In the United States, the owners of farm property paid property taxes. Some states have special provisions where the property being actively farmed (any dwelling and certain acreage size for the home is generally not included as farm use) is assigned a "use value" rather than a market value. For a farm near a larger city the difference between use value (as farm land) and market value (for example as sold for use as a subdivision for residential homes) could be substantial. Ask your local assessor about any special abatement for farm land.
The Clergy,and the Nobles
None that I know of.
Being on disability does not exempt you from paying taxes.
It depends in which country they are located.
From paying taxes.
Generally churches are exempt from paying real (land and buildings) and personal property (equipment, cars, machinery, etc.) taxes in most states in the United States. Property tax laws are governed by the laws of each individual state, but most if not all states exempt qualifying religious organizations. The church would probably have to send an application for tax exempt status to the local assessor or tax collector in order to qualify. Your local assessor should have an inventory of all taxable and tax exempt property.
No, churches are tax exempt.
they are exempt from paying income taxes
Property owners that are exempt from some of the property taxes in some states.
No, paying property taxes on a property does not make you the property owner. Only a properly executed deed naming you as the owner would make you an owner.
It depends on he local and which exemptions may be applicable to it's situation. Whatever it is exempt from, MUST be used for the Cos exempt purpose and not something else....so say a charity has gotten a property tax exemption for the building it uses, but then takes that property and rents it out to make money (catering hall)...that would end the exemption, at least for that income.
Those that are exempt are the ones that are not required to do something. In the United States, there are only a small percentage of people that exempt from paying taxes.