First Christian Church Tax Assessment

42 Pa. D. & C.2d 643, 1967 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 124
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Washington County
DecidedMarch 22, 1967
Docketno. 148 A.D.
StatusPublished

This text of 42 Pa. D. & C.2d 643 (First Christian Church Tax Assessment) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Washington County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
First Christian Church Tax Assessment, 42 Pa. D. & C.2d 643, 1967 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 124 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1967).

Opinion

Curran, J.,

The First Christian Church of Washington, Pa., affiliated with the Disciples >of Christ of North America, has had a church property in this city since before the year 1908. During all of this time and up until May 1, 1966, the church Was located on West Wheeling Street. Presently, the congregation is one of the larger and more active ones locally, and because of its present size it has outgrown its former building. Land has been purchased in the neighboring borough of Bast Washington, upon which a new church is now being erected. The old building was sold to the Washington City Mission, an agency of the local United 'Fund Organization, and because the mission’s former premises were being razed by the redevelopment authority of the city, it was necessary that the agency have immediate occupancy of any property it purchased. The old Christian Church property was a rather substantial plant, consisting of the church proper, a three-story brick ancillary building and a two-room Sunday school building, all adjoined by a parking lot. The buildings occupy three full lots extending from West Wheeling Street to West Strawberry Avenue in the rear. The church agreed to give immediate possession to the mision, realizing, no doubt, that the market for a church [645]*645property is somewhat limited. The church has now completely moved from its old home. Services are now being held in the Washington High School auditorium, rented by the congregation, but for' use on Sundays only.

On the church’s newly acquired land in East Washington, work is rapidly progressing toward the completion of the new church. All of the old structures on this land have been removed except the separate garage of the old mansion house and the driveway leading to it from Wilmont Avenue. This garage, a two-story building, is now being used solely as the place where all the affairs of the church, except the Sunday services, are conducted. Here are held all of its regular meetings to decide matters of policy, tradition, and devotion. Here its most important decisions are made, most surely preceded by prayers for Divine Guidance. From this building, the Reverend Robert E. Pebley ministers to his congregation — except on Sunday mornings. Matters of transcendant church policy originate here — not from the high school gymnasium or cafeteria. All of the vast store of church records and official documents are presently kept in this building.

The County of Washington, a county of the fourth class, has refused tax exemption for this small structure, together with sufficient land on which it is located and which is necessary for its use and occupancy, contending that this two-story building is not an “actual place of worship”.

The Pennsylvania Constitution of 1874, article IX, sec. 1, does not exempt church property from taxation; it only permits such, providing that “. . . the General Assembly may, . . . exempt from taxation . . . actual places of religious worship”. The Act of May 21, 1943, P. L. 571, sec. 202, 72 PS §5453.202 (general assessment act, applying to counties of the Fourth Class) provides that the following property, inter [646]*646alia, . . shall be exempt from all county, . . . road, poor, . . . and school tax, to wit:

“(1) All churches, meeting-houses, or other regular places of stated worship, with the ground thereto annexed necessary for the occupancy and enjoyment of the same”.

Appellate reports abound with cases enlightening us on the meaning of these constitutional and legislative provisions, and almost at once they raise the thought that perhaps these decisions lean heavily on the legalistic, to the possible exclusion of the theistic; shunning the shelves of the seminaries in favor of the law libraries. And yet it might truly be that only from the former can we hope to understand the real import and the complete scope of the ethic we discuss. And then we are caused to wonder if we should so narrow the definition of worship — even “stated worship”— to the point where it can mean little more than the Saturday or Sunday gathering, augmented perhaps, by a regularly scheduled mid-week meeting: Mullen v. Commissioners of Erie County, 85 Pa. 288 (1877); Wood v. Moore, 1 Chester 265 (1881). We might also ponder the reason for this great concern for restriction, as exemplified in these cases. Surely the story of religion embodies greater substance than the mere weekly scheduling of public devotion. It is not likely that the theologian could support such a proscriptive view. Rather, he most certainly would consider the Saturday or Sunday devotion as the end or the result of the many hours of prayer and effort that preceded it through the other six days of the week; the minister’s continuous studies, his hours of meditation, his prayers for his own guidance and vicariously for all his parishioners. The narrow view of worshipping, while appropriate perhaps for the camp meeting era of the pioneers, contains little practicality for the modern church with its variegated and mounting [647]*647problems, placing, as it does, total importance on weekly services, excluding any pertinence for the other efforts of the church and the minister.

However, our case precedents hold clearly, with few refinements, that only the church’s public meeting auditorium may be exempted from taxation. Dougherty, Trustee v. Philadelphia, 314 Pa. 298 (1934), holds that ancillary prayer and meeting rooms need not be distinguished from the main hall for tax purposes.

What then happens when the church proper is sold, as in the present case, and the minister’s studies, his services, and his efforts must be transferred to another property of the church, one never before included as a church building or as part of the church plant or part of the edifice itself? Our research has found no case similar to the present one. Here there is surely a need for some physical continuity to support the spiritual transition from the old to the new church property. Otherwise a hiatus — a spiritual void — could be brought about. Refusal of tax exemption for this small building could hardly result in the liquidation of the First Christian Church, and no one would seriously so argue. But something much more basic is involved here, and that is the matter of fundamental equality and fairness. The present church is not holding in abeyance any of its services or endeavors; each parishioner is now receiving just what he did before the old church was sold, no more and no less. And this group is not asking inclusion of a structure ancillary to its main building; nor is it asking that this small building be forever tax exempt. It is only asking that this structure be considered for the time being, until its main edifice is finished, as the church itself, the place from which all services actually originate, insofar as physical property is concerned; the physical body necessary to complement its body spiritual. It is asking only for continuity.

[648]*648Perhaps we should look to the basic reason for any tax exemption at all for churches and charitable institutions. 84 C. J. S. 533, §281, states that the underlying reason for exemption granted to charities and religious institutions, educational, literary, and scientific societies and associations is that this exemption is given in return for the performance of functions which benefit the public.

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42 Pa. D. & C.2d 643, 1967 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 124, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-christian-church-tax-assessment-pactcomplwashin-1967.