delivered the opinion of the court;
Thе plaintiff, Lutheran Church of the Good Shepherd of Bourbonnais (the Church), filed a complaint in the circuit court of Kankakee County for administrative review of a decision by the Department of Revenue of the State of Illinois (the Department). The Department deniеd a real estate tax exemption for two tracts of land owned by the Church. The circuit court initially reversed the Department’s decision and granted the tax exemption. However, following a motion for reconsideration, the circuit court affirmed the Depаrtment. Plaintiff now appeals, and we reverse.
Facts
On July 24, 1997, the Church filed an application for a property tax exemption for the year 1997 for two parcels of land totaling 3.347 acres (the subject property). The subject property is adjacent to other Churсh land containing a worship facility, a parking lot and a 20-foot strip of grass. When the subject property was acquired by the Church in 1996, crops were growing on the land. According to Paul Schultz, the chairman of the board of church properties, the Church did not plant crops on the land in 1997 because it intended to use the property as a extension of the existing yard area. The yard was to be used as a playground or picnic area or for other recreational activities. After the crops were harvested in late 1996, nothing was done to the subject property until August of 1997 when weeds that had overgrown the property were mowed. In November the property was tilled in preparation for planting grass seed, but no seeding took place due to unfavorable weather conditions.
Although the Kankakee County Board of Review recommended approval of the Church’s tax-exemption application, the Department denied the application on the basis that the property was “not in exempt use.” The Church requested a formal heаring, which was held on April 17, 1998. Paul Schultz was the only witness, and he testified as indicated above. The administrative law judge subsequently recommended denial of the exemption and the Director of the Department accepted that recommendation on January 27, 1999. The Church filed its complaint for administrative review in the circuit court on March 4, 1999. As previously indicated, after initially reversing the Department’s decision, the court reconsidered its ruling and affirmed the Department’s denial of the tax exemption.
Analysis
The threshold issue in this case concerns the proper standard of review to be applied by this court to the Department’s decision. See Richard’s Tire Co. v. Zehnder,
Since Belvidere, decisions from various districts and divisions of this court, when reviewing cases involving tax exemptions, have applied either a de novo standard (see, e.g., First Presbyterian Church v. Zehnder,
“The selection of a proper standard of rеview is of far more than mere academic interest. This decision largely determines which court will have the final word on a particular issue. If we believe that an issue is fact-specific, we will usually trust the trial court as fact-finder to render the proper decision; thus, wе will select a deferential, ‘clearly erroneous’ standard.
If, however, we believe that an issue needs to be decided uniformly throughout a jurisdiction’s courts, we should opt for de novo review. As Judge Richard Posner has noted, a court should select de novo review if it dеsires to establish ‘rules that will assure that cases with the same facts are decided the same way by different judges.’ The choice between these two approaches is a crucial policy decision ***.” T. O’Neill & S. Brody, Taking Standards of Appellate Review Seriously: A Proposal to Amend Rule 341, 83 Ill. B.J. 512, 516-17 (1995), quoting Johnson v. Trigg,28 F.3d 639 , 645 (7th Cir. 1994).
In this case we believe that the clearly erroneous standard of review is appropriate, for three reasons. First, to qualify for a tax exemption the Church must show that the subject property is “used exclusively for religious purposes.” 35 ILCS 200/15 — 40 (West 1996). Property satisfies the exclusive-use requirement if it is primarily used for the exempted purpose. McKenzie v. Johnson,
Second, Belvidere held that the clearly erroneous standard should be applied to mixed questions of fact of law, which it referred to as “involv[ing] an examinatiоn of the legal effect of a given set of facts.” Belvidere,
Third, the clearly erroneous standard grants a degree of deference to the Department that is not present in de nоvo review. This deference acknowledges the Department’s expertise and credits its experience in such matters. See Abrahamson v. Illinois Department of Professional Regulation,
For these reasons, we will not disturb the Department’s ruling unless it is clearly erroneous, a standard of review that lies between a manifest weight of the evidence standard and de novo review. Belvidere,
We now consider whether the Department properly denied the Church’s application for a tax еxemption. Statutes exempting property from taxation are to be strictly construed in favor of taxation (Chicago Patrolmen’s Ass’n,
“§ 15 — 40. Religious purposes, orphanages, or school and religious purposes. All property used exclusively for religious purposes, or used exclusively for school and religious purposes, or for orphanages and not leased or otherwise used with a view to profit, is exempt ***.” 35 ILCS 200/15 — 40 (West 1996).
The issue in this case is not whether the Church’s plan to use the subject property as an extension of the existing yard area would qualify as a “religious purpose.” We take for granted that it would. See People ex rel. Pearsall v. Catholic Bishop,
“We have often held that property must be in actual use for the exempting purpose, to qualify for exemption. ‘[E]vidence that land was acquired for an exempt purpose does not eliminate the need for proof of аctual use for that purpose. Intention to use is not the equivalent of use.’ ” Illinois Institute of Technology v. Skinner,49 Ill. 2d 59 , 64,273 N.E.2d 371 , 374 (1971) (hereinafter IIT), quoting Skil Corp. v. Korzen,32 Ill. 2d 249 , 252,204 N.E.2d 738 , 740 (1965).
Furthermore, the mere fact that the subject property adjoins land that is tax exempt is of no significance. See IIT,
In Pearsall the property at issue was a 400-acre tract of land used as the grоunds of a seminary. Although there were some buildings, including a dormitory and a chapel, most of the property was devoted to recreational use, including a 40-acre nursery for growing trees and shrubs to use in beautifying the grounds, a baseball diamond and tennis courts, a 140-acre lakе, 80 acres intended as a golf course and wooded lands containing paths and trails. The supreme court found that all but the 80 acres intended as a golf course was tax exempt. “The entire acreage, from plans previously made, was undergoing a process of change from the raw or natural state and being converted into school grounds or campus, with drives, walks, flower beds and other improvements.” Pearsall,
Similarly in this case, the subject property was “undergoing a process of change from the raw or natural state” and was being converted to use as additional church yard or recreation area. Mowing and tilling in 1997 were part of this process, as was the decision not to plant crops. This activity was more than mere planning and constituted actual physical use of the property.
In addition, “[ejxemptions have been allowed *** where property is in the actual process of development and adaptation for exempt use.” Weslin,
The Department argues that Weslin and County Collector represent a narrow exception to the “actual use” rеquirement that applies only where extensive planning, preparation or construction is required to put property into actual use for tax exempt purposes. No such planning or construction was required to convert the subject property to recreational use.
We agree that, unlike Weslin and County Collector, no extensive planning or construction was necessary in this case. However, “[e]ach individual claim for exemption must be determined from the facts presented.” Chicago Patrolmen’s Ass’n,
Accordingly, based on Pearsall, ‘Weslin and County Collector, we find that the Church presented sufficient evidence that the subject property was in the process of development and adaptation for exempt use to qualify as tax exempt. The Department’s decision denying the Church’s application was clearly erroneous. We therefore reverse the judgment of the circuit court affirming that decision and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Reversed and remanded.
HOLDRIDGE and HOMER, JJ., concur.
