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State Board of Tax Commissioners v. New Castle Lodge 147, Loyal Order of Moose, Inc.

Court: Indiana Supreme Court
Date filed: 2002-04-12
Citations: 765 N.E.2d 1257
Copy Citations
14 Citing Cases

ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT                 ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE

Steve Carter                            B. Keith Shake
Attorney General of Indiana       Karen Ball Woods
                                        Henderson Daily Withrow &
Janet L. Parsanko      Devoe
Deputy Attorney General                 Indianapolis, Indiana
Indianapolis, Indiana
                                        Steven G. Hedges
                                        Muncie, Indiana





                                   IN THE

                          SUPREME COURT OF INDIANA



STATE BOARD OF TAX COMMISSIONERS, )
                                        )
      Appellant (Respondent Below),     )
                                        )
            v.                          )  No. 49S10-0011-TA-720
                                        )
NEW CASTLE LODGE #147, LOYAL            )
ORDER OF MOOSE, INC.,             )
                                        )
      Appellee (Petitioner Below).      )










                      REVIEW FROM THE INDIANA TAX COURT
                    The Honorable Thomas G. Fisher, Judge
                         Cause No. 49T10-9701-TA-113



                               April 12, 2002

SHEPARD, Chief Justice.


      In 1992, the New Castle Moose Lodge submitted the same anecdotal  type
of information regarding its charitable efforts  that  earned  it  a  sixty-
seven percent property  tax  exemption  in  1988.   A  State  Board  of  Tax
Commissioners  hearing  officer  updated  a  1988  analysis  of   hours   of
charitable use of the facility and recommended partial  exemption,  but  the
Board denied any exemption for stated reasons having little to do  with  the
statutory “predominant use” test.


      The Tax Court reversed, holding that the Lodge’s predominant  use  was
charitable.  We granted  the  Board’s  petition  for  review,  in  order  to
examine the standards applicable to a non-profit’s claim that  its  property
is predominantly used for charitable purposes and thus exempt.





                             Standard of Review


      Taxpayers bear the burden of proving entitlement  to  tax  exemptions.
See Dep’t  of  State  Revenue  v.  Safayan,  654  N.E.2d  270  (Ind.  1995).
Judicial review of an administrative  decision  denying  tax  exemption  “is
limited to whether  the  agency  possessed  jurisdiction  over  the  subject
matter, and whether the  agency’s  decision  was  made  pursuant  to  proper
procedures, was based  upon  substantial  evidence,  was  not  arbitrary  or
capricious, and was not in violation of  any  constitutional,  statutory  or
legal principle.”  See State Bd. of Tax Comm’rs v.  Jewell  Grain  Co.,  556
N.E.2d 920, 921 (Ind. 1990) (citation omitted).

      This Court reviews Tax Court decisions under  the  “clearly  erroneous
standard” provided in Indiana Trial Rule 52(A).  State Bd.  of  Tax  Comm’rs
v. Indianapolis Racquet Club, Inc., 743 N.E.2d 247, 249 (Ind. 2001).







                           The Statutory Framework


      We begin with a summary of relevant statutes, to provide  context  for
the facts that follow.  Indiana Code  Ann.  §  6-1.1-10-16(a)  (Burns  1989)
says, “All or part of a building is exempt from property taxation if  it  is
owned,  occupied,  and  used  by  a  person   for   educational,   literary,
scientific, religious, or charitable purposes.”

       In  1983  the  legislature  adopted  a  “predominant  use”  test  for
determining  whether  property  qualifies  for  exemption  under  Ind.  Code
Chapter 6-1.1-10.  See 1983 Ind. Acts 66.  Indiana  Code  Ann.  §  6-1.1-10-
36.3 (Burns 1989) says, in relevant part:
      (a)   For purposes of this section, property is predominantly used  or
      occupied for one or more stated purposes if it is used or occupied for
      one or more of those purposes during more than fifty percent (50%)  of
      the time that it is used or occupied in the  year  that  ends  on  the
      assessment date of the property.
      (b) If a section of this chapter states one or more purposes for which
      property must  be  used  or  occupied  in  order  to  qualify  for  an
      exemption, then the exemption applies as follows: . . .
           (3) Property that is predominantly used or occupied for  one  or
           more of the stated purposes . . . is exempt under  that  section
           from property tax on the part of the assessment of the  property
           that bears the same proportion to the total  assessment  of  the
           property as the amount of time that the  property  was  used  or
           occupied for one or more of the stated purposes during the  year
           that ends on the assessment date of the property  bears  to  the
           amount of time that the property was used or  occupied  for  any
           purpose during that year.
           (4) Property that  is  predominantly  used  or  occupied  for  a
           purpose other than one of the stated purposes is not exempt from
           any part of the property tax.




      Indiana Code Ann. § 6-1.1-11-3(a) (Burns  1989)  requires  a  property
owner seeking property tax exemption to file an application with the  county
auditor.  Under subsection (c), exemption applications must contain:
        1) A description of the property claimed to be exempt in sufficient
           detail to afford identification.
        2) A statement showing the ownership, possession, and  use  of  the
           property.
        3) The grounds for claiming the exemption.
        4) The full name and address of the applicant.
        5)  Any  additional  information  which  the  state  board  of  tax
           commissioners may require.



      Ind. Code Ann. § 6-1.1-30-10 (Burns  1989)  authorizes  the  Board  to
delegate its powers, including the power to serve as a  hearing  officer  in
appeals, to field representatives or supervisors.  With respect  to  such  a
review, the hearing officer:
      [S]hall submit a written report of his findings to the state board  of
      tax commissioners.  After reviewing the report,  the  board  may  take
      additional evidence or hold additional hearings.  The board shall base
      its final decision on the report, any additional evidence taken by the
      board, and any records that the board considers relevant.



Ind. Code Ann. § 6-1.1-30-12 (Burns 1989).[1]








                        Facts and Procedural History


      New Castle Lodge #147, Loyal Order  of  Moose,  Inc.  is  a  fraternal
organization qualified under  § 501(c)(8) of the Internal  Revenue  Code.[2]
The Lodge owns a 10,400 square foot building with a  meeting/ballroom,  game
room, dining room, lounge, kitchens, and common areas such as  hallways  and
restrooms.

      A.  The Lodge’s  1988  Exemption  Application.   In  1988,  the  Lodge
applied for property tax exemption, but the Henry  County  Board  of  Review
denied  the  request.   The  Lodge  appealed  to  the  State  Board  of  Tax
Commissioners.

      In its review, the Board relied in part on a “Room  by  Room  Analysis
of Exempt (Charitable) Activity.”   (Pet.  Exh.  7.)  This  analysis  showed
1,080 total hours of meeting/ballroom use during  the  year,  of  which  840
hours (seventy-eight percent) were for charitable purposes.  The game  room,
dining room, lounge and kitchens were primarily  used  for  social  purposes
and were not entitled to any exemption.   The  garage  was  deemed  entirely
taxable, and the common areas were deemed entirely exempt.[3]   The  parking
lot and personal property were both treated as  partially  exempt  based  on
the aggregate exemption percentage calculated for the building.

      The overall exemption percentage allowed by the Board,  based  on  the
foregoing analysis, was sixty-seven percent.  In its findings of  fact,  the
Board noted that Lodge members “devote  a  substantial  amount  of  time  to
charitable activities,” and that the Lodge allowed its ballroom to  be  used
without  charge  for  civic  activities  such  as   a   Muscular   Dystrophy
Association Telethon.[4]  (Id.)

       In  its  conclusions  of  law,  the  Board  cited  cases   in   which
organizations that donated three percent or less of their  gross  income  to
charity were denied  charitable  property  tax  exemptions.[5]   (Id.)   The
Board went on to say:
      The cases cited do not specifically indicate the percentage  of  gross
      income from the year in question that must be devoted to philanthropic
      endeavors before the organization may be considered to be  charitable.
      However, the cases do establish that the annual donation/gross  income
      percentage is of primary consideration when making the  determination.
      . . . [The Lodge] donates 7.09% of its  revenues  to  charity.   This,
      along with the organization’s other  charitable  activities  qualifies
      the Lodge as charitable.


(Id.)  The Board’s final determination was dated September 25, 1992.


      B.  The Lodge’s 1992 Exemption  Application.   Even  before  the  1988
proceeding came to a conclusion, it was time to re-apply, so  in  May  1992,
the Lodge again submitted the standard property tax exemption  request  form
prescribed by the Board.  Again, the Henry County  Board  of  Review  denied
the application, and again the Lodge appealed.

      Board Hearing Officer E. Wayne Hudson visited the  Lodge  on  February
28, 1995.  He updated the “Room by  Room  Analysis  of  Exempt  (Charitable)
Activities” using an identical approach to that  used  for  1988.[6]   (Pet.
Exh. 6.)  He also considered other written  evidence  the  Lodge  submitted:
its constitution, by-laws, and articles of incorporation; its  1991  federal
Return of  Organization  Exempt  From  Tax;  and  its  1992  monthly  member
newsletters.  He  recommended  an  exemption  of  approximately  sixty-three
percent, based on the bottom line of the updated “Room  by  Room  Analysis.”
(See Pet. Exh. 5, 6.)

      The Board rejected  this  recommendation  and  denied  the  Lodge  any
exemption.  It found as  fact  that  the  Lodge  newsletter  described  only
social activities  and  “ma[de]  no  reference  to  charitable  activities.”
(Pet. to App. Exh. 4.)  It also found as  fact  that  all  1,110  hours  the
meeting/ballroom was used  were  for  member  meetings  and  “purely  social
functions.”  (Id.)

      In its conclusions of  law,  the  Board  cited  Saint  Mary’s  Medical
Center v. State Board of Tax Commissioners, 534 N.E.2d 277 (Ind. Tax  1989),
aff’d,  571  N.E.2d  1247  (Ind.  1991),  for  the  proposition  that  lodge
facilities do not qualify for exemption if used by “others” for any  reason.
 (Pet. to App. Exh. 4.)  It cited the same cases as in 1988 as  support  for
the proposition that up to three percent  charitable  contributions  do  not
justify tax exemption, and concluded that  the  Lodge’s  four  percent  1992
contribution rate did not qualify it for charitable exemption.  (Id.)

      The Lodge appealed to the Indiana Tax Court.   See  New  Castle  Lodge
#147, Loyal Order of Moose, Inc. v. State Bd. of Tax Comm’rs, 733 N.E.2d  36
(Ind. Tax 2000), review granted,  741  N.E.2d  1260  (2000).   It  presented
evidence by its tax return preparer that charitable  contributions  were  in
fact substantially greater than the four percent reflected  on  the  return.
(Appellee’s App. at 52-63.)  The Tax Court held  that  the  Lodge  used  its
property  predominantly  for   charitable   purposes   and   remanded   with
instructions to the State Board to conduct further proceedings to  determine
the exact exemption allowed.[7]  New Castle Lodge #147, 733 N.E.2d at 40.







                     The Task of Supporting an Exemption


      A.   The  Board’s  Findings  and  Conclusions.   Two  of  the  Board’s
findings of fact regarding the 1992 exemption request are not  supported  by
substantial evidence.

      First, the Board found that the Lodge’s newsletter made  no  reference
to charitable activities.  (Pet. to App. Exh. 4.)   This  is  simply  wrong.
The 1992  newsletters  mention,  among  other  things,  a  “Moose  Bar  Buck
Campaign” with a goal of raising $1,000 for Easter Seals,  (Appellee’s  App.
at 116), a donation of $1,000 to the local Disabled American Veterans,  (Id.
at 121), a campaign to raise $10,000 to repair the  city  emergency  warning
system and add a new siren in a section of the city inadequately covered  by
the existing system, (Id. at 146), and delivery  of  food  and  supplies  to
victims of Hurricane Andrew, (Id. at 152).

      This error is of  little  significance  because  the  content  of  the
Lodge’s  newsletter  relates  to  charitable  use  of  the   facility   only
indirectly, if at all.[8]

      Second and more important, the Board found:
      The meeting/ballroom is used approximately 1,110 hours per year.   The
      bulk of this time is used for meetings of the Lodge  and  meetings  of
      the Women of the Moose.  The balance of the time used is purely social
      functions – i.e. Saturday night dances.  All these activities are  for
      members and members’ families only.[9]


(Pet. to App. Exh.  4.)  This  finding  contradicts  the  hearing  officer’s
analysis, which  indicated  that  seventy-six  percent  of  the  total  1992
meeting/ballroom hours were for charitable purposes.  (Pet. Exh. 6.)

      Although the statute directs the Board to base  its  decision  on  the
hearing officer’s report plus “any additional evidence taken by  the  board,
and any records that the board considers relevant,” Ind. Code Ann. §  6-1.1-
30-12 (Burns 1989), the Board  did  not  cite  any  additional  evidence  or
records  that  would  explain  why  it  rejected   the   hearing   officer’s
analysis.[10]  This finding is therefore more problematic because it is  the
only Board finding dealing with facility usage,  which  is  necessarily  the
focus of the predominant use standard.

      We next turn to the Board’s conclusions of law.  Finding 5. said,  “To
the extent Lodge facilities are used by others,  for  whatever  reason,  the
facilities do not qualify for exemption.”  (Pet.  to  App.  Exh.  4.)   This
rule is not supported by the case  the  Board  cites[11]  or  by  any  other
law.[12]   See Alte Salems Kirche, Inc. v. State Bd.  of  Tax  Comm’rs,  733
N.E.2d  40,  44  (Ind.  Tax.  2000)(“According  to  the  State  Board,  ‘The
provision of facilities to other organizations or  groups  for  meetings  or
gatherings at no cost does not constitute  a  charitable  act.’   The  State
Board is mistaken.”).

      Board Conclusion 8. said:
      [T]he  cases  do  establish  that  the  annual  donation/gross  income
      percentage is of  primary  consideration  in  making  the  [exemption]
      determination. . . . The Lodge donates 4% of its revenues to  charity.
      This alone is not adequate to qualify  for  exemption  as  charitable.
      Therefore, the real and personal property owned by the Lodge  is  100%
      subject to property taxation for the March 1, 1992 assessment year.


(Pet. to App. Exh. 4.)  This misstates and  misapplies  the  law.   Although
charitable giving might serve as evidence to support claimed charitable  use
of the facility, the statutory test since 1983 has been predominant  use  of
the facility, not distribution of income for charitable purposes.

      B.  The Board’s Argument.  The Board now argues that:
      [T]he Moose Lodge failed [the predominant use] test because it  failed
      to prove that its facility was used charitably for more  than  50%  of
      the time during the relevant  tax  year.   Instead,  the  Moose  Lodge
      concentrated on showing what percentage of its income  it  donated  to
      charity.  Because it failed to address the proper standard, the  Moose
      Lodge failed to prove its entitlement to exemption.  Moreover, nothing
      in the evidence can be  construed  to  show  that  the  Moose  Lodge’s
      facility was used more than 50% of the time  for  charitable  purposes
      during the relevant tax year.

(Appellant’s Br. at 6.)



      This position is disingenuous.  The Lodge  did  indeed  focus  on  the
wrong target, but it did so in response to the Board’s declarations that  in
both  1988  and  1992  charitable  contribution  levels  were  “of   primary
consideration.”  (Pet. to App. Exh. 4.)

      We conclude, as did the Tax Court, that the State Board’s  refusal  of
any exemption was an abuse of discretion.

      C.  The Taxpayer’s Burden.  This leaves us with the question  whether,
under  the  facts  presented,  a  taxpayer  that  has  made  a   misdirected
evidentiary  showing  nonetheless  deserves  some  exemption.    The   Lodge
presented mostly anecdotal evidence, including newsletters that referred  to
a few charitable projects and a  tax  return  that  listed  some  charitable
donations. (Pet. Exh. 4, 9.)  It did not offer any sort of log of  the  time
the facility was used in furtherance  of  these  charitable  efforts  versus
total time used.

      Taxpayers may not avoid their  burden  of  proof  by  “mak[ing]  a  de
minimis showing and then forc[ing] the State Board to support its  decisions
with detailed factual findings.”  Hoogenboom-Nofziger v. State  Bd.  of  Tax
Comm’rs, 715 N.E.2d 1018, 1025 (Ind. Tax. 1999).   The  Board  is  therefore
correct in saying the Lodge failed to meet its burden under the  predominant
use standard.

       D.   The  Board’s  Responsibility.   Administrative  decisions  must,
however, be based on  ascertainable  standards  in  order  to  be  fair  and
consistent  rather  than  arbitrary  and  capricious.   See  State  Bd.   of
Registration for Prof’l Eng’rs v. Eberenz, 723 N.E.2d 422, 429  (Ind.  2000)
(quoting State Bd. of Registration for Land Surveyors v. Bender, 626  N.E.2d
491, 495-96 (Ind. Ct. App. 1993); see also Boaz v. Bartholomew Consol.  Sch.
Corp.,  654  N.E.2d  320,  323  (Ind.  Tax  Ct.  1995)   (“Under   Indiana’s
ascertainable standards  rule,  all  administrative  decisions  must  be  in
accord with previously stated, ascertainable standards.”).   Such  standards
“give fair warning as to  what  the  agency  will  consider  in  making  its
decision.”  Podgor v. Ind. Univ., 178 Ind. App. 245, 258, 381  N.E.2d  1274,
1283 (1978) (citations omitted).[13]

      The statutory focal  point--predominant  use  of  the  facility--seems
fairly straightforward, and the Board would be fully  justified  in  placing
the onus on taxpayers to produce facility usage reports  in  greater  detail
and with better supporting documentation than was done here.  The Board  may
not, however, hide the ball by consistently citing charitable giving  levels
as the primary focus, then arguing for application of  a  different  (albeit
correct) statutory standard only on appeal.



                             A Pragmatic Remedy



      In State ex rel. State Board of Tax Commissioners v.  Marion  Superior
Court, 271 Ind. 374, 379, 392 N.E.2d 1161, 1166 (1979), we said,  “The  sole
relief a court may grant when an administrative  decision  is  found  to  be
unlawful is to vacate the decision and remand the matter to the  agency  for
a further determination.  This rule  applies  likewise  to  actions  by  the
State Tax Board.”  We cited, among other authorities, Indiana Code Ann. § 6-
1.1-15-8, which in 1992 required remand to the Board “for  reassessment  and
further proceedings in accordance with law” when a court  reverses  a  Board
decision.  271 Ind. at 379, 392 N.E.2d at 1166.

      We recognize, however, the practical difficulty the Lodge  would  face
in trying to prove charitable facility usage ten years  after  the  fact  in
accordance with a different standard than the one the Board  led  the  Lodge
to originally document.  Equity demands a  remedy  that  does  not  put  the
taxpayer at such an agency-created disadvantage.

      We note also that the record does contain some  evidence  of  facility
usage.  Hearing Officer Hudson testified  that  he  prepared  a  1992  usage
analysis similar to the 1988 analysis because nothing  had  changed  in  the
Lodge’s operations.  His  figures  bear  this  out,  showing  only  a  small
decline in charitable usage percentage (from sixty-seven percent in 1988  to
sixty-three percent in 1992).  The Board  has  cited  no  evidence  in  this
proceeding to justify its rejection of the hearing officer recommendation.

      We therefore  conclude  that  the  available  evidence  satisfies  the
“predominant use” requirement of the statute and entitles  the  taxpayer  to
partial exemption.  We  remand  to  the  Board  for  a  final  determination
regarding the Lodge’s 1992 exemption application, with evidence  limited  to
the hearing officer’s recommendation.


                                 Conclusion

      We affirm the remand ordered by the Tax Court, subject  to  the  above
directive.

Dickson, Sullivan, and Rucker, JJ., concur.
Boehm, J., not participating.

-----------------------
[1] All of these statutes remained in effect without substantial change
through 2001.  Effective January 1, 2002, the Board’s responsibilities were
divided between two newly-created agencies:  the Department of Local
Government Finance, which has tax collection authority (see Ind. Code Ann.
§§  6-1.1-30-1.1, 14 (Burns 2001)), and the Indiana Board of Tax Review,
which will review property tax appeals (see Ind. Code Ann. §§  6-1.5-1-3, 4-
1 (Burns 2001)).
[2] Internal Revenue Code § 501(c)(8) allows exemption from federal income
taxes for fraternal beneficiary societies, orders, and associations that
meet specified criteria such as operating under a lodge system.
[3] In its conclusions of law, the Board said, “common areas are considered
exempt as is the land under” Ind. Code Ann. § 6-1.1-10-16 (Burns 1989).
(Pet. Exh. 7.)  This statute applies only to land:  “A tract of land . . .
is exempt from property taxation if:  (1) A building which is exempt under
subsection (a) or (b) is situated on it; and (2) The tract does not exceed:
. . . (B) Fifteen (15) acres in all other cases.”  I.C. § 6-1.1-10-16.  The
rationale for treating the building common areas as fully exempt is
therefore unclear.
[4] This finding seems to contradict the next finding:
      The meeting/ballroom is used approximately 1080 hours per  year.   The
      bulk of this time is used for meetings of the Lodge  and  meetings  of
      the Women of the Moose.  The balance of the time used  is  for  purely
      social functions – i.e[.] Saturday Night dances.  All these activities
      are for members and members’ families only.
(Id.)
[5] State Bd. of Tax Comm’rs v. Fraternal Order of Eagles, Lodge No. 255,
521 N.E.2d 678 (Ind. 1988); Sahara Grotto & Styx, Inc. v. State Bd. of Tax
Comm’rs, 147 Ind. App. 471, 261 N.E.2d 873 (1970); Indianapolis Elks Bldg.
Corp. v. State Bd. of Tax Comm’rs, 145 Ind. App. 522, 251 N.E.2d 673
(1969).  Both parties agree that none of these cases applied the
predominant use test of Ind. Code § 6-1.1-10-36.3.  (Appellant’s Br. at 12-
13, Appellee’s Br. at 9.)  Fraternal Order of Eagles, Lodge No. 255, 521
N.E.2d 678, decided in 1988, dealt with a March 1, 1983 assessment that
predated enactment of the predominant use standard.  See 1983 Ind. Acts 66
(approved Apr. 14, 1983).
[6] Hudson apparently began with the typewritten analysis from 1988 and
simply “whited out” amounts to be updated and wrote in the new amounts
manually.  (Pet. Exh. 6.)  He updated the total hours of meeting/ballroom
use to 1,110 hours but for reasons not disclosed in the record left the
typewritten figure “840 hrs.” of charitable use from 1988 intact.  (Id.)
[7] The Lodge did not argue on appeal that it is entitled to exemption
under Ind. Code Ann. § 6-1.1-10-23 (Burns 1989), which applies to fraternal
beneficiary associations.
[8] Had a usage log been maintained, the newsletters could provide
supporting evidence that charitable activities listed on the log actually
occurred.
[9] This wording repeats the 1988 finding verbatim, with only the usage
figure changed to reflect the updated “Room by Room Analysis” figure.
[10] At the Tax Court proceeding, the Lodge offered  testimony  that  during
1992 some meeting/ballroom dances were fundraisers  for  the  tornado  siren
project; that twice yearly the Lodge brings in senior citizens from  nursing
homes for free lunch and bingo; and that  each  September  the  Lodge  holds
“Back-to-School Bingo” for children of the community, with prizes  for  all.
(Appellee’s App. at 25-26, 49-50.)
       The  Board  presented  only  one  witness,  Hearing  Officer  Hudson.
(Appellee’s App. at 76.)   The  deputy  attorney  general  representing  the
Board elicited Hudson’s  testimony  that  he  “just  basically  updated  the
numbers” from 1988 “[b]ecause that’s [the] way I have  been  trained:   That
if nothing has changed from the  previous  exemption  year  to  the  one  in
question, that there probably would be no reason for anything to  change  as
far as the exemption is concerned.”  (Id. at 82-83.)  The Board  offered  no
testimony as to why it found no  charitable  use  of  the  meeting/ballroom;
only  Hudson’s  personal  opinion  that  despite  filing  a  report  to  the
contrary,  he  believed  the  Lodge’s  predominant  use  was   “social   and
recreational.”  (See id. at 76-86.)
[11] Saint Mary’s Med. Ctr., 534 N.E.2d 277.
[12] Furthermore, such a per se rule would make little sense.  If, for
example, the Lodge allowed a qualified charitable relief organization to
temporarily house displaced disaster victims in its facility, it would
receive no credit for charitable use under this approach.
[13] The Board is of course entitled to reasonable latitude in carrying out
its responsibilities.  See, e.g., Garcia v. State, No. 71S10-0108-TA-366,
April 12, 2002, where taxpayers built a home more luxurious than any
“comparables” pictured in the Board’s assessment manual.  The Board
extrapolated from existing standards to assess the home at an “A+6” grade
as contemplated by Board regulations, and allowed the taxpayer a reasonable
opportunity to respond to its assessment methodology.  We upheld this
appropriate exercise of the Board’s discretion.
   Here, in contrast, the Board applied an incorrect exemption standard to a
fraternal lodge that was used for the types of activities in which such
organizations commonly engage.  The Board’s discretion does not extend to
applying an erroneous legal standard.