Mount Calvary Baptist Church v. Zehnder

CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 31, 1998
Docket1-97-3831
StatusPublished

This text of Mount Calvary Baptist Church v. Zehnder (Mount Calvary Baptist Church v. Zehnder) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mount Calvary Baptist Church v. Zehnder, (Ill. Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

FIFTH DIVISION

December 31, 1998

No. 1-97-3831

MOUNT CALVARY BAPTIST CHURCH, INC., )

a Religious Corporation, )         Appeal from

)      the Circuit Court

Plaintiff-Appellant, )       of Cook County.

)

v. )

KENNETH E. ZEHNDER, Director, ILLINOIS )       No.  96-L-51166

DEPARTMENT OF REVENUE, and THE ILLINOIS )

DEPARTMENT OF REVENUE; HONORABLE WILSON )

FROST and JOSEPH BERRIOS, Commissioners,)

COOK COUNTY BOARD OF (TAX) APPEALS, and )          Honorable

THE COOK COUNTY BOARD OF (TAX) APPEALS, )     Lester A. Bonaguro,

)       Judge Presiding.

Defendants-Appellees. )

JUSTICE THEIS delivered the opinion of the court:

Mount Calvary Baptist Church, Inc. (Mount Calvary), an Illinois not-for-profit corporation, seeks reversal of the circuit court's order of September 16, 1997, affirming the final administrative decision of the Illinois Department of Revenue (the Department), which had denied, in part, Mount Calvary's request for a religious-use tax exemption for several parcels of property for the 1991 tax year.  The properties at issue comprise a burned-out church building, a storage building, and several parking lots.  We reverse and remand with directions.

On July 2, 1992, Mount Calvary filed a real estate tax exemption complaint with the Board of (Tax) Appeals of Cook County (the Board),

seeking a religious-use property tax exemption under section 19.2 of the Revenue Act of 1939 (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1991, ch. 120, par. 500.2) for various parcels of real estate in Chicago for the 1991 tax year.  The Board recommended that the exemption be granted.  The Department denied the application, and Mount Calvary requested a formal hearing before the administrative law judge (the ALJ) to determine whether the parcels warranted exemption.  At the hearing, the ALJ noted that Mount Calvary's application did not include all parcels owned by it and admitted into evidence an exhibit, identifying all the parcels on which were located a burned church building, Mount Calvary Christian Academy, a storage building, and various parking lots.

The burned church building (the burned church) is an 8,692 square-foot building located on three lots at 1251, 1253, and 1257 West 111th Street, identified by permanent index numbers (PIN) 25-20-

105-001 through and including 25-20-105-003.  Mount Calvary Christian Academy (the academy), a Christian school at 1237, 1239, 1241, 1243, 1245, 1249 West 111th Street, is located directly east of the burned church, also on West 111th Street, and is identified by PIN 25-20-105-

004 through and including 25-20-105-009.  A 7,260 square-foot storage building is located at 1322 West 111th Street on PIN 25-17-333-036.

Parking lots were located on the following parcel numbers: PIN 25-20-105-010 through and including 25-20-105-012, and 25-20-105-045 located directly east of the academy on 111th Street; PIN 25-20-105-

019 through and including 25-20-105-023 located at least five parcels east of but still on the same block as the academy; PIN 25-20-105-047 located at 1256 West 111th Street; PIN 25-17-333-024 through 25-17-

333-025 located at least 10 parcels west of but on the same block as the storage building; and PIN 17-333-024-037, a parking lot located directly east of the storage building on 111th Street.

The church building was damaged by a fire in September 1989.  The fire resulted in the relocation of worship services and other church activities to the academy building.  Prior to the fire, the academy building was used as a school known as the Mount Calvary Christian Academy.  Immediately after the fire, Mount Calvary filed a claim with its insurance carrier, and the claim was denied for lack of coverage.  On September 18, 1989, Mount Calvary filed for protection under the United States Bankruptcy Code.  

In November of 1989, Mount Calvary sought a declaratory judgment on the issue of insurance coverage in the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois.  Mount Calvary ultimately prevailed on appeal to the United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit, which found Mount Calvary was entitled to insurance coverage.  After the United States Supreme Court denied the insurer's writ of certiorari , the matter was returned to the bankruptcy court for determination of the amount owed.  A settlement was reached in March of 1998 in the amount of $2,000,000.

The following persons testified at the hearing before the ALJ on behalf of Mount Calvary:  Theodore Peters (Peters), a deacon and trustee of Mount Calvary; Dr. Robert Johnson (Johnson), chairman of Mount Calvary's Board of Trustees; and Greg Kenner (Kenner), manager at John E. Wilson, Ltd., Certified Public Accountants.  In addition, the Department and Mount Calvary submitted exhibits, which included deeds for the property establishing Mount Calvary's ownership and two maps showing the location of the property.   

The record on appeal indicates that Peters testified that he had been a member of Mount Calvary Baptist Church since 1946.  Peters explained that, in September 1989, the church building burned and after the fire the church building was closed because no roof remained.  In 1991, the burned structure remained standing, but was not rebuilt.  

Peters stated that Mount Calvary did not actually use the burned church building for religious services, but explained "[s]ometimes we would go there and pray."  Peters explained that, after the fire, Mount Calvary conducted its religious services at the academy building just east of the burned church building.  Peters further testified that insurance coverage litigation ongoing in 1991 prevented the church from being rebuilt as it formerly stood.  Peters attested that no business was conducted for profit that year in the burned church building or in any of the parking lots.  Peters also testified that in 1991 Mount Calvary's parking lots were used by parishioners attending church.  When asked whether during 1991, given its various activities, the church used all of its parking facilities, Peters answered:  "Not all of the time, but most of the time."

Johnson testified that in 1991, in his capacity as chairman of the Board of Trustees and registered agent of Mount Calvary, he became aware of the church's need to maintain its not-for-profit corporate status and to make applications for religious-use exemptions with respect to the subject property.  Johnson stated that Mount Calvary had established a building fund, which was a special savings account designated for the following purpose:  "We had to try to rebuild our church after it had burned in '89."

With respect to the storage building, Johnson testified that in 1991 "[a]ccess was restricted because the building needed repair so we didn't let anyone go into it."  Johnson further explained:  "We just used it for storage" because of Mount Calvary's insurance, fines and violations on the building.  Johnson stated that in 1991 people did go into the building, "but not for any church activities, just to get things in and out of it."  Johnson testified that Mount Calvary stored desks, chairs, and air conditioners in the storage building.

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Mount Calvary Baptist Church v. Zehnder, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mount-calvary-baptist-church-v-zehnder-illappct-1998.