delivered the opinion of the court:
In this action brought by plaintiff, Girl Scouts of Du Page County Council, Inc., to set aside the decision of the Department of Revenue (the Department), the trial court affirmed the Department’s denial of an exemption for property taxes pursuant to the Revenue Act of 1939 (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1985, ch. 120, par. 500.7) for a parcel of plaintiff’s property. On appeal, plaintiff contends that the court erred in affirming the Department’s decision denying an exemption from real estate property taxes to the site manager’s residence and surrounding property on the grounds the property was not used exclusively for charitable purposes. We affirm.
Plaintiff, Girl Scouts of Du Page County Council, is an Illinois not-for-profit corporation chartered by the Girl Scouts of America. The Girl Scouts own approximately 120 acres in Du Page County known as Camp Greene Wood consisting of 11 contiguous parcels of property upon which they maintain their Council Service Center, three cabins, a picnic pavilion, tent sites, storage buildings, a pond, nature trails, the site manager’s facility, and other sites and buildings for the use of scouts and leaders.
The Girl Scouts have hired a site manager and require him to live on the premises to maintain its property and keep it secure. The site manager's facility is located on the main road into Camp Greene Wood, and all persons, troops, or groups are required to check in and out upon entering or leaving. This facility was constructed by the Girl Scouts in 1980 through donations and volunteer labor and is a two-story building; it has an upper floor containing three bedrooms, IV2 baths, a kitchen, dining room, and living room. The site manager uses the dining room area as his office, in which he keeps his desk and records, key box, and radio base station. The radio is left on at all times when users are in camp. The basement contains a garage, and one half of the basement is used to store such items as the Girl Scout truck, tractor, cross-country skis, and minor camping equipment.
The Girl Scouts pay for the telephone and for maintenance of the facility, and the site manager pays for electricity and heat. The Girl Scouts have made living in the facility a condition of the site manager’s employment, and he pays no rent. In 1986, the tax year for which the Department denied tax exemption to a portion of the site manager’s facility, the site manager lived there with his mother.
The job duties of the site manager include patrolling the camp sites, repairing equipment, dispensing equipment and keys, maintaining lawn care, removing snow, checking the camp’s perimeter fence, and checking in groups using the camp. Three of the camp buildings have a security system which directly transmits an alarm to an outside security company. The site manager is also responsible for engaging and disengaging these systems when necessary. He is on call 24 hours a day on the five days a week that he works and is the person all campers are instructed to contact in case of an emergency. On the site manager’s days off, a neighbor who lives across the street from the camp performs the job duties. The site manager does not direct camp programming or activities and is not involved in the camp leadership.
In 1987, the Department of Revenue issued a tax exemption certificate for Camp Greene Wood for 1986 and subsequent years, but denied an exemption from property taxes for the parcel of property which included the site manager’s facility because it was not used exclusively for charitable purposes. The Girl Scouts petitioned for administrative review, after which the Department modified its total denial of exemption and exempted from real estate taxes for 1986 all portions of Camp Greene Wood except the ground on which the site manager’s residence is located, one-half of the lower level of the residence, and all of the upper level of the residence, except the office area. In April 1988, the Girl Scouts sought relief under the Administrative Review Law (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1987, ch. 110, par. 3 — 101 et seq.) in the circuit court which resulted in a judgment affirming denial of the exemption, from which they appeal.
As the relevant facts are undisputed, whether the property is exempt is a question of law (Weslin Properties, Inc. v. Department of Revenue (1987),
All property is subject to taxation unless specifically exempted by statute. (Benedictine Sisters of the Sacred Heart v. Department of Revenue (1987),
“The General Assembly by law may exempt from taxation only the property of the State, units of local government and school districts and property used exclusively for agricultural and horticultural societies, and for school, religious, cemetery and charitable purposes.” (Ill. Const. 1970, art. IX, §6.)
The Illinois Revenue Act of 1939 exempts certain property from taxation, including:
“All property of institutions of public charity, all property of beneficent and charitable organizations, whether incorporated in this or any other state of the United States *** and all property of not-for-profit organizations providing services or facilities related to the goals of educational, social and physical development *** when such property is actually and exclusively used for such charitable or beneficent purposes ***.” Ill. Rev. Stat. 1987, ch. 120, par. 500.7.
This exemption is allowed only for property used exclusively for the stated purpose. (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1987, ch. 120, pars. 500.2, 500.7.) Statutes granting tax-exemptions are construed strictly in favor of taxation, and the party claiming the exemption has the burden of proving by clear and convincing evidence that the property in question falls within the terms of the exemption statute. (Cantigny Trust v. Department of Revenue (1988),
In determining whether the primary purpose of property makes it tax exempt, the courts have recognized two distinct situations: (1) where the property as a whole, or in unidentifiable portions, is used both for an exempt purpose and a nonexempt purpose, the property will be wholly exempt only if the exempt use is primary and the nonexempt use is incidental; and (2) where distinct portions of the property are used for exempt purposes and the remainder is used for nonexempt purposes, the remainder alone is taxable if it is a substantial portion of the property. (Illinois Institute of Technology v. Skinner (1971),
In rendering its decision denying tax exemption to a portion of the parcel which it deemed to be primarily residential, the Department relied on three cases, People ex rel. Kelly v. Avery Coonley School (1957),
In Avery Coonley School, our supreme court denied tax exemption to a parcel of property which was part of the school property and had been improved with a building containing two apartments, one of which was occupied by the school custodian, on the ground that no part of the exempt activities of the school was required to be performed on that parcel by the custodian. The court held that the primary use of that parcel was residential. (Avery Coonley School,
The Girl Scouts argue that the case at hand is distinguishable from the cases upon which the Department relied as the institutions in those cases could continue their programs and maintain their level of services to the users without the on-site presence of their caretakers, while the level of service and quality of the facilities and the security at Camp Greene Wood could not have been maintained by the Girl Scouts without their on-site property manager. However, the evidence shows that the site manager’s facility is primarily applied to his personal use and is not used to maintain the quality or availability of the camp’s services.
The Girl Scouts assert that in Illinois Conference of the United Church of Christ v. Department of Revenue (1988),
The Girl Scouts also contend that their case is similar to Evangelical Alliance Mission v. Department of Revenue (1987),
In a factually similar case, the court in Cantigny Trust v. Department of Revenue (1988),
“It appears that their extra-hours duties could be handled by hiring additional employees, by requiring the present employees to live in close proximity to the park, or by installing additional security equipment. Although this might entail some additional expense for plaintiff, the issue is whether the employees’ duties are reasonably necessary to the performance of its charitable functions, not what is convenient for the institution.” Cantigny,171 Ill. App. 3d at 1087 .
The Girl Scouts did not prove that the residential portion of the site manager’s facility was necessary to the performance of their charitable function. The site manager does not perform any of his duties in the residential portion of the facility, and the nature of his duties does not require him to live at the camp. We find no error in the trial court’s affirmance of the Department’s decision to deny an exemption to that portion of the site manager’s facility used as a residence and to the surrounding property which was not used exclusively for charitable purposes, and we find no error in the Department’s decision to exempt only that portion of the property which was found to be used in furtherance of the charitable purposes of the Girl Scouts. Accordingly, the judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
Affirmed.
UNVERZAGT, P.J., and REINHARD, J., concur.
