Texas Learning Technology Group v. C.I.R.

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedMay 20, 1992
Docket91-4474
StatusPublished

This text of Texas Learning Technology Group v. C.I.R. (Texas Learning Technology Group v. C.I.R.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Texas Learning Technology Group v. C.I.R., (5th Cir. 1992).

Opinion

United States Court of Appeals,

Fifth Circuit.

No. 91–4474.

TEXAS LEARNING TECHNOLOGY GROUP, Petitioner–Appellant,

v.

COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent–Appellee.

April 16, 1992.

Appeal from a Decision of the United States Tax Court.

Before THORNBERRY, KING, and DEMOSS, Circuit Judges.

THORNBERRY, Circuit Judge:

This is an appeal from the Tax Court's decision in a declaratory judgment action. The

Appellant filed a suit for declaratory judgment in the Tax Court after the Commissioner of the Internal

Revenue Service ruled that the Appellant is not a "political subdivision" under § 170(b)(1)(A)(v) of

the Internal Revenue Code. The Tax Court agreed with the Commissioner that Appellant is not a

"political subdivision." The Appellant now appeals the Tax Court's decision.

I. Background

A. The Proceedings Below

After the Commissioner of the Internal Revenue Service ruled that the Appellant, Texas

Learning Technology Gro up (TLTG), did not qualify as a political subdivision under §

170(b)(1)(A)(v), TLTG filed a suit for declaratory judgment in the Tax Court, requesting a ruling that

it qualifies as a "political subdivision" and is thus excepted from "private foundation" status and its

requirements. The case went before the Tax Court without a trial pursuant to Tax Ct.R. 122, based

upon the pleadings, the administrative record, and a partial stipulation of facts filed by the parties.

The Tax Court found that TLTG failed to qualify for an exemption from "private foundation" status

as a "political subdivision" under § 170(b)(1)(A)(v) because it was not authorized to exercise "sovereign power."1 TLTG now appeals the Tax Court's ruling.

B. Texas Learning and Technology Group

TLTG is an unincorporated association that was created by an interlocal agreement among

eleven Texas public school districts. The eleven school districts entered into the agreement pursuant

to the Interlocal Cooperation Act, Tex.Rev.Stat.Ann. art. 4413(32c) (Vernon 1976). The Interlocal

Cooperat ion Act allows any local government to "contract or agree with one or more local

governments to perform governmental functions and services under the terms of [the] Act."

Tex.Rev.Stat.Ann. art. 4413(32c)(4)(a). Hence, the school districts, as local governments, formed

a contract creating TLTG in order to fund, organize, and manage projects designed to improve the

public education curriculum in Texas.

TLTG is governed by a board of direct ors that is responsible for TLTG's fiscal and

administrative policies. The board of directors consists of fifteen members: five board members are

appointed by the President of the Texas Association of School Administrators; five board members

are appointed by the President of the Texas Association of School Boards; two members are

appointed by the Texas Board of Education; and the Governor, Lieutenant Governor, and Speaker

of the House of Representatives of Texas each appoint one member.

TLTG entered into a co ntract with the National Science Center for Communications and

Electronics Foundation to develop a physical science curriculum. TLTG plans to sell its physical

science curriculum to all public school districts in Texas. The revenues first will be used to pay for

development costs, and any remaining funds will be returned to the member school districts, up to

1 The IRS originally stated that TLTG could avoid "private foundation" status by meeting the "public support" test under § 170(b)(1)(A)(vi), for charities that receive most of their funding from governmental units. (TLTG receives almost all of its funding from the school districts which are governmental units.) TLTG wants to escape "private foundation" status only by means of subsection (v) and not subsection (vi), because under subsection (vi), TLTG's finances would be examined periodically to determine whether it continued to satisfy the "public support" test. 125% of the participating member school district's contributions. Any revenues not returned to

participating member school districts may be used by TLTG for any purpose consistent with its

agreements with its members. In the future, TLTG will fund, organize, and manage new projects that

are consistent with its purposes and objectives. Each member school district will have an option to

participate in projects by entering into separate interlocal project agreements. Each member public

school district must pay $500 in annual dues to TLTG and contribute funds for any group project in

which it participates. Also, the school districts are required to fund any deficit that TLTG might

incur.

The parties have stipulated that TLTG does not maintain the power to tax, the power of

eminent domain, or the power to issue government bonds.

C. Relevant Provisions of the Internal Revenue Code

TLTG's tax exempt status is not at issue in this appeal. TLTG challenges only the Tax Court's

conclusion that TLTG is not a political subdivision within the meaning of § 170(b)(1)(A)(v).

TLTG is a § 501(c)(3) organization and any § 501(c)(3) organization is presumed to be a

"private foundation" unless it qualifies under one of the exceptions to "private foundation" status

listed in § 509(a). As long as an organization is classified as a "private foundation," it is subject to

certain excise taxes for self-dealing, speculative investing, lobbying, and other restricted activities.

See 26 U.S.C. §§ 4940–4945 (1989). Tax exempt organizations that are classified as "other than

private foundations" are not subject to the requirements of §§ 4940–4945.

Under § 509(a)(1), an organization described in § 170(b)(1)(A)(i)–(vi) is excepted from

private foundation status. Subsection (v), the subsection TLTG seeks to avail itself of, requires by

way of § 170(c)(1) that TLTG be "a state, a possession of the United States, or any political

subdivision of any of the foregoing...." Thus, to escape private foundation status by way of subsection (v), TLTG must be a "political subdivision" of the state of Texas.

II. Analysis

A. The Standard of Review

"The scope of review by the Courts of Appeal of Tax Court decisions and nonjury District

Court decisions is the same." JOHN C. CHOMMIE, FEDERAL INCOME TAXATION, § 301 (1973); 26

U.S.C. § 7482 (1989). The Tax Co urt's ruling that TLTG is not a "political subdivision" is a

conclusion of law which we review de novo.

B. The Definition of "Political Subdivision"

The term "political subdivision" is not defined in § 170 or in the Treasury Regulations

accompanying § 170. Treasury Regulation 1.103–1(b), however, provides that any division of the

government that is a municipal corporation or has been delegated the right to exercise part of the

sovereign power of the government, is a political subdivision. 26 C.F.R. § 1.103–1(b). Case law

both before and after the promulgation of Regulation 1.103–1(b) has required an entity to be

authorized to exercise some sovereign powers in order to be considered a political subdivision. The

power to tax, the power of eminent domain, and the police power are the generally acknowledged

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