OPINION
This appeal involves a grant of exemption from taxation on property owned by St. Thomas Hospital in Nashville. The exemption was awarded by the Tennessee State Board of Equalization and upheld by the Chancellor over opposition of appellants, the Metropolitan Government of Nashville and Davidson County, the Metropolitan Tax Assessor and the Metropolitan Board of Equalization.
Saint Thomas Hospital is a non-profit corporation which has provided medical service to citizens of Nashville since 1905. Because of demands for a larger and more modern medical facility, St. Thomas procured the land in question to build a new hospital. It paid the property tax on the land for the years 1970 through 1973, and applied for the exemption to be effective January 1,1974.
Pursuant to Article 2, Section 28 of the Constitution of Tennessee, the state legislature enacted T.C.A. § 67-513 which insofar as is relevant here, provides:
“(a) There shall be exempt from property taxation, the real and personal property owned by any religious, charitable, scientific or educational institution which is occupied and used by such institution or its officers purely and exclusively for carrying out thereupon one or more of the purposes for which said institution was created or exists . . .”
The sole issue is whether property during construction is “occupied and used” within the meaning of the exemption statute.
In City of Nashville v. State Board of Equalization,
“. . . the plain intent of this Act is to exempt such an institution’s real estate only when it is both (1) ‘occupied ’ and (2) ‘used exclusively’ by the institution for one of its charter purposes . .210 Tenn. at 606 ,360 S.W.2d at 466 .
Our next opportunity to apply this test involved the converse of the factual situation of the present case. In Mid-State Baptist Hospital Inc. v. City of Nashville,
“The better rule is that it requires use to take real property off the tax rolls. When real property is not on the tax rolls by reason of being exempt it should take use to put it back on, not intention.”211 Tenn. at 607 ,366 S.W.2d at 773 .
Since Mid-State Baptist Hospital, we have continued to look for actual physical use in determining exemptions. See La Manna v. Electrical Workers,
Appellees urge that tax exemptions in favor of charitable institutions are liberally construed rather than strictly construed in this State. We are aware of that line of cases. Peabody College v. State Board of Equalization,
The decree of the Chancery Court is reversed. Costs are assessed against St. Thomas Hospital.
Notes
. Chapter 644, Public Acts 1974, changed the lien date from January 10 to January 1.
