127 Mass. 378 | Mass. | 1879
It was decided by this court, in Lowell Meetinghouse v. Lowell, 1 Met. 538, that the exemption of houses of
The proper inference to be drawn from the statutes and decisions upon the subject is, that the exemption from taxation depends entirely upon the use for which the building in question is intended, and is limited by such use. There must either be an actual occupation of it as a place of religious worship, or at the least a distinct and fixed intent to use it as such; otherwise, it is not a house of religious worship. An unfinished church edifice, in the process of construction, is exempt, and so also is a house of worship the use of which has been temporarily interrupted. The reason of the exemption in such cases is that, although the property is not actually in present use for purposes of religious worship, yet it is held in good faith for such uses and none other. It is plain that, on the first day of May 1875, the plaintiff’s ownership and use of the building did not fulfil any condition which would entitle it to be exempt from taxation.
The plaintiff ceased to use the building as a place of public worship in December 1872, having previously purchased a lot of land in another part of the city, upon which to build a church edifice, chapel and parsonage for its own use, (all of which had been begun,) and having made arrangements elsewhere for temporary places of worship in the mean time. At the special session of the Legislature called on the occasion of the great fire in Boston, in November 1872, the plaintiff obtained authority