.J. and Lamont, Cannon, Crocket and Hughes JJ.
ON APPEAL FROM THE APPELLATE DIVISION OF THE SUPREME COURT OF
ALBERTA
Taxation—Municipal law—Exemptions—Lands used in connection
with and for purposes of a college—Assessment together of exempt and non-exempt
land—Taxing Statute—Construction of—The Edmonton Charter, 1913, c. 23, s. 320(5).
[Page 280]
In 1924 the appellant corporation, the "Synod",
purchased for the purposes of a college certain blocks of land in the city of Edmonton,
containing a little over eight acres, and erected college buildings on a
portion thereof, and these have since been used by the Synod for the purposes
of the college. In 1930 the Synod acquired, six other lots, now in question,
which were not contiguous to the lands on which the college buildings were
situated, and erected thereon four residences, or dwelling-houses, for the use
of the professors of the college. No rent was charged or collected from the
professors occupying these residences by the Synod, but the professors were
entitled to occupy these residences only while engaged as professors of the
college in the service of the Synod, and a condition of their engagement was
that residence accommodation would be furnished them rent free. The professors
had some duties to perform in the college at night, such, for instance, as
superintendence and assistance to the students in their studies, and inspection
of dormitories, and meetings of the faculty of the college. The six lots in
question had an area of ·572 acres and with 3·428 acres comprising the sites of
the college and buildings, formed just 4 acres. Section 320 of the Edmonton
Charter provides that "All lands in the city shall be liable to
[Page 281]
assessments and taxation for both municipal and school
purposes, subject to the following exceptions: * * *
(5) The land not exceeding four acres of and attached to or
otherwise bona fide used in connection with and for the purposes of any
* * * college, * * * so long as such land is actually used and occupied by such
institutions, but not if otherwise occupied."
Held, Cannon and Crocket JJ. dissenting, that the
appellant was not exempted from taxation as to the lots upon which the
residence of its professors were situated.
Per Duff C.J. and Lamont and Hughes JJ.—Assuming in the
appellant's favour that the professor's residences were "bona fide used
in connection with and for the purpose of" the college, it has not been
established from the facts as disclosed in the special stated case, (and the
onus was on the appellant to bring itself strictly within the provision of the
statute granting immunity) that these residences were "actually used and
occupied by" the appellant institution, and "not otherwise occupied".
Per Duff C.J. and Lamont and Hughes JJ.—Section 320
does not give to an institution to which an exemption is granted the right to
select the various pieces of property up to four acres to which the exemption
would apply; under the Act, in the absence of any statutory provision
indicating that the selection of the exemptions under the section may be made
by the donee thereof and for giving notice of the same to the assessor, it is
the assessor's duty to select the exemptions.
The other portion of the appellant's land, i.e., the site of
the college buildings and the land immediately surrounding them, was assessed
as a block described as 8·107 acres with the added words "4·107 taxable, 4
acres exempt".
Per Duff C.J. and Lamont and Hughes JJ.—Such an
assessment is invalid as it is impossible to ascertain from that description
which particular piece of land is assessed and which is exempt.
Per Cannon J. dissenting.—According to the facts
disclosed in the special stated case, the land and the professors' residences
erected thereon were exempted from taxation under section 320 of the Edmonton
charter. These facts and the plans fyled in the case established that the
residence of the principal of the institution was a building used and occupied
by him in connection and for the purposes of the college; and there is no
difference in the present case, between the nature of the occupation of the
principal's residence and that of the professors'. Their presence was required
and their residence in close proximity was necessary for the due carrying out
of the purposes for which the appellant institution has been established.
Per Crocket J. dissenting (concurring with Cannon
J.).—Whatever may be the meaning of the words "attached to," the
alternative words "or otherwise bona fide used in connection with
and for the purposes of" point to other lots and buildings than those
which may be contiguous or, to use the words of the enactment, "attached
to" one another, and whether the lots and buildings are contiguous or not,
the alternative words above quoted extend the statutory exemption to them if
they are in fact bona fide used in connection with and for the purposes
of any of the institutions designated.
Judgment of the Appellate Division ([1933] 2 W.W.R. 310) aff.
[Page 282]
APPEAL from the judgment of the Appellate Division of the
Supreme Court of Alberta,
reversing the judgment of Ford J., which
was in favour of the appellant.
The material facts of the case and the questions at issue are
stated in the head-note, in the statement below and in the judgments now
reported.
The case was a special case stated by leave of the trial
judge, of which the principal paragraphs are as follows:
3. Section 320 of the charter of the plaintiff provides in
part as follows:
320. All lands in the city shall be liable to assessment and
taxation for
both municipal and school purposes, subject to the following
exemptions:
* * *
(5) The land not exceeding four acres of and attached to or
otherwise bona fide used in connection with and for the purposes of any
university, college, high school, public or separate school, seminary of
learning or hospital owned by a corporation, whether vested in a trustee or
otherwise, and of the association known as "The Young Men's Christian
Association" and "The Young Women's Christian Association" so
long as such land is actually used and occupied by such institution but not if
otherwise occupied;
(6) The land exempted under the two preceding clauses shall
nevertheless be liable to be assessed for local improvements.
15. In the year 1930 the said Synod caused to be erected four
residences or dwelling houses for the use of the professors of the said college
on the lots enclosed in red upon the said plan being lots 14, 15 and 16, in
block 13, and lots 9, 10 and 11, in block 18, Bellevue subdivision aforesaid.
16. The defendant acquired said lots enclosed in red and
erected said residences under the belief that such lots and sufficient land
upon which the college buildings were erected to the extent in all of four
acres were exempt from taxation except local improvement taxes.
17. The four buildings mentioned in paragraph 15 are
residences or dwelling houses and are used solely and exclusively as residences
or dwelling houses for the professors of the said college in the service of the
said Synod; no rent is charged to or collected from the said professors
occupying the said residences or dwelling houses by the said Synod and the said
professors are entitled to occupy said residences or dwelling houses only while
engaged as professors of the said college in the service of the said Synod as
aforesaid and a condition of the engagement of the said professors is that
residence accommodation be furnished to them rent free.
17a. That the professors who reside in the said residences
have duties to perform in the said college at night, such for instance as
supervision and assistance of students during study periods in the evening, the
supervision of student activities, the inspection of the dormitories at
retiring time and the inspection of the college buildings, meetings of the
faculty of the college and such other duties as may be assigned to such
professors.
25. The question submitted for the opinion of this Court is:
is the said Synod by reason of the provisions of said Section 320 of the
Edmonton charter entitled to the exemption from taxation except for local
improvements, of the said lots 14, 15 and 16, block 13, and said lots 9, 10 and
11, block 18, and 3·428 acres containing the site of the said college buildings
and immediately surrounding said college buildings, or is the said City of
[Page 283]
Edmonton entitled to assess the said
Synod in the manner in which it is assessed on the Assessment Roll of 1931 and
1932?
S. Bruce Smith for the appellant.
Geo. B. O'Connor K.C. for the respondent.
The judgment of the majority of the Court (Duff C.J., Lamont and
Hughes JJ.) was delivered by
LAMONT J.—In my opinion this appeal should be dismissed.
The question which we are called upon to answer is set out in the special case
in these words:
25. The question submitted for the opinion of this Court is:
is the Synod by reason of the provisions of said section 320 of the Edmonton
charter entitled to the exemption from taxation except for local improvements,
of the said lots 14, 15 and 16, block 13, and said lots 9, 10 and 11, block 18,
and 3·248 acres containing the site of the said college buildings, or is the
said city of Edmonton entitled to assess the said Synod in the manner in which
it is assessed in the assessment Roll of 1931 and 1932?
The material facts are briefly as follows:
In 1924 the appellant corporation (hereinafter called the
"Synod") purchased for the purposes of the college block X, and block
33, as shewn on plan 2677-Q, of the city of Edmonton, containing a little over
eight acres, and erected college buildings on a portion thereof, and these have
since been used by the Synod for the purposes of the college.
In 1930 the Synod acquired the six lots now in question which are
not contiguous to the lands on which the college buildings are situated, and
erected thereon four residences, or dwelling-houses for the use of the
professors of the college. No rent is charged or collected from the professors
occupying the said residences by the Synod, but the professors are entitled to
occupy these residences only while engaged as professors of the college in the
service of the Synod, and a condition of their engagement is that residence
accommodation shall be furnished them rent free.
The professors have some duties to perform in the college at
night, such, for instance, as superintendence and assistance to the students in
their studies, and inspection of dormitories, and meetings of the faculty of
the college.
The six lots in question have an area of ·572 acres and with
3·428 acres comprising the sites of the college and buildings, form just 4
acres.
[Page 284]
Whether the six lots in question are exempt from taxation depends
upon the provisions of the exempting statute, which is section 320, subsection(5),
of the Edmonton charter, the material portion of which reads as follows:
320. All lands in the city shall be liable to assessments
and taxation for both municipal and school purposes, subject to the following
exceptions:
(5) The land not exceeding four acres of and attached to or
otherwise bona fide used in connection with and for the purposes of any
* * college, * * * so long as such land is actually used and occupied by such
institutions, but not if otherwise occupied.
Under this statutory provision, before the Synod is entitled to
have its lands to the extent of four acres exempt from taxation, it must be
shewn that
1. the land is bona fide used in connection with and for
the purposes of the college; and
2. the land is actually used and occupied by the institution.
Without deciding the point I will assume in the Synod's favour that the
professors' residences are bona fide used in connection with and for the
purposes of the college. That, however, is not the only condition of the
exemption: to be entitled to the exemption they must be "actually
used" and "occupied" by the institution, and not otherwise
occupied. On the facts as disclosed in the special case is it possible to
conclude that the college actually used and occupied these residences? That is
the condition imposed by the legislature, and the onus is on the Synod to shew
that the condition has been complied with. The Act grants immunity from a
burden which most other inhabitants are called upon to bear, and those who
claim the benefit of that immunity must bring themselves strictly within the
purview of the statute granting it, and shew that the facts, as set out in the
case, construing the words in their ordinary sense, do justify the conclusion
that the institution did occupy the residences within the meaning of what is
ordinarily understood as "occupying" a residence.
It was a term of a professor's engagement that "residence
accommodation be furnished" him "rent free." It is, therefore,
to be inferred that his occupation was in accordance with the terms of his
engagement. The facts disclosed in the special case leave no room for an
inference that a professor in his occupation is not to enjoy all the
independence and all the control of the residence which he occupies that a
tenant of his class would be entitled to enjoy if he
[Page 285]
rented the premises. Although he does not
pay any rent it cannot be supposed that the furnishing of a free dwelling-house
did not constitute a part of the remuneration which the Synod, when it engaged
him, agreed to allow him for his services. Had the Synod not agreed to furnish
residence free, the remuneration which it would have had to pay its professors
would have been increased by the value of the occupation of their
dwelling-houses. So that while it may be that the Synod did not collect rent
for these residences qua rent it reached the same result by agreeing to
furnish residence with a smaller monetary remuneration.
There is nothing in the statement of fact to justify even a
suggestion that the professors occupied their residences as servants of the
Synod. Yet, if they were not the servants of the Synod, how can it be said that
the dwellings were occupied by the "institution," and not
"otherwise occupied"? In my opinion the dwellings were occupied by
the professors, who exercised all the rights and all the independence of an
ordinary householder. It is not shewn that the Synod had any right to interfere
in any way with a professor's occupation of his house so long as he occupied
the position of professor in the college. The Synod was, therefore, not
entitled to exemption in respect of the six lots.
It was also argued on behalf of the Synod that the effect of
section 320 was to give to the institution to which an exemption was granted
the right to select the various pieces of property up to 4 acres to which the
exemption would apply. Along with the members of the court below I am unable to
see any authority for the proposition that the party claiming the exemption has
the right of selection. The right to make the selection, in my opinion, is
governed by the same principle as the claim for exemption itself. It is a
benefit which is allowed to only a few of His Majesty's subjects and, in order
to be entitled to it, the onus rests on the claimant to shew clearly that it
was the intention of the legislature that such right of selection should exist.
I find absolutely nothing in the legislation from which an inference can
reasonably be drawn that such was the legislative intention. In fact if that
had been the intention it is surprising that no provision is to be found in the
statute by which the Synod would be able to
[Page 286]
give notice to the assessor that the
selection had been made. The assessment roll should shew definitely what
property is exempt, and what property has been assessed. To set these out is
the duty of the assessor. In the absence of any statutory provision indicating
that the selection of the exemptions under the section may be made by the donce
thereof and for giving notice of the same to the assessor, I am of opinion that
it is the assessor's duty to select the exemptions.
As to the assessment of the property of the Synod other than the
six lots, I agree with the court below that it is invalid. The land is assessed
as a block which is described as containing "8·107 acres" with the
additional words "4·107 acres taxable 4 acres exempt ". It is
impossible to ascertain from this description which particular piece of land is
assessed and which is exempt.
CANNON J. (dissenting).—The dwellings built for the
professors are occupied by them not as ordinary tenants, but are placed at
their disposal, rent free, while they are in service for the purposes set forth
in the stated case which require their residence in close proximity in order to
perform some of their duties at night. The education of the students requires from
the teachers close supervision, assistance and inspection at night and this has
as much importance as the bare teaching given during the day. The exemption is
granted to lands (a) owned and attached to, or (b) owned by and
otherwise used in connection with and for the purposes of any seminary of
learning.
These are the important words—which are not, to my mind,
nullified by the redundance found at the end of the exemption clause. As long
as the land is actually used and occupied bona fide in connection with
and for the purposes of the school, it should be exempt, if within the four
acres selected. The selection was made, with the knowledge and consent of the
city authorities, and we are not called upon to decide, in the abstract, who,
under the statute, is entitled to segregate for exemption the four acres of
land—including the buildings erected thereon—by and for the purposes of the
school. The only question is: the selection having been made, is the site of
these four residences entitled to exemption under the statute?
[Page 287]
A college cannot exist without professors in close touch with the
students and the principal. It is common ground that under the statute the
residence of the principal is used and occupied for the purposes of the college
and therefore exempt. The blue print shewing the situation of the properties
involved in the case includes, enclosed in green, the residence of the
principal to which reference is made as follows in the special case.
21. The portions of block "X" and block 33 enclosed
in green are bona fide used in connection with and for the purposes of
the said college and such land is actually used and occupied by the said
college.
24. The building marked "A" upon the said plan has
been demolished and the orange coloured figure upon block "X"
represents the residence of the principal of the said college which is used and
occupied by him upon the same terms and conditions as the other residences are
used and occupied by the professors of the said college.
Therefore, for the decision of the case,
this building is used and occupied by the principal in connection and for the
purposes of the college and such land (including buildings) is actually used
and occupied by the said college.
I cannot differentiate, in the present case, between the nature
of the occupation of the principal's residence and that of the professors'.
Their presence is required, their residence in close proximity is necessary,
according to the facts agreed upon, for the due carrying out of the purposes
for which the appellant has been established. I do not say that there is any
finding on that point in the judgment of the Appellate Division, but I base my
reasoning on the facts agreed upon by the parties which, to my mind, have been
ignored by the court a quo.
I agree with the reasoning of Mr. Justice Ford and would allow
the appeal with costs before this Court only, as there seems to be an
understanding between the parties that no costs were to be given in the lower
courts.
CROCKET J. (dissenting).—This appeal arises out of
a stated case and raises the question as to what portion of the defendant
corporation's land in the city of Edmonton, if any, is entitled to exemption
from taxation under s. 320, ss. 5 of the city of Edmonton charter. That
subsection provides for the exemption from all municipal and school taxes,
except taxes for local improvement, of
The land not exceeding four acres of and attached to or
otherwise bona fide used in connection with and for the purposes of any
university, college, high school, public or separate school, seminary of
learning or hospital owned by a corporation, whether vested in a trustee or
other
[Page 288]
wise, and of the association known
as "The Young Men's Christian Association" and "The Young
Women's Christian Association" so long as such land is actually used and
occupied by such institution but not if otherwise occupied.
It is agreed in the stated case that the defendant in the years
1931 and 1932, with the assessments for which this action was concerned, was
and still is the owner of several parcels of land in the city of Edmonton
containing a combined area of more than eight acres. Two of these parcels of
land are contiguous, and when acquired by the defendant in the year 1924
constituted the whole of what were then designated in the town plan of Edmonton
as blocks X and 33. Block X extended northerly from Jasper St. past what was
then the end of 111th Ave. to 112th Ave. Block 33, abutting it on the east,
extended only from Jasper St. to 111th Ave. and was bounded on the east by the
westerly line of 71st St. The defendant erected its college buildings partly in
the centre of block 33, and partly in the southern portion of block X, the
principal's residence being placed near the southwesterly corner of block X,
150 ft. or more from the college buildings proper.
In the year 1930 the defendant conveyed to the city a strip off
the northerly portion of block X measuring approximately on 112th Ave. 375 ft.
by 125 ft., which was afterwards subdivided into building lots, in exchange for
several building lots conveyed to it by the city in the southern half of blocks
18 and 13, lying between Jasper St. and 111th Ave. The defendant had previously
proposed in 1929 to erect four houses for the use of its professors on that
portion of block X, which it subsequently conveyed to the city, but as the
result of the exchange of the lots referred to, it erected in the year 1930 two
residences for the purpose indicated on lots 9, 10 and 11 of block 18, and two
others on lots 16, 15 and 14 of block 13. The lots 9, 10 and 11 in block 18
occupy the southwesterly part of that block and are separated from block 33 and
block X, upon which the college buildings are situated, by five apparently
vacant building lots, and by 71st St., running north and south, while lots 16,
15 and 14 in block 13 occupy the southwesterly portion of the latter block, and
are separated from blocks 33 and X by 70th St., the whole southerly half of
block 18 and 71st St. The six lots upon which the professors' residences were
built contain a combined area of
[Page 289]
·572 acres, while block 33 and the
southerly portion of block X lying between the southerly line of 111th Ave. and
its prolongation westerly across the width of block X, upon which the college
buildings proper and the principal's residence are situated, it is admitted,
does not exceed three acres in area.
In the years 1931 and 1932 the city assessors assessed the six
lots on which the professors' buildings were erected and all that portion of
block X remaining in the possession and ownership of the defendant after the
exchange with the city, and the whole of block 33—a total in the last two
blocks of 8·107 acres—of which the assessment roll marked "4·107 acres
taxable" and "4 acres exempt," without indicating in any way
what portion or portions of blocks X and 33 were included in the exemption
otherwise than by setting against them $6,080 as the value of the land, and
$3,000 as the land exemption, and $81,000 as the value of the buildings and
$81,000 as the buildings exemption, leaving $3,080 as the net taxable value of
the two blocks.
The defendant claimed that it was entitled to include within the
exempted area of four acres the six lots on which the professors' houses were
constructed, together with that portion of blocks X and 33 upon which the
college buildings proper and the principal's residence are situated, and
sufficient land around these buildings to make up the complement of the
four-acre exemption, contending that the lots upon which the professors' houses
were situated was its land bona fide used in connection with and for the
purposes of the college, within the meaning of s. 320, ss. 5, and that it was
entitled to select the four acres to which the exemption should apply.
The question submitted on the stated case to Mr. Justice Ford of
the Supreme Court of Alberta was, therefore, as follows:
Is the Synod by reason of the provisions of said section 320
of the Edmonton charter, entitled to the exemption from taxation except for
local improvements, of the said lots 14, 15 and 16, block 13, and said lots 9,
10 and 11, block 18, and 3·428 acres, containing the site of the said college
buildings and immediately surrounding the said college buildings?
He answered this question in the
affirmative, but on appeal to the Appeal Division of the Supreme Court of
Alberta, his decision was unanimously reversed.
[Page 290]
The decision of the majority of the Appellate Division, Harvey,
C.J.A.; Mitchell, Lunney and McGillivray, JJ.A., was based upon the ground that
the land upon which the professors' residences are located is used and occupied
by men who are in the employ of the institution, and that this does not
constitute occupation by the institution, within the meaning of the section,
and consequently that it does not come within the exemption. Clarke J. A., held
that the defendant was not entitled to any exemption so long as its land used
and occupied by it for the purposes of the college exceeds four acres in area,
and that the city was entitled to assess the whole property without exemption.
Two paragraphs from the special case regarding the occupation of
the residences by the professors and the latter's duties in connection with the
college appear to be necessary to a full consideration of the question
involved. These are paragraphs 17 and 17A, which read as follows:
17. The four buildings mentioned in paragraph 15 are
residences or dwelling houses and are used solely and exclusively as residences
or dwelling houses for the professors of the said college in the service of the
said Synod; no rent is charged to or collected from the said professors
occupying the said residences or dwelling houses by the said Synod and the said
professors are entitled to occupy said residences or dwelling houses only while
engaged as professors of the said college in the service of the said Synod as
aforesaid and a condition of the engagement of the said professors is that
residence accommodation be furnished to them rent free.
17a. That the professors who reside in the said residences
have duties to perform in the said college at night, such for instance as
supervision and assistance of students during study periods in the evening, the
super-vision of student activities, the inspection of the dormitories at
retiring time and the inspection of the college buildings, meetings of the
faculty of the college and such other duties as may be assigned to such
professors.
The respondent in its factum relies upon
the following four grounds:
1. The professors' houses are separated from the main
college site and the right of selection of exemption up to four acres if in the
appellant is confined to the main college site.
2. The professors' houses being used solely and exclusively
as residences are not "bona fide used in connection with and for
the purposes of the college" within the meaning of subsection(5).
3. The lots and residences are not "actually used and
occupied by the institution" within the meaning of said subsection(5).
4. In any event the exemption is confined to land and the
houses are not exempt.
The fourth point is the one which naturally first arises, and it
will, therefore, be convenient to consider this first, although neither the
trial judge nor the Appellate Division
[Page 291]
appear to have considered it in their
reasons. It is not questioned that it is open to the respondent.
This contention is based upon the fact that the Edmonton charter,
as amended by c. 23, statutes of Alberta, 1913, did not contemplate the
taxation of buildings, except in the case of special franchises, as clearly
appears by s. 3 of part I and the whole statute. It is argued that the meaning
of the words "the land not exceeding four acres," etc., of s. 320,
ss. 5, as it then stood in the charter, was not affected by the amendment which
was made to the charter in the year 1918, c. 52, statutes of Alberta, s. 44,
which provided for the assessment of buildings.
It appears, however, that in 1917 an amendment was enacted to the
charter by c. 46, statutes of Alberta, providing for a plebiscite on the
question of assessing buildings and business incomes. By this Act, s. 321 of
the charter, which then provided that
land shall be assessed at its fair
actual value exclusive of the value of buildings and improvements thereon,
was amended by inserting immediately
after these words the words
unless the buildings and
improvements shall become assessable as hereinafter provided,
and by adding two subsections to the same
section, ss. 2 providing for the plebiscite on the question of the assessment
of buildings, and ss. 3 providing for a plebiscite on the question of the
assessment of business incomes. The words, "unless the buildings and
improvements shall become assessable as hereinafter provided," clearly
referred to the event of the adoption as a result of the plebiscite of the proposal
to assess buildings, and are still retained in s. 321 of the charter as it
stands to-day, making the first sentence thereof read as follows:
Land shall be assessed at its fair actual value exclusive of
the value of buildings and improvements thereon unless the buildings and
improvements shall become assessable as hereinafter provided; thus clearly
contemplating that whenever buildings and improvements become assessable, they
become so as part of the land.
The provision for the assessment of buildings in 1918 was made by
the addition to s. 321 of a new section—321A, reading as follows:
In the year 1918 and in each subsequent year all buildings
and improvements on the land within the city shall be assessed at sixty per
[Page 292]
centum of their actual value, which
shall be the amount by which the value of the land is thereby increased;
This added section, as it appears in the
printed consolidated charter of 1931, filed in this case, contains, in addition
to the main section just quoted, three subsections, nos. 2, 3 and 4, ss. 4
reading in part as follows:
In assessing land having any buildings thereon, the
assessment value of the land and buildings as hereinbefore defined shall be
ascertained separately and shall be set down separately in the assessment roll
either in the same or separate columns, and the assessment shall be the sum
of such values.
The underlined words of the main section—321A—and of ss. 4
thereof, quite as plainly indicate, I think, as those of the amended sec. 321,
that, although the value of the land and buildings is to be ascertained
separately and that they shall be set down separately in the assessment roll,
the assessment shall be treated as an assessment of the land, inclusive of the
buildings. The effect of these amendments, therefore, must be to render
entirely inoperative the words "but in no other cases," in clause (d)
of s. 12, following the words "in case of special franchises," and
thus to give the word "land" the meaning which but for these words it
would, undoubtedly, bear, including buildings and improvements. The city
itself, by its assessors, seems to have consistently acted upon that
interpretation in its assessment of the college from the beginning. I find it,
therefore, impossible, to accede to the proposition that the words "land
not exceeding four acres," as it now reads in s. 320, ss. 5, do not apply
to land, whose value has been increased by the erection upon it as part of the
freehold of buildings and permanent improvements.
I am, therefore, of opinion that the word "land" in the
exemption subsection includes all buildings affixed thereto.
Although the four points relied upon by the respondent in its
factum do not seem to include the ground taken by Clarke J.A., in his reasons
for judgment, the respondent's counsel explicitly took it upon this appeal,
viz: that because the college lands exceed in area the four acres to which the
exemption is limited, they are not entitled to exemption at all.
It is true that the Act does not indicate how or by whom the area
of exemption is to be selected, but this in my opinion is not a sufficient
reason for limiting the exemption to cases where the college or other
institution owns and
[Page 293]
occupies no more than four acres of land
and thus construing the ownership and use of no more than four acres as a
condition without which the exemption is not to apply at all. If that were the
true construction, no college or seminary of learning or hospital could extend
its land holding beyond four acres without entirely forfeiting its right to the
exemption which the legislature, in my opinion, clearly intended to give it. I
think the more reasonable view is that the words "land not exceeding four
acres," etc., mean land to the extent of four acres.
In the Mayor, etc., of Whanganui v. Whanganui College
Board, the
Court of Appeal of New Zealand considered a clause in the New Zealand Rating
Act, which excepted from the payment of rates "land and buildings used
for a school * * * but so that within any borough or town district not
more than four acres be used and occupied by or for the purpose of any such
school." The Court unanimously held that the effect of these words—which
appear on their face to point much more directly to a condition than the
enactment now under consideration—was, if more than four acres were so held, to
exempt up to four acres and not to destroy the exemption entirely. Any other
construction, it was pointed out by two of the three judges taking part, would
lead to such a manifest absurdity and repugnance as to justify the Court in ignoring
the strict grammatical meaning of the language of the enactment.
In the present case the interpretation of the words "not
exceeding four acres" in the sense indicated does no violence to the
grammatical construction of any language used in the enactment.
Once the selection of the four acres to which the exemption is to
apply is made, either by the city assessors or by the owner, as it must be, the
difficulties suggested by Clarke, J.A., as to the description and
identification of the excess in case of a sale for non-payment of taxes,
disappears. Counsel for the respondent conceded that if the view taken by
Clarke, J.A., were erroneous, the defendant had the right to select the
exempted area. This, I think, is true, for the reason that the exemption is
intended for the benefit of the college.
[Page 294]
The other points relied upon by the respondent all concern the
construction of the words "of and attached to or otherwise bona fide used
in connection with and for the purposes of any university, college," etc.,
and the concluding words of the subsection, "so long as such land is
actually used and occupied by such institution but not if otherwise
occupied."
The subsection is certainly not a model of good phrasing, as will
be seen when one tries to link the words "the land * * * of and attached
to" with the various institutions named, whether as a group or separately
or as buildings or bodies corporate. Whatever may be the meaning of the words
"attached to" it is manifest that the alternative words "or otherwise
bona fide used in connection with and for the purposes of" point to
other lots and buildings than those which may be contiguous or, to use the
words of the enactment, "attached to" one another, and that, whether
the lots and buildings are contiguous or not, the alternative words above
quoted extend the statutory exemption to them if they are in fact bona fide used
in connection with and for the purposes of any of the institutions designated.
These words must be construed severally with reference to these various
institutions. In the case of a university or a college which is a corporate
institution, as the defendant's college is, they must be read as meaning lots
and buildings, which are bona fide used in connection with and for the
purposes of a university or college as such an institution and in the ordinary
and popular sense of the language the legislature has employed. There is
nothing in the context to indicate otherwise. What then is the ordinary and
popular meaning of the words "bona fide used in connection with and
for the purposes of" a university or a college as a corporate institution?
Obviously they cannot refer to a physical connection of lots or buildings. They
must, therefore, mean a use in connection with and for the purposes of the corporate
institution in the wider sense. Whether the words "in connection
with" qualify the words "the purposes of" or the words "any
university, college," etc., the result is the same. Subject to the
four-acre limitation and to the concluding words of the section they embrace
any use of lots and buildings made for legitimate university or college
purposes, and would, in my opinion, include a resi-
[Page 295]
dence building provided by the college
for its principal as they would a residence provided by and managed and
controlled by the college for its students, whether physically attached to the
college building proper or not, as they would also include, in the case of a
hospital, a nurses' home for the use of its nurses. I can see no distinction
between the case of a principal's residence and the case of professors'
residences. The only suggested distinction is that the professors' residences
are separated from the particular lots on which the college buildings are
situated, and this fact, as I have already pointed out, does not exclude them
from the exemption provision. As a matter of fact, the professors' houses,
which were erected, are nearer to and more conveniently situated with reference
to the college buildings proper than if they had been erected on the site first
intended at the extreme northerly end of block X.
There remains the question as to the effect of the concluding
words of the subsection, viz: "so long as such land is actually used
and occupied by such institution, but not if otherwise occupied" Are
these words intended to alter the scope of the exemption as indicated by the
preceding words "bona fide used in connection with and for the
purposes of" the university, college, etc.? It is contended that they
limit the exemption to land which is actually used and occupied by the
institution. That the concluding words must be interpreted in the light of the
preceding words can hardly be denied. The preceding words indicate the
character and scope of the use which must be made of the land of the college to
entitle it to exemption, viz: that it be bona fide used in connection
with and for the purposes of the college. Do the words "actually used and
occupied by the institution," etc., mean anything more than the words
"bona fide used and occupied in connection with and for the
purposes of" the institution? In my opinion they do no more than define
the duration of the exemption already created, and the residences cannot
fairly, in the circumstances stated, be said not to be actually used and
occupied in connection with and for the purposes of the college. They are used
for the purposes of housing, rent free, professors of the college only while
engaged in the service of the college as such professors—professors who, in
addition to their daytime duties, have duties to perform in the college at
night, such as assist-
[Page 296]
ing the students during study periods and
inspecting the dormitories at retiring time, as the stated case sets forth, and
who are subject at all times to the orders of the principal. Although in a
sense the residences may be said to be used and occupied by the professors,
they are none the less bona fide used, as the learned trial judge has
found, by the institution in connection with and for the purposes of the
college, and are, in my opinion, actually used and occupied by it within the
contemplation of the subsection, their use having a direct reference to the
aims and objects of the college as a corporate institution.
A number of English, Canadian and American cases were cited on
the argument dealing with exemption claims under various rating statutes. In
none of them is the language of the exemption provision involved identical with
that of s. 320 of the Edmonton charter, or the facts the same as in the present
case. These cases, therefore, are of little assistance in construing the
provision here in question. For instance the respondent's counsel relied
strongly on the decision of this Court in Ruthenian Catholic Mission v. Mundare,
where the Court divided evenly on an appeal from the decision of the Appellate
Division of the Supreme Court of Alberta holding that a building used by the
appellant as a seminary was not a building used for church purposes within the
meaning of s. 24 (d) of the Alberta School Assessment Act. It
will at once be seen that there is no analogy between the words "any
building used for church purposes" and the words "land bona fide used
in connection with and for the purposes of" any university or college as a
corporate institution. In the Nova Scotia case, Catholic Corporation of
Antigonish v. Municipality of Richmond,
the exemption words were "Every church and place of worship and the land
used in connection therewith and every churchyard and burial ground."
There were no such words as "bona fide used in connection with and
for the purposes of" a church in the sense of a corporate institution, or
a religious denomination. The word "church" clearly meant a building
used as a church or place of worship.
The case, which seems to me most nearly to approach the present
case, is The Trustees of Phillips Academy v.
[Page 297]
Andover(1), in which the Supreme
Court of Massachusetts considered the question as to whether the occupation of;
resiliences belonging to the Academy by the president and professors and the
officers of the institution and their families was necessarily inconsistent
with the intent of the provision of a taxing Act exempting the real estate of
educational and charitable institutions, "occupied by them or their
officers for the purposes for which they were incorporated." All of the
judges agreed that the exemption contemplated an occupancy which "must
have or be supposed to have direct reference to the purposes for which the
institution was incorporated and must tend directly to promote them," and
further, that "the occupancy does not lose what may be termed its
institutional character and purpose because as incidental to it, the president
and professors and other officers and their families are provided with homes,
for the possession and enjoyment of which by them compensation is allowed or
taken into account in some manner." It was contended that the inclusion of
the words "or their officers" in the Massachusetts exemption
provision, distinguished the Phillips Academy
case from the present. These words, I think, make no real difference inasmuch
as a corporate institution cannot occupy land otherwise than by its officers or
servants. It is a question in every case, having regard to all the facts and
circumstances, and the intentions and purposes of those in charge of the
institution, whether the dominant, controlling consideration of the use or
occupancy of the buildings is really the enhancement of the educational
advantages of the institution, or the private benefit and convenience of the
professors and their families. The words "bona fide used" in
the exemption clause in the present case point unmistakably to such a
consideration as the determining factor.
I should perhaps also refer to a passage used by Lord Davey in
delivering the judgment of the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council in Commissioners
of Taxation v. Trustee of St. Mark's Glebe.
His Lordship, discussing the effect of the words "for and in connection
with," said:
The words "for or in connection with" (say) a
hospital or a church are probably intended to include, not only the actual site
of the hospital or church, but also other buildings or land occupied in
connection with
[Page 298]
the principal building, as, for
example, land used for a residence for the head or Minister, or a room for
church meetings or other similar purposes.
This is doubtless a mere dictum, as
contended by the respondent's counsel, but it is a dictum of very high
authority, and one which, so far as I have
been able to discover, has never been authoritatively challenged in a case
where identical words were considered.
I would allow the
appeal and restore the decision of the learned trial judge with costs of this
appeal.
Appeal dismissed with costs.