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Wildlife sanctuaries can't get religious exemptions from property taxes, court rules

The Supreme Judicial Court today better defined just what sort of property a religious organization can claim a tax deduction on - and wildlife sanctuaries and buildings entirely rented out to non-religious groups are not included - but cafeterias and gift shops can be.

The ruling comes in an appeal by the Shrine of Our Lady of La Salette, which objected to the Attleboro board of assessors demanding $92,292.98 in taxes be paid in 2012 on 110 acres of land on which the Mass. Audubon Society has an easement, a former convent now rented to a safe house for battered women, a shrine welcome center and a shrine storage building

The assessors ruled the shrine was only entitled to a partial abatement on the welcome center in part because it included a cafeteria and gift shop and because the shrine sometimes rented the hall out to local groups.

The state's highest court ruled that state law on what religious organizations can seek to exempt for taxation specifically bars land or facilities used for "purposes other than religious worship or instruction."

Wildlife sanctuaries and buildings entirely rented to third parties for non-religious programs do not qualify, the court ruled - adding the shrine might be able to make a case for exemptions under clauses related to non-profit uses more generally.

While renting out a building to a safe house for battered women may be a noble cause and stem from the shrine's religious beliefs, the state law on religious exemptions focuses on "religious worship and instruction," and letting a third party rent a church building for a safe house does not fall under that, the court ruled, adding:

Had the Shrine timely filed the documents required under [the clause related to non-religious non-profit efforts], it might have obtained an exemption for the safe house.

The court used similar logic to side with assessors on the wildlife sanctuary, which the shrine said was a place for "ecospirituality" and religiously contemplative walks:

We appreciate that a wildlife sanctuary may be for some a spiritual sanctuary, much as working in a safe house may be for some the realization of a spiritual mission. But the Legislature did not intend either a wildlife sanctuary or a safe house, when used and operated as they were here, to qualify as a house of religious worship.

In contrast, the court ruled against Attleboro assessors on their decision to at least partially tax a welcome center and a storage building.

The welcome center, at which visitors to the shrine are shown a video about the shrine before visiting the shrine itself to pray or confess - after which they return to the welcome center for lunch in a cafeteria that also doubles as a soup kitchen - does qualify as being in use for religious purposes, the court said.

A video presentation about Our Lady of La Salette plainly is religious instruction. Pilgrims and visitors who spend hours at the Shrine need to eat and drink, so the cafeteria and bistro are "connected with" religious worship, and "accompany and supplement" the religious work of the Shrine by sparing pilgrims and visitors the need to bring their own food and drink or leave the Shrine in order to find it. ...

Those who are inspired by the Shrine may obtain religious objects and books at the gift shop that might allow them to continue their religious worship and instruction when they leave. The fact that money earned from the cafeteria, bistro, and gift shop may help pay for the Shrine's expenses does not remove them from the realm of religious worship and instruction; even a church cannot live on prayer alone.

The court used similar logic in ordering an abatement on taxes on the storage building, because the shrine uses it to store the 400,000 or so lights for its Christmas light show, which clearly has a religious basis - as well as for storing items used in the shrine or sold in the gift shop.

Because the dominant purpose of the maintenance building is connected with the religious worship and instruction offered at the Shrine, we conclude that the board erred in declining to find it exempt from taxation [under the religious tax-exemption clause].

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Comments

So the court is suggesting that they spread out their religion across the property? Maybe a stations of the cross set up along a trail all around the sanctuary site?

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The ruling says both the wildlife sanctuary and the safe house are legitimate non-profit uses, but that the shrine should have filed for abatements based on the clause dealing with non-religious, non-profit uses, not the the clause dealing with religious uses.

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Which makes me wonder, why did this get escalated all the way up to the SJC when the shrine could have just filed some paperwork to make it go away?

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Presumably because they missed the deadline to file for the abatement in the year(s) in question, so pursuing the court case was the only way to try to avoid paying the money.

Going forward, one would expect, they'll be filing the abatements now that they know they have to. But abatements aren't retroactive as I understand it. Once you miss the deadline for filing one, that real estate tax year is closed out and you can't get an abatement even if you were entitled to one.

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This is absurd. It just demonstrates how much religious organizations can get away with in this country.

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Don't you mean "can't get away with"?

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How come the shrine didn't get an abatement on the whole property, then?

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The church will probably get rid of most of that bill once it files for the correct abatements.

It does bring to mind Harvard University's refusal to pay taxes on its Watertown Arsenal on the Charles properties. Even though it was almost entirely occupied by for-profit companies paying market rents, the school escaped paying real estate taxes. Why is the exemption so broad for schools, but relatively narrow for religious groups?

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Harvard has better lawyers than the LaSalette Shrine.

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