GiaQuinta, Special Judge
This case concerns whether the Indiana Board of Tax Review (the "Indiana Board") Conclusions determining that Whitelick Indiana Aerie 3207 Fraternal Order of Eagles, Inc. ("Aerie 3207") was not entitled to a property tax exemption under either Indiana Code § 6-1.1-10-23 or Indiana Code § 6-1.1-10-16 were not in accordance with law. The court affirms.
Aerie 3207 was incorporated in Indiana as a domestic, not-for-profit corporation, with no capital stock, for the following purposes as set forth in its Articles of Incorporation:
Aerie 3207 is a local chapter instituted by the authority of the Grand Aerie of the Fraternal Order of Eagles. The Grand
During the 2013 and 2014 tax years, Aerie 3207 owned two parcels located at 5556 East U.S. Highway 40, Plainfield. The larger parcel is a 4.4-acre tract with a 7,560-square-foot lodge, a surface parking lot, a shelter house, horseshoe pits, and a playground. Members gather at the property to socialize. The lodge is comprised of three main sections: (1) a social room with a restaurant and bar used exclusively by members, (2) a banquet hall, and (3) offices, meeting rooms and restrooms. Each of these sections accounts for approximately 33% of the total building. And, the lodge contains personal property used for the organization's activities such as kitchen equipment, table, chairs, dish and glassware and office supplies.
The banquet hall functions as a party room, bingo room and ballroom. For example, Aerie 3207 holds weekly bingo nights open to the public. Non-members can rent the banquet hall for weddings, receptions and other events. Those rentals occur approximately 8-10 times per year. Aerie 3207 also donates use of the banquet hall, meeting rooms, and outside facilities to the Chamber of Commerce, various charities, local organizations, youth groups, and businesses.
At various times during the years under appeal, the lodge and surrounding grounds were used for weekly bingo nights; 52 Club drawings; Annual Charity Ball/Sweetheart Dance; banquet hall rentals; Eagles Riders Club raffles and charity rides; fundraising for the State Aerie and State Auxiliary projects; collecting goods for the Grand Aerie's Operation Eagle program; member's funeral dinners; dart tournaments; real estate agency clothing drives and pork chop sales; Chamber of Commerce meetings; Veteran's Day banquets and dinners; dinners for local police and firemen; children's Christmas programs; Easter egg hunts; Halloween parties and dances; picnics; Act of Faith's Charity Cat Show; and a fundraising event for Premier Academy of the Performing Arts Competition Team.
The other parcel is a 2.75-acre tract with a storage shed/garage. Aerie 3207 uses the shed to store its business records and personal property such as lawn-maintenance equipment.
Aerie 3207 generates most of its income through its restaurant, gaming, membership dues, and fundraisers and uses that income to pay operating expenses. Aerie 3207 gives funds not used for operations to charity. Aerie 3207 also collects donations for specific charitable causes, some of which are passed through to benefit the charitable endeavors of the society.
Members of the local pay annual membership dues of up to $30 per year. Aerie 3207's bylaws provide for a funeral benefit ranging from $150 (if a member dies in his first year of membership) to $300 (if he dies in the tenth year of membership or after). To qualify for the funeral benefit, the member must have been initiated into Aerie 3207 before his 55
Aerie 3207 filed Applications for Property Tax Exemption with the Hendricks
Aerie 3207 then timely appealed to the Indiana Board. On November 17, 2015, the Indiana Board held a hearing during which Aerie 3207 presented evidence including, but not limited to, its relationship to the society and the Grand Aerie, mission, and ownership, occupancy and use of the parcels. On June 20, 2016, the Indiana Board issued a final determination in which it held that Aerie 3207 was not entitled to either the fraternal benefit association exemption or the charitable purposes exemption.
On August 4, 2016, Aerie 3207 filed this original tax appeal. The court heard oral argument on June 7, 2017.
This court gives great deference to final determinations of the Indiana Board when it acts within the scope of its authority. The court will reverse a final determination of the Indiana Board only if it is:
Ind. Code §§ 33-26-6-6(e)(1)-(5) (2014). See, Fraternal Order of Eagles # 3988, Inc. v. Morgan Cnty. Property Tax Assessment Bd. of Appeals, 5 N.E.3d 1195, 1198 (Tax Ct. 2014). Aerie 3207 contends that the Board's conclusions that Aerie 3207 neither established itself as a fraternal benefit association under Indiana Code § 27-11-1-1 nor that it met the charitable exemption requirements under Indiana Code § 6-1.1-10-16(a) were not in accordance with law.
Aerie 3207's first claim addresses the Board's conclusion that it was required to provide an insurance "Benefit Contract," including the issuance of certificates of insurance, to qualify as a fraternal benefit association for tax exempt status under Indiana Code § 6-1.1-10-23.
Aerie 3207 next claims that the Indiana Board erred when it determined that it failed to establish that its buildings and personal property were predominantly used for charitable purposes and exempt under Indiana Code § 6-1.1-10-16(a).
"[E]xemption statutes are to be strictly construed against the taxpayer, and thus, the burden is on the taxpayer to prove that it is entitled to the exemption that it seeks." Fraternal Order of Eagles No. 3988, Inc., 5 N.E.3d at 1200 (citing Tipton Cnty. Health Care Found. v. Tipton Cnty. Assessor, 961 N.E.2d 1048, 1051 (Ind. Tax Ct. 2012)); see also Long v. Wayne Twp. Assessor, 821 N.E.2d 466, 471 (Ind. Tax Ct. 2005) (explaining that a taxpayer must walk the Indiana Board through each element of its analysis and may not simply assume that the evidence speaks for itself to make a prima facie case). Therefore, Aerie 3207 was required to meet the statutory definition of a fraternal
During tax years 2013 and 2014, Indiana Code § 6-1.1-10-23 provided, "tangible property is exempt from property taxation if it is owned by a fraternal benefit associations which is incorporated, organized, or licensed under the laws of this state." Ind. Code § 6-1.1-10-23(a) (1975). That section continues, "This exemption does not apply to real property unless it is actually occupied and exclusively used by the association in carrying out the purpose for which it was incorporated, organized, or licensed." See, I.C. § 6-1.1-10-23(b). But neither subsection defines "fraternal benefit association."
Prior to the establishment of this court, in Fort Wayne Sport Club, Inc., the Court of Appeals held that, "the exemption is very clearly limited to such association as that term is defined in the 1935 act at § 181, [now, Indiana Code § 27-11-1-1]," 258 N.E.2d at 880, 147 Ind. App. at 137-138; see also, Fraternal Order of Eagles #3988, Inc., 5 N.E.3d at 1200. Therefore, under Fort Wayne Sport Club, Aerie 3207 must show that it meets the definition of a fraternal benefit association by establishing that it is an "incorporated society, order, or supreme lodge without capital stock, whether incorporated or not, conducted solely for the benefit of its members and their beneficiaries and not-for-profit, operated on a lodge system with ritualistic form of work, having a representative form of government, and that provides benefits in accordance with this article." Ind. Code § 27-11-1-1 (1985). If the organization meets that statutory definition, then it must prove that it is entitled to an exemption.
The Indiana Board determined that Aerie 3207 was not entitled to the fraternal beneficiary exemption because it did not meet the definition set forth in Indiana Code § 27-11-1-1. The Indiana Board reasoned that the evidence presented by this subordinate lodge was unpersuasive because it failed to demonstrate that Aerie
There is no dispute between the parties that the method for determining whether Aerie 3207 is a fraternal benefit association was established by the Indiana Court of Appeals in Fort Wayne Sport Club.
The linking of Indiana Code § 6-1.1-10-23 and the insurance provisions at Indiana Code § 27-11 et seq. by the court in Fort Wayne Sport Club seemed reasonable under the plain facts of that case, but that linkage is less clear here where the taxpayer is a subordinate lodge of a society. Most of art. 11 regulates the historical role of fraternal beneficiary societies as insurance companies. See, Ind. Code § 27-11-6-1 and Ind. Code § 27-11-5-5 (1985); see also Elkhart Mut. Aid, Benevolent Relief Ass'n v. Houghton, 103 Ind. 286, 2 N.E. 763 (1885). Art. 11 provisions have little application to the role played by the society's local chapters, which are utilized for social activities and charity events, not providing member insurance. One need not proceed past the very first section of Indiana Code § 27-11 to sense the square peg/round hole challenge these facts present. That section states that art. 11 applies to a "society, order, or supreme lodge without capital stock..." See, I.C. § 27-11-1-1. Aerie Local 3207 is none of those. Aerie 3207 is, as the Indiana Board found, is a "local chapter" or subordinate lodge in a hierarchy that includes, "districts and zones within a state aerie which, in turn, are grouped into regional conferences." All of the subordinates together comprise an Order of 850,000 members.
The sections of Indiana Code § 27-11 are meant to apply to the hierarchy common to many fraternal benefit societies. At Indiana Code § 27-11-1-1, the terms, "society, order, or supreme lodge" are used synonymously and constitute the "fraternal benefit society to which article 11 applies." Ind. Code § 27-11-1-11. The term, "Lodge" is defined as a "subordinate member unit of the society," not the society itself.
That the society in not synonymous with a local lodge like Aerie 3207 is clear from the numerous sections of art. 11 where both terms are used in a hierarchical context. See, Ind. Code §§ 27-11-2-1; 3-2 (a), 3-4, and 9-4 (1985). Local lodge Aerie 3207 is not a society; it is subordinate to the society. I.C. § 27-11-2-1. Since Indiana Code § 27-11-1-1 defines fraternal benefit associations as societies, not subordinate lodges, Aerie 3207 is no more a fraternal benefit association under Indiana Code § 6-1.1-10-23 than the soccer club in Fort Wayne Sport Club; its meager funeral benefit notwithstanding.
Yet since there is no previous Indiana authority for the proposition that only societies, not local lodges, are fraternal benefit associates under the express language of Indiana Code § 27-11, the court will address the parties' contentions concerning whether Aerie 3207, as a local lodge, meets the definition of a fraternal benefit association under Indiana Code § 27-11.
Aerie 3207 proposes a limited inquiry into Indiana Code § 27-11, et seq. to determine its eligibility for an exemption under Indiana Code § 6-1.1-10-23. Aerie 3207 contends that the court's inquiry should end in its favor once it is determined that Aerie 3207 operates for the benefit of its members by providing a benefit specified at Indiana Code § 27-11-6-1. Section 6-1(a)(1) "Death benefits" is one of the benefits which "may" be provided by a "society." Aerie 3207 cites its bylaws which call for it to pay either $150 or $300 to deceased members' beneficiaries depending upon the number of years the member paid the $30 in annual dues.
Again, putting aside the applicability of Indiana Code § 27-11-6-1 to subordinate lodges like Aerie 3207, the facts presented to the Indiana Board demonstrate that Aerie 3207's reliance on section 6-1 is unavailing. A contract is essential in order for a payment to a member's beneficiaries to qualify as a "benefit" under section 6-1; but not just any contract. The nature and content of the contract, referred to as a "Benefit Contract," is set forth at Indiana Code § 27-11-1-3 (1985) which, in turn, invokes Indiana Code § 27-11-6-4 for the Benefit Contract details. The Indiana Board followed the correct statutory path to conclude that if there is no Benefit Contract as defined in section 1-3 and section 6-4, there is no benefit under section 6-1. Without a contractual benefit under section 6-1, Aerie 3207 does not meet the definition of "operating for the benefit of members" under Indiana Code § 27-11-2-3 which is a threshold requirement under Indiana Code § 27-11-1-1.
Aerie 3207 admits that it does not issue Benefit Contracts in accordance with art. 11 which disqualifies its payments as death benefits under section 6-1. But Aerie 3207 answers this criticism by arguing that Indiana Code § 27-11-6-4 applies only to societies licensed to sell insurance in Indiana and that Indiana Code § 27-11-9-4 exempts it from having to follow the technical requirements of art. 11 — like the requirement of a Benefit Contract.
Aerie 3207's contention that Indiana Code § 27-11-9-4 saves it from the art. 11 administrative requirements extends to those provisions which define whether an entity is a fraternal benefit association. This warrants a closer look at section 9-4.
Indiana Code § 27-11-9-4 states:
This safe-harbor provision, if it applies to Aerie 3207, would seem to allow it to avoid any section of Indiana Code § 27-11 which it cannot meet. However, the argument is fatally circular. If none of art. 11 applies or affects Aerie 3207 under section 9-4, it is hard to see how Aerie 3207 can use any of Indiana Code § 27-11 to support its argument that it qualifies as a fraternal benefit association. When taken to its logical conclusion, section 9-4 would end the art. 11 review before it begins and,
The safe harbor language of Indiana Code § 27-11-9-4 does not apply to Aerie 3207 under the facts presented to the Indiana Board. The clear language of the section recognizes the hierarchy of fraternal benefit societies. Its language clearly anticipates transactions involving the issuance of insurance benefits between at least two levels among the hierarchy that comprise the society. Those societies or their subordinate lodges who provide benefits, "exclusively through local or subordinate lodges," need not follow the strict requirements of Indiana Code § 27-11 et seq., most of which are intended to protect the beneficiaries of insurance issued by the society.
In this case, the record shows that Aerie 3207 provided its meager death allowance from the dues it collects from its own members. The meager amounts paid require no actuarial support and may indeed be paid from either a dues account or even petty cash. There is no superior lodge providing an insurance benefit through the local nor is Aerie 3207 providing benefits through a subordinate lodge, since it occupies the lowest rung on the society's ladder. The "death benefit" here begins and ends with Aerie 3207 and, therefore, does not fall under the section 9-4 safe harbor.
Aerie 3207 contends that the order or "Grand Aerie" "authorizing" local lodges to provide death benefits fills this statutory gap. But that is not what the statute says. (Brief of Appellant, p. 18). The statute limits its application to those transactions where the society "provides" the benefits through the local not where it authorizes the local to provide a benefit. Without section 9-4 relief from compliance with art. 11, Aerie 3207's argument fails because as the Indiana Board noted, it does not issue its benefits by way of Benefit Contracts as required by art. 11.
Finally, Aerie's reliance on its by-laws as the Benefit Contract is unpersuasive. Indiana Code § 27-11-6-4 sets forth the requirements for a Benefit Contract which are in addition to the bylaws of the society. Without section 9-4 protection, Aerie 3207 cannot claim that it meets the requirement of a fraternal benefit association, notwithstanding that it is not a society in the first place.
But even if section 9-4 were to be interpreted in Aerie 3207's favor, it cannot claim fraternal benefit association status for a more fundamental reason — that section would preclude Aerie 3207 from meeting the threshold requirements of Indiana Code § 27-11-1-1. While the court agrees with the Indiana Board that the Aerie 3207 death allowance is deficient under section 6-1 for lack of a Benefit Contract as described in section 6-4, one need not even reach that level of analysis (See, Ind. Code § 27-11-1-3).
If Aerie 3207 can rely on section 9-4, and nothing in art. 11 applies to it, then it is exempt from the threshold requirement of Indiana Code § 27-11-1-1 that it "provide benefits in accordance with ... article (11)." Section 9-4 would preclude Aerie 3207 from qualifying as a fraternal benefit association under the very definition to which it agreed to be bound.
In summary, Aerie 3207 cannot have it both ways; either it meets the requirements of Indiana Code § 27-11-1-1 by providing benefits in accordance with art. 11 as a fraternal benefit association or avoids
However, as discussed below in Section III, the question of whether Aerie 3207 meets the definition of a fraternal benefit association matters little since it failed to establish that its use and occupation of the subject real estate meet the test for exemption at Indiana Code § 6-1.1-10-36.3 applicable to all sections of Indiana Code § 6-1.1-10 including sections 16 and 23.
Even if Aerie 3207, as a subordinate lodge to a society under Indiana Code § 27-11-1-1, could meet the definition of fraternal benefit association under art. 11, it would still not qualify for tax exempt status due to the same deficiencies established by the Indiana Board in denying its claim for exemption under Indiana Code § 6-1.1-10-16(a) described in IV, below.
Under Indiana Code § 6-1.1-10-23, the purposes for which the real estate owned by Aerie Local 3207 must be "actually occupied and exclusively used" are set forth in its organizational documents. The extent to which it may claim exemption is then determined by reference to Indiana Code § 6-1.1-10-36.3(c)(3), which states:
The test for exempt status under Indiana Code § 6-1.1-10-23 and Indiana Code § 6-1.1-10-16(a) are the same because both are sections in chapter 10 to which the language in Indiana Code § 6-1.1-10-36.3 applies. Aerie 3207 contends, "The record is replete with evidence of social, charitable, fraternal, and patriotic purposes for benefit of its members and others." (Brief of Appellant, p. 16, f. 14). Aerie 3207's evidence of the activities which support its use of the property in compliance with its organizational statement incorporates the charitable uses it claims support its request for a charitable exemption under section 16(a).
Regardless, both suffer the same statutory infirmity explained by this court in compelling fashion in Fraternal Order of Eagles, #3988, 5 N.E.3d at 1197-98. The Indiana Board noted the court's skepticism over the charitable nature of the activities listed by #3988 which create the same
Indiana Code § 6-1.1-10-16 provides, "[a]ll or part of a building is exempt from property taxation if it is owned, occupied, and used by a person for ... charitable purposes." Ind. Code § 6-1.1-10-16(a). "The exemption generally extends to the land on which an exempt building is situated and the personal property that is contained within." Fraternal Order of Eagles # 3988, Inc., 5 N.E.3d at 1201; See also I.C. § 6-1.1-10-16(c), (e). A charitable purpose will generally be found to exist if: (1) there is evidence of relief of human want manifested by obviously charitable acts different from the everyday purposes and activities of man in general; and (2) there is an expectation that a benefit will inure to the general public sufficient to justify the loss of tax revenue. College Corner, L.P. v. Department of Local Government Finance, 840 N.E.2d 905, 908 (Ind. Tax Ct. 2006).
To qualify for a charitable purposes exemption under Indiana Code § 6-1.1-10-16, a taxpayer must prove that it owns, occupies and either exclusively or predominately uses its property for charitable purposes. Fraternal Order of Eagles # 3988, Inc., 5 N.E.3d at 1201. See, Ind. Code § 6-1.1-10-36.3. Here, Aerie 3207 argues it is entitled to a charitable purpose exemption for all but a third of its lodge. The Indiana Board disagreed, holding that Aerie 3207 failed to establish a prima facie case that it was entitled to an exemption under Section 16(a).
Prior to the creation of this court, the Court of Appeals made clear that the "General Assembly, however, has not expressly declared in any statute that property owned, occupied, and exclusively used by a fraternal organization is ipso facto used for a charitable purpose and thus exempt." See Fraternal Order of Eagles No. 3988, Inc., 5 N.E.3d at 1202 (citing Indianapolis Elks Bldg. Corp. v. State Bd. of Tax Comm'rs, 145 Ind.App. 522, 251 N.E.2d 673, 681 (1969); see also I.C. § 6-1.1-10-16(a)). Therefore, Aerie 3207 needed to establish that its property was predominately or exclusively used for a charitable purpose, which it failed to do. The Eagles #3988 decision is instructive in other key respects, especially concerning the need for time usage reports. Fraternal Order of Eagles No. 3988, Inc., 5 N.E.3d at 1202.
The evidence contained in the Certified Administrative Record reveals that Aerie 3207 used its property for a variety of social and recreational purposes including, but not limited to, gambling, drinking, dancing, various tournaments, picnics and general relaxation) and for charitable purposes including fundraisers and donations. Aerie rented its property for weddings and social events. Aerie also donated its property for use by local organizations such as the Chamber of Commerce. Yet, there is nothing in the record to indicate that the
The court reminds that Aerie 3207 has the burden of proof in this matter yet it did not provide the Indiana Board with any comparison of the time its property was used for exempt versus non-exempt purposes. Aerie 3207's "failure to provide this comparison was fatal to its claim for either a full or a partial exemption." See Fraternal Order of Eagles No. 3988, Inc., 5 N.E.3d at 1202; see also Hamilton County Assessor v. Duke, 69 N.E.3d 567, 571 (Ind. Tax Ct. 2017) (taxpayer failed to meet its burden under the predominant use test by failing to present a log of the time the facility was used for exempt purposes versus total time used). Additionally, Aerie 3207 failed to establish that the activities that it claimed were charitable satisfied the common law definition by relieving human want.
Use of Aerie 3207's property for fraternal purposes, socialization purposes, gambling, drinking, and charity events does not establish that the local lodge owns, actually occupies and exclusively or predominantly uses its property for either fraternal or charitable purposes. The Indiana Board's determination that the lodge failed to make a prima facie case that its property was exclusively or predominantly used for charitable purposes was neither contrary to law nor unsupported by substantial evidence. Given the failure to present evidence demonstrating the comparison of exempt to non-exempt use, Indiana Code § 6-1.1-10-36.3 is fatal to both exemption claims.
The court does not discount the importance of the activity undertaken by entities like Aerie 3207. Such activity is laudable and deserves recognition. Strong communities rely on both charitable organizations and taxpaying entities. The fact that Aerie 3207 falls into the latter category by no means diminishes its importance to its community. While Aerie 3207 may take small consolation in a ruling requiring tax participation, the court acknowledges its civic contributions including those made to local governmental units.
The court holds that:
For the above-stated reasons, the Indiana Tax Court AFFIRMS the final determination of the Indiana Board.