United States v. Kremetis ( 1997 )


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    _________________________


    No. 97-1319


    STATE POLICE ASSOCIATION OF MASSACHUSETTS,

    Petitioner, Appellant,

    v.

    COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE,

    Respondent, Appellee.

    _________________________

    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES TAX COURT

    [Hon. Thomas B. Wells, Judge]

    _________________________

    Before

    Selya and Lynch, Circuit Judges,

    and Pollak,* Senior District Judge.

    _________________________

    Alfred J. O'Donovan, with whom Michelle H. Blauner and
    Shapiro, Haber & Urmy were on brief, for appellant.
    Teresa T. Milton, Attorney, Tax Division, U.S. Dep't of
    Justice, with whom Loretta C. Argrett , Assistant Attorney General,
    and Kenneth L. Greene, Attorney, Tax Division, were on brief, for
    appellee.

    _________________________


    August 20, 1997
    _________________________

    __________________
    *Of the Eastern District of Pennsylvania, sitting by designation.




    SELYA, Circuit Judge . In this case, the Commissioner of

    the Internal Revenue Service (the Commissioner) issued a deficiency

    notice to the State Police Association of Massachusetts (the

    Association) for income taxes allegedly due but unpaid. When the

    Association protested, the Tax Court sided with the Commissioner.

    See State Police Ass'n of Mass. v. Commissioner, 72 T.C.M. (CCH)

    582 (1996) (Tax Ct. Op.). The Association appeals, contending that

    the Tax Court erred both in finding that the deficiency assessment

    was timely and in holding that certain of the Association's

    activities gave rise to liability for unrelated business income

    tax. We affirm.

    I. BACKGROUND

    The Association is a labor organization, and, as such, is

    exempt from income taxes under 26 U.S.C. S 501(c)(5) (1994). The

    purpose of the organization is to represent its members in

    bargaining over the terms and conditions of their employment and to

    promote a fraternal spirit among members. Virtually all the

    troopers who are eligible to join the Association do so.

    During the years at issue, the Association published an

    annual yearbook, known as The Constabulary. The yearbook consisted

    of photographs, articles, display advertisements, and a business

    directory. We describe infra the sales effort (which the

    Association in more salubrious times called the "earnings program")



    From this point forward, we will refer to the applicable
    provisions of the Tax Code, as they appeared on the date(s) in
    question, by using the preface "IRC." To illustrate, 26 U.S.C. S
    501(c)(5) will be cited as IRC S 501(c)(5), and so on and so forth.

    2




    and the mechanics of publication and distribution. It is enough

    for now to say that the earnings program proved to be aptly named:

    gross receipts related to the publication of The Constabulary for

    the years at issue totalled $8,788,211. Of this amount, the

    Association retained somewhat over 40% (the precise percentage

    varied from year to year, and is of no consequence here). The

    Association paid no tax on the income.

    It is said that all good things come to an end. Federal

    law requires that an otherwise tax-exempt organization must pay

    federal income tax on income derived from business ventures which

    are not substantially related to its tax-exempt purpose(s). See

    IRC S 511. After due investigation, the Commissioner concluded

    that the Association had violated this stricture because the sale

    of advertising in The Constabulary yielded taxable income. Acting

    on this conclusion, the Commissioner issued a deficiency notice

    seeking $1,352,433 in taxes due for the tax years ended April 30,

    1986 through April 30, 1989, the three months ended July 31, 1989,

    and the tax years ended July 31, 1990 and 1991, along with

    additions to tax and penalties totalling $711,075.

    Displeased by this turn of events, the Association

    brought suit in the Tax Court under IRC S 6213(a) to obtain a

    redetermination of the taxes allegedly due. It claimed that, for

    certain tax years, the notice of deficiency had been issued beyond

    the applicable limitation period; and that, on a broader plane, the

    activity cited by the Commissioner _ the solicitation, sale, and

    publication of display ads and listings in The Constabulary _ did


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    not constitute an unrelated trade or business regularly carried on,

    and that, therefore, the income derived from that activity was

    exempt from tax. The Tax Court rejected both of these theses and

    sustained the Commissioner's determination of the existence and

    extent of the deficiency (although it eliminated the additions to

    tax and the penalties). See Tax Ct. Op. at 589, 594. This appeal

    ensued.

    II. THE PUTATIVE TIME BAR

    The Association claims that the statute of limitations

    bars the collection of taxes as to some or all of the affected

    periods. The relevant facts are not in dispute. On August 3,

    1992, the Association and the Commissioner, through their

    authorized representatives, executed a form entitled "Consent to

    Extend the Time to Assess Tax" (the Form). The Form, a copy of

    which is reprinted in the appendix, permitted the Commissioner to

    assess income tax on or before April 30, 1993, for the contested

    periods through July 31, 1989. The Commissioner assessed the taxes

    allegedly due for these periods by issuing a deficiency notice on

    April 22, 1993. The applicable limitation period is three years.

    See IRC S 6501(a). If the Form sufficed to extend the limitation

    period, then the deficiency notice was timely as to all the tax

    years at issue; if not, the Commissioner's claim for certain

    periods is probably time-barred.

    The Association advances a purely linguistic argument on

    this point. It notes that the text of the Form provides for an

    extension of the limitation period solely with respect to tax due


    4




    on "any return(s) made" by the Association during the periods in

    question. The only returns so made were information returns, on

    Form 990, entitled "Return of Organization Exempt from Income Tax."

    By definition, no tax could possibly be due on an information

    return. Taking this literal view, the Association contends that

    the Form did not extend the limitation period at all.

    The Tax Court refused to swallow this slippery syllogism.

    It impliedly found the language of the Form ambiguous and construed

    it as broad enough to include not only taxes due on returns made

    but also taxes due on returns deemed to be made. See Tax Ct. Op.

    at 589. Ascertaining the ambiguity vel non of a writing requires

    a court to ask and answer a question of law, and, therefore, we

    review this conclusion de novo. See IRC S 7482(c)(1); see also RCI

    Northeast Servs. Div. v. Boston Edison Co. , 822 F.2d 199, 202 (1st

    Cir. 1987).

    The Tax Court's rendition withstands scrutiny. Tax forms

    are rarely models of syntactical clarity, and the Form signed by

    the parties is no exception. The Tax Court read the phrase

    "return(s) made" as encompassing returns deemed to be made. This

    construction strikes us as reasonable.

    Words must be read in context. Though a plain vanilla

    reading of the Form would support an inference that the parties

    wished to extend the limitation period for assessing taxes due on

    actual returns filed for the applicable periods, the context casts

    a different light on the phrase "return(s) made." When one takes

    into account that the only "returns made" were information returns


    5




    on which no tax could conceivably be due, and that the signatories

    to the Form knew as much, the ambiguity of the phrase becomes

    apparent.

    Our thinking runs along the following lines. It would be

    nonsensical to extend the limitation period for assessment of taxes

    due on a return on which, by operation of law, no tax conceivably

    could be due. The law, in turn, should be reluctant to insist that

    courts construe a document in a way that leads to an absurd or

    nonsensical result. Indeed, the maxim ut res magis valeat quam

    pereat teaches that a written instrument ordinarily should be given

    a meaning that will make it legally functional rather than a

    meaning which will render it legally dysfunctional. See 3 Arthur

    Linton Corbin, Corbin on Contracts S 532 (1960); see also Blackie

    v. Maine, 75 F.3d 716, 722 (1st Cir. 1996). Thus, the very

    implausibility of the Association's proposed construction suggests

    that the phrase "return[s] made" must have some other meaning.

    This conclusion is fortified by the wonted operation of

    the relevant provisions of the Internal Revenue Code.

    Specifically, a return relative to the unrelated business taxable

    income of a normally tax-exempt organization (a so-called "990-T"

    return) is deemed made, for purposes of starting the running of the

    limitation period, when the information return (a so-called "990"

    return) is in fact made. See California Thoroughbred Breeders

    Ass'n v. Commissioner, 47 T.C. 335, 338 (1966) (construing IRC S

    6501(g)(2)). Without this rule deeming the Association's 990

    return to be a 990-T return, the statute of limitations that the


    6




    Association seeks to invoke would, presumably, not yet have begun

    to run. The Association thus seeks to link the two forms for the

    purposes of starting the limitations period, but would have us

    decouple the forms in reviewing its agreement to extend that

    period. Perhaps more important, reading the Form against the

    backdrop of the California Thoroughbred Breeders rule suggests

    another (broader) meaning for the phrase "return(s) made" _ a

    meaning which extends to returns deemed made _ and thus highlights

    the ambiguity of the Form.

    That ends the matter. The presence of an ambiguity

    permits a reviewing court to examine extrinsic evidence in an

    effort to clarify the intent of the parties. See Smart v. Gillette

    Co. Long-Term Disability Plan, 70 F.3d 173, 179 (1st Cir. 1995);

    RCI Northeast, 822 F.2d at 202. Here, the extrinsic evidence is

    telling: the Association's reading of the Form contradicts what

    even the Association admits was the parties' mutual intention _ to

    extend the limitation period as to any unrelated business income

    tax that might be due for the affected periods.

    We need not linger. We resolve contractual ambiguity in



    The court below suggested that, if it were unable to construe
    the language in the Form to give effect to the parties' discerned
    intention, it could reach the same result by reforming the
    instrument. See Tax Ct. Op. at 589 n.4. In general, reformation
    is available when a writing is clear on its face (i.e.,
    unambiguous) but nonetheless misstates the parties' intent. See,
    e.g., United States v. Lumbermens Mut. Cas. Co. , 917 F.2d 654, 658
    (1st Cir. 1990); Rocanville Corp. v. Natural Gas Pipeline Co. , 823
    F.2d 92, 94 (5th Cir. 1987); see also Restatement (Second) of
    Contracts S 155 (1979). The doctrine can be applied in tax cases.
    See, e.g., Woods v. Commissioner, 92 T.C. 776, 782-83 (1989).
    However, because we uphold the Tax Court's implicit finding that

    7




    favor of effectiveness, accept the discerned intent of the parties,

    endorse the Tax Court's interpretation of the phrase "return[s]

    made," and hold that the Form extended the limitation period as to

    the assessment of unrelated business income tax. The notice of

    deficiency was, therefore, timely as to all the contested tax

    years.

    III. THE MERITS

    The gravamen of the Commissioner's case is the charge

    that the activity undertaken in connection with publication of The

    Constabulary generated unrelated business taxable income. The

    allegation that an activity engaged in by a tax-exempt organization

    gives rise to unrelated business taxable income requires proof of

    three components. The Commissioner must demonstrate (1) that the

    activity comprises a trade or business, (2) which is regularly

    carried on, and (3) which is not substantially related to the

    organization's tax-exempt purpose. See United States v. American

    Bar Endowment, 477 U.S. 105, 110 (1986); see also IRC S 513(a).

    A.

    At the gateway to this issue, the parties dispute the

    standard of review. The Association asserts that the Tax Court's

    findings _ that publication of The Constabulary involved a business

    regularly carried on _ are subject to de novo review. The



    the Form is ambiguous, we need not reach the reformation issue.

    The Association does not mount a challenge on the third prong
    of the tripartite test, instead conceding that if the activity
    amounts to a regularly conducted trade or business, it is, as the
    Tax Court found, not substantially related to the Association's

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    Commissioner maintains that these findings are entitled to greater

    deference.

    Congress has directed the courts of appeals to use the

    same standards in reviewing Tax Court decisions that traditionally

    are used in appellate review of district court decisions in civil

    actions tried without a jury. See IRC S 7482(a). Consequently, we

    evaluate the Tax Court's findings of fact under the clearly

    erroneous standard. See Commissioner v. Duberstein, 363 U.S. 278,

    291 (1960); Manzoli v. Commissioner, 904 F.2d 101, 103 (1st Cir.

    1990); see also Fed. R. Civ. P. 52(a). This mode of review

    requires us to accept the Tax Court's credibility determinations

    and its findings about historical facts unless, after careful

    evaluation of the evidence, we are left with an abiding conviction

    that those determinations and findings are simply wrong. See

    Reliance Steel Prods. Co. v. National Fire Ins. Co. , 880 F.2d 575,

    576 (1st Cir. 1989). Notwithstanding the clearly erroneous rule,

    however, the Tax Court's ultimate conclusions (e.g., whether the

    facts, as found, are legally sufficient to demonstrate that the

    Association engaged in a trade or business) are conclusions of law,

    and are therefore subject to de novo review.

    On the merits, the Association advances two challenges:

    it asserts that the activities in question did not constitute a

    trade or business, and that in all events those activities were not

    conducted with the requisite regularity. We address these

    challenges sequentially.


    tax-exempt purpose. See Tax Ct. Op. at 591.

    9




    B.

    The operating paradigm permitted the Association to

    exercise significant control over the sales effort, the handling of

    the funds generated, and the publication of The Constabulary.

    Under this paradigm, the Association contracted with an outside

    firm (originally Brent-Wyatt East, and later R.H. McKnight Co.) to

    publish the yearbook and recruit telemarketers. These

    telemarketers were considered joint employees of the Association

    and the outside firm. Groups of eight to twelve callers worked out

    of field offices selected by the outside firm with the

    Association's approval and solicited local and national businesses

    within geographic areas demarcated by the Association. In so

    doing, they utilized a canned solicitation format approved by the

    Association, introducing themselves as calling on behalf of the

    Association. Troopers monitored all solicitations to make certain

    that the sales staff did not trespass into forbidden terrain. The

    Association also retained the right to inspect, without prior

    notice, the field offices from which solicitations took place.

    Prospective customers were offered the opportunity to

    purchase display advertisements and listings. Displays ranged in

    size from one-sixth of a page to a full page, and, at the

    purchaser's option, could contain text, logos, slogans, borders,



    We describe the relationship as it existed through mid-1990,
    under contractual arrangements with Brent-Wyatt East. Although the
    contract signed with McKnight on June 20, 1990, contained some
    variations, the Tax Court supportably found that these changes were
    largely cosmetic and did not alter the essential character of the
    relationship. See Tax Ct. Op. at 585.

    10




    and blocking. The fee charged for a display advertisement or a

    directory listing varied in direct proportion to the size of the

    display or listing and to the number of editions in which it

    appeared. The Constabulary was arranged so that displays were

    interspersed with editorial matter, and the publication contained

    a so-called "Index to Advertisers." Listings were arranged by type

    of product or service in a separate business directory section.

    Payments for ads sold were made to the Association and

    the Association deposited the receipts in its account. It made

    weekly accountings _ retaining a stipulated percentage "off the

    top" for itself, paying set percentages of the gross receipts to

    the telemarketers and to the outside firm, defraying the costs

    associated with solicitation and publication _ and kept any excess.

    The Association published The Constabulary annually.

    Association members acted as the editorial staff, writing and

    editing articles for the publication and approving the contents of

    the finished product. The Association distributed the yearbook

    free of charge at various state troopers' barracks, the

    Association's annual picnic (the "Police Chase"), and other

    occasions. Copies were sometimes sent to advertisers.

    Based on this scenario, the Commissioner's theory is that

    the Association _ which from time to time called The Constabulary

    an "ad book" and which, in its contract with Brent-Wyatt East,

    referred to the latter's assignment as "marketing advertising" _



    The Association produced five regional editions with common
    editorial material.

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    engaged in the business of selling advertising. The Association

    counters that it did not engage in that business; in its view, the

    displays and listings were not advertising at all, but merely a

    means of identifying sponsors. The Tax Court rejected this

    contention, see Tax Ct. Op. at 590, and so do we.

    Even a cursory glance at the yearbook, the pricing

    structure, and the terminology used by the Association belies the

    belated claim that the ads and listings were not "advertising" as

    that term is commonly understood. Nor is the Association's

    attempted recharacterization made any more palatable by its

    reliance on Proposed Treas. Reg. S 1.513-4, 58 Fed. Reg. 5690, 5690

    (1993). The proposed regulation describes the permissible contents

    of acknowledgements of sponsorship payments; it allows value-

    neutral descriptions of a sponsor's products or services, and logos

    or slogans "that are an established part of a sponsor's identity."

    See id. S 1.513-4(c). We need not decide, however, whether the

    materials in The Constabulary meet these exacting criteria; the

    proposed regulation, by its terms, does not apply to periodicals

    produced by tax-exempt organizations. See id. S 1.513-4(a).

    Putting the proposed regulation to one side, the

    Commissioner's appraisal of The Constabulary's contents comports

    with common sense: the displays look like ads, the directory

    listings function as guides to products and services, and the

    Association itself, at least during the first four years of the

    undertaking, consistently referred to the displays and listings as

    ads rather than as acknowledgements. That appraisal also is


    12




    supported by well-reasoned precedent.

    Fraternal Order of Police, Etc. v. Commissioner, 87 T.C.

    747 (1986), aff'd, 833 F.2d 717 (7th Cir. 1987) (FOP), which also

    involved the solicitation and sale of insertions in a publication

    sponsored by a tax-exempt policemen's organization, bears a strong

    resemblance to the case at bar. The Tax Court found that the

    activity in question amounted to an unrelated business. 87 T.C. at

    757. The Seventh Circuit affirmed this finding. 833 F.2d at 721-

    22. The similarities are striking. There, as here, the

    publication included display ads (using logos, slogans, and

    blocking), a directory section, and a message asking readers to

    patronize the businesses listed therein. See id. at 719-20.

    There, as here, the size of an insertion was directly proportionate

    to the price charged. See id. at 721. There, as here, the

    sponsoring organization, prior to the time the Commissioner came

    calling, characterized the disputed activity as advertising. See

    id.

    Given these similarities, FOP is powerful authority for

    the Commissioner's position that the activity here in question

    comprises a separate, unrelated business. We consider FOP

    correctly decided, and we find unconvincing the Association's

    attempts to distinguish it. Consequently, we hold that the Tax



    In striving to reach escape velocity from FOP's precedential
    orbit, the Association relies heavily on its presentation of expert
    testimony at trial. But this testimony was discounted by the Tax
    Court because the expert was dismally uninformed. See Tax Ct. Op.
    at 589-90. That determination was well within the trier's purview.
    See Seagate Tech., Inc. v. Commissioner, 102 T.C. 149, 186 (1994).

    13




    Court did not commit clear error in finding that the Association's

    solicitation, sale, and publication of displays and listings in The

    Constabulary constituted the business of advertising.

    The Association's fallback position is its claim that the

    Commissioner erred in treating the outside firms (Brent-Wyatt East

    and McKnight, respectively) as agents of the Association (and,

    thus, in attributing these firms' activities to the Association).

    To bolster this claim, the Association stresses that the contract

    documents required these firms to operate as independent

    contractors. It follows, the Association says, that even if the

    cited activities constituted the business of advertising, the

    business belonged to the outside firms.

    We are not persuaded. In the first place, an independent

    contractor can be an agent if, and to the extent that, the

    contractor acts for the benefit of another and under its control in

    a particular transaction. See Restatement (Second) of Agency SS 2,

    14N (1957). In the second place, the label which contracting

    parties place on their relationship is not decisive of their status

    vis-a-vis third parties. See Board of Trade v. Hammond Elevator

    Co., 198 U.S. 424, 437 (1905). Either way, answering the question

    that the Association raises requires that we examine the substance

    of the contracting parties' relationship.

    In this analysis, no single factor is dispositive. See

    Labor Relations Div. of Constr. Indus. v. International Bhd. of

    Teamsters, 29 F.3d 742, 748 (1st Cir. 1994). Rather, the nature of

    the relationship between the Association and the outside firms


    14




    depends on a myriad of factors, including control over the manner

    and means of performing the work, the skill required, the method of

    payment, the duration of the relationship, and similar factors.

    See, e.g., Saenger Org., Inc. v. Nationwide Ins. Licensing Assocs.,

    Inc., ___ F.3d ___, ___ (1st Cir. 1997) [No. 96-2197, slip op. at

    12]; Speen v. Crown Clothing Corp. , 102 F.3d 625, 629-30 (1st Cir.

    1996). The relevant factors here, taken as a whole, solidly

    support the Tax Court's determination that the outside firms acted

    as the Association's agents.

    First and foremost, the manner in which the Association

    conducted its affairs undercuts its claim that it lacked the

    requisite degree of suasion over the outside firms' activities.

    The Association retained very tight control over the method and

    manner of solicitation, the ingredients of the sales pitch, the

    identity of the solicitors, the financial aspects of the

    arrangement, the use of its name, the advertising formats, and the

    contents of the yearbook. We refer the reader who hungers for a

    blow-by-blow account to the details set out in the opinion below.

    See Tax Ct. Op. at 584-85. Without belaboring the point, it is

    enough to say that the record reveals an ample factual predicate

    for the finding that an agency relationship existed between the

    Association and the outside firms.

    C.

    The Association's final contention is that, even if its

    activities comprise a business attributable to it, that business

    was not carried on regularly. To buttress this contention, the


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    Association makes two separate, but related, arguments.

    Its first asseveration rests on the decisions in National

    Collegiate Athletic Ass'n v. Commissioner, 914 F.2d 1417 (10th Cir.

    1990) (NCAA), and Suffolk County Patrolmen's Benevolent Ass'n v.

    Commissioner, 77 T.C. 1314 (1981). These decisions are inapposite.

    In each instance, the advertising activity was tied to the program

    for a specific event. See NCAA, 914 F.2d at 1420 (collegiate

    basketball tournament); Suffolk County , 77 T.C. at 1316 (vaudeville

    show). Thus, resolution of those cases depended on Treas. Reg. S

    1.513-1(c)(2)(ii), which specifically provides that "publication of

    advertising in programs for sports events or music or drama

    performances will not ordinarily be deemed to be the regular

    carrying on of business." That regulation is of no assistance here

    because the Tax Court found specially that the Association's

    publication of The Constabulary was not linked to the occurrence of

    a specific event, see Tax Ct. Op. at 593, and the Association has

    not challenged that finding in this venue.

    We hasten to add, moreover, that the mode of analysis

    used in NCAA and Suffolk County cannot be employed here. Because

    those cases each involved a particular event, they looked to the

    time frame of the event in determining the regularity with which

    the business was carried on. See NCAA, 914 F.2d at 1422-23;

    Suffolk County , 77 T.C. at 1322-24. In a case like this one, where



    It is interesting to note that Proposed Treas. Reg. S 1.513-4
    draws a clear distinction between periodicals and material
    published in connection with a specific sponsored event. We find
    the distinction significant.

    16




    the publication of an ad book is not pegged to a particular event,

    a court must assay the activities which collectively comprise the

    business, and look to the overall time frame in which they

    occurred. For present purposes, that means the time frame in which

    the Association solicited, sold, and published advertising. See

    Treas. Reg. S 1.513-1(b) (noting that the activities of soliciting,

    selling, and publishing advertising collectively constitute a

    business). Those activities persisted for approximately 46 weeks

    a year. See Tax Ct. Op. at 593. This is more than sufficient

    regularity by any standard.

    The Association next argues that it did not regularly

    engage in a business because it did not carry on the advertising

    activity with the same entrepreneurial zeal that might typify a

    commercial operator. But this is an ill-conceived comparison.

    Although the purpose behind the unrelated business income tax is to

    create a more level playing field between taxed and tax-exempt

    enterprises, competitive similarities are not the only factors to

    be taken into account. See FOP, 833 F.2d at 722-23. The

    applicable regulation stipulates that the activity in question must

    be judged "in light of the purpose" of the tax, but it does not

    require that either actual competition or competitive equality be



    To be sure, the Association argues that the time frame is much
    shorter because, although solicitation and sales transpired 46
    weeks a year, publication occurred within a very narrow temporal
    window. This argument is disingenuous. Treas. Reg. S 1.513-1(b)
    refers to the activities of soliciting, selling, and publishing
    advertising as a singular business. That business must be
    regularly carried on, but there is no requirement that each task
    within the scope of the business must be carried on regularly.

    17




    shown. Treas. Reg. S 1.513-1(c)(1).

    In this instance, the Association carried on its

    activities in a systematic and well-organized fashion, with a

    clearly defined profit motive. Given the limitations of clear-

    error review, we cannot disturb the lower court's finding that the

    Association's activities were sufficiently regular to bring them

    within the ambit of the regulation. See Tax Ct. Op. at 593.

    IV. CONCLUSION

    We need go no further. While the Association makes

    several other arguments, none requires discussion; each of them is

    either adequately treated in the Tax Court's opinion, or obviously

    incorrect, or both. It suffices to say that the Commissioner's

    determination of the tax due and owing rests on a sturdy factual

    and legal foundation.



    Affirmed.






















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