Debs Memorial Radio Fund, Inc. v. Commissioner

3 T.C. 949, 1944 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 109
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedJune 5, 1944
DocketDocket No. 576
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 3 T.C. 949 (Debs Memorial Radio Fund, Inc. 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
Debs Memorial Radio Fund, Inc. v. Commissioner, 3 T.C. 949, 1944 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 109 (tax 1944).

Opinions

OPINION.

Sternhagen, Judge'.

1. The petitioner claims exemption from excess profits tax by virtue of section 727, Internal Revenue Code, as a corporation exempt from income tax under section 101 (8): “Civic leagues or organizations not organized for profit but operated exclusively for the promotion of social welfare * * Regulations 103, section 19.101 (8) — 1, provides: “Civic leagues entitled to exemption under section 101 (8) comprise those not organized for profit but operated exclusively for purposes beneficial to the community as a whole, and, in general, include organizations engaged in promoting the welfare of mankind * * In the notice of deficiency the Commissioner held “your organization is not an exempt corporation as defined by section 101 of the Internal Revenue Code.”

Thus, the petitioner is required to prove that it was not organized for profit1 and that it is operated exclusively for the promotion of social welfare. Adopting the propositions that incorporation under the New York Stock Corporation Law is not itself preclusive of a claim for exemption (Anderson Country Club, Inc., 2 T. C. 1238, 1242) and that the corporation may properly be regarded as a civic organization (cf. Amalgamated Housing Corporation, 37 B. T. A. 817, 825; affirmed per curiam, 108 Fed. (2d) 1010), we are of opinion that the evidence fails to show that the corporation was not organized for profit. Doubt on that point operates to defeat the claim for exemption. There is nothing in the stated purposes set forth in the articles of incorporation to suggest that profit is not among the purposes, while on the other hand there is much to indicate business and financial purposes which can only be fulfilled by seeking profit. The first purpose stated is not merely to broadcast, but to engage in the business of broadcasting, and the corporation may broadcast matter of every kind and any description available. All of the purposes are stated in language carefully drawn consistently with the promotion of business purposes and are in some instances expressly stated in terms of business purpose.2

The petitioner urges that the statement of purposes of the charter is unimportant in view of the fact that it is the successor of an unincorporated membership association which was organized as a memorial to the late Eugene V. Debs by his friends, with the idea of conducting a free public radio forum for the dissemination of liberal and progressive social views, and that the corporation should be recognized as organized to carry on that purpose. An answer to this is that if that had been the sole purpose and there was no purpose of profit, the organizers of the corporation could have made that clear in the articles and would not have left it to construction, or could have organized a non-stock corporation under the “Membership Corporation Law.” When this corporation was organized in 1928, the income tax law had been in operation for fifteen years, and the exact words of this exemption had been used since the first revenue act. (Revenue Act of 1913, sec. II (G) (a).) Also, it was clear in extant decisions that, although an exemption was not lost by a corporation engaging in business for profit, this was only when such business operations for profit were merely incidental to the promotion of a grand charitable purpose and activity. Trinidad v. Sagrada Orden de Predicadores, 263 U. S. 578; Unity School of Christianity, 4 B. T. A. 61. See also Hanover Improvement Society, Inc. v. Gagne, 92 Fed. (2d) 888. Under such circumstances, the decision of the question whether the corporation was organized for profit may not be rested upon the testimony that the founders originally intended only to establish a free public forum for educational, cultural, and civic purposes without financial gain in total disregard of the carefully drawn expression of business purposes contained in the articles. Nor is the decision greatly influenced by the provision of the bylaws after the change of 1932 that profits would not be distributed but would be used for the improvement of the radio service or for the civic, educational, and cultural purposes. The use of profits for the improvement of the radio service is consistent with a profit purpose, and it is only joined with the civic, cultural, and educational purposes by the disjunctive “or” and therefore not restricted to such nonprofit purposes. Since the language used in respect of the corporation’s rights, powers, and activities was deliberately chosen, there is little reason to deflect its meaning for a liberal effect.

There is no restriction in this section of the statute, as in some of the other exemption sections — i. e., subsections 6 and 7 — that no part of the income shall inure to the benefit of any private shareholder or individual; the restriction stated is that the corporation must be “not organized for profit.” This does not permit the exemption of any corporation organized for profit, even though such corporation be inhibited from distributing its profits to individuals. The statutory exemption precludes any corporation unless it is not organized for profit, and it matters not that, being organized for and having profits, it chooses to use them for one purpose rather than another. Amalgamated Rousing Corporation, 37 B. T. A. 817. This corporation, as permitted by its charter, had profits and chose by its amended bylaw of February 23, 1932, to restrict itself in their use to the improvement of its radio service or for its civic, educational and cultural purposes. In the tax year it had gross income from broadcasting amounting to $323,834.16 and net income of $52,955.36. It does not appear in the evidence just what was done with this income, although it is clear that no dividends have at any time been distributed. The omission to distribute dividends is however not an indication that the corporation itself was not organized for profit, for it is not unreasonable to infer that profits were used to enlarge, expand, and improve the radio facilities and service for both commercial and sustaining programs. The station was in business competition with other radio stations in its commercial broadcasting, and it was required to maintain its equipment and service adequately to enable it to meet that competition. This commercial broadcasting was important and took a large part of the time allotted to the corporation, from which it derived a substantial and increasing income. It can not be said that, despite the profit sought and obtained from it, the corporation was not organized for profit, even though its civic function was regarded by its management as more important.

We think that the evidence fails to show that the corporation meets the first requirement for exemption, that it be not organized for profit.

The evidence was also largely directed to the second requirement of the statute, that the corporation be operated exclusively for the promotion of social welfare. We may not consider this requirement too literally as involving a definitive meaning of “promotion of social welfare” or requiring a strict application of the word “exclusively”; nevertheless the extent of the operations of the corporation and its radio station for profit on an ordinary commercial basis in promotion of other ends than social welfare prevent even a liberal application of the statutory exemption. Clearly the doctrine of the Trinidad case, the Roche's Beach case (96 Ted.

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Debs Memorial Radio Fund, Inc. v. Commissioner
3 T.C. 949 (U.S. Tax Court, 1944)

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Bluebook (online)
3 T.C. 949, 1944 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 109, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/debs-memorial-radio-fund-inc-v-commissioner-tax-1944.