The issue in this zoning case is whether a five-day-a-week school run by a fundamentalist church is a facility “usually connected with a church.” We hold that it is.
In June of 1971 the Reverend Roy Forrest founded the New Testament Baptist Church in Concord, eventually locating it at 4 Union Street. In 1976 a building at 8 Union Street, separated from the church by one nonowned property, was purchased. The members of the church consider themselves “born-again Christians” and constitute one of about 3,000 congregations of Independent Baptist churches across the nation. The tenets of faith and beliefs of the members of the New Testament Baptist Church require as a convictional matter that their children receive a Bible-oriented education every day of the week, not just on Sunday morning. Accordingly in 1976 the Heritage Christian School, as part of the ministry of the church, adopted the Accelerated Christian Education curriculum and provided education in lieu of public school for grades kindergarten through twelve.
Upon the suggestion of city officials, Reverend Forrest on August 3, 1976, filed an application for a special exception with the Zoning Board of Adjustment for the city of Concord, to operate a “private school.” The application indicated that the purpose of the request was that “the church is extending its teaching ministry ... from only on Sunday to . . . during the entire week.” The board heard and denied the application on August 11. A rehearing was denied, but the school opened on September 5 without city approval. State authorization as a private school had been obtained, *58 and State agencies had certified compliance with fire and health laws.
The congregation believed that as a matter of conviction, not just convenience, the school must open despite lack of approval from all civil authorities.
See Wisconsin v. Yoder,
Prior to the hearing before the master, the church amended its pleadings to allege that no special exception under the Concord zoning ordinance for a private school was in fact needed because the school was a permitted use under the ordinance allowing “facilities usually connected with a church.” Despite numerous other arguments by the parties, if the ordinance allows such a facility, then the school may operate without city approval. Whether the school thus qualifies is a question of law upon which this court is “not bound by the conclusions of the zoning board” or master. ESA 31:78.
See Becker v. Town of Hampton Falls,
The term “connected” in the Concord ordinance should not be read to require physical propinquity but rather to prescribe close association with the primary permitted use. Webster’s New International Dictionary (3d ed. 1961). That is the test in the analogous area of accessory uses.
Becker v. Town of Hampton Falls,
A test for balancing the respective interests of the parties in determining a reasonable construction of the phrase at issue was developed in the area of tax exemptions for various structures of educational or religious entities. This court has said that “there is a strong presumption in favor of the judgment of an educational institution’s officers as to what uses of land or buildings are necessary to promote the institution’s purposes.”
St. Paul’s School v. Concord,
Applying this analysis to the case at hand, we first note that the parents and members of the congregation believe as a matter of religious conviction that their children should not be taught secular humanism in the public schools but receive a Christian education. As in
Yoder,
“they object to [public] education generally, because the values [it] teaches are in marked variance with [their] values and . . . way of life.”
Wisconsin v. Yoder,
Historically, “[i]n New England some of the schools were private, some public, and some partly public and partly private.” O. Chitwood, A History of Colonial America 457 (3d ed. 1961). The school house was “generally near the church and was regarded as a sort of annex to it. Religion had a large place in the Puritan school.” Id. Even public schools in the colonies were “closely associated with the established church.” Id. at 458. Public compulsory educa *60 tion as it is known today was a rarity in the early years of this republic. Rothbard, Historical Origins, in W. Rickenbacker, The Twelve-Year Sentence, Radical Views of Compulsory Schooling 12-16 (1974). For instance, the Quakers in Pennsylvania believed the schools to be an important extension of the church, and by the end of the eighteenth century sixty or seventy schools had been so established. O. Chitwood, supra at 460. Probably the oldest corporation in Pennsylvania is the present private William Penn Charter School, chartered by Penn as a Quaker school in 1689. J. Gummere, Old Penn Charter 1 (1973).
Thus a school may be considered as an integral and inseparable part of a church. 2 R. Anderson, American Law of Zoning 2d § 12.25, at 459-60 (1976);
see Westbury Hebrew Congregation, Inc. v. Downer,
Exception sustained; injunction dissolved.
