Appellant, a religious corporation, paid under protest real estate taxes assessed by the District of ’Columbia for the fiscal year beginning July 1, 1948, and has sued to recover the amount paid. It claims that the property was exempt from taxation under Code 1951, 47-801a, which provides: “The real property exempt from taxation in the District of Columbia shall be the following and none other: * * *. (m) Churches, including buildings and structures reasonably necessary and usual in the performance of the activities of the church. A church building is one primarily and regularly used by its congregation for public religious worship.” The trial court found that the taxes were validly assessed and denied recovery.
The property in question, a church and Sunday school building, which will hereafter be referred to as the Twelfth Street property, was formerly owned by an Episcopal ’Church. In May 1948 appellant, which then owned and occupied a church building hereafter called the North Capitol Street property, agreed to buy the Twelfth Street property from the Episcopal Church. Deed conveying title was executed May 26, 1948, but was not delivered until July 30 and was recorded August 9. 1 Delay in delivery of the deed was due to some difficulty encountered in the sale of appellant’s North Capitol Street property. Despite the delay in completion of the sale, appellant received permission in May to enter the Twelfth Street property for the purpose of removing trash and rubbish and making a general clean-up of the buildings preparatory to renovation of the property by a contractor. The cleaning work was done by appellant’s pastor and members of the congregation, who in groups numbering from two to twenty-one gathered at the building at irregular intervals. On these occasions those present would have a prayer, sing a song or two, and then proceed with the work. This preliminary work was completed in July. The contractor then began his work which was not completed until January 1949. During the period from May 1948 to January 1949 appellant’s congregation, which numbered from 200 to 300 active and inactive members, held its regular services in the North Capitol Street property. The first regular service in the Twelfth Street property was held on January 16, 1949.
Aside from the question of primary and regular use, appellant’s claim to exemption on July 1, 1948, must fail for another reason. Under the statute “concurrence of ownership and use is essential to the exemption of a church building.” Trustees of St. Paul Methodist Episcopal Church South v. District of Columbia, D.C.Cir.,
Affirmed.
Notes
. Appellant’s brief states that the deed was received May 26, but this statement has no basis in the record.
. It may be noted that the North Capitol Street property was exempted from taxation and that the Twelfth Street property since the taxable year in question has been in a tax exempt status.
