Hanson v. Dept. of Rev.

CourtOregon Tax Court
DecidedSeptember 26, 2019
DocketTC-MD 190010G
StatusUnpublished

This text of Hanson v. Dept. of Rev. (Hanson v. Dept. of Rev.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Tax Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hanson v. Dept. of Rev., (Or. Super. Ct. 2019).

Opinion

IN THE OREGON TAX COURT MAGISTRATE DIVISION Income Tax

DICK E. HANSON ) and CAROL J. HANSON, ) ) Plaintiffs, ) TC-MD 190010G ) v. ) ) DEPARTMENT OF REVENUE, ) State of Oregon, ) ) Defendant. ) DECISION

This case is ready for decision after trial on the issue of whether activity reported on

Plaintiffs’ Schedule C was conducted for profit. Plaintiffs appealed from Defendant’s

Conference Decision Letter. Plaintiff Dick E. Hanson (Pastor Hanson) appeared and testified on

behalf of Plaintiffs. James Bartos, Tax Auditor, appeared and testified on behalf of Defendant.

Plaintiffs’ exhibits 1 to 14, 2A, 2B, 3A, 3B, 4A, 7A, and 9A were admitted without objection.

Defendant’s exhibits A to E, the odd-numbered pages of its exhibit F, and its exhibits G to I were

admitted without objection. Page 6 of Defendant’s exhibit F was admitted on rebuttal.

I. STATEMENT OF FACTS

Pastor Hanson is an entrepreneur, a business owner, and an emeritus minister of the

Seventh-day Adventist® church (SDA).1 (Ex 9.) He is an expert in “stewardship education” and

has published books and led seminars on that topic. Pastor Hanson testified that, although he is

retired from employment with SDA, ministry continues to inform every aspect of his life,

including his business ventures. During 2014, he had three ventures: a longstanding custom-

1 The registered-trademark symbol appears on Pastor Hanson’s ministerial credentials. The court makes no assertion regarding SDA’s trademark status.

DECISION TC-MD 190010G 1 of 11 parts-manufacturing business called Corex LLC, a real-estate holding company, and a

stewardship-education project called Vital Truths Media LLC (“VTM”). The character of Pastor

Hanson’s activities related to VTM is the subject of this appeal.

The idea for VTM originated after Pastor Hanson received the writings of his late mentor,

Pastor Mel Rees, from the executor of Pastor Rees’s estate. Pastor Rees had developed a

theology of stewardship that was formative in Pastor Hanson’s ministry. One of Pastor Rees’s

endeavors had been the publication of a magazine conveying his principles of stewardship,

subscriptions for which were sold to SDA congregations. Pastor Hanson’s idea was to do with

videos something like what Pastor Rees had done with printed magazines.

From 2011 to 2013, Pastor Hanson completed preliminary research, planning, and

development for VTM. He and his wife attended services at many SDA congregations “with a

stopwatch” in order to determine an appropriate video length. The plan he settled on was to

produce weekly, 4-to-5-minute videos about stewardship that could be played during church

services. (Ex 6.) Subscriptions would be offered to individual congregations for an annual fee

of $60 to $120, depending on congregation size. (Id.) Multiplying an average subscription fee

by the number of congregations in SDA’s North American Division, Pastor Hanson estimated

the project’s initial gross income potential at over $450,000 annually.2 (Ex 5 at 1.) He believed

that income potential could be greatly expanded by translating the videos into Spanish, thus

opening up markets in Central and South America. (Id.) Pastor Hanson obtained an Internet

domain name for VTM and, in November 2013, he completed two prototype videos. By the end

of 2013, VTM was “ready to launch.” (Id.)

2 Apart from missions, individual SDA congregations each belong to a geographical conference. (Ex 9A.) Each conference is headed by a president, and conferences within a wider region form a union conference, also headed by a president. The North American Division contains nine union conferences. (Id.)

DECISION TC-MD 190010G 2 of 11 Based on his knowledge of SDA’s structure and internal dynamics, Pastor Hanson

planned to market VTM’s videos—called Living Truth—to SDA leadership before contacting

pastors about subscriptions for their individual congregations. His initial target date to begin

fulfilling subscriptions was January 2015; to meet that target, he aimed to produce six months’

worth of weekly videos by October 2014.

In January 2014, Pastor Hanson met with the president of the North Pacific Union

Conference (NPUC), who was pleased with his presentation and invited him to speak to the

presidents of NPUC’s constituent conferences at their upcoming meeting in March 2014. Pastor

Hanson decided to wait for the results of that meeting before producing any more videos. In the

meantime, he presented the Living Truth prototypes via telephone to the Director of Stewardship

for the North American Division (NAD), which encompassed NPUC and the other eight union

conferences. The NAD stewardship director was also pleased, “but wanted to think about the

whole program,” and suggested they set an in-person meeting in May.

On March 15, 2019, Pastor Hanson presented the Living Truth prototypes to the NPUC

Presidents Council and was surprised to encounter “resistance.” Pastor Hanson described that

meeting as when “the wheels kind of came off” the project and he began to question its viability.

However, he was invited by the president of the Idaho conference to present on stewardship to

pastors and church members at upcoming events in November 2014, January 2015, and June

2015. Pastor Hanson agreed to waive his customary honorarium in exchange for an opportunity

to present the Living Truth project at those events. He “put everything on hold”—including

development of additional videos—and concentrated on preparing for those events, which he

thought would give him a “feel for acceptance from pastors and members.” (Ex 5 at 2.)

///

DECISION TC-MD 190010G 3 of 11 In May 2014, Pastor Hanson flew to Salt Lake City to meet with the NAD stewardship

director. Although the stewardship director expressed interest in what Pastor Hanson would

learn at the upcoming Idaho meetings, he was unable to provide mailing lists or contact

information for churches and pastors. Pastor Hanson described that meeting as another

disappointment. (Ex 5 at 2.)

Pastor Hanson spoke at the conferences in Idaho in November 2014, January 2015, and

June 2015, taking time to introduce Living Truth at each venue. (Ex 5 at 2.) His presentations

were well-received by members, but not by pastors. (Id.) Noting that “pastors are the

gatekeepers,” Pastor Hanson began looking for a “plan B or C.” (Id.)

In August 2015, Pastor Hanson met with a representative of “Faithlife Corporation /

Logos Bible Software” regarding digitizing Pastor Rees’s library of books and receiving a

royalty when they were viewed. (Ex 5 at 3.) The representative informed Pastor Hanson that he

would need to obtain a written copyright to proceed. In October 2015, Pastor Hanson was

introduced to another publisher’s representative, who advised him on how to obtain the

copyright.

Shortly thereafter, Pastor Hanson began attempting to locate Pastor Rees’s heirs and, on

August 1, 2016, he purchased the copyright from them for $3,250. (Ex 5 at 3.) He then learned

that “things had changed at Faithlife,” and his bid to have the Rees works digitized by them was

denied. (Id.) Over the next couple of years, Pastor Hanson made some unsuccessful attempts to

digitize and edit the Rees library while dealing with health issues and family emergencies, with a

plan to obtain $5,000 per year in licensing fees for up to five years upon completion. (Id. at 3–

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Hillenga v. Dept. of Rev.
21 Or. Tax 396 (Oregon Tax Court, 2014)

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