Brown v. Commissioner

62 T.C. No. 62, 62 T.C. 551, 1974 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 71
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedJuly 30, 1974
DocketDocket No. 7994-71
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 62 T.C. No. 62 (Brown v. Commissioner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Tax Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brown v. Commissioner, 62 T.C. No. 62, 62 T.C. 551, 1974 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 71 (tax 1974).

Opinion

Scott, Judge:

Respondent determined a deficiency in petitioner’s Federal income tax for the calendar year 1968 in the amount of $5,-546.24.

Some of the issues raised by the pleadings have been disposed of by the parties, leaving for decision whether payments made in 1968 by petitioner for Scientology auditing for himself and his wife by an ordained priest and for his wife at the Hubbard College of Scientology and the Hubbard Academy of Personal Independence and related travel expenses are deductible as medical expenses.

FINDINGS OF FACT

Some of the facts have been stipulated and are found accordingly.

Donald H. Brown (hereinafter petitioner) was a resident of Min-netonka, Minn., at the time he filed his petition in this case. Petitioner and his wife, Catherine H. Brown, filed their joint Federal income tax return for the calendar year 1968 with the district director of internal revenue, Minneapolis, Minn.

Petitioner and his wife began marital counseling with Rev. Clyde A. Benner (hereinafter Benner), a priest of the Episcopal Church, in late 1964. They had been referred to Benner for marital counseling by their minister, Rev. Clem Wagstrom, United Church of Christ, Min-newashta Heights, Minn. At the time petitioner’s wife came to Benner for counseling she felt that she was depressed, had a low energy level, and had suicidal tendencies.

Benner was not a licensed psychiatrist or psychologist, but he was an ordained minister. He also held a degree in chiropractic but never treated petitioner or his wife as a chiropractor. The statements he used to bill petitioner were headed “Dr. C. A. Benner,” but petitioner knew Benner had no medical training other than as a chiropractor. Benner made no claim that he was a psychologist, but he did state to petitioner’s wife that he used psychological principles in his counseling work. He alluded to these principles as the Christian Ethic and described his services as helping two people to be responsible to each other, to act responsively to one another, and to have greater understanding.

Early in the course of the counseling sessions, Benner referred petitioner and his wife to a clinical psychologist for 'testing to determine whether their problems were of the type he could handle by pastoral counseling. Benner would not counsel psychotic people or seriously neurotic individuals. The tests indicated that both petitioner and his wife had personality problems but that these problems were of the type that Benner and the psychologist felt could be helped by Benner’s pastoral counseling.

Benner’s counseling with petitioner’s wife did help to alleviate her depression and low energy level, and she ceased to have suicidal tendencies. Benner would talk with petitioner’s wife and suggest books for her to read. He would then discuss these books with petitioner’s wife with emphasis on the relationship of the statements in the books to her life.

In late 1967 Benner suggested to petitioner and his wife that they could further develop their awareness and achieve greater peace within themselves through Scientology. All services rendered by Benner to petitioner and his wife from January to April 1968 were in the nature of Scientology processing for which they paid him $1,838. At that time Benner was working toward becoming a fully qualified Scientology auditor and was qualified to render Scientology processing services to others at the lower levels of such processing.

The Scientology creed espouses the belief that the spirit can be saved and that the spirit can save and heal the body. Scientology auditors are not required to be medically trained in any way and achieve their status as auditors by reaching a high level in the same courses they administer to the individuals they audit.

In Scientology auditing each person audited is asked the same specific set of questions while he holds 'an instrument called an E-meter which electrically measures his response. His answer to the questions and the readings from the E-meter are then used as an indication of his personal condition. There are no questions directed to the person audited as an individual or to his specific problems, nor are his answers analyzed by 'the Scientology auditor. During the audits no ailments of mind or body of the person being audited are diagnosed or treated, but if an auditor discovers that a person undergoing auditing has an organic defect, he will advise the person being audited to seek medical help.

After Benner in early 1968 had audited petitioner and his wife using Scientology processing to the extent of his then training as a Scientology auditor, petitioner and his wife went to the Church of Scientology, Minneapolis, Minn., where the auditors were qualified to process at a higher level. They expected through this further Scientology auditing to receive an improvement in their ability to communicate with each other and with other people and to 'better handle any disagreements they might have. They felt that they did receive improvement from the further processing and later in 1968, with the encouragement of Benner, petitioner and his wife traveled to East Grinstead, England, and Edinburgh, Scotland, to take courses at the Hubbard College of Scientology and the Hubbard Academy of Personal Independence. Petitioner paid over $12,000 for the courses taken by himself and his wife at the Hubbard College and the Plubbard Academy. The amount of $6,560 represented the cost of his wife’s courses.

Petitioner’s wife not only received auditing, but she also took courses in England costing a total of $1,092 in which she learned to audit herself and other individuals. Petitioner’s wife believed that as a result of the Scientology processing she received from Benner and from the Scientologists in England, her mental outlook improved and some of her physical ailments, including migraine headaches, a hypothyroid condition, and irregular menstrual cycle were alleviated.

On his 1968 Federal income tax return, petitioner claimed as deductions for medical expense payments to Benner for counseling, and payments for his wife’s Scientology courses in England, as well as travel expense to Benner’s office, the local ¡Scientology building, and his wife’s share of the travel expenses to England in an amount totaling $9,007.20. Respondent disallowed this claimed deduction on the basis that none of the expenses constituted payment for medical care as defined by section 213,1.R.C. 1954.1

OPINION

Section 213 provides, with certain limitation, that there shall be allowed as a deduction expenses paid for medical care of the taxpayer, his spouse, and dependents. Medical care is defined in section 213(e) as amounts paid for “the diagnosis, cure, mitigation, treatment, or prevention of disease, or for the purpose of affecting any structure or function of the body” and “for transportation primarily for and essential to medical care.” 2 Section 1.213-1 (e) (1) (ii), Income Tax Regs., requires that “Deductions for expenditures for medical care * * * be confined strictly to expenses incurred primarily for the prevention or alleviation of a physical or mental defect or illness.”

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Bluebook (online)
62 T.C. No. 62, 62 T.C. 551, 1974 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 71, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-commissioner-tax-1974.