Keystone Automobile Club v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue

181 F.2d 402, 39 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 352, 1950 U.S. App. LEXIS 4025
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedMarch 30, 1950
Docket10097_1
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 181 F.2d 402 (Keystone Automobile Club v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Keystone Automobile Club v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 181 F.2d 402, 39 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 352, 1950 U.S. App. LEXIS 4025 (3d Cir. 1950).

Opinion

GOODRICH, Circuit Judge,

The question in this case is whether the Keystone Automobile Club must pay federal income taxes for the year 1943. The Club says that it does not have income. It also says that it is exempt under Section 101(9) of the Internal Revenue Code, 26 U.S.C.A. § 101(9). The wording of this section will be discussed later. The Commissioner’s assertion of tax liability was upheld by the Tax Court. 1 The taxpayer seeks a reversal of that decision here.

There are two aspects to the case and we think it will make for clearness in their treatment if we discuss them separately. One has to do with whether, as an original proposition, the Keystone Club comes under the exemption statute. The second aspect of the case has to do with the effect of what is claimed to be a long history of administrative action applying the exemption to this and similar organizations.

We turn first to the statute and the question of exemption without regard to administrative rulings. The pattern of activity of Keystone does not differ greatly from that of other automobile organizations recently involved in this same type of litigation. Keystone was organized in 1906 as The Automobile Club of Delaware County and was incorporated in 1911 as a Pennsylvania non-profit, non-stock corporation. It now operates in Eastern Pennsylvania, the District of Columbia, part of New Jersey, Maryland and Virginia. But it also has arrangements whereby its members may procure the benefit of membership through services obtained outside these áreas. Members are entitled to emergency road service, touring advice and maps, bail bond service and assistance in securing licenses and having applications notarized. Keystone is the sole owner of the stock of two insurance companies and these companies, in turn, sell policies on motor vehicles and fire insurance on homes to members of Keystone. There is also a finance corporation through which members may finance payments on cars they purchase. These wholly owned corporations pay income taxes on their earnings. The inducement to members of Keystone to do business with them is that members secure the services offered by these companies at lower net cost than they could obtain them elsewhere. Further facts about the nature and operation of the taxpayer will be stated as the discussion proceeds.

The paragraph of the statute under which exemption is claimed here (Section 101 [9]) exempts: “(9) Clubs organized and operated exclusively for pleasure, recreation, and other nonprofitable purposes, no part of the net earnings of which inures to the benefit of any private shareholder.”

We are very skeptical whether Keystone has any features of a club except the word used as part of its corporate name. What is a club ? Unless the term has become one of art in the law we do not think a consultation with law dictionaries to be helpful. We do not think it is a term of art and find no evidence that Congress was not *404 using the word as any of us would in common parlance. , The dictionary definition perhaps may help to center attention on the use of the term in ordinary speech; it talks about a club as “an association of persons for the promotion of some common object.” 8

We have no doubt that the concept of a club is a broad one. It can include persons who get together to eat and, drink and to sing afterwards, but it certainly is not limited to that. On'the other hand, a group of people with a common object may, quite clearly, not constitute a club. A crowd of shoppers trying to get at a counter where a sale is taking place is certainly a group of people with a common object, but we feel sure that even the petitioner would not call such a group a club. We think that the dictionary represents the common concept that there-must be some type of mingling of people together, as well as a common object, to constitute that vague thing known as a club. .

What about Keystone in the light of this general approach?' Back in 1911 when the charter was granted, the purpose was stated as “to maintain a^club for social enjoyment, and a club house, and for the comfort, protection and conveniencé of its members in the pursuit of the pastime of automobiling.” In 1911 there were about 618,000 passenger cars registered in the United States as compared with something more than 33,-000,000 in 1948. 2 3 It may well be at that time car owners did club'together for their common interests. Whether Keystone ever had a club house the record does not disclose. But there is an interesting indication in one of the recent cases concerning motor clubs that the club of Minneapolis, Minnesota, had and still does maintain a country club house for its members. 4

Keystone has quarters where it transacts business. These quarters are not' a club house in the sense of being a center of social activity. Nor does Keystone conduct or furnish facilities for conducting any social functions whatever. And so far as “the pastime of automobiling” is concerned there is nothing to show that Keystone’s members, or how many of them, use their cars for the pastime of automobiling. The organization does not check to see whether a member, present or prospective, uses his car commercially or for pleasure only or both. It is difficult for us to think that the 48,010 members of Keystone Automobile Club in 1943 used their cars as a “pastime.”

The securing of new members for Keystone does not seem , to us to be done in a club-like manner. It appears that during the tax year 1943 Keystone paid some $40,-000 in commissions to solicitors who had secured persons to join. In other words, here is a type of out and out solicitation, a perfectly legitimate business, but hardly fitting in with the conduct of a club.

We do not see in the evidence shown as to the operation of Keystone and the services performed anything which members do together. There is a provision' for an annual meeting and the election Of officers. Not without significance is the provision .that 25 members constitute a quorum. The other services rendered, which have.already been outlined, are no doubt highly valuable and w‘e have no question as to the efficiency of operation. But they are commercial services pure and simple and the fact that people save each other money by employing a common agent from whom to procure these services does not make them club members, even in the loosest sense of that term.

But if we assume that Keystone is a “club” where do we get as to its exemption under the statute? We have been treated to a good sized dose of so-called canons of construction known as noscitur a sociis and ejusdum generis in connection with the argument. We find them just about as helpful in settling a specific case as those vials of distilled wisdom of the ages containing the phrases “birds of a feather flock together” and “a man is known by the company he keeps.” Throwing a vague *405 phrase into law Latin does not make it any more, useful in construing a statute.

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Bluebook (online)
181 F.2d 402, 39 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 352, 1950 U.S. App. LEXIS 4025, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keystone-automobile-club-v-commissioner-of-internal-revenue-ca3-1950.