Credit Managers Assn. of Northern & Cent. California v. Commissioner

3 T.C.M. 385, 1944 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 281
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedApril 21, 1944
DocketDocket No. 2381.
StatusUnpublished

This text of 3 T.C.M. 385 (Credit Managers Assn. of Northern & Cent. California 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
Credit Managers Assn. of Northern & Cent. California v. Commissioner, 3 T.C.M. 385, 1944 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 281 (tax 1944).

Opinion

Credit Managers Association of Northern and Central California, a Corporation v. Commissioner.
Credit Managers Assn. of Northern & Cent. California v. Commissioner
Docket No. 2381.
United States Tax Court
1944 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 281; 3 T.C.M. (CCH) 385; T.C.M. (RIA) 44127;
April 21, 1944
*281 J. W. Paramore, Esq., 315 Montgomery St., San Francisco, Calif., for the petitioner. H. R. Horrow, Esq., for the respondent.

ARUNDELL

Memorandum Findings of Fact and Opinion

This proceeding involves deficiencies in income taxes and delinquency penalties for the taxable years ending April 30, 1940 and April 30, 1941, as follows:

YearIncome TaxPenalty
April 30, 1940$350.32$87.58
April 30, 1941311.3931.14
The sole question presented is whether the petitioner is exempt from tax as a business league, within the provisions of section 101 (7) of the Internal Revenue Code.

Findings of Fact

The petitioner, the Credit Managers Association of Northern and Central California, successor to an incorporated association of the same name, is a corporation organized September 20, 1938, under the laws of the State of California with its principal office at 333 Montgomery Street, San Francisco, California. It filed its income tax returns for the periods here involved with the Collector of Internal Revenue for the first district of California.

The purposes of the corporation are set forth in Article II of the Articles of Incorporation as follows:

"The purposes for which it*282 is formed are protective as well as educational, i.e., to develop and combine the intelligence of its members for their mutual protection against imposition, injustice and fraud; to establish more firmly the basis upon which credit in every branch of commercial enterprise may be founded, which shall include demand for the reform of laws, Federal and State, unfavorable to honest debtors and creditors, and the enactment of laws beneficial to commerce throughout the United States; to improve existing methods for the dissemination of credit information to its members; to gather and disseminate to its members data in relation to the subject of credit; to improve business customs whereby commercial interests and particularly the commercial interests of its members may be benefited, and the welfare of all advanced; to establish Bureaus of Education, Ledger Interchange, Fraud Prevention and such other Bureaus as may from time to time appear to be in the best interests of its members and in furtherance of the objects of its members and in furtherance of the objects and purposes herein enumerated, and to perform such other kindred lines of work as the members of this Association may from time*283 to time determine upon, with the idea of bringing about mutual improvements and greater similarity and certainty in business customs and usages of trade, and to establish closer credit co-operation among its members.

"The corporation does not contemplate pecuniary gain or profit to the members thereof, and no part of its net earnings, if any, shall enure to the benefit of any member or individual."

The corporation has no stockholders. Under the by-laws membership is open "to any and all firms, manufacturers, and wholesalers, corporations, banks, and individuals engaged in any legitimate line of business where credit is granted." Prospective members are required to make application to the secretary-manager, whereupon the application is voted upon by a membership committee.

Pursuant to the by-laws members pay an initiation fee of $10 and dues of $36 per annum. During the taxable year ended April 30, 1940 dues received by the petitioner amounted to $23,851 out of a total revenue of $94,540.14. During the taxable year ended April 30, 1941 dues amounted to $25,783.50 out of a total revenue of $90,423.46.

The principal activity of the petitioner is the operation of a credit interchange*284 bureau. Any member was entitled to obtain the service of this bureau by entering into a subscriber's agreement providing for the payment of fixed fees for a given number of credit reports and an additional fee for excess reports. The method of operation of the interchange bureau was as follows: The subscriber desiring information as to the credit rating of a customer or prospective customer called on the bureau for a credit report and accompanied his request with a statement of his own ledger experience with the customer or the amount of the initial credit sought by him. Thereupon, the petitioner circulated a form to all members disclosed by its file as dealing with the account and their experience with that account. The information gathered in this manner consisted of a statement of the highest recent credit given, the amount presently owing, the amount past due, the terms of sale, and whether the customer pays on time, is slow, or seeks discounts. There was also space for additional information under remarks.

Upon receipt of this information, which the subscribers were by contract required to furnish, the petitioner compiled a single report and forwarded it to the inquiring subscriber, *285 keeping the permanent copy for its own files. Such reports were supplied only to a firm that had extended or was extending credit on the account in question. This service was occasionally furnished nonsubscribing members as a courtesy and also as an accommodation occasionally to nonmembers without charge in exchange for their own ledger experience with the account.

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3 T.C.M. 385, 1944 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 281, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/credit-managers-assn-of-northern-cent-california-v-commissioner-tax-1944.