Quarrie v. Commissioner

603 F.2d 1274
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedAugust 15, 1979
DocketNo. 78-2089
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 603 F.2d 1274 (Quarrie v. Commissioner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Quarrie v. Commissioner, 603 F.2d 1274 (7th Cir. 1979).

Opinion

SPRECHER, Circuit Judge.

The William F., Mable E. and Margaret K. Quarrie Charitable Fund (The Fund), by its trustee, The Northern Trust Company, (The Trustee), appeals from a Tax Court determination that it is a private foundation as defined by Section 509(a) of the Internal Revenue Code, rather than a supporting organization within the terms of Section 509(a)(3). The sole issue is whether the trustee of The Fund has such discretionary power to substitute beneficiaries as requires denial of supporting organization status.

In 1942 William F. Quarrie created a trust, which became irrevocable on his death in 1956. In 1960 Quarrie’s widow Mable, pursuant to powers granted her by the trust instrument, executed a “Designation of Charitable Beneficiaries.” The Designation directs that the income from the trust be paid to The Northern Trust Company as trustee of The Fund, and distributed to The Chicago Community Trust, the [1277]*1277Columbia-Presbyterian Medical Center Fund, Inc., and the Art Institute of Chicago. According to the trust instrument Mr. Quarrie’s niece receives $1,000 a year from the income of the trust. On her death the principal goes to The Fund and the income is to be paid by The Trustee, in specified shares, to the beneficiaries now receiving the income. According to the Designation, the income distributed to the Chicago Community Trust and to the Columbia-Presbyterian Medical Center is to be used as they “shall deem advisable for the advancement of medical education and research.” The crucial terms of the Designation provide that:

In the event that at some future date, any of the aforesaid charitable uses in the judgment of the Northern Trust Company shall have become unnecessary, undesirable, impracticable, impossible or no longer adapted to the needs of the public, the income otherwise to be devoted to such use shall be distributed to such charitable, scientific, educational or religious corporations, trusts, funds or foundations as the Northern Trust Company may select to be used for their general purposes.

According to the Tax Court this provision requires that The Fund be treated as a private foundation, and not as a supporting organization.

Private foundations were defined and subjected to significant regulations and controls by the Tax Reform Act of 1969. These reforms were prompted by Congressional concern over widespread abuses of the tax-exempt status of private foundations. The 1969 Act imposed on private foundations an excise tax, required that they distribute yearly a minimum percentage of their assets, severely limited the permissible relationship of foundations to their founders or donors, required that they supervise the use made of the funds they distribute, required yearly reports, and exposed them to severe penalties for failure to satisfy these requirements. See Internal Revenue Code, §§ 4940 through 4945. The definition of a private foundation is intentionally inclusive: all organizations exempted from tax by Section 501(c)(3)1 are private foundations except for those specified in Section 509(a)(1) through (4). The exceptions are churches, schools, and hospitals, § 509(a)(1), other publicly supported organizations, § 509(a)(2), and supporting organizations of such excepted organizations.2 If The Fund were to escape private foundation status and its associated burdens, it would do so as a supporting organization.

Public charities were excepted from private foundation status on the theory that their exposure to public scrutiny and their dependence on public support would keep them from the abuses to which private foundations were subject.3 Supporting or[1278]*1278ganizations are similarly excepted in so far as they are subject to the scrutiny of a public charity. The Treasury Regulations therefore provide that the supporting organization must be responsive to the needs of the public charity and intimately involved in its operations.4

This required relationship between a supporting organization and a public charity is described by Section 509(a)(3)(B): the supporting organization must be “operated, supervised, or controlled by or in connection with” a public charity. The interpretive regulations elaborate this as describing three different types of relationship: being 1) operated, supervised, or controlled by, 2) supervised or controlled in connection with, or by, 2) supervised or controlled in connection with, or 3) operated in connection with.5 Treas.Reg. § l,509(a)-4(f)(2). It is agreed that The Fund is an organization “operated in connection with” a public charity. Because this is the least intimate involvement of the three sorts of relationship, strict limits are imposed on the structure of an “operated in connection with” organization.

The requisite characteristics of a supporting organization are indicated by Section 509(a)(3)(A): it must be

organized, and at all times thereafter operated exclusively for the benefit of, to perform the functions of, or to carry out the purposes of one or more specified organizations described in paragraph- (1) or (2).

At issue here is the requirement that the beneficiary organization must be specified by name. This requirement is more narrowly drawn for “operated in connection with” organizations, than for the other two sorts.6

The articles of a supporting organization which is “controlled by” or “controlled in connection with” a publicly supported organization may specify the beneficiary organizations by class, rather than by name, provided that the supporting organization is controlled by a beneficiary of the specified class. Treas.Reg, § 1.509(a)-4(d)(2) and (3). In such circumstances substitution of beneficiaries within the class is permitted, since such substitution is at all times controlled by a publicly supported beneficiary.

The articles of a supporting organization such as The Fund, which is merely “operated in connection with” a publicly supported organization must without exception designate the “specified” organizations by name.7 Since such specified [1279]*1279organizations may in time dissolve, substitution is permitted. The possible substitutes must be named too. They may be designated by class, rather than by name, but only if:

such substitution is conditioned upon the occurrence of an event which is beyond the control of the supporting organization, such as loss of exemption, substantial failure or abandonment of operations, or dissolution of the publicly supported organization or organizations designated in the articles.

Treas.Reg. § 1.509(a)-4(d)(4)(i)(a). The issue in this appeal is whether the Tax Court properly found that The Fund fails to satisfy this regulation due to the power given to The Trustee to substitute beneficiaries when, in its judgment, the uses of the named beneficiaries “shall have become unnecessary, undesirable, impracticable, impossible or no longer adapted to the needs of the public.”

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Bluebook (online)
603 F.2d 1274, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/quarrie-v-commissioner-ca7-1979.