Lowry Hosp. Ass'n v. Comm'r

66 T.C. 850, 1976 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 59
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedAugust 12, 1976
DocketDocket No. 7264-73
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 66 T.C. 850 (Lowry Hosp. Ass'n v. Comm'r) 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
Lowry Hosp. Ass'n v. Comm'r, 66 T.C. 850, 1976 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 59 (tax 1976).

Opinion

Wilbur, Judge:

Respondent has determined the following deficiencies in petitioner’s Federal income tax:

Taxable year Deficiency Taxable year Deficiency
1967 _ $18,053.06 1970 _ $20,846.86
1968 _ 19,173.47 1971 _ 13,947.87
1969 _ 8,933.94

The issues presented for our decision are (1) whether petitioner qualified as a tax-exempt organization under section 501(c)(3)1 during the years in issue and (2) whether petitioner’s tax-exempt status may be retroactively revoked for taxable years ended prior to November 7,1972.2

FINDINGS OF FACT

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

Petitioner is a corporation organized under Tennessee law (ch. 67, sec. 1, et seq., Public Acts 1945, as amended, repealed 1968) as a “corporation for the general welfare of society and not for individual profit.” Petitioner’s principal business purpose is the operation of a hospital. When the petition was filed herein, its principal office was located in Sweetwater, Tenn. In each of the years in issue petitioner filed a Return of Organization Exempt from Income Tax with the Mid-Atlantic Service Center, Philadelphia, Pa.

Petitioner’s hospital is and has been located in a three-story brick building in downtown Sweetwater, Tenn., and serves a community of about 40,000 people. During the years in issue the hospital had beds and facilities for approximately 30 patients. The Sweetwater area has one other hospital with a capacity for about 60 patients. During the years 1967 to 1972 there were between six and eight doctors in the area.

Petitioner was incorporated as a nonprofit organization under Tennessee law in December 1954. The incorporators of petitioner were Dr. Telford A. Lowry (Dr. Lowry), Florence C. Lowry, his wife, Juanell Campbell, William E. Howe, and Elizabeth D. Lowe.3 Dr. Lowry is a physician who has practiced in Sweetwater since 1946. William E. Howe, a practicing attorney in Sweetwater, has acted as attorney and director for petitioner and as trustee of a trust for Dr. Lowry’s daughter. Juanell Campbell has been an employee of the hospital since 1953, and its administrator since 1958.4

From October 1,1957, to January 1,1968, petitioner leased the hospital building from Florence C. Lowry, individually, and Dr. Lowry as trustee of a trust for the benefit of their children. On January 1, 1968, the hospital property was conveyed to William E. Howe, trustee of a trust for the benefit of Dr. Lowry’s daughter, and during the years 1968 through 1971, petitioner leased the hospital building from the trust. Pursuant to the lease, petitioner paid a monthly rental of $1,300 for the use of the building and the adjoining parking lot. The petitioner also paid $200-per-month rent to Dr. Telford Lowry for the use of a paved parking lot located across the street from the hospital. In June 1972, petitioner purchased the hospital building for $300,000 cash, paid in two installments, $90,000 in July 1972 and $210,000 in December 1972. The $300,000 purchase price equaled the amount set forth in an appraisal by Norman B. Lee, a real estate broker in Madisonville, Tenn.5

During the years in issue, the Lowry-Henshaw Clinic (the clinic) was located in the same.building as the hospital. Dr. Lowry and Dr. Joe Henshaw (Dr. Henshaw) considered themselves partners in the clinic, and shared profits and losses equally. The clinic paid $300 per month for the space in the building occupied by the clinic and for the use of the adjoining parking lot. These payments were made directly to the trustee pursuant to the lease agreement between petitioner and the trust that owned the building.

The hospital building contained 10,259 square feet of floor space. Of this amount, 8,244 square feet was used exclusively by the hospital; 985 square feet, exclusively by the clinic. The remaining 1,030 square feet was common space used by both the clinic and the hospital.

The common space contained the hospital’s laboratory and X-ray room. It also contained a room used as an emergency room by the hospital and on a daily basis as a treatment room by the clinic and by doctors other than Drs. Lowry and Henshaw. Additionally, it contained two business offices, the reception room, restrooms, and the common entrance to the building.

The hospital and the clinic worked in close cooperation, often sharing supplies and services. For example, the charge for drugs purchased at the local drug store was made on a joint bill and the hospital and clinic portions were allocated by the hospital administrator. Where it was difficult to determine the specific charges allocable to the hospital or clinic, a reasonable allocation was made by the hospital administrator. Similarly, the hospital’s pathological work was done by third parties who sent a single bill for the work performed. The hospital paid for the specific portion of the bill relating to pathological services performed for hospital patients; the clinic paid for the portion of the bills specifically relating to outpatients. The clinic paid the telephone bills6 for both the hospital and the clinic ($16,191.57 total for the years in issue) and the hospital paid the utility bills for both the hospital and the clinic ($18,126.59 total for the years in issue).

Hospital and clinic employees frequently did work for both operations. During the years in issue, the hospital had approximately 30 employees; the clinic, 3 employees. The following were employees who served both in varying degrees during this time:

Employee Salary paid by
Administrator_ Hospital
Outpatient nurse- Clinic Outpatient nurse_ Hospital
Lab technician- Hospital
Lab technician_ Clinic
Employee Salary paid by
Insurance clerk_ Hospital
Insurance clerk_ Hospital
Receptionist-switchboard operator_ Clinic
Janitorial personnel_ Hospital

The clinic’s outpatient nurse worked for the hospital when it had an emergency or had need for an additional nurse. At other times, the hospital’s outpatient nurse assisted the clinic’s nurse. The lab technicians, one employed by the hospital and one by the clinic, worked together performing laboratory and X-ray services for both the hospital and the clinic. The two insurance clerks, both employed by the hospital, handled claims for both the hospital and clinic and also did the billing for both the hospital and clinic. Janitorial personnel employed by the hospital provided janitorial services for both the clinic and the hospital. The registration of patients of both the hospital and the clinic was handled by the receptionist employed by the clinic.

If an outpatient of Dr. Lowry or Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
66 T.C. 850, 1976 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 59, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lowry-hosp-assn-v-commr-tax-1976.