Coroa v. Board of Assessors
Coroa v. Board of Assessors
Opinion of the Court
This is an appeal from the refusal of the assessors to grant the appellant a full exemption under G. L. c. 59, § 5, Forty-first, for the year 1966 on real estate in Fall River which she occupied as a dwelling. See St. 1964, c. 681, § 1.
The case was heard on a statement of agreed facts by the Appellate Tax Board, which filed a decision for the appellee board. The appellant appealed to this court.
The applicable exemption under § 5, Forty-first, as appearing in St. 1966, c. 728, provides in material part: “Real property, to the amount of four thousand dollars . . . of a person seventy years of age or over and occupied by him as his domicile, or of a person who owns the same jointly with his spouse, either of whom is seventy years of age or over, and occupied by them as their domicile or of a person seventy years of age or over who owns the same jointly or as a tenant in common with a person not his spouse and occupied by him as his domicile; provided . . . that such person . . . has owned such real property either individually, jointly, or as a tenant in common, for the preceding five years . . ..”
In Assessors of Everett v. Formosi, 349 Mass. 727, it was said that the exemption in § 5, Forty-first, “rests upon the financial exigencies of the elderly owner” (p. 729). The holding was that where only part of the real estate is used as the domicil of the taxpayer entitled to the benefit of the exemption clause, the exemption was not restricted to the proportionate part so used.
In Breare v. Assessors of Peabody, 350 Mass, 391, the real estate was assessed to one Skerry to whom Breare, the grantor, had given a warranty deed, reserving a life estate to himself. It was held that “Breare has a sufficient property interest ... as tenant in common during his life, to
The reason for the assessors’ action was that the appellant had not held the property in precisely the same manner “for the preceding five years.” But she had held some interest since 1936, first as joint tenant with her spouse, from 1962 to 1965 as joint tenant with her two children, and since December 21, 1965, as a life tenant, with remainder to her children. These interests are among the three categories enumerated in § 5, Forty-first. The board’s decision is at variance with the actual ruling, if not the discussions, in the Breare case. It also is not in accord with the purpose of aiding the elderly owner, as stated in the Formosi case. The supposed reason for a restrictive interpretation, as argued by the assessors, namely to avoid wholesale transfers by nonqualifying individuals to otherwise qualifying elderly persons, does not apply to the facts in the case before us.
Decision reversed.
See § 5, Forty-first, as now appearing in St. 1966, c. 728.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Maria S. Coroa v. Board of Assessors of Fall River
- Status
- Published