St John’s Evangelical Lutheran Church v. City of Bay City

319 N.W.2d 378, 114 Mich. App. 616, 1982 Mich. App. LEXIS 3035
CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 5, 1982
DocketDocket 50997
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 319 N.W.2d 378 (St John’s Evangelical Lutheran Church v. City of Bay City) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
St John’s Evangelical Lutheran Church v. City of Bay City, 319 N.W.2d 378, 114 Mich. App. 616, 1982 Mich. App. LEXIS 3035 (Mich. Ct. App. 1982).

Opinion

J. N. O’Brien, J.

Petitioner, St. John’s Evangelical Lutheran Church, appeals from an April 8, 1980, decision of the Michigan Tax Tribunal in favor of respondent, City of Bay City.

This case involves a parcel of property (Lot 14 and the south 40 feet of Lot 15, Block 8, Fitzhugh and Kiesel Subdivision, Bay City) purchased by petitioner on October 24, 1977. The subject property was used for residential purposes at the time of its purchase and was on the respondent’s tax rolls. When purchased by petitioner, the subject property was immediately put to use as a dwelling residence for one of the teaching ministers employed by petitioner. This teaching minister’s primary duty was teaching in the elementary school operated by petitioner on the same city block that contained the subject property.

Petitioner’s request that the subject property be removed from the tax roll was denied by the city assessor on March 14, 1978. The board of review subsequently denied petitioner’s appeal. Petitioner then appealed to the Tax Tribunal. The case was heard before an administrative law judge who rendered a proposed opinion and judgment on *618 March 10, 1980. The Tax Tribunal adopted the same on April 8, 1980.

St. John’s Evangelical Lutheran Church of Bay City is a Michigan ecclesiastical corporation. It owns almost an entire block of property in the City of Bay City, that being Block 8 of Fitzhugh and Kiesel’s Subdivision of Bay City, Michigan. To be precise, it owns the south 40 feet of Lot 2, all of Lots 3 through 14, and the south 40 feet of Lot 15 of the said Block 8. The church building is located on Lots 5 through 8. Lots 2 through 4 constitute a parking lot for the church. St. John’s owns and operates a school as an integral part of the church parish. It is recognized as an approved nonpublic school by the Michigan Department of Education. This school is located on Lots 10 through 12. Lot 9 is used as a parking lot. A home occupied by the school principal is located on Lot 13. There is another house located on Lot 14 and the south 40 feet of Lot 15, which is occupied as a home by a teacher in the church-school. The church also owns a residence to the west of Block 8, located on Lot 13 of Block 9. It is occupied by the intern vicar of the church. The church also owns Lot 1 of Block 15 in the same subdivision, and the house thereon is occupied by Pastor Brenner, the head minister of the church.

The United States Bureau of Internal Revenue recognized the Wisconsin Evangelical Lutheran Synod, this church and this school for § 501(c)(3) tax exemption, as an educational, charitable and religious organization. St. John’s Evangelical Lutheran Church is part of the Wisconsin Evangelical Synod. It has been in existence for 117 years in Bay City and it has been at this location for 107 years. The church building and the school building have a common heating and power system. The *619 church has owned Lot 13 and the home located on it for 89 to 90 years. The head pastor’s home located on Lot 1, Block 15, is owned by the church and is not on the tax roll. Lot 13, Block 9, and the resident house located thereon has been owned by the church for 29 or 30 years. It is not, and has not been, on the tax roll. The church owns four residences, and only one of them has been placed on the tax roll, i.e., Lot 14-15, Block 8, the subject premises.

St. John’s conducts a Christian day school. The pastor is the superintendent of the school. The enrollment of the school is confined to the children of the members of the congregation. All subjects are taught on the basis of their Christian philosophy. Tuition is not charged. Teachers must receive theological training. They must be trained and certified by the synod as well as by the State of Michigan. Teachers in the school are considered as ministers of the gospel and have been granted exemption from selective service as such. The three teachers in this school are recognized by the Internal Revenue Service to be ministers of the gospel to the extent that their occupancy of a residence owned by the church is not attributed to them as income. This applies to all teachers in the school of the Wisconsin Synod. The church and the school operate under one common budget. The teachers are trained in knowledge of the Bible, church history, dogmatics and doctrine. They are trained to teach and catechize the children. The ministers are sometimes called preaching ministers and teaching ministers. The church views them equally as ministers of the gospel. Preaching ministers and teaching ministers are all trained in the synod schools. They have to be trained in the church school in order to be able to teach in the *620 church school. These teaching ministers are expected to make life-long commitment to their work just as the preaching ministers do. The teaching ministers receive a call from a congregation in the same fashion as a preaching minister does. In the church at large and at conventions teaching ministers and preaching ministers have the same rights and privileges. They serve as voting members at synodical meetings.

Teaching ministers assist in the church work, such as the distribution of sacraments, calling on the sick and, at times, preach the gospel. Teaching ministers are considered as self-employed, the same as preaching ministers, under the IRS rulings. Teaching ministers receive a divine call to the church and are installed in the church in a worship service. The teaching ministers are called to the church the same way as the preaching ministers. A teaching minister cannot solicit a call just as a preaching minister cannot. The teaching ministers and preaching ministers receive identical hospital benefits and retirement benefits. They are theologically equipped to perform marriages. Church law provides that a parish must provide housing for all teaching ministers, the only exception being where a teaching minister is a married female, in which case she lives with her husband.

The teaching minister who occupies the property in issue has been with the church for 14 years. Prior to the purchase of this house, the teaching minister lived at 206 S. Mountain, which the church owned for many, many years. The church furnishes all of the gas, water and other utilities in the houses. When the church purchased this house, it asked for the same tax exemption as it receives for the other houses it has owned for mány years. When the church bought other simi *621 lar properties which were on the tax rolls, the assessor always took them off the tax rolls upon its request.

The residence at issue is occupied by a Mr. Engle, his wife and family. He is a teaching minister, who heads the music department. This man also is the head organist, directs the choir, and is in charge of the total music department within the church and the school. The church has three parsonage exemptions and this would constitute a fourth. These residences are used rent free by the occupants.

These teaching ministers have a parallel in the Roman Catholic Church teaching orders. The Dominicans and the Jesuits, the so-called teaching orders, commit themselves to a clerical role in the teaching area. The Roman Catholic Church has many orders of nuns, as example Dominican nuns, which are primarily teaching orders.

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319 N.W.2d 378, 114 Mich. App. 616, 1982 Mich. App. LEXIS 3035, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/st-johns-evangelical-lutheran-church-v-city-of-bay-city-michctapp-1982.