I directly use the result (formula) for Chinese Remainder Theorem to solve this problem. By the way, this method needs a little knowledge of group theory.
For the system $$x\equiv a_1\pmod{m_1}\\ x\equiv a_2\pmod{m_2}\\
\vdots\\ x\equiv a_n\pmod{m_n}$$ The general solution is given by
$$x=\sum_{i=1}^na_iM_iy_i+t\cdot \prod_{i=1}^nm_i,$$ where
$$t\in\mathbb{Z},\qquad M_i=\prod_{j=1,\ j\neq i}^nm_j\qquad
\text{and}\qquad [M_iy_i]_{m_i}=[1]_{m_i}.$$
Therefore, in this problem, $a_1=3,\ m_1=7, a_2=3,\ m_2=13,\ a_3=0,\ m_3=12$,
we have
$$M_1=13*12=156,\quad y_1=4$$
$$M_2=7*12=84,\quad y_2=-2$$
$$M_3=7*13=91,\quad y_3=-5$$
So the solution is $x=3*4*156-3*2*84-0*5*91+7*13*12*t=1368-1092t$. For your answer, it is just the smallest positive solution, which can be obtained from letting $t=1$, $1368-1092=276$.