The City of La Crosse appeals from a summary judgment requiring it to refund 1984 and 1985 real estate taxes paid by a religious order, The Dominican Nuns, on certain property located in the city. The dispositive issue is whether the property, although vacated by the order, remained "[p]roperty owned and used exclusively by ... [a] religious ... association[]” and was thus exempt from property taxation under sec. 70.11(4), Stats.
The case was decided by the trial court on an agreed statement of facts, and because the issue is solely one of law, we owe no deference to the court’s decision.
Evangelical Lutheran Synod v. Prairie du Chien,
The order maintained a convеnt on the property from 1953 until December, 1983, when it moved its headquarters and all its members to new facilities in anоther part of the country. The La Crosse property, which consisted of a chapel/residence hall, a second residence unit, and a garage, was first listed for sale in mid-1983, and the order moved out sometime thereaf *579 ter. The order continued to maintain heat and electric service at the propеrty and arranged for its continued maintenance until it was sold on December 31, 1985.
After the order departed, the city inspected the property and, finding it vacant and listed for sale, determined that it was nonexempt as of January 1, 1984, and proceeded to assess taxes for the years 1984 and 1985. The order filed approрriate objections and paid the taxes under protest. It then commenced legal action to recover the amount paid, and the trial court ordered the refund.
As indicated, sec. 70.11(4), Stats., provides a tax exemption for property owned and used exclusively by religious associations. The order qualifies as such an association, and it was the record owner of the property in 1984 and 1985. The question is whether the оrder may be said to have "exclusively used” the property during those years within the meaning of the statute.
Tax еxemptions are matters of legislative grace and there must be clear evidence that such grace was intended before we will so find in a given case.
Wisconsin Electric P. Co. v. Dept. of Revenue,
The order argues that the property must be considered as remaining in its "exсlusive use” in 1984 and 1985 because: (1) it stored some maintenance tools and lawn implements there; (2) it retained a grounds
*580
keeper to maintain the property; (3) it had the property listed for sale; and (4) it maintained a mоrtgage on the property and used some of the proceeds to acquire its new quarters on the еast coast. In support of its argument, the order cites
Family Hospital Nursing Home, Inc. v. Milwaukee,
In
First Nat. Leasing Corp. v. Madison,
*581
We do not consider that the claimed "uses” of the order’s La Crosse property — heating it, keeping it in repair, listing it for sale, and maintaining a mortgage — meet this definition. The property was not being "used” for any of the order’s regular aсtivities or benevolent purposes. Indeed, the order had no presence on the property оther than through a locally-retained maintenance person. The former convent was vacant, аnd we have recognized that premises which are "wholly vacant and unoccupied” do not qualify for еxemption under sec. 70.11(4), Stats.
Evangelical Lutheran Synod,
We hold, therefore, that where a religious society has vacated its convent and chapel, listing it for sale, and has permanently relocated elsewhere, the property is no longer "used exclusively” by the society within the meaning of sec. 70.11(4), Stats; and the fact that members of the society have mortgaged the property to assist in their relocation, and have made arrangements for its upkeep pending its sale, does not alter that conclusion. The order has not met its burden of establishing that it was entitled to the exemption after December 31, 1983, and the city properly assessed and taxed the property in 1984 and 1985.
By the Court. — Judgment reversed.
