Published on:

Court Rules on Petitioner’s Request for Tax Exempt Status

by

 

The issue here is whether renewal applications for four properties located in the Village of Freeport, Nassau County, are entitled to tax exemption pursuant to Real Property Tax Law § 462. We affirm the order of the Appellate Division holding that the properties are tax exempt.

On September 24, 1999, respondent, Word of Life Ministries, submitted to Nassau County renewal applications for tax exempt status for four properties on the ground that they were used as residences by “officiating clergymen.” The applications mistakenly answered “yes” in response to the question whether the properties were used for purposes other than as residences of “the officiating clergy” stating that they were used as the residences of assistant pastors. Before the tax authorities made a decision, respondent corrected the applications before the County to state that the properties were used as residences for officiating clergymen. After reviewing the applications, Nassau County concluded that the properties were not tax exempt under RPTL 462. Respondent submitted similar applications to the Village of Freeport on July 25, 2000, but the Village rejected respondent’s attempt to correct its mistake. These applications were denied on or about August 15, 2000.

The respondent filed a CPLR article 78 petition against the County on July 17, 2000, and against the Village of Freeport on December 6, 2000. On March 20, 2001, the proceedings were consolidated.

After examinations before trial and a review of documentary evidence, Supreme Court determined that the applications were improperly denied, annulled the county and village decisions and granted the applications. Only the Village appealed to the Appellate Division, which affirmed the determination .. This Court granted the Village leave to appeal.

RPTL 462 states that “property owned by a religious corporation while actually used by the officiating clergymen thereof for residential purposes shall be exempt from taxation.” At issue here is whether the men living at the four residences in the Village of Freeport are “officiating clergymen.”

The Village asks us to construe the term “officiating clergymen” undefined in the statute as limited to the “spiritual and settled leader” of a church. In effect, the Village argues that there will frequently be only one officiating clergy person per congregation the cleric who has ultimate supervisory authority over the other clergy. In the Village’s view, an “assistant pastor,” by virtue of title alone, can rarely constitute officiating clergy within the meaning of the statute.

We decline to read the statute so narrowly. True, “officiating clergymen” does not mean all clergymen. But neither does it mean only one clergy person who presides over subordinates. Rather, we construe “officiating” as looking outward to a cleric’s relationship with his or her congregation, and not to the hierarchical structure of the various clergy persons. Thus, a full-time, ordained member of the clergy who presides over an established church’s ecclesiastical services and ceremonies, conducts weddings and funerals, and administers the sacraments of the church in short, one who “officiates” is entitled to the statutory tax exemption.

In arguing for a more restrictive definition, the Village points to New Jersey case law, which the Village contends interprets a similar New Jersey statute to limit that state’s parsonage exemption to the “settled leader” of a church. In truth, however, New Jersey’s test imposes no such restriction and the Village’s position is based on a misreading of that state’s precedent.

The Village cites Trenton Church of Christ v City of Trenton for the proposition that a pastor seeking a parsonage exemption in New Jersey must be the “settled leader” of a church, which the Village takes to mean the supervising cleric. The Village cites several cases in which exemption was denied because the person was not the settled leader.

In St. Matthew’s Lutheran Church for the Deaf v Division of Tax Appeals (18 NJ Super 552, 87 A2d 732 [1952]), the New Jersey Appellate Division granted tax exemption for a building occupied by a minister assigned to conduct worship services for the deaf. The court held that tax exemption could not be granted to the residence of an itinerant preacher but that an officiating clergy person “must be a settled or incumbent pastor . . . installed over a parish, church or congregation” and “must be serving the needs of a reasonably localized and established congregation” (18 NJ Super at 558, 87 A2d at 735). In Congregation Ahavath Torah v Englewood City (21 NJ Tax 318, 320 [2004]), the New Jersey Tax Court, in holding that the residences of a synagogue’s rabbi and cantor both qualified for the parsonage exemption, explained that “it is not status or title, but the services performed that determine if the exemption will apply.” Thus, New Jersey looks, as we do, to the character and “extent of the clergyman’s activities” (Friends of Ahi Ezer Congregation, Inc. v Long Branch City, 16 NJ Tax at 595 [1997]; see also Shrine of Our Lady of Fatima v Mantua Twp., 12 NJ Tax 392, 397-398 [1992]). “If the duties sound like those performed by congregational leaders of all religious denominations, the clergyman is considered an officiating clergyman of the religious corporation” (Ahi Ezer, 16 NJ Tax at 595).

Those lower New York courts that have addressed the issue have uniformly applied the correct test. Thus, in Matter of Holy Trinity Orthodox Church of E. Meadow v O’Shea (186 Misc 2d 880 [Sup Ct, Nassau County 2001]), the court held that the church choir director was not an officiating clergyman because, although he was ordained as a subdeacon and cantor within the church, he could not officiate at weddings or funerals and his sole ecclesiastical responsibility was to provide liturgical music for these ceremonies. By contrast, in Temple Beth Sholom, Inc. of Roslyn, N.Y. v Nassau County Dept. of Assessment, Bur. of Exemptions (2001 NY Slip Op 50147[U] [Sup Ct, Nassau County]), an assistant rabbi was held to be officiating clergy where he was employed full time by the synagogue; conducted secondary services on Sabbath and all holidays; taught Sisterhood and Men’s Club classes during the year; supervised youth groups; conducted weddings, funerals, and baby namings when the rabbi was not available; and visited members in hospitals and homes after the death of family members (see also Full Gospel Tabernacle of Long Is., N.Y., Inc. v Board of Assessor of Town of Brookhaven, NYLJ, Jan. 25, 1982, at 15, col 6 [Sup Ct, Suffolk County] [assistant pastor entitled to exemption as officiating clergy]; 5 Ops Counsel SBEA No. 54, at 105 [1976] [suggesting that an officiating clergy is someone ordained who “preach(es) on a regular basis”]).

We therefore conclude that respondent is entitled to a parsonage exemption for each of the challenged properties, declining to hold that the mere designation of one of the pastors here as the “Senior Pastor” means that as a matter of law he and he alone is the “officiating” clergy. All of the pastors, including those living at the residences in question, were ordained and held no outside employment. All took part in church services and shared in the preaching. All provided marital counseling, officiated at marriages and funerals, and administered the sacraments recognized by the church. They also ministered to the youth of the church and took part in outreach to the homeless. Indeed, the pastors ministered to at least 2,000 people weekly. Because the pastors’ salaries are low, respondent provides them with housing, located near the church. We thus reject the Village’s argument that the residents in question are not officiating clergy.

Accordingly, the order of the Appellate Division should be affirmed, with costs.

If you have a similar case scenario, contact Stephen Bilkis and Associates for guidance.

Contact Information