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NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE APPROVAL
OF THE TAX COURT COMMITTEE ON OPINIONS
TAX COURT OF NEW JERSEY
DOCKET NO. 009158-93
St. Ann's Catholic Church, :
:
Plaintiff, :
:
v. :
:
Borough of Hampton, :
:
Defendant. :
Decided: May 16, 1994
Richard M. Conley for plaintiff
(Conley & Haushalter)
Richard Dieterly for defendant
(Gebhardt & Kiefer)
HAMILL, J.T.C.
In this matter, plaintiff, St. Ann's Catholic Church New
Hampton challenges the 1993 local property tax assessment on
property located at 534 East Grand Street in the Borough of Hampton
(Borough). The property is designated as Block 7, Lot 1, on the
local tax map, and was assessed for tax year 1993 as follows:
Land: $38,900
Improvements: 60,700
Total: $99,600
The Hunterdon County Board of Taxation issued a
memorandum of judgment affirming the original assessment.
Plaintiff filed the instant complaint, claiming that the subject
property is exempt under N.J.S.A. 54:4-3.6 and "other statutes."
The matter is before me on cross-motions for summary
judgment.
The principal issue is whether property located adjacent
to a church cemetery and in close proximity to the church, which
was acquired by the church for access to and security for the
cemetery, is exempt from local property taxation as property
reasonably necessary to carry out the purposes of an entity
organized exclusively for religious purposes.
The subject property consists of approximately half an
acre and an eight-room, single-story residence occupied by Karl
Erz, his wife Rebecca, and their five children. The church became
the owner of the property pursuant to a transfer of deed dated July
31, 1992, and the Erzes moved into the residence on August 22,
1992. The property, is one of four contiguous lots (totaling
approximately 7.5 acres of land) owned by the church. The other
three lots include Lot 6 (1.85 acre parcel, upon which is situated
the church, rectory, and a garage); Lot 8 (4.7 acre parcel which
comprises the church's cemetery); and Lot 9 (0.4 acre parcel upon
which there is situated a residence housing seven nuns). The tax
status of these other lots is not an issue in this appeal.
The church was incorporated in 1864. Between 1924 and
1929 land was purchased for expansion of the existing cemetery,
which was described by Father William J. Hewitt, the church's
pastor, as a "Catholic Cemetery."
Mr. Erz works 40 hours per week as a carpenter for Thomas
Weibe in Hampton. Additionally, he performs maintenance work for
the church, takes care of an unused part of the cemetery (but has
nothing to do with the internment of bodies in the cemetery), keeps a watch on the cemetery, occasionally closes off the cemetery with
a chain, and plows snow during the winter. Church maintenance
includes maintaining the church furnace (weekly in the winter,
monthly in the summer), taking "care of the exterior lighting,
mak[ing] sure the bulbs are all in working order[,] ... repairing
pews and kneelers in the church, and replacing "several of the
outlets in the rectory." Taking care of the cemetery involves
mowing the grass and plowing snow. With respect to keeping a watch
on the cemetery, Mr. Erz stated that the entire cemetery can be
seen from the residence, that Mrs. Erz also watches the cemetery,
and that Mr. Erz usually walks through the cemetery "a couple or
several times a week." According to Mr. Erz, during 1993 he
observed suspicious people in the cemetery on three occasions, two
of which turned out to be people visiting graves at night. The
third occasion involved someone smoking marijuana. That person
left the property, apparently without incident, when told to do so
by Mr. Erz. Mr. Erz estimates that he spends forty to sixty hours
a month (or 10 to 15 hours per week) doing maintenance work for the
Church and 6 hours a week (or 24 hours per month) doing work in the
cemetery (although that figure increases during the winter in order
to clear snow). According to Father Hewitt, the church's
arrangement with Mr. Erz enables church maintenance to be provided
for one-third the cost if the church had to hire outside help.
The church and Mr. Erz memorialized an oral understanding
in a June 1993 written agreement executed by Father Hewitt and Mr.
Erz. The agreement states, inter alia, that "[o]ne of the major reasons for the Owner [i.e., the church] entering into this
agreement with [Mr. Erz] is to provide the presence of the
Caretaker-Sexton on the subject premises in the evening hours on
substantially a year-round basis." The agreement precludes Mr. Erz
"from accepting evening employment during the period from sunset to
sunrise" and requires that he be "personally present on the subject
premises adjacent to the cemetery, the rectory and the church
during the evening hours when Owner believes vandalism is most
likely to occur." Additionally, the agreement sets forth the
maintenance duties that Mr. Erz is required to perform as the
church sexton.
In exchange for his services, Mr. Erz does not pay rent
to live in the church-owned house.
The property was purchased for two reasons -- to prevent
vandalism of the church's properties and to ensure the continuing
existence of an exit from the cemetery. Prior to Mr. Erz moving
into the residence, there had been acts of vandalism, including one
incident in which about twenty headstones were turned over or
damaged. Additionally, the church was burglarized twice, once on
November 16, 1990, and once in the afternoon on January 26, 1992.
Since Mr. Erz and his family moved into the residence on the
subject property, there have been no acts of vandalism.
The house is used exclusively as the Erzes' family
residence and to store tools that Mr. Erz uses for church
maintenance. No church functions take place on the property. No one besides the Erzes' immediate family resides in the residence
and Mrs. Erz does not conduct any kind of business from the home.
In support of its motion for summary judgment, the
borough argues that the church is not entitled to a tax exemption
for the subject property under N.J.S.A. 54:4-3.6 because the
residence is not actually and exclusively used for religious
purposes. Additionally, the borough notes that section 3.6
expressly exempts from taxation parsonages occupied by officiating
clergy, and that the "statutory language ... itself demonstrates a
legislative intention that residences not so occupied are not to be
exempt." Finally, the borough maintains that since Mr. Erz has a
full-time job not related to the church, and Mr. Erz works only 40
to 60 hours a month on church-related activities, Mr. Erz "is not
a full-time caretaker of the church," and "the residence which he
occupies is not exempt from taxation" under N.J.S.A. 54:4-3.6.
In addition to claiming that the residence is not exempt
under N.J.S.A. 54:4-3.6, the borough maintains that the residence
is not exempt pursuant to N.J.S.A. 8A:5-10, which exempts cemetery
property of any cemetery company, on the basis that the church is
not a "cemetery company", and because the Erz residence is not used
for the operation and maintenance of cemetery lands.
In support of its cross-motion for summary judgment,
plaintiff argues that it is entitled to summary judgment under
N.J.S.A. 54:4-3.6. First, plaintiff cites Boys' Club of Clifton,
Inc. v. Jefferson Township,
72 N.J. 389, 401 (1977) and Fairleigh
Dickinson University v. Florham Park Borough,
5 N.J. Tax 343 (Tax 1983), for the proposition that "exempt entities may receive an
exemption for as many as five acres for each exempt building."
Noting that the church has four exempt buildings (the church
building, the rectory, the garage and the nuns' residence),
plaintiff maintains that the church could acquire up to 20 acres of
tax exempt property, provided the newly acquired land was
"reasonably necessary" to the church's exempt activities. Accord-
ing to plaintiff, the fact that the subject property is improved
with a residence is of no importance because the use of the
residence as a residence is de minimis.
With respect to the residence, plaintiff cites Princeton
Tp. v. Tenacre Found.,
69 N.J. Super. 559, 565 (App. Div. 1961) for
the proposition that the house should be exempt if it is
"reasonably necessary for the efficient functioning of the [exempt]
institution." Plaintiff argues that the house is reasonably
necessary for the efficient functioning of the church because it
"serves primarily as a convenience for the church rather than for
the Erz family, which was induced to relocate there ... by Father
Hewitt," and because "the activities of Mr. Erz and his family in
helping to maintain and safeguard the entire church property are
reasonably necessary to the integral operations of [the church]."
Since there is no genuine issue of material fact, the
within matter is ripe for summary judgment. Judson v. Peoples Bank
and Trust Co.,
17 N.J. 67 (1954); R. 4:46-2.
The relevant statute in this case is N.J.S.A. 54:4-3.6,
which provides in relevant part:
The following property shall be exempt
from taxation under this chapter. ... [A]ll
buildings actually and exclusively used in the
work of associations and corporations
organized exclusively for religious or
charitable purposes; ... the buildings, not
exceeding two, actually occupied as a
parsonage by the officiating clergymen of any
religious corporation of this State, together
with the accessory buildings located on the
same premises; the land whereon any of the
buildings hereinbefore mentioned are erected,
and which may be necessary for the fair
enjoyment thereof, and which is devoted to the
purposes above mentioned and to no other
purpose and does not exceed five acres in
extent; .... provided, in case of all the
foregoing, the buildings, or the lands on
which they stand, or the ... corporations ...
using and occupying them as aforesaid, are not
conducted for profit .... The foregoing
exemption shall apply only where the
association, corporation or institution
claiming the exemption owns the property in
question and is incorporated or organized
under the laws of this State and authorized to
carry out the purposes on account of which the
exemption is claimed ....See footnote 1
Initially, it is clear that the subject property is not
exempt as land not exceeding five acres that is necessary for
church purposes. It may be settled that five acres per exempt
building may be granted exemption, see Boys' Club of Clifton, Inc.
v. Jefferson Tp., supra, 72 N.J. at 401, but this case involves an
exemption, not for additional lands that may be reasonably
necessary for the church's use, but rather an exemption for an
improved lot. A small portion of the lot provides access to the
cemetery, but exemption for the balance of the lot and the improvement is available only on the basis that the improvement is
occupied by an individual who watches over and maintains the
church's property. The use of the residence is not de minimis but
rather the principal ground on which exemption is sought. The fact
that, had the church acquired additional vacant land, that land
might have been exempt under the five-acre per building allowance
is immaterial. The fact is that the church did not purchase vacant
land; it purchased an improved lot.
The remaining issues are (1) whether the subject property
is actually and exclusively used for church purposes and (2)
whether the subject property is an "accessory building" to the
parsonage.
With respect to the parsonage exception, the issue is
really a non-issue. Although Mr. Erz has performed work on and in
the rectory, by no stretch of the imagination can the subject
property be deemed an "accessory building" of the rectory. Rather,
it is a residence for the Erz family.
With respect to the exemption for church purposes, as
this court pointed out in Clinton Township v. Camp Brett-Endeavor,
Inc.,
1 N.J. Tax 54, 56 (Tax 1980), N.J.S.A. 54:4-3.6 requires that
residential premises of certain organizations, including religious
and charitable organizations and, at the time Camp Brett-Endeavor
was decided, hospital organizations, must be "actually and
exclusively used" in the work of the organization. On the other
hand, residences of other exempt organizations such as schools,
academies, or seminaries, and now hospitals, need only be "actually used" for the organization's exempt purpose.See footnote 2 In Princeton Tp. v.
Tenacre Foundation, supra, 69 N.J. Super. at 564, the Appellate
Division interpreted the requirement of actual and exclusive use to
mean a facility that "is reasonably necessary for the efficient
functioning of the institution." Id. at 565. Under that test the
court held that the residence of the foundation's director was
exempt. The residence was located on the premises of the
foundation, which operated a sanitorium and nursing home for
Christian Scientists. The director was "'on call' virtually 24
hours a day" and his residence was located in close proximity to
the institution. The court found that it was essential to the
operation of the hospital/sanitorium that the director be available
on the premises 24 hours a day and that his residence was therefore
"an integral part of the institution's facilities." Ibid.
Again construing the hospital exemption, the Appellate
Division in City of Long Branch v. Monmouth Medical Center,
138 N.J. Super. 524 (App. Div. 1976), aff'd o.b.,
73 N.J. 179 (1977),
held that apartment units located about one and a half blocks from
the hospital that were used as residences for residents, interns,
and nurses on the hospital's staff were reasonably necessary for
the "proper and efficient operation of the hospital." Id. at 533.
The provision of nearby housing enabled the hospital to function on
a 24-hour basis. The below market rentals enabled the hospital to attract qualified individuals and established that the hospital was
using the apartments to carry out its hospital purposes rather than
to earn income as a landlord. The apartments were thus an integral
part of the hospital's facilities. Ibid.
To the same effect as Monmouth Medical Center is Perth
Amboy General Hospital v. Perth Amboy,
176 N.J. Super. 307 (App.
Div. 1980), in which the Appellate Division held that condominiums
located one and a half miles from a hospital that were used to
house residents and interns were exempt. The greater distance of
the residential properties from the exempt organization did not
destroy their exemption because there was a housing shortage in the
area and residents and interns typically were married individuals.
Id. at 311.
In Camp Brett-Endeavor, Inc., supra, after surveying the
cases, this court concluded that there is a two-fold test to
determine whether a residential property qualifies for exemption
under the religious, charitable, and hospital exemptions. First,
the residence must be "predominantly used as an integral part of
the operation of the exempt organization, rather than being
primarily a convenience to the tenant ...." Second, the residence
must be "reasonably necessary for the proper and efficient
operation of the exempt organization." Camp Brett-Endeavor, supra,
1 N.J. Tax, at 60.
In Camp Brett-Endeavor, the facts leading this court to
conclude that the residence of the director/caretaker was exempt
included a demonstrated need for year-round security and maintenance of the camp's numerous buildings and swimming pool and
the use of the residence for camp administration. There had been
a security problem in the winter months, with "extremely high"
vandalism on the property, and the director's wife testified that
she had chased deer hunters off the property. Although the
director was an eighth grade teacher during the school year, his
wife and children apparently were present on the property during
the day. The camp trustees had previously employed part-time
caretakers without success. Construction of a year-round
director's residence would, the trustees hoped, attract a year
round director with a family.
Another case involving residential property of an
individual with maintenance responsibilities is Summit v. Overlook
Hospital Association,
4 N.J. Tax 183 (Tax 1982). Under the
rationale of Monmouth Medical Center, Judge Hopkins concluded that
the residences of physicians, nurses, a biomedical technician,
three laboratory technicians, and x-ray technology students were
all exempt because the individuals fulfilled vital roles in the
medical care offered by the hospital and, as to the students, there
was no reason to differentiate between housing for nursing
students, which traditionally has been exempt, and housing for x
ray technology students. Id. at 192-93. On the other hand,
"specific justification" was required to exempt the residence of
the maintenance man. Id. at 192. Despite the fact that the
maintenance man was the only employee of the hospital with the
skills to maintain the hydraulic systems and was on call 24 hours a day, the court found that his residence was not exempt because it
was not sufficiently integrated into the hospital's operations.
Id. at 193. There was no dispute that the on-site residence of the
hospital's chief engineer was exempt.
Two cases involving exemption for the on-site residences
of cemetery caretakers have some bearing. Washington Cemetery
Assoc. v. South Brunswick Tp.,
1 N.J. Tax 157 (Tax 1980), and
Greenwood Cemetery Assoc. v. Millville City,
1 N.J. Tax 408 (Tax
1980), dealt with claims for exemption of residences located on
cemetery grounds under N.J.S.A. 8A:5-10.See footnote 3 Although the two cases
involved a different statute, in Washington Cemetery, the court
expressly relied on case law construing the exemption under
N.J.S.A. 54:4-3.6 for buildings actually used for schools,
colleges, academies or seminaries, and in Greenwood Cemetery the
court implicitly accepted the reasoning of such cases under
N.J.S.A. 54:4-3.6. In Washington Cemetery the court found that the
on-site residences of two laborers and a superintendent reduced
vandalism of the cemetery. The laborers were able to see cars
coming onto the cemetery property at night. In addition, the
presence of these individuals on the grounds permitted interments
to take place within 24 hours of death, a requirement dictated by
the religious belief of many of the cemetery's clients. In fact,
burials were expected to be made on two hours' notice and at times
took place at night.
In Greenwood Cemetery, the court found that a cemetery
caretaker's second-floor residence, located over the cemetery
office, was not exempt because the individual's wife ran a business
from the premises. In dicta the court stated, however, that, but
for the business, the residence would have been exempt because,
given "the exigencies of modern times ... providing ... an on-site
residence for a cemetery superintendent to deter vandalism is as
much a cemetery function as the interment of bodies." Greenwood
Cemetery, supra, 1 N.J. Tax at 411-12. This conclusion was based
on testimony concerning the need for a full-time caretaker because
of vandalism problems.
I am mindful of the holding in Cresskill Borough v.
Northern Valley Evangelical Free Church,
125 N.J. Super. 585 (App.
Div. 1973), that the residence of a church youth director was not
exempt because
[a] building that is used in the
religious work of a church and which
is additionally utilized as the
residence of an employee of the
religious corporation (other than
one of the officiating clergyman),
quite obviously is not being devoted
exclusively to religious purposes in
the ongoing work of the church.
[Id. at 587]
I am aware as well of Teaneck Township v. Lutheran Bible Institute,
20 N.J. 86 (1955), in which the Supreme Court concluded that
residences of ministers who taught at a bible institute were not
exempt under the religious exemption because the residences were not used exclusively in the religious endeavors of the bible
institute but were used primarily as residences for the ministers.
These cases would seem to establish that, in so far as
property of religious organizations is concerned, the requirement
of exclusive use is to be interpreted literally. The reason I
believe this cannot be the proper interpretation is that the
Monmouth Medical Center case, which construed the exclusive use
requirement of the hospital exemption to require merely that the
property be "reasonably necessary for the proper and efficient
operation of the hospital," was affirmed on the opinion below by
our Supreme Court. See Long Branch City v. Monmouth Medical Ctr.,
73 N.J. 179 (1977). Once the hospital exemption was so construed,
it is no longer possible to construe the religious exemption more
strictly. To do otherwise would raise an issue under the First
Amendment of discrimination against property of religious
organizations. Consequently, the test for determining whether
residential property of religious entities is exempt is the two
fold test described in Camp Brett-Endeavor. The property must be
"predominantly used as an integral part of the operation of the
[religious] organization ... and ... provision of the residence
[must be] reasonably necessary for the proper and efficient
operation of the [religious] organization." Clinton Tp. v. Camp
Brett-Endeavor, supra, 1 N.J. Tax at 60. See also Harvey Cedars v.
Sisters of Charity of Saint Elizabeth,
163 N.J. Super. 564, 568
(App. Div. 1978) (so construing the religious and charitable
exemption and denying an exemption for land and buildings used as a summer residence for sisters whose charitable work took place
elsewhere).
In sum, when exemption is sought for the residence of a
maintenance man/caretaker, the test is one of reasonable necessity.
Under the hospital and cemetery cases and Camp Brett-Endeavor, in
order to find reasonable necessity, there must be a demonstrated
need for such maintenance and caretaking, and an integration of
those activities with the exempt functions of the entity.
In this case, there is insufficient evidence of a need
for the Erz residence as security for the church and cemetery.
There is no history of serious vandalism in the area.
Hampton Borough in the vicinity of the church is neither an urban
area nor an isolated area. The church is on Main Street and the
cemetery has improved properties to the front and along one side.
Vandalism of the cemetery and church has been limited to three
incidents in the recent past. Since he moved into the residence in
August 1992, Mr. Erz has found only one suspect person in the
cemetery - a marijuana smoker. These isolated incidents do not
establish a compelling need for a caretaker comparable to a
hospital's staffing needs that justify exemption for nearby
residences of hospital physicians and nurses. Without staff
available on a 24-hour basis, a hospital cannot function; without
a caretaker St. Ann's can function, and the risk of vandalism
appears manageable. As there is thus insufficient evidence of a
need for surveillance, it cannot be concluded that the subject
property is reasonably necessary to the functioning of the church.
There is limited integration of the Erz residence with
the church's exempt functions. The Erzes' acts to prevent
vandalism of the cemetery and church have been extremely limited.
Mr. Erz is not on the property at all during the day and is not
needed by the church on a 24-hour basis. While required to be in
his home at night, he does not patrol the cemetery or church, but
merely walks through the cemetery a few evenings a week. Assuming
that the entire cemetery can be seen from the Erz residence, I am
not convinced that this potential for surveillance, standing alone,
is enough to exempt the residence. It appears unlikely that Mr.
Erz would be aware of vandals entering the church given the
distance between the church and his residence and the fact that the
entrance to the church cannot be seen from the Erz residence. To
the extent exemption is claimed simply because an occupied house
next to a cemetery deters vandals, the Erz property achieved that
end when occupied by its prior owners. Given the Erzes' limited
surveillance activities, the house is no more integrated with the
church's exempt functions when owned by the church than when owned
by its prior owners.
Mr. Erz does engage in fairly extensive maintenance work
for the church, but none of these activities require that he reside
in close proximity to the church or cemetery. He could just as
well live across town or in another municipality and continue to
mow the grass, plow the snow, and tend to the church furnace and
repairs. Unlike the need for residences of hospital staff in close
proximity to the hospital as described in Monmouth Medical or the residence of the director of a sanitorium on the grounds of the
institution as described in Tenacre Foundation, there is no need
for the church's maintenance man to be in close proximity to the
church. If there is no exemption for the residence of a hospital's
maintenance man who is on call 24 hours a day and is the only
employee knowledgeable about the hospital's hydraulic systems,
there is no exemption for the Erz property on the ground that Mr.
Erz provides routine, part-time maintenance services for the
church. Cf. Summit v. Overlook Hospital Ass'n, supra, 4 N.J. Tax
at 193. It may be convenient for the church to have Mr. Erz close
at hand, but that proximity is not necessary for the operation of
the church. See Monmouth Medical Center, supra, 138 N.J. Super. at
535 (denying exemption for offices leased to physicians for their
private practices despite the fact that the offices were located
close to the hospital).
Plaintiff argues that the church's considered decision to
buy the property for security and access to the rear of the
cemetery should be given considerable weight in determining whether
the property is reasonably necessary for the operation of the
church. There is something to be said for the argument, but
ultimately the question is whether the proofs establish reasonable
necessity to the court's satisfaction. The proofs here do
establish a need for access to the rear of the cemetery, but they
do not establish a sufficient need for security. One act of
vandalism in the cemetery is simply not enough.
It is true that the property was acquired for church
purposes, and it is also true that the church charges no rent for
the property. These facts suggest a church use rather than a
private use, or in other words that the property is being used for
the convenience of the church rather than for the convenience of
the Erzes. As the Appellate Division stated in Monmouth Medical
Center, however, "convenience is not the test; the test is
reasonable necessity ...." 138 N.J.Super. at 535. Given the
insufficient demonstration of necessity in this case, the test has
not been met. Ownership of Lot 1 may be convenient for the church,
but that ownership is not reasonably necessary.
As to the demonstrated need for access to the rear of the
cemetery, the portion of the subject lot needed for that purpose is
approximately 20 feet according to defendant. The exemption for
property owned by religious entities requires use entirely for the
exempt purpose. Unlike the current hospital exemption, there is no
provision for a partial exemption. Compare City of Long Branch v.
Monmouth Medical Center, supra, 138 N.J.Super. at 538-39 (decided
prior to the 1983 amendment allowing a partial exemption for
hospital property and consequently denying partial exemption to a
hospital clinic building on account of a lease of a portion of the
building to a retail pharmacy) and Jersey Shore Medical Center v.
Neptune Tp., 13 N.J. Tax ____ (Tax 1994) (decided after the 1983
amendment and consequently allowing a partial exemption of a
hospital building containing a for-profit coffee shop). Thus, the
exempt use of a portion of Lot 1 for access to the cemetery cannot render the property exempt if the balance of the lot is not
reasonably necessary for the operation of the church.
Plaintiff concedes that, standing alone, none of the
relevant factors -- access to the cemetery, cemetery surveillance,
and church and cemetery maintenance -- might warrant tax exemption,
but argues that, when the factors are considered in combination,
the property should be exempt. It is true that the cumulation of
the relevant factors tends to show a greater integration with the
church's operation. It is not true, however, that these factors in
combination demonstrate any greater need by the church. The
church's need for security, maintenance, and access remains the
same whether the factors are considered singly or in combination.
As indicated previously, there is an insufficient demonstration of
need for security and maintenance and consequently a failure to
show that the property is reasonably necessary for the operation of
the church.
As the subject property is not reasonably necessary for
the operation of the church, it is not exempt under N.J.S.A. 54:4
3.6. The court will therefore enter judgment affirming the
judgment of the Hunterdon County Board of Taxation.
Footnote: 1The statutory requirement that the entity claiming
exemption be organized under the laws of New Jersey is no longer
applicable. See WHYY, Inc. v. Glassboro Borough,
393 U.S. 117,
89 S. Ct. 286,
21 L. Ed.2d 242 (1968).
Footnote: 2
The hospital exemption was amended by L. 1983, c., 224, to
require only actual and not exclusive use.
Footnote: 3N.J.S.A. 8A:5-10 is not implicated here because the
exemption is limited to cemetery property of cemetery companies,
and St. Ann's is not a cemetery company.
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