United Cancer Council, Inc. v. Commissioner ( 1997 )


Menu:
  •                        
    109 T.C. No. 17
    UNITED STATES TAX COURT
    UNITED CANCER COUNCIL, INC., Petitioner v.
    COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent
    Docket No. 2008-91X.               Filed December 2, 1997.
    Petitioner was organized in 1963. In a ruling letter
    dated Mar. 31, 1969, respondent ruled that petitioner was
    exempt from Federal income tax and was an eligible
    charitable donee. Secs. 501(a), 501(c)(3), 170(c), I.R.C.
    1954.
    On June 11, 1984, petitioner entered into a 5-year
    fundraising contract (the Contract) with a professional
    fundraiser (W&H). During 1984 through 1989, W&H helped
    petitioner conduct a nationwide direct mail fundraising
    campaign. Petitioner received a total of about $2¼ million
    in net fundraising revenue under the Contract. W&H received
    more than $4 million in fees from petitioner, and in
    addition derived substantial income from exploiting the co-
    ownership rights in petitioner’s mailing list, which rights
    had been granted to W&H under the Contract.
    On Nov. 2, 1990, respondent revoked the favorable
    ruling letter retroactively to June 11, 1984. Petitioner
    initiated the instant action under sec. 7428, I.R.C. 1986,
    for a declaratory judgment that it qualifies as an exempt
    organization and as an eligible charitable donee.
    - 2 -
    1. Held: W&H was an “insider” for purposes of the
    inurement provisions of secs. 501(c)(3), 170(c)(2)(C),
    I.R.C. 1954 and 1986.
    2. Held, further, there was an inurement of net
    earnings to W&H; petitioner fails to qualify as an exempt
    organization or as an eligible charitable donee.
    3. Held, further, respondent’s retroactive revocation
    of the favorable ruling letter back to June 11, 1984, was
    not an abuse of discretion.
    Leonard J. Henzke, Jr., James W. Curtis, Jr., MacKenzie
    Canter III, Theodore R. Weckel, Jr., and Joseph Greif, for
    petitioner.*
    Dianne I. Crosby, Deidre A. James, Sandra M. Jefferson, and
    Chalmers W. Poston, Jr., for respondent.
    TABLE OF CONTENTS
    Page
    Introduction and Statement of Issues   ......................     4
    Findings of Fact   ..........................................     5
    Background and Summary..................................      6
    Direct Mail Fundraising.................................     14
    *
    After the trial was held and opening briefs were filed, but
    before the parties filed their answering briefs, Theodore R.
    Weckel, Jr., was given permission to withdraw from the instant
    case.
    Briefs amici curiae were filed by Thomas A. Troyer, Albert
    G. Lauber, Jr., and Catherine E. Livingston, as attorneys for
    American Heart Association, American Lung Association, American
    Cancer Society, and Independent Sector (hereinafter sometimes
    collectively referred to as American/Sector), and by Roger Warin
    as attorney for Non-Profit Mailers Federation (hereinafter
    sometimes referred to as Mailers).
    - 3 -
    W&H; AICR...............................................   21
    The Contract; Related Agreements .......................   25
    A. The Contract (June 11, 1984) .....................   25
    B. The Escrow Agreement .............................   29
    C. Petitioner's “Draw” Arrangement...................   32
    D. Agreement To Continue At 50 Percent The Percentage
    Of Net Housefile Mailing Income The Fundraising
    Contract Required To Be Retained In The Escrow
    Account To Reimburse W&H..........................   36
    E. April 1987 Addendum to the Contract...............   36
    Direct Mail Fundraising Campaign: 1984--1989............   40
    A. In General........................................   40
    B. W&H’s Advances Of The Initial
    Capital To Conduct The Direct Mail
    Fundraising Campaign..............................   44
    C. Vendors Who Furnished Goods Or Services...........   45
    D. Rentals Of Mailing Lists..........................   46
    E. Sweepstakes Mailings..............................   53
    F. Adverse Publicity ................................   60
    G. Petitioner's Escrow Account-Related Problems......   64
    1. Draws and Petitioner's Dispute with W&H
    Over the Calculation of Cumulative
    Net Mailing Campaign Revenue...................   64
    2. W&H’s Purchase And Invoice Control
    Procedures.....................................   68
    H. Petitioner's Attempt To Obtain A Copy of
    Its Housefile.....................................   76
    Petitioner's and W&H’s Respective Accounting
    Treatments Of The Direct Mail Campaign's
    Revenue And Expenses....................................   78
    Petitioner's Allocation Of Expenses Between
    Fundraising And Public Education........................   80
    Opinion.....................................................   85
    I. Status Under Sections 501(c)(3) And 170(c)(2)........   85
    A. W&H As Insider ...................................   90
    B. Did Any Of Petitioner’s Net Earnings
    Inure To W&H?.....................................   98
    II. Retroactivity Of Respondent's Revocation Of The Prior
    Favorable Ruling Letter Issued To Petitioner......... 111
    - 4 -
    CHABOT, Judge:     Petitioner initiated this action pursuant to
    section 74281 for a declaratory judgment that for all periods
    beginning on or after June 11, 1984, it qualifies as an
    organization described in section 501(c)(3) which is exempt from
    tax under section 501(a) and that it qualifies as an organization
    described in section 170(c)(2).    The action was initiated after
    respondent revoked a favorable ruling letter which had been
    issued to petitioner.    The revocation is retroactive to June 11,
    1984.    Petitioner has exhausted its administrative remedies and
    satisfied the other statutory predicates (sec. 7428(b); Rule
    210(c))2.
    The issues for decision are as follows:3
    (1) Whether petitioner is operated exclusively for
    charitable, educational, scientific, or other exempt
    purposes under sections 501(c)(3) and 170(c)(2)(B).
    (2) Whether any part of petitioner’s net earnings
    inured to the benefit of private shareholders or
    1
    Unless indicated otherwise, all section references are
    to sections of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954 or the Internal
    Revenue Code of 1986, as in effect for the period of time
    referred to.
    2
    Unless indicated otherwise, all Rule references are to
    the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure.
    3
    In United Cancer Council, Inc. v. Commissioner, 
    100 T.C. 162
     (1993), we denied petitioner’s motion for summary
    judgment, holding that the due process clause of the Fifth
    Amendment to the Constitution does not require respondent to
    initiate judicial review before revoking the ruling letter issued
    to petitioner.
    - 5 -
    individuals, within the meaning of sections 501(c)(3) and
    170(c)(2)(C).
    (3) If the answer to issue (1) is “no”, or the answer
    to issue (2) is “yes”, then whether the retroactive
    revocation of the favorable ruling letter was an abuse of
    discretion.
    The parties have also raised ancillary issues, including the
    following:   (1) whether petitioner’s direct mail fundraising
    arrangement with Watson and Hughey Company (hereinafter sometimes
    referred to as W&H) constitutes a joint venture; (2) whether a
    portion of the direct mail campaign expenses petitioner incurred
    are properly allocable to public education; and (3) whether the
    mailings made under petitioner’s nonprofit mail permits violate
    United States Postal Service regulations as cooperative mailings
    due to the nature of the fundraising arrangement between
    petitioner and W&H, and to W&H’s co-ownership rights in
    petitioner’s mailing list.
    FINDINGS OF FACT
    Some of the facts have been stipulated; the stipulations and
    the stipulated exhibits are incorporated herein by this
    reference.
    On June 1, 1990, petitioner filed for bankruptcy under
    chapter 7 of the Bankruptcy Code in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for
    the Southern District of Indiana, Indianapolis Division.   On
    January 28, 1991, the bankruptcy court granted petitioner’s
    - 6 -
    motion to lift the automatic stay and permit petitions to be
    filed in the Tax Court for purposes of initiating the instant
    declaratory judgment action and a related deficiency proceeding.4
    When the petition was filed in the instant case, petitioner
    was a not-for-profit corporation in bankruptcy in Indiana.
    Gregory Fehribach, the trustee in bankruptcy, maintained an
    office in Indianapolis, Indiana.
    Background and Summary
    Petitioner was organized in 1963 as a Delaware not-for-
    profit corporation.   Petitioner is a membership organization.
    Its members consist of local cancer agencies throughout the
    country.   By letter dated March 31, 1969, respondent ruled that
    petitioner was exempt from Federal income tax under section
    501(c)(3) and that donors may deduct contributions to petitioner
    under sections 170, 2055, 2106, and 2522.
    Petitioner’s founding members had previously been local
    chapters of the American Cancer Society (hereinafter sometimes
    referred to as the ACS).   These founding members separated from
    the ACS because (1) they wanted to participate in United Way
    fundraising campaigns, which ACS prohibited at that time; and (2)
    they wanted to concentrate on cancer prevention and alleviation
    of pain and suffering of cancer victims, rather than research to
    develop a cure for cancer.
    4
    The related deficiency proceeding, docket No. 2009-91,
    involves deficiencies determined for 1986 and 1987. The parties
    have agreed to hold that case in abeyance until after the
    resolution of the instant case.
    - 7 -
    From 1963 until 1984, petitioner acted as a support
    organization for its “affiliate member agencies”.   It published a
    quarterly newsletter, offered access to cancer educational
    materials, and held an annual meeting of its membership each
    fall.   Petitioner was an umbrella organization, coordinating its
    affiliate member agencies which met the direct needs of cancer
    patients through the providing of medical supplies, cancer
    research, and public education about cancer prevention,
    detection, and treatment.   Petitioner was supported primarily by
    the membership dues paid by its affiliate member agencies.
    Petitioner also received contributions in small amounts as a
    result of direct solicitations of individuals who were members of
    petitioner’s board of directors or of the boards of directors of
    petitioner’s affiliate member agencies.    Until 1984, petitioner’s
    annual budget never exceeded $50,000.
    In 1983, some affiliate member agencies indicated they
    intended to withdraw from petitioner.   This precipitated a budget
    crisis for petitioner.   Its board of directors realized that
    petitioner might have to be dissolved unless other sources of
    funding could be secured for petitioner.   The board directed
    petitioner’s executive director to conduct a search for a
    professional fundraiser that could assist petitioner in
    conducting fundraising to meet its increased need for funds,
    without the necessity of petitioner’s contributing initial
    capital for the fundraising effort.
    - 8 -
    As a result, during 1983 and 1984, petitioner and W&H
    discussed their possible entry into a fundraising contract.    As
    of March 12, 1984, petitioner estimated it would have an
    operating deficit for 1984 of $13,000, without additional
    fundraising income.   In addition to providing the initial capital
    to conduct petitioner’s direct mail fundraising campaign, W&H
    offered to furnish funds with which petitioner could continue to
    operate.
    On June 11, 1984, petitioner and W&H entered into a “Full
    Service Direct Response Fundraising Agreement” (hereinafter
    sometimes referred to as the Contract) for a term ending May 30,
    1989.   As of the date the Contract was entered into, petitioner
    was on the verge of insolvency; petitioner did not have money to
    start a direct mail or other fundraising program on its own.    The
    Contract was amended by an addendum on April 8-9, 1987.    Unless
    the context indicates otherwise, references to the Contract are
    to be taken as including both the Contract entered into in 1984
    and the 1987 amendment.   The Contract expired in May 1989, and
    was not renewed.
    In conjunction with the formation of the Contract, W&H
    agreed to advance money to petitioner in order to cover the
    initial costs of the mailings.    W&H also agreed to give to
    petitioner an immediate advance, or “draw”, against petitioner’s
    projected future earnings from the Contract.
    - 9 -
    From 1984 until its bankruptcy in 1990, petitioner
    maintained its principal office in either Carmel or Indianapolis,
    Indiana.   As part of the direct mail fundraising campaign
    petitioner conducted from 1984 through 1989 pursuant to the
    Contract, a Washington, D.C., office mailing address was
    maintained for petitioner.    Contributors were directed to send
    their donations to the Washington, D.C., office mailing address.
    During 1984 through 1989, about 79.6 million fundraising
    letters were mailed under the Contract.     Of the 79.6 million
    letters, about 51.8 million were “prospect letters” and 27.8
    million were “housefile letters”.    The terms “prospect letter”
    and “housefile letter” are discussed more fully infra.        The
    Contract provided that W&H was to receive as compensation, among
    other things, mailing fees of $.05 per prospect letter mailed and
    $.10 per housefile letter mailed.    However, the Contract was a
    “no-risk” contract for petitioner, in that petitioner was liable
    to pay fundraising expenses only to the extent proceeds were
    raised.    If insufficient proceeds were raised to cover the
    fundraising expenses, then W&H was liable to pay the excess
    fundraising expenses.    During the term of the Contract, W&H
    advanced funds to conduct petitioner’s direct mail fundraising
    campaign and, generally, was paid its fees only after other
    fundraising expenses had been paid.     Under the Contract,
    petitioner was further guaranteed that, for the first 2 years of
    - 10 -
    the Contract, petitioner would receive at least 50 percent of the
    cumulative net income produced from its housefile mailings; after
    the first 2 years, petitioner would receive at least 70 percent.
    In April 1986 petitioner agreed to keep the guarantee at 50
    percent in exchange for W&H’s reducing its “creative” package fee
    on housefile mailings and capping its mailing fee on any
    housefile mailing of more than 500,000.
    Petitioner generally maintained its books under an accrual
    method of accounting.   For 1984 through 1989, petitioner received
    the amounts of total annual contributions set forth in table 1.
    Table 1
    Year            Total Contributions
    1984                   $240,380
    1985                  5,087,453
    1986                  7,869,015
    1987                 10,740,045
    1988                  3,883,352
    1
    1989                     943,142
    Total               28,763,387
    1
    An analysis of petitioner’s financial statements, prepared by
    petitioner’s counsel and assumed to be true by petitioner’s
    expert witness Richard S. Steinberg, indicates that $644,627 of
    the 1989 contributions were produced under the Contract.
    For 1984 through 1989, petitioner incurred at least the
    amounts of total annual expenses in fundraising and in its
    mailing campaign set forth in table 2.
    - 11 -
    Table 2
    Year                Total Expenses
    1984                  $241,251
    1985                 4,980,949
    1986                 7,255,744
    1987                 9,734,233
    1988                 3,229,425
    1989                 1,082,315
    Total               26,523,917
    The amounts in table 2 include mailing campaign expenses from
    petitioner’s “Donor Development Fund” that petitioner concluded
    were allocable to its public education activities, as
    distinguished from its fundraising activities.      The amounts in
    table 2 do not include other management and general expenses that
    petitioner incurred as a result of carrying out its fundraising
    activities and mailing campaign.
    Petitioner received a total of about $2¼ million in net
    fundraising revenue under the Contract.   In 1984 through 1989,
    petitioner paid to W&H the amounts for fundraising shown in table
    3.
    - 12 -
    Table 3
    Year                   Amounts Paid
    1984                        $43,965
    1985                        143,196
    1986                        842,219
    1987                      1,974,247
    1988                        999,527
    1989                        115,406
    Total                    4,118,560
    The amounts in table 3 do not include list rental fees and
    commissions paid to Washington Lists, a division of W&H, or
    income derived by W&H from exploiting its rights in petitioner’s
    housefile.
    For 1984 through 1989, petitioner paid to Washington Lists
    the amounts for mailing list rentals shown in table 4.
    Table 4
    Year                  Amounts Paid
    1984                    $39,813
    1985                    907,594
    1986                    868,763
    1987                  1,756,964
    1988                    328,070
    Total                3,901,204
    After the end of the term of the Contract, petitioner
    entered into a fundraising contract with another fundraising
    consultant.   Under this second contract, petitioner was liable
    for all fundraising expenses.    However, when petitioner was not
    able to pay certain debts to vendors, the new fundraiser paid
    - 13 -
    those debts.   The fundraising efforts conducted under the new
    contract were not successful, and petitioner suffered a
    substantial financial loss on the mailings done, and was unable
    to pay all of the fundraising expenses.
    On November 2, 1990, respondent issued to petitioner a final
    notice of revocation of the favorable ruling letter retroactive
    to June 11, 1984.    The notice of revocation states, in pertinent
    part, as follows:5
    We have completed our review of your activities, and
    examination of your Forms 990 for the years ending December
    31, 1986 and December 31, 1987.
    By a determination letter dated March 31, 1969, we
    recognized your exemption from Federal Income tax under
    section 501(c)(3) * * *.
    As a result of the examination of your activities and
    financial records for the years noted above, we had
    unresolved questions concerning your mailings and your
    exempt status. On July 12, 1989, we requested technical
    advice from our National Office in order to resolve these
    questions.
    In response to the request for technical advice, our
    National Office ruled that your exemption from income tax
    should be revoked effective June 11, 1984.
    *   *   *     *      *   *   *
    This letter constitutes formal notification of revocation of
    your exemption from Federal income tax effective June 11,
    1984.
    *   *   *     *      *   *   *
    5
    There are some slight differences between the notice of
    revocation letter identified by both sides in the pleadings, and
    the one that the parties have stipulated in the administrative
    record; these differences appear to be irrelevant to any matter
    in dispute. In these findings we have used the letter that is in
    the administrative record.
    - 14 -
    Contributions to you are no longer deductible as provided in
    section 170 * * * .
    On November 2, 1990, respondent also issued a notice of
    deficiency to petitioner, determining income tax deficiencies for
    1986 and 1987.
    On January 30, 1991, after the bankruptcy court lifted the
    automatic stay, petitioner filed its petition initiating the
    instant declaratory judgment action pursuant to section 7428.    On
    January 30, 1991, petitioner also filed its petition initiating a
    proceeding for review of the notice of deficiency issued to it
    for 1986 and 1987, United Cancer Council, Inc. v. Commissioner,
    docket No. 2009-91.   The parties have agreed that the deficiency
    proceeding should be held in abeyance pending the resolution of
    the instant declaratory judgment action.
    Direct Mail Fundraising
    W&H operated with the understanding that direct mail
    solicitation allows an organization’s marketing and solicitation
    efforts to directly focus on and target specific individuals.    In
    W&H’s view, in comparison to direct mail solicitation,
    solicitations conducted through the print media or radio will
    generally reach a nonspecific and less targeted audience.    W&H’s
    advice to petitioner and actions under the Contract were based in
    part on these understandings.
    In a direct mail fundraising campaign, a “prospect letter”
    is a letter mailed to an individual who has not previously
    - 15 -
    contributed, or otherwise responded, to the mailing organization.
    A “housefile letter” is a letter mailed to an individual who has
    contributed to the organization or has responded favorably to a
    communication, typically as the result of a prospect letter.    An
    organization’s housefile mailing is a mailing sent strictly to
    that organization’s housefile.
    An organization’s housefile, containing the names,
    addresses, and other pertinent information with respect to that
    organization’s previous contributors, can be a valuable asset in
    that organization’s present and future fundraising efforts.
    Typically, in a direct mail fundraising campaign, practically all
    of an organization’s net mailing revenue will be generated from
    its housefile mailings.   As a result, a usual primary goal of a
    direct mail fundraising campaign is to develop a productive
    housefile of contributors for use in the organization’s
    fundraising efforts.
    In contrast to housefile mailings, an organization will
    usually lose money or, at best, break even in conducting prospect
    mailings.   However, an organization typically first develops and
    establishes a productive housefile through conducting prospect
    mailings.   Moreover, over the course of time, a housefile will
    suffer from attrition.    Not all previous contributors will
    continue to contribute to the organization.    As a result, even
    after an organization has built up a productive housefile, the
    organization will periodically conduct prospect mailings to
    - 16 -
    refresh and add new names to its housefile.
    An organization’s housefile can also be of considerable
    value to other organizations in their fundraising or solicitation
    efforts.    Accordingly, an organization may be able to profit
    economically from its housefile by using its housefile to produce
    rental income or by exchanging its housefile for another
    organization’s housefile, thereby reducing its fundraising
    expenses.    Before the late 1970's there were few mailing lists on
    the market, and most that were available were exchanged list for
    list, rather than rented for a fee.     By the late 1970's and early
    1980's a rental market for mailing lists had developed.    The
    rental market has expanded since the mid-1980's because there are
    more lists being made available for rent and more list rental
    brokers.    However, some organization that have mailing lists did
    not rent or exchange their lists.
    It is common practice to use monitoring or “dummy” names
    (sometimes called “seed names”) in a housefile, to guard against
    unauthorized use of the housefile and to monitor the patterns of
    mail drops across the United States.    Both petitioner and W&H
    maintained their own, separate, monitoring names with regard to
    the mailing lists developed under the Contract.    The parties have
    not presented us with illustrations of how this dummy name
    monitoring works in practice, or how much effort or funds are
    expended in such monitoring programs generally, or were expended
    under the Contract.
    - 17 -
    By industry custom, if a rented name responds favorably to
    the mailing made by the lessee of the mailing list (i.e., by
    sending a contribution, making a purchase, or entering a
    sweepstakes contest), then the lessee is entitled to add that
    name to its own housefile.   The lessee thereafter may use the
    name as its own and will not have to pay a further rental fee.
    W&H had Wiland Associates (described infra as a services
    vendor) provide management information reports to petitioner.
    Among these reports was one that evaluated individual
    contributors on mailing lists, based on an analysis of the
    following three factors:   (1) recency (i.e., how recently the
    last donation by that contributor was made), (2) frequency (i.e.,
    how frequently that contributor has made donations to the
    organization), and (3) size of the gift.   All other things being
    equal, a contributor who made a donation within the past 6 months
    is considered more valuable than a contributor who last made a
    donation 3 years ago.   Similarly, all other things being equal, a
    contributor who made 10 donations is considered more valuable
    than a contributor who made just one donation.   Lastly, all other
    things being equal, a contributor who made a $100 gift is
    considered more valuable than a contributor who made a $5 gift.
    In the 1960's and the 1970's, the use of computers
    revolutionized the operation of the direct mail fundraising
    industry.   Using the electronic data processing capability of
    computers, mailing lists could be analyzed, compiled, and
    - 18 -
    utilized much more efficiently than previously was possible.
    Before the use of computers, mailing lists were maintained on 3-
    by-5 cards or on metal plates.
    Richard Viguerie (hereinafter sometimes referred to as
    Viguerie) was an early pioneer in the contemporary direct mail
    fundraising industry.   By the late 1970's, Viguerie and his
    company, Richard Viguerie and Associates (hereinafter sometimes
    referred to as the Viguerie Company), had received considerable
    press and publicity as a result of their ability to successfully
    conduct direct mail fundraising campaigns for “conservative”
    political candidates and causes.    The Viguerie Company reportedly
    had a master mailing list comprising the names and addresses of
    millions of contributors.   The Viguerie Company also conducted
    nonpolitical direct mail fundraising campaigns for charitable
    organizations exempt under section 501(c)(3).
    As of the early 1980's, Viguerie and the Viguerie Company,
    which maintained offices in the Washington, D.C., area, had
    several competitors who offered similar fundraising services.
    Some of these competitors were former employees of the Viguerie
    Company.
    By the 1980's, many States enacted charitable solicitation
    statutes.   Generally, such statutes require most charitable
    organizations to register with a State governmental regulatory
    agency before soliciting contributions from members of the
    general public within that State.   Some State charitable
    - 19 -
    solicitation statutes further prohibited or restricted charitable
    organizations from soliciting contributions, unless a prescribed
    minimum percentage of the proceeds raised would be expended in
    the charitable organization’s charitable program, thereby
    limiting the percentage of the proceeds to be used by the
    charitable organization to pay fundraising expenses.6
    The Council of Better Business Bureaus (hereinafter
    sometimes referred to as the CBBB) and the National Charities
    Information Bureau (hereinafter sometimes referred to as the
    NCIB) established certain guidelines for organizations that
    solicit charitable contributions from the public.   The objectives
    of the CBBB as to these matters are to (1) encourage self-
    regulation of charities and (2) assist potential donors by
    helping them to make better-informed gift-giving decisions.    The
    objective of the NCIB is to promote informed giving by providing
    to the public information that will help potential donors to
    evaluate charities.   The CBBB is exempt under section 501(c)(6)
    as a business league; its activities in the charitable area are
    conducted by a division called the Philanthropic Advisory
    6
    Ultimately, the United States Supreme Court held
    unconstitutional, on First Amendment grounds, several State
    charitable solicitation statutes that limited the amount or
    percentage of the proceeds raised that could be expended by
    charitable organizations to pay fundraising expenses. See Riley
    v. National Federation of Blind, 
    487 U.S. 781
     (1988); Secretary
    of State of Md. v. J.H. Munson Co., 
    467 U.S. 947
     (1984);
    Schaumburg v. Citizens for Better Environ., 
    444 U.S. 620
     (1980);
    see also, United Cancer Council, Inc. v. Commissioner, 
    100 T.C. at 174
    -177.
    - 20 -
    Service.   The CBBB and the Philanthropic Advisory Service were
    formed in 1971, as the successors to the National Better Business
    Bureau and its Solicitations Control Division, respectively.    The
    NCIB is exempt under section 501(c)(3) as a charity; it was
    founded in 1918.   CBBB and NCIB also prepared and issued reports
    on whether particular charitable organizations met CBBB’s and
    NCIB’s respective fundraising and operational guidelines.
    Typically, a report on a particular charitable organization was
    prepared as a result of CBBB’s or NCIB’s receipt of inquiries
    with respect to that charitable organization.
    Among its guidelines, CBBB generally recommends that (1) a
    charitable organization’s fundraising costs not exceed 35 percent
    of related contributions, and (2) total fundraising and
    administrative expenses not exceed 50 percent of its total
    income.    However, CBBB recognizes that a charitable organization
    that does not meet these percentage limitations may provide
    evidence demonstrating that its use of funds is reasonable.    In
    particular the CBBB pamphlet on standards states as follows:
    The higher fundraising and administrative costs of a newly
    created organization, donor restrictions on the use of
    funds, exceptional bequests, a stigma associated with a
    cause, and environmental or political events beyond an
    organization’s control are among the factors which may
    result in costs that are reasonable although they do not
    meet these percentage limitations.
    The overwhelming majority of the charities that the CBBB reviews
    meet all 22 of the CBBB’s guidelines.
    Similarly, among its guidelines, NCIB generally recommends
    - 21 -
    that not more than 30 percent of the contributions, grants, and
    bequests a charitable organization receives should be spent on
    fundraising.   NCIB suggests that, where more than 30 percent was
    spent on fundraising, then the prospective contributor should
    further analyze the charitable organization’s operations and ask
    the charitable organization for an explanation regarding the
    percentage of proceeds spent in fundraising.   In particular,
    NCIB’s contributor’s checklist pamphlet states as follows:
    Some fund-raising practices are always expensive--
    acquisition of new donors through direct mail or
    telemarketing, for example--and yet they may be the
    only methods available to an organization if it hopes
    to reach the general public. Some charities which rely
    heavily on bequests will have fundraising costs that
    vary considerably from year to year. New
    organizations, organizations with causes that are
    little known or controversial, organizations with a
    contributor base made up of many smaller contributions
    rather than a few large grants--are all likely to have
    relatively high fund-raising costs, and yet they may be
    quite well managed.
    W&H; AICR
    W&H began business in late 1981 as a two-person partnership
    owned 50 percent each by Jerry Carroll Watson (hereinafter
    sometimes referred to as Watson) and Byron Chatworth Hughey
    (hereinafter sometimes referred to as Hughey).   As of the time of
    the trial in the instant case, Watson and Hughey have been W&H’s
    only two partners.   Before forming W&H, Hughey was employed at
    the Viguerie Company from 1978 to 1981.   From 1983 through the
    time of the trial in the instant case, W&H maintained its offices
    in the Washington, D.C., area, in Alexandria, Virginia.   (In July
    - 22 -
    1992, W&H changed its name to Direct Response Consulting
    Services; herein we continue to refer to it as W&H.)
    W&H is engaged in the direct mail and fundraising services
    business and has had up to about 20 to 22 employees.      Its clients
    primarily have been nonprofit organizations.      Over the years, W&H
    began to specialize in offering direct mail fundraising services
    to nonprofit health organizations.       In 1984, W&H had one or two
    clients in addition to petitioner which were nonprofit health
    organizations.    Over the years, more and more of W&H’s clients
    were in health-related areas.    In 1987, W&H received 65 percent
    of its income from three major clients and petitioner accounted
    for 26 percent of W&H’s gross income for that year.      In 1987, W&H
    had a total of 12 clients.
    American Institute For Cancer Research (hereinafter
    sometimes referred to as AICR), which has been recognized by
    respondent as tax-exempt under section 501(c)(3) since its
    incorporation in September 1981, was one of W&H’s first nonprofit
    health clients.    Watson and Hughey are the two sole “founding
    members” of AICR.    AICR’s articles of incorporation provide that
    only its founding members have the right to vote.      The articles
    also provide that no changes may be made with respect to the
    founding members who were designated at AICR’s initial board
    meeting and that no other founding members may be added, unless
    all the founding members are dead.
    AICR and W&H entered into successive fundraising contracts
    - 23 -
    that covered the period from AICR’s inception through December
    31, 1989.7   When W&H did its first mailings for AICR, Watson and
    Hughey consulted an attorney.    The attorney advised them that
    they and AICR would have to be careful that section 501(c)(3)’s
    prohibition against inurement was not violated, in light of
    Watson’s and Hughey’s status as founding members of AICR.    As a
    result, W&H reduced its fees “drastically”, W&H relinquished all
    ownership in AICR’s mailing lists, and other changes were made.
    Table 5 summarizes certain features of W&H’s fundraising
    contracts with AICR.
    7
    Petitioner does not object to respondent’s proposed
    finding of fact to this effect. We note that the first of the
    contracts that respondent listed in support of this finding was
    executed on Jan. 20, 1983; this contract states that it “is
    effective the 1st day of June 1982”; but AICR had been
    incorporated in September 1981. Similarly, the last of the
    contracts that respondent listed states that “The term of this
    Agreement is two (2) years beginning Jan. 1, 1987”; thus, the
    last contract appears to have expired 1 year before the date
    specified in the agreed-to proposed finding. We have treated the
    agreed-to proposed finding as, in effect, an additional
    stipulation between the parties.
    - 24 -
    Table 5
    Mailing Fees
    Effective                           Prospect--cents         Housefile--cents
    Date of     No-Risk     Term of      per letter,             per letter,
    Contract    Provision   Contract    letter per year         letters per mailing     Retainer1    List Ownership
    6/1/82      Yes         1 yr.      4 cents                    8 cents               $3,000/mo.   Capital List--
    forever
    2/4/83      Yes         1 yr.      4 cents                    8 cents                1,500/mo.   Joint--W&H, AICR
    2/4/832      No         1 yr.      2 cents                    4 cents 1st 250,000
    2 cents thereafter     1,500/mo.   Sole property
    of AICR
    1/1/84      No          1 yr.      2 cents 1st 10 mil.        4 cents 1st 250,000
    1 cent next 5 mil.         1 cent next 250,000
    0.5 cents next 3 mil.      Free after 500,000
    Free after 18 mil.                                1,500/mo.   Sole property
    of AICR
    1/1/85      No          1 yr.      1.8 cents 1st 10 mil.      3 cents 1st 250,000
    0.9 cents next 5 mil.      1 cent next 250,000
    0.45 cents next 3 mil.     Free after 500,000
    Free after 18 mil.                                    No      Sole property
    of AICR
    1/1/86      No          1 yr.      1.8 cents 1st 10 mil.
    0.9 cent next 5 mil.
    0.45 cents next 9 mil.     3 cents 1st 250,000
    Add’l. letters--price      1 cent next 250,000
    to be arranged             Free after 500,000         No      Sole property
    of AICR
    1/1/87      No          2 yrs.     1.8 cents 1st 10 mil.      3 cents 1st 400,000
    0.9 cent next 5 mil.       1 cent next 400,000        No      Sole property
    0.45 cents next 9 mil.                                         of AICR
    Add’l. letters--price
    to be arranged
    1
    Payment to be applied to AICR’s debt to W&H, not a separate “package fee”.
    2
    Contract signed Aug. 10, 1983, retroactive to Feb. 4, 1983.
    - 25 -
    Later, as a result of advice by another attorney, changes
    were made regarding Watson’s and Hughey’s control over AICR.
    Under AICR’s original articles of incorporation, directors are
    elected by, and may be removed without cause by, AICR’s founding
    members, Watson and Hughey.   Under amendments filed May 4, 1984,
    any founding member is forbidden to elect or remove directors
    “during any period in which such founding member has a commercial
    relationship with the Corporation [AICR] and for a period of three
    years thereafter.”    For these purposes “the term ``founding member’
    shall be deemed to include any * * * partnership * * * in which a
    founding member has a material interest.”   These amendments also
    provide as follows:
    During any period that all founding members are
    prohibited, or are abstaining, from exercising their
    rights with respect to the election and removal of
    Directors, Directors shall be elected and removed by the
    affirmative vote of a majority of the entire Board of
    Directors.
    The Contract; Related Agreements
    A.   The Contract (June 11, 1984)
    The Contract provides that, during its 5-year term, ending
    May 30, 1989, W&H would be petitioner’s exclusive fundraising
    consultant and adviser in petitioner’s conduct of its direct mail
    fundraising solicitations.    Petitioner agrees not to “retain or
    use the services of any other person or company to provide counsel
    and advice to [petitioner] in conducting its direct mail
    solicitations.”   W&H agrees to furnish its services and to advise,
    - 26 -
    counsel, and make recommendations concerning all aspects of
    preparing petitioner’s direct mail fundraising and membership
    solicitations, and to be responsible for implementing all of the
    work required, either directly or through affiliates or other
    suppliers, “subject to the approval of CLIENT [petitioner].”     W&H
    further agrees to maintain petitioner’s housefile and to perform
    all follow-up correspondence.
    The Contract further provides that all mailing campaign
    materials prepared and recommended by W&H, including the proposed
    numbers of letters to be mailed, would be subject to petitioner’s
    approval “and no such material shall be mailed or made available
    to the public without such approval.”
    The Contract additionally provides that a bank or “caging
    company” (described below) would be hired to act as cashier and
    escrow agent for the funds generated under the Contract.   The bank
    or caging company would process receipts and disburse payments
    under an agreement to be entered into by it, petitioner, and W&H.
    The Contract requires W&H to promptly furnish to petitioner
    copies of invoices received from suppliers of goods and services
    used in fulfilling W&H’s obligations under the Contract.   The
    Contract also requires W&H to make reasonable efforts, where
    market conditions and time permit, to obtain competitive bids or
    rates for work subcontracted to suppliers.   W&H affiliates would
    be allowed to perform such subcontract work, subject to this
    competitive bid and rate requirement.    No markup was to be added
    - 27 -
    by W&H on the supplier or subcontractor invoices billed to
    petitioner.
    The Contract provides that W&H would be paid, as compensation
    for its services, mailing fees of $.05 per prospect letter mailed
    and $.10 per housefile letter mailed, as well as certain creative
    fees for each housefile mailing package mailed.    On a housefile
    package mailed to under 50,000 previous contributors, W&H would be
    entitled to a $2,500 creative fee.    On a housefile package mailed
    to 50,000 or more previous contributors, W&H’s creative fee would
    be $5,000.    Petitioner would pay a retainer of $1,500 per month to
    W&H as a draw against these fees.    During the term of the
    Contract, all materials, packages, and ideas developed by W&H on
    behalf of petitioner would remain the sole property of W&H, and
    all such material could be used by petitioner only with W&H’s
    written consent.
    With respect to petitioner’s mailing list, the Contract
    provides that W&H and petitioner would have respective co-
    ownership rights as follows:
    Section 14. List Ownership. It is expressly
    understood, covenanted and agreed upon * * * that any
    and all names and addresses and amounts contributed, if
    any, of persons, firms, associations or corporations
    which are obtained, developed, compiled or otherwise
    acquired for CLIENT by or through the direct or indirect
    efforts of W&H in connection with any services rendered
    by W&H to CLIENT pursuant to the terms hereof shall at
    all times be and constitute the property solely and
    exclusively of W&H and CLIENT. These names and
    addresses and the amounts of contributions, if any, can
    be used at any time by CLIENT in any manner, for any
    purpose for its own account. CLIENT shall use these
    - 28 -
    names and addresses developed by W&H for no purpose
    other than in direct connection with CLIENT’S own
    projects. CLIENT shall not at any time during the life
    of this Agreement or any time thereafter rent, exchange,
    lease, sell or give away these names and addresses
    developed as the result of the efforts of W&H to any
    other parties for any purpose whatsoever. However, W&H
    shall be free to use the names and addresses referred to
    in Section 14 in any way it so desires and for any
    purpose it may so determine.
    The Contract also states that “It is expressly understood and
    agreed upon that * * * Section 14 [the list ownership rights
    provision] shall survive” the termination of the Contract.   The
    Contract also requires that, during the Contract’s term, any
    computer work that petitioner wants to have done with respect to
    the names developed as a result of the Contract “must be done at
    W&H or at a company designated by W&H.”
    The Contract provides as follows with respect to its “no-
    risk” nature:
    Section 9. Payments to W&H and Suppliers. W&H
    assumes full obligation and responsibility for the
    payment of all vendor, suppliers and W&H invoices
    arising out of the fulfillment of W&H’s obligations
    hereunder, said invoices to be subsequently reimbursed
    by CLIENT only under the terms and conditions set forth
    in this Section. CLIENT shall reimburse W&H only to the
    extent that W&H has raised such funds. W&H shall have
    no right or claim upon any other funds or accounts of
    CLIENT. W&H shall be reimbursed for money owed to it
    only out of funds obtained as a result of W&H’s efforts.
    However, if CLIENT raises additional funds through their
    own efforts from names that W&H has generated, these
    funds shall be considered in the same category as funds
    raised by W&H. People who are members of UCC or prior
    donors to UCC are excluded from the provisions of this
    section. In other words, W&H is liable for all expenses
    connected with this contract to the extent that W&H has
    not raised funds to cover those costs. This section
    applies throughout this agreement.
    - 29 -
    CLIENT shall make monthly payments to W&H to the
    full extent that W&H has raised funds to pay the costs
    incurred by W&H in carrying out its obligations under
    this Agreement.
    For the first two years of this Agreement, up to
    50% of net income from * * * [house] file mailings may
    be applied to the cost of * * * [prospect] mailings.
    After two years and for the remainder of this Agreement,
    up to 30% of net income from * * * [house] file mailings
    may be applied to the cost of * * * [prospect] mailings.
    CLIENT will only utilize * * * [house] file net income
    for its projects under the terms and conditions set
    forth in this Section.
    For purposes hereof, net income received pursuant
    to this Agreement by CLIENT shall hereby be defined as
    all contributions received, less all expenses incurred,
    pursuant to the terms hereof, including supplier
    invoices, postage, W&H charges and all other items
    described in this Agreement.
    The Contract provides that it “is automatically renewable for
    Five (5) Years if either Party does not in writing specify the
    canceling of this Agreement at least Three (3) Months prior to the
    expiration of this Agreement.”    Apparently this provision was
    intended to give each party to the Contract a veto over the
    Contract’s automatic renewal.    However the Contract does not
    include a provision permitting termination for cause.
    B.   The Escrow Agreement
    On June 19, 1984, petitioner, W&H, and Washington
    Intelligence Bureau (hereinafter sometimes referred to as WIB)
    entered into an escrow agreement (hereinafter sometime referred to
    as the Escrow Agreement), whereby WIB would provide escrow
    services in connection with the Contract.    The Escrow Agreement,
    which W&H provided to petitioner and WIB, is essentially the same
    - 30 -
    agreement that W&H uses in all of the escrow arrangements that W&H
    has with WIB.   During the term of the Contract, WIB was at all
    times the escrow agent and did most of the caging.8
    WIB began to deal with W&H in 1982 or 1983.   WIB has been the
    escrow agent for most of W&H’s clients.   WIB’s first W&H-related
    client was AICR.   In 1984, about 15-20 percent of WIB’s business
    pertained to W&H’s clients.   By 1989, this had grown to 30-35
    percent.   Thereafter, the percentage dropped to about 25 percent.
    WIB has always been unrelated to W&H in ownership.
    The Escrow Agreement provides, in pertinent part, as follows:
    WHEREAS, the Client [petitioner] agrees to pay all
    costs for direct mail fund raising services as well as
    cost for others providing services and supplies for the
    direct mail fund raising program.
    IT IS, THEREFORE, agreed:
    1. ESCROW FUND. The Agency [W&H] and the Client hereby
    agree that returns from the direct mail fund raising
    programs shall be received by the Escrowee [WIB] and the
    sum so received shall be known as the Escrow Fund.
    2. PAYMENT OF CREDITORS. The Escrow Fund shall be held
    by The Escrowee separate and apart from the other funds
    of the Escrowee. The Agency shall present the Escrowee
    with invoices of creditors, including invoices of the
    Escrowee, which the Escrowee shall pay from said Escrow
    Fund. All invoices paid from said Escrow Fund shall be
    8
    Caging involves receiving, opening, and processing the
    return mail generated by a direct mail campaign. A caging
    company generally performs such functions as depositing the
    return mail receipts with a bank, providing to the client an
    account of these receipts, verifying and correcting name and
    address information with respect to contributors, recording
    pertinent information with respect to contributors, and relaying
    such contributor information to a computer company selected by
    the client.
    - 31 -
    approved by the Agency and submitted to the Escrowee
    promptly for payment.
    3. MAIL CHARGES. The Escrowee may transfer all sums
    necessary to pay charges by the United States Postal
    Service for the Client’s Business Reply Mail without
    approval of the Agency or Client.[9]
    4. ESCROWEE’S COMPENSATION. The compensation of the
    Escrowee shall be established by the Agency, the Client,
    and Escrowee. The Escrowee shall render billings for
    Escrowee services to the Client, in care of the Agency,
    and shall be paid on a priority basis. If approved
    invoice is not received from the Agency by the Escrowee
    within 30 days from the date of invoice, the Escrowee
    shall be authorized to pay such billing without the
    approval of the Agency.
    *    *    *     *      *   *   *
    6. ACCOUNTING. The Escrowee shall provide the Client
    and Agency an accounting as to each payment or
    disbursement made from the Escrow Fund. Those
    disbursements shall only be upon the written approval of
    the Agency. The Escrowee shall be provided compensation
    for these services.
    7. DISPUTES. In the event of any dispute with respect
    to disposition of all or part of the Escrow Fund, The
    Escrowee shall not be obligated to disburse the disputed
    portion thereof nor shall the Escrowee be required
    affirmatively to commence any action against the Client
    or Agency, or defend any action that a creditor might
    bring. In his [sic] sole discretion, the Escrowee may,
    in the event of a dispute as to the disposition of all
    or part of the Escrow Fund, commence an action in the
    nature of interpleader and seek to deposit the disputed
    portion in a Court of Competent Jurisdiction.
    9
    The Business Reply Mail postage referred to represented
    postage on the return mailing envelopes provided to the persons
    solicited in the direct mail fundraising campaign for purposes of
    making contributions to petitioner or otherwise responding.
    Unlike the outgoing fundraising letters and materials which were
    mailed under petitioner’s nonprofit mail permits at the lower
    nonprofit mailing rate, postage at the regular United States
    Postal Service rate was required on the return letters mailed by
    recipients of the fundraising letters.
    - 32 -
    Pursuant to the Escrow Agreement, WIB opened a bank account
    (hereinafter sometimes referred to as the Escrow Account) in which
    to maintain the escrow fund.    Only authorized employees of WIB
    could withdraw funds from the Escrow Account.    The money deposited
    into the Escrow Account came primarily from the following sources:
    (1) The money W&H advanced to pay for petitioner’s fundraising
    expenses and operational expenses, and (2) the contributions made
    by the general public in response to the fundraising letters
    mailed under the Contract.   All of the revenues from petitioner’s
    direct mail campaign, not merely the profits from the mailings,
    went into the Escrow Account.
    C. Petitioner’s “Draw” Arrangement
    As indicated above, during its discussions with petitioner
    about entering a possible fundraising contract, W&H offered to
    provide funds with which petitioner could continue to operate.
    W&H furnished such funds to petitioner after the Contract was
    executed.
    A December 17, 1984, letter agreement between petitioner and
    W&H provides, in pertinent part, as follows:
    In order to meet your cash flow needs for administration
    and program, you [petitioner] plan to transfer funds from the
    escrow account that were generated from * * * [prospect
    letter mailings]. To date $5,000 was transferred on November
    1, $5,000 was transferred on December 1, and you plan to
    transfer another $5,000 on January 1, 1985.
    This letter acknowledges the fact that these transfers *
    * * are made in such a manner from * * * [prospect letter
    mailing] revenues will be replenished from UCC’s income from
    * * * [housefile letter] mailings within six months of
    - 33 -
    making such a transfer.
    Contrary to what is suggested in the above letter agreement,
    as of December 1984, no net mailing revenues had yet been produced
    from either the prospect letter mailings or housefile letter
    mailings conducted.   Only losses or relatively small amounts of
    net mailing revenues were produced by the housefile letter
    mailings up until June or July 1985.    It was not until about July
    1985, that the cumulative net revenue produced from housefile
    letter mailings began to somewhat approach the cumulative amount
    of funds W&H provided to meet petitioner’s operating expenses.
    Initially, some of the funds used to meet petitioner’s operating
    expenses were advanced by W&H to the Escrow Account.    Also, W&H
    deferred receiving payment of its fees.
    Later, as the net revenue produced from mailings began to
    increase, W&H authorized and permitted petitioner to “draw”
    increasingly larger monthly amounts of funds from the Escrow
    Account to finance petitioner’s larger annual operating budgets.
    Up until about the execution on April 8-9, 1987, of an addendum to
    the Contract, petitioner was fully liable to repay the draws it
    had taken, to the extent the draws exceeded the 50 percent of
    cumulative housefile income guaranteed to petitioner under the
    Contract.   The draws petitioner received were to be repaid within
    6 months, regardless of the direct mailing campaign’s
    profitability.   The events leading up to and culminating in the
    execution of the April 1987 addendum to the Contract are discussed
    - 34 -
    more fully infra.
    Once the mailings had become sufficiently more profitable, in
    deciding the amount of petitioner’s monthly draws, W&H considered
    petitioner’s budget plans and the future net mailing revenues
    expected to be produced.   W&H based its decisions, in large part,
    on its calculation of the current monthly net housefile mailing
    revenue being produced and the 50 percent of the cumulative
    housefile income that petitioner, in all events, was guaranteed
    under the Contract.
    Monthly draws from the Escrow Account were taken by
    petitioner over the period from October 1984 through May 1989, as
    shown in table 6.
    Table 6
    Monthly           Cumulative
    Month                   Draws              Draws
    10/84                   $5,000            $5,000
    11/84                     --               5,000
    12/84                    5,000            10,000
    1/85                   10,000            20,000
    2/85                      --             20,000
    3/85                    6,000            26,000
    4/85                   14,000            40,000
    5/85                   10,000            50,000
    6/85                   10,000            60,000
    7/85                   18,000            78,000
    8/85                   20,000            98,000
    9/85                     --              98,000
    10/85                   22,000           120,000
    11/85                   33,000           153,000
    12/85                   25,000           178,000
    1/86                   40,000           218,000
    2/86                   40,000           258,000
    3/86                   40,000           298,000
    (Cont.) Table 6
    - 35 -
    Monthly         Cumulative
    Month                  Draws            Draws
    4/86                 40,000             338,000
    5/86                 40,000             378,000
    6/86                 40,000             418,000
    1
    7/86                 40,000             453,000
    8/86                 40,000             493,000
    9/86                 40,000             533,000
    10/86                 40,000             573,000
    11/86                 40,000             613,000
    12/86                 40,000             653,000
    1/87                 50,000             703,000
    2/87                 50,000             753,000
    3/87                 50,000             803,000
    4/87                 50,000             853,000
    5/87                 50,000             903,000
    6/87                 50,000             953,000
    7/87                 50,000          1,003,000
    8/87                 50,000          1,053,000
    9/87                 50,000          1,103,000
    10/87                 50,000          1,153,000
    11/87                 50,000          1,203,000
    12/87                 50,000          1,253,000
    1/88                 60,000          1,313,000
    2/88                 60,000          1,373,000
    3/88                 60,000          1,433,000
    4/88                 60,000          1,493,000
    5/88                 60,000          1,553,000
    6/88                 60,000          1,613,000
    7/88                 60,000          1,673,000
    8/88                 60,000          1,733,000
    9/88                 60,000          1,793,000
    10/88                 60,000          1,853,000
    11/88                 60,000          1,913,000
    12/88                 60,000          1,973,000
    1/89                 60,000          2,033,000
    2/89                 60,000          2,093,000
    3/89                 60,000          2,153,000
    4/89                 60,000          2,213,000
    1
    So shown in the stipulated exhibit. Evidently, there is a
    $5,000 error in either the July 1986 monthly draw amount or the
    cumulative draws. This discrepancy does not affect our analysis
    or conclusions.
    - 36 -
    D. Agreement to Continue at 50 Percent the Percentage
    of Net Housefile Mailing Income the Fundraising
    Contract Required to be Retained in the Escrow
    Account to Reimburse W&H
    As indicated above, the Contract originally provided that,
    after 2 years, the percentage of net housefile mailing income that
    petitioner was required to retain in the Escrow Account be lowered
    from 50 percent to 30 percent.    In March and April 1986, Watson
    proposed to petitioner that this percentage remain at 50 percent,
    rather than be lowered, because of higher prospect mailing
    expenses resulting from an increase in postal rates.    In exchange
    for petitioner’s agreement to this, W&H would reduce its creative
    fee on housefile package mailings from $5,000 to $2,500 and cap
    its mailing fee at $50,000 for any housefile mailing done in
    excess of 500,000 letters.   On April 26, 1986, petitioner’s board
    of directors accepted Watson’s proposal.
    E. April 1987 Addendum to the Contract
    The certified public accounting firm that examined
    petitioner’s annual financial statements issued a qualified
    opinion, dated April 18, 1986, as to petitioner’s 1985 financial
    statement.   The certified public accounting firm elaborated on its
    concerns in a management letter dated May 23, 1986, to the
    executive committee of petitioner’s board of directors.    This
    management letter states, in pertinent part, as follows:
    General Fund
    1. Continued Existence of the Agency [petitioner].
    Our gravest concern is the viability of the
    - 37 -
    organization. It is our understanding that the
    1986 budget totals $520,000 including grant
    commitments of $100,000. You expect to fund this
    ambitious budget with the excess of revenues over
    expenses from the direct-mail campaign. What will
    the Council [petitioner] do if the excess of
    revenues over expenses does not materialize at the
    level expected?
    The General Fund must borrow heavily from the
    Donor Development Fund [Escrow Account] to finance
    the budget, and if required to repay such
    borrowings it is doubtful the General Fund would
    have the ability to make the repayments.
    Over a 7- to 8-month period beginning in or about July 1986,
    petitioner discussed with W&H its concerns regarding petitioner’s
    full recourse liability to repay the excess draws taken and
    petitioner’s inability to receive unqualified opinions from the
    certified public accounting firm with respect to petitioner’s
    future annual financial statements.        On October 23, 1986, Watson
    sent a letter to petitioner’s executive director stating W&H’s
    position with respect to petitioner’s repayment of the excess
    draw liability, stating in pertinent part, as follows:
    This letter is to confirm our discussion relating
    to program draws from the UCC escrow account.
    *   *   *   *   *    *   *
    As we understand it, UCC’s concerns surround the
    procedure by which this [50 percent of] net income
    [from housefile mailings] is transferred to your
    regular operating account.
    Rather than receiving the exact amount as
    determined by the 50% formula, UCC, with W&Hs
    knowledge, is taking a fixed amount each month. When
    the final net income figure becomes known some months
    later, UCCs draw from the escrow account can be greater
    than it should be.
    - 38 -
    Your question is Will UCC be required to pay the
    escrow account back for this excess draw?
    According to the terms of the agreement, I suppose
    that technically you would have to do this.
    However, since W&H does have knowledge that these
    transfers are taking place, we currently have no
    objection to this in light of our hope that we can
    overcome the deficits. W&H would not request UCC to
    repay any overdraws unless we objected to a specific
    draw at the time it was taken or in the event that UCC
    would unreasonably interfere with W&H’s efforts to
    continue the mailing campaign to recover the deficits.
    The worst thing that could happen is that should
    the deficits continue to grow or can not be reduced,
    and if UCC substantially overdraws its 50% program
    allocation, it could become necessary to reduce the
    draws to bring them back into balance.
    Should we determine this situation to be
    developing, I would like for us to sit down well in
    advance of such time and create plans so that a
    reduction would not adversely impact UCC’s operation.
    After reviewing Watson’s October 23, 1986, letter, petitioner’s
    executive committee and executive director concluded that the
    letter was not satisfactory for petitioner’s purposes and did not
    relieve petitioner from having full recourse liability with
    respect to excess draws.
    Petitioner’s executive committee asked petitioner’s
    executive director “to contact * * * Watson to ask that he
    rewrite it [i.e., the October 23, 1986, letter] in time for our
    auditors review.”
    Watson sent a new letter to petitioner’s executive director
    on November 19, 1986.   The November 19, 1986, letter is
    substantially the same as the October 23, 1986, letter, except as
    - 39 -
    follows:   (1) The November 19 letter omits the October 23, 1986,
    paragraph that states “According to the terms of the agreement, I
    suppose that technically you would have to do this [i.e., repay
    the excess draw]”; and (2) the November 19 letter replaces the
    phrase “the draws” by the phrase “future draws” after “reduce” in
    the October 23 letter clause “it could become necessary to reduce
    the draws to bring them back into balance.”
    On December 12, 1986, petitioners executive director sent a
    letter to Watson about the treatment of general and
    administrative costs under the Contract.   In the course of this
    letter, he pointed out that the auditors “were in the office to
    begin preliminary work on the 1986 Financial Statements.”
    Petitioner and W&H executed an addendum to the Contract on
    April 8-9, 1987.   The addendum provides that, beginning with
    1986, petitioner would not have to repay draws taken in excess of
    its 50 percent of its housefile income, to the extent sufficient
    net fundraising revenue was not raised.    The addendum states that
    such excess draws would be treated in the same manner as prospect
    mailing debts for purposes of the Contract.   The addendum further
    provides that petitioner’s monthly draws would be agreed to in
    writing by W&H and petitioner, and requires W&H to give 90 days’
    prior written notice to petitioner in order to effectuate any
    reduction in the monthly draws.   Petitioner’s then-chairman
    believed that W&H agreed to the April 1987 addendum--especially
    the nonrefundability of the draws--because W&H hoped that it
    - 40 -
    would improve relations with petitioner’s board of directors and
    increase the likelihood that the Contract would be renewed.
    As a result of the addendum provision regarding monthly
    draws, petitioner received an unqualified opinion for 1986.    That
    is, the certified public accounting firm’s report no longer
    included qualifications or reservations about petitioner’s
    practices or potential liabilities.
    Direct Mail Fundraising Campaign:   1984-1989
    A. In General
    From June 1984 through May 1989, W&H conducted a nationwide
    direct mail fundraising campaign for petitioner.    Mailings were
    eventually sent throughout all 50 States.   However, petitioner
    directed W&H not to make mailings to areas serviced by certain of
    petitioner’s member agencies, as those member agencies received
    annual funding from the United Way campaign and a condition of
    their receipt of such funding was that they not be involved in
    competing fundraising efforts.
    W&H created and developed direct mail fundraising packages
    with petitioner’s assistance and input.   Before each direct mail
    package was mailed, petitioner received from W&H all materials to
    be included in the package, as well as the names of all mailing
    lists to which W&H proposed to send the package and the estimated
    numbers of names from each mailing list to be used in the
    mailing.   Petitioner, through its staff and a committee of its
    board, reviewed and revised the package and the mailing list and
    - 41 -
    gave instructions as to the mailing list numbers, the copy, the
    dates of mailing, and the total number of letters to be sent.
    Petitioner received from W&H a monthly status report of the
    cumulative costs and revenues of each direct mail package mailing
    and a proposed schedule of future mailings.   Petitioner was also
    advised with regard to test mailings, typically of 5,000 letters,
    that W&H had done of proposed mailing packages.   If a test
    mailing was successful, then W&H generally recommended that more
    mailings of that package be “rolled out” in greater quantities.
    W&H issued purchase orders on behalf of petitioner with
    respect to all of the goods, services, and other expenditures
    required for the various mailings.    This was done on an on-going
    basis and involved such items as computer work, mailing house
    expenses, mailing list rentals, and printing.   When petitioner
    approved the making of a mailing, W&H and petitioner considered
    petitioner to have authorized W&H to order and arrange for all of
    the related goods, services, and other expenditures required to
    effectuate the mailing.
    Petitioner accrued the amounts shown in table 7 as its
    expenses for (1) postage and shipping, (2) printing and
    publishing, (3) fundraising fees,10 and (4) mailing list rentals.
    10
    Compare the accruals shown on the fundraising fees
    column in table 7, with the payments shown supra table 3. When
    adjusted for the W&H reimbursements pursuant to the Contract, the
    net accrual amounts are fairly close to the actual payment
    amounts, except for 1986, where the difference is about $275,000.
    (continued...)
    - 42 -
    Petitioner allocated about 45 percent of each of these categories
    of expenditures--other than fundraising fees--to “program
    services”, rather than “donor development and fundraising”.
    10
    (...continued)
    - 43 -
    Table 7
    Postage       Printing     Professional    (Reimbursable)    Net Professional   Mailing
    and          and          Fundraising       or Not          Fundraising        List
    Year       Shipping    Publications      Fees          Reimbursable1         Fees          Rentals
    1984        $60,171     $74,224         $30,092              --             $30,092         $50,201
    1985      1,480,719    1,445,431        798,092         $(641,920)          156,172        1,034,711
    1986      2,079,059    1,513,599      1,521,101             (403,772)     1,117,329        1,133,254
    1987      2,678,137    1,824,517      1,259,798             730,228       1,990,026        1,475,299
    1988        936,627     675,605         659,179             237,444         896,623         229,684
    1889        263,514     439,479         115,406              65,890         181,296          14,529
    Totals 7,498,227   5,972,855      4,383,668             (12,130)      4,371,538        3,937,678
    1
    Expenses (reimbursable), or no longer reimbursable, by W&H under the Contract. The
    amounts are taken from petitioner’s Forms 990. The parties have not explained why these
    amounts net to ($12,130), rather than -0-.
    - 44 -
    B. W&H’s Advances of the Initial Capital to
    Conduct the Direct Mail Fundraising Campaign
    As indicated above, the Contract was a “no-risk” contract
    with respect to petitioner’s payment of fundraising expenses.
    For the first 2 years or so under the Contract, W&H advanced
    money to the Escrow Account to pay for postage.   Postage was an
    “upfront” expense, while other expenses generally were billed
    “after the fact”, when petitioner had already received the
    revenue generated by the mailing.    For a while, W&H continued to
    advance money to pay for postage even when there were substantial
    amounts in the Escrow Account.   W&H did this because its people
    believed that there was not enough money in the Escrow Account to
    pay both the postage and the other vendors, and because of the
    draws that W&H paid to petitioner.
    W&H’s last advance of funds to petitioner for postage
    occurred on March 9, 1987.   Thereafter, petitioner earned
    sufficient profits from its mailings to cover its postage
    expense.
    The Contract does not specify how much capital W&H would
    provide to fund petitioner’s direct mail fundraising campaign.
    W&H’s decisions to advance additional capital were based, in
    substantial part, on its evaluation of the results from the
    mailings that had already been done and on its conclusions about
    the mailing campaign’s profits prospects.   Where W&H and its
    clients entered into no-risk fundraising contracts similar to the
    - 45 -
    Contract, W&H’s practice was to stop advancing funds to finance a
    client’s direct mail fundraising campaign if the initial mailings
    were unsuccessful and W&H concluded that reasonable prospects for
    conducting a profitable mailing campaign did not exist.   If W&H
    decided to stop advancing funds, W&H then advised that client its
    mailings would be curtailed, unless that client paid the expenses
    of the further mailings that the client wanted to do.   On the
    other hand, if W&H concluded that strong prospects for conducting
    a profitable mailing campaign existed, W&H then might
    substantially increase its advancements of funds in order to
    finance larger mailings for that client.
    In this manner W&H effectively limited the risk that it had
    apparently assumed in any no-risk fundraising contracts similar
    to the Contract
    C. Vendors Who Furnished Goods or Services
    In the course of petitioner’s direct mail fundraising
    campaign, goods and services were obtained from a number of
    vendors.   As indicated above, WIB was the escrow agent and
    provided most of the caging services with respect to the return
    mail received in response to petitioner’s mailings.   Wiland
    Associates (hereinafter sometimes referred to as Wiland) was
    retained by W&H and performed the computer services required in
    connection with the Contract.
    Several other vendors at various times furnished goods or
    services in connection with petitioner’s direct mail campaign.
    - 46 -
    W&H did not own or have any interest in the vendors who furnished
    printing, mailing, telemarketing, or data processing services
    under the Contract, nor did W&H own or have any interest in WIB
    or Wiland.
    The Art Department Company, a corporation owned by Watson
    and Hughey, prepared mock-ups and layouts and performed other art
    work-related services for W&H’s clients and for other customers.
    Petitioner was billed at the rate of $25 per hour for the Art
    Department Company services.
    Washington Lists, a division of W&H, performed list
    brokerage services for petitioner.11    A list broker represents an
    organization that wants to rent a mailing list from another
    organization.    One of Washington Lists’ functions as a list
    broker was to arrange for petitioner to use as lessee certain
    mailing lists.    Washington Lists arranged these mailing list
    rental transactions for petitioner through standard industry
    channels for such transactions.
    D. Rentals of Mailing Lists
    As indicated above, Wiland was retained by W&H to perform
    the computer services required in connection with the Contract,
    including maintenance of a computer list of petitioner’s
    housefile.   Wiland also maintained computer lists which W&H owned
    11
    In 1986, Washington Lists changed its name to Capitol
    List. Hereinafter, use of the term Washington Lists includes,
    where applicable, reference to Capitol List.
    - 47 -
    or co-owned with its other clients.      Wiland, as instructed by
    W&H, automatically merged and added to W&H’s masterfile on a
    monthly basis all new names and donor information that had been
    added to petitioner’s housefile.    W&H’s masterfile included the
    names and donor information that was owned by W&H or was jointly
    owned by W&H and its clients.    W&H had joint ownership rights in
    most of the client housefile mailing lists developed under the
    fundraising contracts it entered into with its nonprofit clients;
    W&H did not have such an arrangement with respect to AICR.
    In conducting petitioner’s prospect mailings, prospect
    mailing packages were mailed to the following categories of names
    and addresses (hereinafter for convenience referred to as names):
    (1) Names that W&H, as lessor, rented to petitioner from the W&H
    masterfile, (2) names that Washington Lists arranged for
    petitioner to rent as lessee from outside list owners unrelated
    to W&H, (3) names that W&H, as lessor, rented to petitioner
    through Washington Lists which names W&H obtained from outside
    list owners in exchange for petitioner names, and (4) names that
    W&H, as lessor, through Washington Lists rented to petitioner
    which names W&H obtained from outside list owners in exchange for
    non-petitioner names on W&H’s masterfile.
    The Contract forbids petitioner to exchange or to rent as
    lessor its housefile list names.    When petitioner as lessee used
    names from W&H’s masterfile, W&H charged petitioner W&H’s
    advertised rental rate for the names published in the current
    - 48 -
    “Standard Rate and Data” publication (hereinafter sometimes
    referred to as SRD).   SRD is a direct mail industry advertising
    publication that sets forth the characteristics of a number of
    mailing lists available for rental, the rental rates, and the
    name and telephone number of the particular list owner or list
    owner’s agent to contact.   When petitioner as lessee used names
    that W&H obtained from outside list owners either through
    exchanges of petitioner’s housefile list names or exchanges of
    non-petitioner names on the W&H masterfile, W&H charged
    petitioner the outside list owner’s currently advertised SRD-
    published rental rate for the names furnished to petitioner or,
    if no current SRD-published rental rate existed for the names
    furnished to petitioner, W&H’s currently advertised SRD-published
    rental rate for the names W&H gave up in the exchange
    transaction.
    Generally, by engaging in an exchange transaction, a list
    owner is able to obtain additional names at a significantly
    cheaper cost than it would otherwise incur to use the names as a
    lessee in a rental transaction.   For instance, in a typical
    exchange transaction, the two list owners involved might agree
    that each would furnish to the other 10,000 of their respective
    housefile list names that meet certain prescribed specifications.
    The two owners would not pay one another any cash fee; the only
    costs an owner would incur include computer-related production
    costs for a computer tape or mailing labels containing the 10,000
    - 49 -
    names that owner furnishes, postage to ship the tape or labels,
    and a list broker’s fee or list manager’s fee12 for arranging the
    exchange transaction.
    When W&H exchanged for petitioner names it owned jointly
    with petitioner, the cost to W&H of acquiring the third party’s
    names included charges for computer processing, postage, and a
    list broker’s or list manager’s fee.     W&H did not pay a rental
    fee to the owner of the third-party names in these situations,
    because W&H was providing names to the third party that normally
    rented for $60 per thousand names.
    Table 8 shows the amounts petitioner as lessee paid to
    Washington Lists by way of mailing list rental fees for renting
    mailing lists which W&H owned or mailing lists to which W&H
    claimed mailing list rights.   The payments petitioner made to W&H
    include payments for names that W&H acquired by exchanging
    petitioner’s names for names owned by unrelated third parties.
    Table 8
    Payments for Names W&H
    Payments for W&H       Obtained by Exchanging
    Year           Masterfile Names       Petitioner Names
    1984                 -0-                         $1,450
    1985                $6,448                       57,349
    1986                44,645                      119,436
    1987               122,747                      219,896
    1988                32,408                       24,660
    12
    In the direct mail industry, a list manager functions
    as a sales agent who represents a list owner in marketing the
    list owner’s mailing list to others. The list manager promotes
    the mailing list and arranges for rentals and/or exchanges of the
    mailing list to other parties.
    - 50 -
    1989                  -0-                       -0-
    Totals             206,248                   422,791
    When W&H obtained names for petitioner to use as lessee,
    including non-petitioner names from W&H’s masterfile and third-
    party names for which W&H exchanged petitioner names, W&H charged
    or passed on any direct out-of-pocket costs of obtaining those
    names to petitioner.   These out-of-pocket costs included
    computer-processing charges and mailing charges.
    W&H’s masterfile had numerous subparts or discrete “list
    selects” that could be selected via computer processing.     For
    example, list selects of all donors to sweepstakes contest
    appeals, all donors to health causes, all donors to cancer-
    related health causes, or all donors to a particular W&H client,
    could be obtained through computer selection.
    During 1984 through 1989, W&H exchanged segments of
    petitioner’s housefile list between 200 and 300 times.     These
    exchange transactions involved as few as 5,000 petitioner names
    or as many as 300,000 petitioner names.
    For each of these exchanges, W&H charged petitioner the
    published SRD rental fee of the names received in the exchange;
    if no published SRD rate existed, then W&H charged petitioner the
    published SRD rental fee of petitioner’s names that were given up
    in the exchange.   UCC’s payments to W&H on account of these
    charges constituted income to W&H.
    - 51 -
    W&H also rented as lessor the names on its masterfile to
    third parties, including other W&H clients and W&H-controlled
    entities.   Petitioner’s names could be separately selected from
    the W&H masterfile and were occasionally rented by W&H to third
    parties as a discrete, separate list of petitioner names.
    Petitioner’s names were also contained in lists rented by W&H to
    third parties mixed together with non-petitioner names.   On the
    record in the instant case, it is virtually impossible to
    determine how often any particular petitioner name was rented as
    part of a mixed list.
    From 1984 through the time of the trial in the instant case,
    W&H as lessor rented discrete segments of petitioner’s housefile
    names about 50 to 80 times.   These rental transactions may have
    involved as few as 5,000 petitioner names or as many as 300,000
    petitioner names.13   From 1984 through the time of the trial, in
    the instant case, W&H as lessor rented segments of the W&H
    masterfile more than 2,000 times.   Any such rental may have
    involved no petitioner names, one petitioner name, or a
    substantial number of petitioner names.   On at least one occasion
    as many as 300,000 petitioner names were contained on a rented
    13
    For example, a list rental order dated Jan. 1, 1990,
    submitted on behalf of the Norris Hospital at the University of
    Southern California to W&H, reflects that an 8,500-name
    “representative cross section” of certain petitioner names was
    being ordered. The order indicates that the segment of
    petitioner names selected consisted of donors who had made a
    donation of $5 or more to petitioner within the past 24 months.
    Note that the Contract had expired more than 7 months earlier.
    - 52 -
    segment of the W&H masterfile.
    W&H as lessor rented petitioner names at rates that were
    common in the list rental market.   A typical rate was $60 per
    thousand names.
    The Contract did not require W&H to, and W&H did not, notify
    petitioner before renting parts of the W&H masterfile including
    petitioner’s names to third parties.   Pursuant to the Contract,
    W&H retained all rights to approve a mailing sample of what would
    be mailed by the third parties renting parts of W&H’s masterfile.
    W&H also retained all rights to control the mailing dates when
    these third parties using parts of W&H’s masterfile would make
    their mailings to the rented list names.
    During the term of the Contract, some of petitioner’s
    directors and staff became aware that W&H was exchanging
    petitioner housefile names for other names, and then charging
    petitioner full regular rental rates for the use of the other
    names.   Some of petitioner’s directors and staff also became
    aware that other W&H clients, including certain nonprofit cancer
    organizations, were mailing fundraising packages similar to
    petitioner’s.   They were further aware that W&H possibly could be
    renting or otherwise providing petitioner housefile names to the
    W&H clients that were mailing fundraising packages which were
    similar to petitioner’s.   In fact, W&H did so use petitioner’s
    housefiles and did mail similar sweepstakes packages for
    petitioner’s “competitors”.   Petitioner did not try to have W&H
    - 53 -
    stop such activities, as petitioner concluded that W&H was acting
    within its rights under the Contract.
    Under the Contract, it would have been improper for W&H to
    impose a markup on charges made by suppliers.   Thus, if W&H
    secured a desired mailing list for petitioner as lessee, and the
    lessor charged $55 per thousand, then it would have been improper
    for W&H to pass a cost of $60 per thousand on to petitioner.    W&H
    and petitioner operated in accordance with the Contract.
    However, when W&H “paid for” the desired mailing list by
    exchanging one of petitioner’s mailing lists for it, so that the
    lessor imposed no monetary rental fee, then, as petitioner’s
    staff understood the Contract, it was appropriate for W&H to pass
    on to petitioner a rental fee in the amount that the lessor would
    have charged for the desired mailing list if the lessor had not
    instead received petitioner’s mailing list in exchange.    In
    exchange situations, then, W&H received as its own revenue the
    “as if” rental that the lessor had not in fact charged, as well
    as W&H’s regular fees under the Contract.
    The bar against petitioner’s exchanging its own names
    extended past the term of the Contract.   Because petitioner could
    not exchange its own names, petitioner had to pay the greater
    costs associated with renting names from others.
    E. Sweepstakes Mailings
    The first sweepstakes contest mailing that W&H conducted was
    done under the Contract.   W&H then used sweepstakes contest
    - 54 -
    mailings extensively with most of its other clients.    Before they
    formed W&H, both Watson and Hughey had experience with the use of
    sweepstakes contests on behalf of either their employers or their
    clients.
    As part of its initial program of prospect mailings for
    petitioner, W&H tested various packages.   A “check” package
    performed best and became petitioner’s “control” package--a
    package that is mailed until a later package can net more money.
    In November 1984 a sweepstakes (sweeps) package was tested and
    also performed well.   As Watson put it in an October 15, 1985,
    memorandum to several of petitioner’s directors and its executive
    director, “At this point UCC had two control packages, the check
    package which could be mailed to the traditional donor market;
    and a sweepstakes offer which could be mailed to markets that
    respond to sweepstakes.”
    A January 1985 major prospect mailing was planned using the
    check package.   However, although the package had been approved
    by petitioner, petitioner’s board of directors then urged that
    the check package be replaced by a different package.   That
    different package then lost $110,000.14
    14
    The record reflects that petitioner’s directors
    directed the check package not be used, because they believed
    certain representations contained in the package were inaccurate.
    Recipients of the package were informed that if they made a
    contribution, petitioner then essentially would receive a
    matching donation from another party. In actuality, at the time
    the solicitation was made, petitioner had not yet secured a
    (continued...)
    - 55 -
    In August 1985 an “annual fund” package was successfully
    tested.   As a result, petitioner again had two control packages.
    An annual fund package was first mailed out in substantial volume
    (almost 500,000 letters) in December 1985.
    Apart from the foregoing, for petitioner every substantial
    volume prospect mailing and almost every test prospect mailing in
    1985 was a sweeps package.   Five of these 1985 sweeps prospect
    mailings each lost more than $100,000; one lost $228,569.
    However, from mid-1986 to mid-1987, sweeps packages produced
    14
    (...continued)
    commitment from another party to make matching contributions.
    In his letter dated Feb. 19, 1985, to petitioner’s executive
    director, Watson complained that the projected $70,000 loss on
    the Jan. 1985 poll package mailing (excluding at least another
    $45,000 due W&H in fees) done at petitioner’ directors’ urging
    was the largest single loss W&H ever experienced. He stated that
    it was essential that what happened not occur again and formally
    requested that once petitioner approved a mailing package that
    petitioner be committed to the package’s use, unless it was
    “obvious and conclusive” that the package’s continued use would
    result in irrevocable harm to petitioner. His letter concluded,
    in pertinent part, as follows:
    I’m sure you are disappointed in what has happened in
    regard to this Poll package mailing. But, I assure you, no
    one is as concerned as I am. I hope it has been a lesson
    for us all.
    I had the hope, and still have the dream, that UCC
    could be made financially strong within a relatively short
    time. And, I pray this setback doesn’t postpone that day
    too long into the future.
    Copies of this letter to the executive director were also sent by
    Watson to three of petitioner’s directors.
    - 56 -
    the greatest percentages of responses to prospect mailings.
    Also, contrary to the usual experience with prospect mailings,
    some sweeps packages produced substantial profits.
    Although the sweeps packages were often profitable for
    petitioner, they had their drawbacks.         Sweeps packages generally
    worked on individuals who were primarily interested in playing
    the contest, as opposed to being interested in supporting
    petitioner.   In his memorandum dated July 9, 1986, to
    petitioner’s executive director, Watson, in generally commenting
    on petitioner’s direct mail campaign, made the following
    observations about the sweeps package donors who contributed to
    petitioner:
    UCC basically has two donor files--one being sweepstakes
    donors and the other being regular or straight donors.
    The Sweepstakes file makes up 80% of all donor names and the
    straight file has the balance of 20%.
    Although sweeps names have a higher conversion rate into
    second and third donations, the life span of these donors is
    less than straight donors.
    We are continuing to try to expand the straight file which
    is a true donor base and is the one that can be tapped for
    future major gifts. * * *
    *   *   *     *      *    *   *
    In summary, it appears that the UCC direct mail
    fundraising program is healthy and shows signs of continued
    improvement. As the straight donor file expands, it should
    lend stability to the monthly income for UCC. The
    sweepstakes housefile mailings should continue to provide
    the buffer needed to provide the minimum revenues to help
    UCC make its monthly budgetary commitments.
    In addition to the problem that Watson noted, some of the
    - 57 -
    sweepstakes contest mailings generated adverse publicity for
    petitioner, because some individuals who received the mailings
    believed the solicitations were misleading.   The adverse
    publicity petitioner experienced in conducting its direct mail
    campaign is discussed more fully infra.
    Although W&H attempted to convert some of petitioner’s
    sweepstakes donors into straight donors by sending them non-
    sweepstakes mailing packages, the conversion efforts were not
    successful.   W&H concluded that the only way to obtain further
    contributions from sweepstakes donors was to continue to send
    them sweepstakes contest mailing packages.
    During 1985 through May 1989, sweepstakes contests mailings
    were used heavily in petitioner’s direct mail fundraising
    campaign.   Beginning in late 1987 or early 1988, petitioner
    sharply reduced the numbers of sweepstakes contest prospect
    letters it mailed, because petitioner realized the sweepstakes
    contest prospect mailings were not helping petitioner to develop
    a strong housefile.   In his letter dated January 28, 1988, to the
    W&H executive who handled petitioner’s account on a daily basis,
    petitioner’s executive director responded as follows to the W&H
    executive’s prior argument that petitioner should not reduce the
    level of its 1988 prospect mailings so greatly below the level of
    the 1987 prospect mailings, because the 1987 prospect mailings,
    the W&H executive claimed, had added 1 million new names to
    petitioner’s housefile:
    - 58 -
    Your reference to the 1 million names added in 1987
    housefile is interesting. Why were we continuing to
    mail to only 300+ thousand with housefile packages
    given this million “new” names? My opinion is that we
    both knew those names wouldn’t produce due to their
    acquisition from sweeps. And if they did work, their
    lifespan was a matter of weeks, not months. We wish to
    see greater cultivation of housefile names with new
    packages and straight packages. If we only get 180,000
    names or less, but they have been generated via quality
    straight packages, we will be better off than adding
    another 1 million sweeps players.
    In November 1988 petitioner stopped conducting prospect
    mailings.     During 1984 through 1988, a total of 90 prospect
    mailings were done in petitioner’s direct mail fundraising
    campaign.     Of the 90 prospect mailings, 71 involved the use of
    sweepstakes contest mailing packages.     The total number of
    prospect letters mailed in petitioner’s mailing campaign was
    51,771,026, of which 37,546,124 involved the use of sweepstakes
    contests.15
    15
    So stipulated. The parties stipulated as an exhibit
    W&H’s July 1, 1989, status report to petitioner. In that
    exhibit, the listing of the 90 prospect mailings occupies three
    pages. The stipulated number of letters is the total of the
    prospect mailings listed on the first two pages of this portion
    of the exhibit. The total for the prospect mailings listed on
    all three pages is 57,758,533. Only 48 of the prospect mailings
    are identified in the status report with the word “sweeps”; these
    48 involve 32,671,489 letters. We cannot clearly identify which
    23 of the 42 other prospect mailings are among the 71 stipulated
    sweeps prospect mailings. Based on the descriptive terms used in
    the status report, our best estimate is that the status report
    shows that the 71 stipulated sweeps prospect mailings involved
    about 41-43 million letters.
    Similarly, the parties have stipulated that the status
    report shows 75 housefile mailings, of which 47 were sweeps
    letters, and a total of 27,849,216 housefile mailings letters of
    (continued...)
    - 59 -
    As of May 19, 1989, near the end of the term of the
    Contract, petitioner’s housefile contained a total of 2,084,019
    donor names, of which 1,165,153 were “active names” and 918,866
    were “inactive names”.16   As of May 8, 1989, petitioner’s
    housefile contained 1,164,698 “active donor names”, which had
    been produced from the sources indicated in table 9.
    Table 9
    Source                  Number of Names
    Sweepstakes Mailings                810,411
    15
    (...continued)
    which 19,915,212 were sweeps letters. The stipulated status
    report shows 75 housefile mailings, but a total of only
    21,849,216 letters. The 47 sweeps housefile mailings that we
    were able to identify involved 17,313,153 letters.
    It may be that the status report misidentified mailings
    totaling about 6,000,000 names. Although the discrepancy between
    the stipulation and the stipulated exhibit is substantial (more
    than 10 percent of the total), it does not affect our ultimate
    conclusions.
    16
    The parties stipulated to these numbers of “active
    names” and “inactive names”. An invoice dated May 19, 1989, to
    petitioner from Wiland, the computer company that maintained
    petitioner’s housefile, reflects that Wiland had prepared a
    computer tape of petitioner’s housefile that contained 1,165,153
    “active names” and 918,866 “inactive names”. According to Dan
    Wells, an employee of Wiland who testified at trial, “active
    names” were the names that petitioner had mailed most recently.
    Interestingly, Watson, during his testimony, estimated that
    petitioner’s housefile, as of the May 30, 1989, date petitioner’s
    contract with W&H ended, contained approximately 250,000 to
    300,000 “active names” and another 1 million “inactive names”.
    Watson, however, defined “active names” to be names which, at
    that point, would produce a profit if mailed to, and “inactive
    names” to be names which, at that point, would not produce a
    profit if mailed to. He elaborated that the actual
    categorization of a particular name as “active” or “inactive”
    results from applying a complex statistical aging formula.
    - 60 -
    Non-Sweepstakes Mailings             279,084
    Miscellaneous                         75,203
    Total                              1,164,698
    F. Adverse Publicity
    As a result of its direct mail fundraising campaign and its
    association with W&H, petitioner received adverse publicity.
    This adverse publicity began in or about November 1984 and
    persisted through the term of the Contract.
    In late 1984, some of petitioner’s directors and staff began
    receiving complaints and inquiries about the direct mail
    fundraising campaign petitioner was conducting.    Adverse
    newspaper articles concerning petitioner had been published.   The
    negative press came from all parts of the country to which
    petitioner was mailing fund-raising letters.    The areas of
    concern raised in the complaints or inquiries included (1) W&H’s
    control of another cancer charity, AICR, (2) the mailing packages
    petitioner employed, (3) the adverse impact of mailings done in
    certain areas covered by petitioner’s member agencies, and (4)
    whether petitioner was spending a sufficient portion of its
    receipts for charitable purposes, as distinguished from spending
    for fundraising and administration.
    At petitioner’s board of directors meeting on November 17,
    1985, the board members viewed and discussed a videotape of an
    unfavorable Dayton, Ohio, television news story about
    petitioner’s direct-mail fundraising.   The news story focussed on
    - 61 -
    petitioner’s asserted high-pressure fundraising tactics and
    sweepstakes contests.
    Petitioner’s directors were divided concerning the course of
    action petitioner should pursue as a result of the above adverse
    publicity petitioner experienced.    Some directors wanted
    petitioner to discontinue its direct mail fundraising campaign
    entirely.   However, a majority of the directors decided that
    petitioner’s direct mail fundraising campaign should be continued
    and that the adverse publicity was a problem which could be
    managed.    Financial considerations were a controlling factor in
    the majority’s decision to continue the direct mail campaign.
    The fundraising arrangement with W&H accounted for substantially
    all of petitioner’s operating funds.    Additionally, at this time,
    petitioner was fully liable on a recourse basis to W&H for the
    excess draws petitioner had obtained from the Escrow Account.
    Although petitioner had tried, at various times, to develop other
    sources of funds, these efforts were not successful and
    petitioner remained heavily financially dependent on its direct
    mail fundraising campaign revenues throughout the term of the
    Contract.
    In early 1987, NCIB issued a report on petitioner that,
    among other things, concluded petitioner’s fundraising expenses
    for 1985 equaled about 97.7 percent of the related contributions
    - 62 -
    petitioner received.17    The NCIB report resulted in further
    adverse publicity for petitioner.
    In or about September 1986, petitioner began using a
    sweepstakes prospect mailing package known as the Instant Cash
    package.     The Instant Cash package mailings were highly
    profitable for petitioner--especially unusual for prospect
    mailings.     However, petitioner’s use of this sweeps package
    resulted in adverse publicity for petitioner.     After receiving
    complaints from contributors who received the Instant Cash
    Package,18 petitioner stopped using the package by about June
    1987.
    At petitioner’s board of directors meeting on June 13, 1987,
    its executive director proposed that petitioner establish a
    cancer patient assistance fund which it would fund with $2,000
    per month.     In discussing the proposed patient assistance fund,
    17
    As is discussed infra, table 10 and the text following,
    NCIB did not accept petitioner’s allocation of a portion of its
    direct mail campaign expenses to public education.
    18
    Recipients of the package were informed that they were
    winners in a contest with a prize of $5,000, if they would enter
    the contest. As applicable State laws generally prescribed that
    the recipients of such sweepstakes contest solicitations be
    allowed to enter the contest without making a contribution, they
    were also asked, but not required, to make a contribution to
    petitioner. Although the solicitation letter also indicated that
    the actual amount won by a recipient would be decided in a later
    drawing, the individuals who complained to petitioner believed
    the package was deceptive. In actuality, the $5,000 prize money
    awarded in the contest would be split evenly among all the
    contestants who entered the contest, and these contestants
    typically received about $.09. In some instances, petitioner
    refunded the contributions it received from the complainants.
    - 63 -
    petitioner’s executive director stated that the direct mail
    campaign is a form of public relations, some viewing it as a
    negative form, but with a cancer patient assistance fund in place
    it could be turned around to a positive form in the future.
    In April 1988, petitioner retained a consultant to assist
    petitioner in soliciting donations and grants from corporations
    and foundations.   The consultant reported to petitioner on the
    May 6, 1988, meeting that took place between the consultant and
    an executive with the Lilly Endowment, a large foundation in
    Indianapolis.
    The consultant advised that the Lilly Endowment’s
    executive’s unfavorable reaction to petitioner during the meeting
    indicated that petitioner’s continuance of its fundraising
    contract with W&H would jeopardize petitioner’s efforts to obtain
    funding from corporations and foundations.   The consultant
    advised that “It is doubtful that Lilly will ever fund UCC * * *.
    Perhaps a case could be built three or four years after the
    termination of the direct mail consultant contract.”
    The consultant’s report was given to petitioner’s
    Administrative Fundraising Committee, and mentioned by this
    committee in its May 11, 1988, report to petitioner’s Executive
    Committee.
    Several of petitioner’s affiliate member agencies withdrew
    from petitioner as a result of the adverse publicity petitioner
    experienced.
    - 64 -
    In addition, investigative inquiries with respect to
    petitioner’s direct-mail fundraising activities were begun by
    various State attorneys general, including the attorneys general
    for Alabama, Illinois, Maryland, Massachusetts, New York, and
    Pennsylvania.   Later, lawsuits were begun by some of the State
    attorneys general, including the attorneys general for New York
    and Pennsylvania.
    G. Petitioner’s Escrow Account-Related Problems
    1. Draws and Petitioner’s Dispute With W&H Over the
    Calculation of Cumulative Net Mailing Campaign Revenue
    Pursuant to its draw arrangement with W&H, petitioner
    received monthly draws from the Escrow Account maintained by WIB.
    See supra table 6 & preceding text.    In late 1984 these draws
    were $5,000 per month.   W&H exercised final authority with
    respect to approving and directing WIB to release the funds
    petitioner sought.   Even though the Escrow Account was in
    petitioner’s name and WIB considered that the funds in the Escrow
    Account belonged to petitioner, WIB paid money out of the Escrow
    Account only in response to check requests submitted by W&H.
    This was so whether the payments were (1) to vendors in
    connection with petitioner’s fundraising activities (in which
    events WIB also required the vendors’ invoices), (2) to W&H, or
    (3) directly to petitioner.
    Petitioner could not have obtained immediate possession of
    the funds that WIB held in the Escrow Account by unilaterally
    - 65 -
    revoking the Escrow Agreement between petitioner, WIB, and W&H.
    If a dispute between petitioner and W&H had arisen with respect
    to the disposition of the funds held in the Escrow Account, then
    WIB would have frozen the account.
    At petitioner’s executive committee meeting on July 19,
    1986, the committee members directed petitioner’s staff to ask
    W&H to increase petitioner’s monthly draw from $40,000 to
    $64,000, beginning August 1, 1986.     During the meeting,
    petitioner’s executive director expressed his reservations about
    petitioner’s increasing the amount of its monthly draws, unless
    W&H provided written assurance that petitioner would not have to
    repay the excess draws it received.     However, the executive
    committee member who proposed that petitioner should seek to
    increase its monthly draw, responded that he wanted to have those
    funds in UCC’s control and accounts despite the possible future
    need to repay W&H.   This member’s proposal was further supported
    by another of the committee members.
    At petitioner’s executive committee meeting held on
    September 25, 1986, a W&H executive who attended a part of the
    meeting advised the committee members that W&H was of the opinion
    that petitioner should not increase its monthly draw beyond the
    then-current $40,000, because of a decrease in petitioner’s
    housefile mailing income.   W&H suggested that petitioner wait
    until January 1987 before increasing its monthly draw to $50,000.
    Petitioner’s monthly draw was increased to $50,000 beginning in
    - 66 -
    January 1987, and was again increased, to $60,000, beginning in
    January 1988.
    In his letter dated November 4, 1988, to Watson,
    petitioner’s executive director advised Watson that there was a
    substantial discrepancy between W&H’s calculation of petitioner’s
    Escrow Account balance and what petitioner calculated its Escrow
    Account balance to be.   The executive director asked that W&H
    authorize transfer from the Escrow Account of the entire
    remaining $90,000 of petitioner’s draws for 1988.
    In his letter dated November 23, 1988, to Watson,
    petitioner’s executive director acknowledged petitioner’s receipt
    of its mid-November, semimonthly draw of $30,000 from the Escrow
    Account, and stated that he assumed petitioner would be receiving
    its draws for 1988 as originally scheduled, rather than in the
    lump sum he had asked for in his November 4, 1988, letter.   He
    further asked that W&H immediately transfer to petitioner half of
    the proposed $300,000 it would draw from the Escrow Account for
    the period January through May 1989.
    In his letter dated December 28, 1988, to Watson,
    petitioner’s executive director advised that petitioner’s
    Executive Committee had decided petitioner should stop receiving
    monthly draws of $60,000 from the Escrow Account, and instead
    receive 50 percent of the housefile mailing income, based on
    petitioner’s calculation of the net housefile mailing income.
    Petitioner’s executive director stated that these transfers are
    - 67 -
    to be made within 10 working days of petitioner’s calculations.
    In her letter dated February 15, 1989, to Watson,
    petitioner’s chief financial officer enclosed a copy of
    petitioner’s tentative calculation reflecting, as of January
    1989, a $92,358.03 positive balance of cumulative net income from
    the direct mail campaign.   As petitioner had not received all
    invoices of mailing expenses in connection with the January 1989
    mailings, petitioner’s chief financial officer asked that
    petitioner be paid $75,000, which would leave another $17,000 to
    cover any additional mailing expenses.    Her letter stated that if
    W&H had any questions regarding any of this, petitioner should be
    contacted, otherwise petitioner would expect to receive its
    requested check for $75,000 no later than February 21, 1989.
    In her letter dated May 9, 1989, to a W&H executive,
    petitioner’s chief financial officer noted that there was a
    substantial discrepancy between petitioner’s and W&H’s respective
    computations of cumulative housefile net income, as of December
    31, 1988.   Petitioner’s chief financial officer stressed that
    petitioner’s figures were audited.     Petitioner computed that, as
    of December 31, 1988, its cumulative housefile income was
    $1,930,909, its cumulative transfers from the Escrow Account
    amounted to $2,078,200, and there was a resulting deficit of
    $147,291. In contrast, W&H computed that the cumulative transfers
    were only $1,973,000, but there was a deficit of $540,711. W&H
    prepared a status report dated July 1, 1989, in which it took the
    - 68 -
    position that, as of April 30, 1989, the cumulative transfers had
    grown to $2,213,000 and the deficit had risen to $687,712.
    In order to wind up the fundraising arrangement between
    petitioner and W&H, the Escrow Account was kept open until at
    least September 30, 1989, as petitioner’s last housefile mailing
    under the Contract was sent out in early May of 1989.     Petitioner
    expected that W&H would render a final accounting to it on
    September 30, 1989.   However, no final accounting was ever made
    or agreed to by petitioner and W&H.
    Petitioner’s position is that all debts incurred for
    prospect mailings had been paid for by the revenues produced from
    the mailing campaign, and that petitioner did not owe any money
    to W&H.
    2. W&H’s Purchase and Invoice Control Procedures
    Similar to the authority it exercised with respect to the
    funds petitioner sought from the Escrow Account, up until about
    1987, W&H generally exercised final authority with respect to
    approving and directing WIB to release funds to pay the direct
    mail campaign’s expenses.   As indicated above in discussing the
    Escrow Agreement, the sole exceptions to W&H’s authority
    concerned WIB’s transfer of Escrow Account funds to pay “Business
    Reply” postage and invoices for WIB’s own services.     Beginning
    about 1987, W&H generally obtained petitioner’s approval with
    respect to the payment of certain vendor invoices, before issuing
    payment instructions to WIB.
    - 69 -
    During 1984 through 1989, W&H generally furnished WIB with
    copies of all vendor invoices along with check requests and
    payment instructions.   WIB relied on W&H to tell WIB that
    petitioner had approved the check requests.   When WIB paid an
    invoice, it promptly sent to petitioner a copy of the invoice,
    the check request, and payment information.   Any time that
    petitioner called WIB to ask questions about an invoice, WIB
    referred petitioner to W&H, because WIB did not review the
    correctness or appropriateness of the invoices to petitioner.
    Petitioner never asked WIB not to pay a vendor invoice.   However,
    on at least one occasion W&H authorized a payment without
    petitioner’s approval; W&H finally agreed that it would pay that
    bill.
    In a memorandum dated October 15, 1985, Watson addressed and
    discussed a number of matters raised during an October 8, 1985,
    meeting between himself, two of petitioner’s directors, and
    petitioner’s executive director.   Among the matters dealt with in
    the memorandum are W&H’s procedures with respect to its issuance
    of purchase orders, processing of invoices, and issuance of check
    requests to WIB to pay invoices.   W&H’s asserted practice was to
    send to petitioner copies of purchase orders for all goods or
    work contracted by W&H.   After completion of the work or delivery
    of the goods and W&H’s receipt of an invoice from the vendor, the
    W&H account executive reviewed the invoice for accuracy and
    returned it to W&H’s accounting department.   A check request was
    - 70 -
    then prepared and sent to WIB, and a copy of that check request
    was also sent to petitioner.    In his memorandum, Watson stated
    that “Should UCC wish to raise a question concerning any bill,
    all they need to do is pick up the telephone and call the escrow
    agent [WIB] and request that payment be held up until UCC is
    satisfied.”
    In his October 15, 1985, memorandum Watson also responded to
    petitioner’s concern that W&H, as required by the Contract, make
    reasonable efforts to solicit competitive bids from vendors,
    where time and market conditions permitted.     Watson explained
    that W&H’s executives, in soliciting bids, prepared
    specifications for the various goods and services needed on a
    standardized 7-part purchase order form.     The executives then
    contacted prospective vendors, advised them of the specifications
    for the goods and services sought, and requested bids.     The bids
    submitted typically were given to the executives over the
    telephone, rather than in writing.      However, the W&H executives
    who received these bids recorded the bid, the name of the company
    making it, and the date the bid was submitted, on the last page
    of the purchase order.   Watson maintained that requiring W&H to
    obtain written bids, as petitioner wanted, would be too
    cumbersome a procedure and might deter prospective bidders from
    submitting bids.    If petitioner wanted to audit a bid, Watson
    suggested, then petitioner could contact various vendors and ask
    them for their internal documentation on the bids they had
    submitted to W&H.
    - 71 -
    Among the concerns raised by petitioner’s certified public
    accounting firm in its later management letter dated May 23,
    1986, to petitioner’s board of directors and executive committee,
    are the following:
    2. W&H Responsibility for Documentation.
    It is our understanding that certain procedures in the areas
    of purchasing and cash disbursements are executed by W&H
    personnel. We performed a limited test of such procedures
    and have the following observations:
    a.   We could not locate a check request for each cash
    disbursement. It was our understanding that at the
    very minimum, each check issued is to have a
    corresponding check request identified with it. The
    check request is the only document which indicates W&H
    approval of the cash disbursement.
    b.   During our testing, there were several instances where
    we could not locate the invoice(s) associated with
    specific checks. We recommend that Council personnel
    perform a timely limited review of all cash
    disbursements to insure that the proper supporting
    documentation exists. One area that needs special
    attention is postage. Although invoices are not issued
    for postage disbursements, receipts are given to W&H
    upon payment. We strongly recommend that the Council
    request that the original postage receipt be sent to
    the Council and if W&H requires the receipts for their
    files, they could retain a copy of the receipt.
    Although our testing did not indicate that any of the
    checks written for postage were used for items other
    than postage, the receipts would provide verification
    of these substantial expenditures. [See supra table 7,
    which shows that postage and shipping was petitioner’s
    largest category of expenses for 1985, 1986, 1987, and
    1988.]
    c.   W&H appears to be decidedly lacking in its adherence to
    the stated procedures regarding obtaining competitive
    bids on behalf of the Council. A number of the goods
    and services are paid for on a contractual basis so
    that the main items subject to purchase using
    competitive bids are printing and mailhouse costs. Of
    the items we examined on a test basis which should have
    been subject to competitive bids, we could find
    documentation that bids had been obtained only
    - 72 -
    approximately 50% of the time. It is possible that
    bids were obtained over the phone, but not documented.
    In some instances, the documentation we reviewed stated
    that a bid could not be obtained due to time
    constraints. We do not understand how this could occur
    as the mailing schedule is determined months in
    advance. Another possibility which exists is that
    competitive bids are not obtained but documentation is
    provided that states bids were obtained to pacify
    council personnel requesting adherence to the stated
    procedures regarding obtaining bids. True compliance
    testing of the procedures can only be achieved through
    independent verification with the vendors involved.
    3.   Lack of Timely Information.
    The final major item we would like to discuss concerns
    the lack of adequate, timely financial information
    summarizing the activities of the direct mail campaign.
    It is our understanding that management decisions are
    often based on financial information obtained from
    reports generated by W&H and the modified cash-basis
    monthly financial statements prepared by the Council’s
    accountant. This could be a dangerous course. We have
    made two attempts to reconcile financial information in
    the W&H reports to the Council’s financial records and
    have been unable to do so. We were then informed by
    * * * Watson that these reports were not complete,
    contain several estimates, and would probably not agree
    with the Council’s books. Therefore, we strongly
    recommend that the Board not rely quite so heavily on
    the reports generated by W&H. The best course of
    action would be for Council personnel to prepare the
    monthly financial statements in the same manner as they
    have been prepared at December 31, 1985. However,
    given current circumstances, it would be impossible to
    do this on a timely basis. One problem is that W&H can
    take up to four months to record an invoice in accounts
    payable, particularly W&H’s own invoices. With that
    kind of time lag, the Council cannot determine the true
    accounts payable at month-end until four months later.
    * * *
    Petitioner’s concern about W&H’s use of reasonable efforts
    to obtain competitive bids from vendors continued throughout the
    term of the Contract.   During 1986 and 1987, petitioner further
    discussed with W&H petitioner’s desire to exercise more control
    - 73 -
    over the payment of its direct mail campaign expenses.    However,
    petitioner’s efforts to obtain full control over disbursements
    from the Escrow Account ultimately were unsuccessful.
    In his letter dated July 31, 1986, to Watson, petitioner’s
    executive director confirmed that he and petitioner’s chief
    financial officer would be attending a meeting at W&H’s offices
    on August 12, 1986.   As part of the agenda for their meeting, the
    executive director enclosed for Watson a list of petitioner’s
    “staff concerns”.   Among the listed staff concerns, was one which
    stated that the “EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE MOVED TO BRING ALL
    ACCOUNTING FUNCTIONS IN-HOUSE EFFECTIVE JANUARY 1, 1987.
    Approval of all invoices and check requests shall come from the
    UCC Headquarters, as well as the actual writing and
    reconciliation procedures.”
    In his letter dated August 21, 1986, to Watson, petitioner’s
    executive director stated his understanding that, at the August
    12, 1986, meeting with Watson, “It was agreed that when UCC
    demonstrates the capability of assuming escrow authority and the
    escrow account debt level is significantly reduced, then UCC will
    become the escrow agent.”
    In her letter dated January 14, 1987, to petitioner’s chief
    financial officer, preparatory to a meeting scheduled for January
    28, 1987, a W&H executive stated as follows concerning
    petitioner’s previously expressed desire to take over management
    of disbursements from the Escrow Account, beginning in early
    1987:
    - 74 -
    Concerning moving the Escrow Account Payable management
    to the [petitioner’s] Carmel office early in 1987, you are
    probably referring to the discussion we had concerning this
    matter during the last visit by you and * * * [petitioner’s
    executive director] to our offices in Alexandria. At that
    time, we mentioned that only one of W&H’s clients handles
    this function in that way. That organization maintains a
    surplus cash balance in their accounts in excess of $2
    million and a positive fund balance of over $400,000. It is
    our policy that once a client is able to develop a positive
    fund balance or the outstanding deficit can otherwise be
    reduced to a reasonable level, we would be supportive of
    such a move as we have been in the past.
    Frankly, with nearly $500,000 in outstanding postage
    loans to UCC on the books as of last week, it makes us
    somewhat nervous to hear mention of this again for the
    reasons outlined in your letter. Certainly those areas that
    were brought up can easily be overcome. If, on the other
    hand, there has been any serious discussion within your
    organization which is outside the scope of what we have
    already stated, I would appreciate your advising me so that
    we can review this with * * * [Watson] and * * * [the W&H
    executive who handled petitioner’s account on a daily
    basis].
    In her letter dated January 30, 1987, to Watson,
    petitioner’s chief financial officer discussed her understanding,
    from her meeting and discussions with Watson and two W&H
    executives on January 28, 1987, of some actions W&H would take to
    address petitioner’s concerns with respect to the conduct of its
    direct mail campaign and the accounting for and disbursement of
    funds to pay the mailing campaign expenses.     Among these actions
    to be taken by W&H, the letter states that Watson “will write an
    addendum to the   * * *   [Escrow Agreement] which would allow   the
    Council to approve invoices paid by the Escrow Agent [WIB]. The
    Council would be able to provide written requests for payment of
    invoices without the approval of    * * *   [W&H].”   With respect to
    - 75 -
    petitioner’s desire to control the funds held in the Escrow
    Account, the chief financial officer’s letter states as follows:
    11. Again, the Council desires to obtain control of
    Accounts Payable through a separate bank account which
    would be funded by the current Escrow Account. Our
    reason is the lack of control we currently have over
    Escrow Account Funds. While I appreciate * * * [the
    W&H executive who handled petitioner’s account on a
    daily basis’] wish to shield us from the aggrevations
    [sic] associated with Accounts Payable, I feel the
    Council is quite capable of shouldering the
    responsibility. If the other changes requested
    previously in this letter occur within the next few
    months, we will be willing to delay the transfer for a
    period of time. Ultimately, the Council wants to
    control all of its accounts.
    In her letter dated March 10, 1987, to a W&H executive,
    petitioner’s chief financial officer objected that the January
    31, 1987, listing of accounts payable submitted by W&H that were
    to be paid, contained invoices previously disapproved by
    petitioner.   Petitioner’s chief financial officer complained that
    it appeared to her that W&H intended to circumvent the invoice
    approval procedure that had been established.   Her letter further
    stated as follows:
    This scenario only emphasizes the lack of control the
    Council [petitioner] exerts over its own funds. * * *
    [W&H] previously has expressed that the Council is incapable
    of managing the Escrow Account, yet the recent activity has
    been unacceptable to us and goes against standard accounting
    principles. Just as * * * [W&H] insists on administering
    the Council’s Accounts Payable, so will we insist that
    standard accounting policy be followed, which includes
    maintaining vendor correspondence and reviewing invoice
    costs.
    The proposed addendum to the Escrow Agreement discussed in
    petitioner’s financial officer’s above letter dated January 30,
    - 76 -
    1987, to Watson, was never executed by petitioner, W&H, and WIB.
    In his letter dated June 1, 1987, to petitioner’s executive
    director, Watson offered to revise the Escrow Agreement to
    provide that petitioner would have the right to approve the
    payment of all invoices, if petitioner agreed to an early renewal
    of the Contract and entered the proposed new fundraising contract
    he enclosed.
    Petitioner eventually abandoned its efforts to obtain full
    control over disbursements from the Escrow Account.   In his
    letter dated June 16, 1988, to petitioner’s certified public
    accounting firm, petitioner’s executive director stated as
    follows:
    The Council [petitioner] chose not to bring all of the
    record keeping for accounts payable and cash
    disbursements in-house. W&H insisted that it would no
    longer be responsible for the prospecting debt if such
    action were taken. Mr. Watson explained that he did
    not want his firm to be responsible for the debt, in
    the event that the Council spent all of the proceeds of
    the campaign on programs and did not pay the fund
    raising expenses. Although we all agree that it would
    be considerably easier and more efficient for the
    Council to exercise direct control of the record
    keeping, the decision was made not to jeopardize the
    Council’s financial health by incurring a large
    prospecting debt.
    We hope these explanations help you understand the
    Council’s position and actions during the past year.
    H. Petitioner’s Attempt To Obtain A Copy Of Its Housefile
    In July 1988, petitioner asked Wiland, the computer services
    company that maintained petitioner’s housefile, to provide to
    petitioner a complete computer tape of its housefile, as of June
    - 77 -
    30, 1988.    Petitioner stated that it would pay for the file.
    Petitioner’s stated reason was that, “At the urging of our legal
    counsel,” it wanted to have a copy of the housefile “to maintain
    a ‘file copy’ * * * in the event some disaster strikes Wiland”.
    Watson responded that Wiland has a file copy in the vault of a
    bank in Fredericksburg, Va., and the safety procedures are
    standard in the industry.    Watson also pointed to the Contract
    provision that “‘any computer work client desires to have done
    with any names developed as a result of this contract with W&H
    must be done at W&H or at a company designated by W&H during the
    term of the agreement’”.
    In September 1988, Watson told petitioner that petitioner
    would receive a copy of its housefile after the Contract ended,
    in May 1989.
    Petitioner’s general counsel, James W. Curtis (hereinafter
    sometimes referred to as Curtis), tried to get for petitioner a
    copy of its housefile.   Curtis was not successful in persuading
    W&H to provide to petitioner a copy of its housefile.    On January
    19, 1989, Curtis formally notified Watson that petitioner was
    invoking the arbitration provisions of the Contract and was going
    to begin an arbitration action in order to obtain the copy of its
    housefile.   After an unsatisfactory response from W&H’s counsel,
    on February 3, 1989, Curtis authorized another attorney to
    prepare an arbitration petition for filing on petitioner’s
    behalf.   On February 9, 1989, Curtis spoke with Watson by
    - 78 -
    telephone, concluded that Watson appeared to be cooperative, and
    instructed the other attorney “to put the arbitration matter on
    hold”.   On February 16, 1989, Curtis followed up the February 9
    telephone call, asked for the housefile tape and certain other
    material needed to understand and use the housefile tape, and
    assured that petitioner would respect W&H’s right to designate
    the company that would do any computer work with the housefile
    during the term of the Contract.   On February 24, 1989, W&H
    responded that it would direct Wiland to provide to petitioner a
    sample tape containing donor information on 10,000 names from
    petitioner’s housefile, together with the other material that
    Curtis had asked for that was needed to understand and use the
    housefile sample tape.   W&H also agreed that “as soon as the
    entire housefile is needed by whoever ends up working on it, we
    can request that it be sent to them by Wiland.”
    On February 27, 1989, W&H advised Wiland that petitioner
    would transfer its housefile to another computer company after
    the Contract ended in May 1989.    W&H instructed Wiland to prepare
    a sample tape containing donor information on 10,000 contributors
    from petitioner’s housefile and to provide certain other
    information about the housefile that would be useful to any other
    company in deciding whether to become petitioner’s computer
    house.
    Petitioner’s and W&H’s Respective Accounting Treatments
    of the Direct Mail Campaign’s Revenue And Expenses
    On its financial statement and Form 990 for 1984, petitioner
    - 79 -
    failed to treat the direct mail campaign’s expenses that exceeded
    the direct mail campaign’s gross revenue as being its expenses.
    In his letter dated December 20, 1985, to petitioner’s
    executive director, Watson advised that petitioner’s accounting
    treatment of the direct mail campaign’s 1984 expenses was
    incorrect.   Watson’s December 20, 1985, letter stated, in
    pertinent part, as follows:
    The proper way to account for all your funds and
    expenses is to account for all of the income generated
    from UCC mailings as UCC income and all of the expenses
    related to all of the mailings must be recorded as UCC
    expenses. If * * * [W&H], through its direct mail
    assistance, raises $1,000,000 for UCC and spends
    $900,000 doing it, then the financial statements must
    reflect a gross income of $1,000,000 and $900,000 in
    expenses. * * * If your accountants are overly
    concerned about the * * * [Contract], I would recommend
    that they list the contract as a contractual obligation
    in the footnotes to the financial statement. And, they
    may want to even indicate that * * * [W&H] is
    potentially liable for any losses incurred in the
    fundraising efforts. But most importantly, and I have
    said this over and over again, * * * [W&H] is not the
    keeper of UCC funds. * * * [W&H] does not dole out net
    proceeds of fundraising campaigns to UCC.
    On its 1985 through 1989 financial statements and Forms 990,
    petitioner treated all of the direct mail campaign’s revenue and
    expenses as its revenue and expenses.
    On its partnership returns, W&H included in “cost of goods
    sold” the postage advances it made and included in income the
    subsequent reimbursements it received for these advances.
    - 80 -
    Petitioner’s Allocation of Expenses Between Fundraising
    and Public Education
    On its financial statements for 1985 through 1988,
    petitioner concluded that substantially all of its direct mail
    campaign expenses were “joint expenses” allocable to public
    education and fundraising.      Its 1985 through 1988 financial
    statements reflected that petitioner received total annual
    contributions, and incurred joint expenses that it allocated to
    public education and fundraising, as shown in table 10.
    Table 10
    1985          1986         1987          1988
    Contributions      $5,087,453    $7,869,015   $10,740,045   $3,883,352
    Joint Expenses--
    Education         2,301,260     3,843,907     4,306,377   1,463,432
    Fundraising       2,647,470     3,390,012     5,399,344   1,693,333
    Petitioner’s certified public accounting firm advised it of
    certain factors to be considered in allocating its direct mail
    campaign expenses between public education and fundraising.       The
    Accounting Standards Division of the American Institute of
    Certified Public Accountants issued two Statements of Position
    (hereinafter sometimes referred to as SOP), SOP 78-10 and SOP 87-
    2, concerning the appropriateness of allocating fundraising
    appeal expenses to a charitable organization’s exempt purpose
    function.   SOP 87-219 amended the earlier-issued SOP 78-10,
    19
    SOP 87-2, states in pertinent part, as follows:
    (continued...)
    - 81 -
    primarily by providing additional matters to be considered, and
    had an effective date which made it applicable to petitioner’s
    1988 financial statement.20   As petitioner’s chief financial
    officer interpreted SOP 87-2, if the considerations set forth in
    that SOP were applied--
    to 1986 or 1987, we would have to show all expenses of the
    Donor Development Fund as fund raising. This means that 96%
    19
    (...continued)
    15. All joint costs of informational materials or
    activities that include a fund-raising appeal should be
    reported as fund-raising expense if it cannot be
    demonstrated that a program or management and general
    function has been conducted in conjunction with the
    appeal for funds. However, if it can be demonstrated
    that a bona fide program or management and general
    function has been conducted in conjunction with the
    appeal for funds, joint costs should be allocated
    between fund-raising and the appropriate program or
    management and general function.
    16. Demonstrating that a bona fide program or
    management and general function has been conducted in
    conjunction with an appeal for funds requires
    verifiable indications of the reasons for conducting
    the activity. Such indications include the content of
    the non-fund-raising portion of the activity; the
    audience targeted; the action, if any, requested of the
    recipients; and other corroborating evidence, such as
    written instructions to parties outside the
    organization who produce the activity, or documentation
    in minutes of the organization’s board of the
    organization’s reasons for the activity.
    20
    SOP 78-10 and SOP 87-2 address only whether allocation
    of a charitable organization’s fundraising appeal expenses is
    appropriate. SOP 87-2 states that “this statement of position
    does not address the issue of how to allocate joint costs. A
    number of cost accounting techniques are available for that
    purpose.”
    - 82 -
    of our total expenses (General Fund and Donor Development
    Fund), would be allocated to Supporting Services.
    Obviously, we cannot afford such a devastating report at the
    end of 1988, and must correct any deficiencies in the direct
    mail program immediately.
    During 1984 through 1989, petitioner was well aware of the
    guidelines CBBB and NCIB established for members of the general
    public to use in evaluating charitable organizations that
    solicited contributions.   Petitioner planned and endeavored to
    meet eventually all of the CBBB and NCIB guidelines, as
    petitioner believed that doing so would enable it to gain more
    support from corporations, foundations, and the general public.
    Although petitioner, during 1984 through 1989, was never
    able to meet all of the CBBB and NCIB guidelines, petitioner
    concluded that it was in its interest to allocate as much of the
    direct mail campaign’s expenses to public education as possible.
    All of the mailing packages petitioner utilized during 1984
    through 1989 contained some educational material.   A list of the
    “Nine Warning Signals of Cancer” was included with almost all the
    housefile and prospect letters petitioner mailed.   As its mailing
    campaign progressed, petitioner tried to increase the educational
    content of its mailings.
    Petitioner’s 1986 financial statements, published as part of
    petitioner’s Annual Report for 1986, contain the following
    explanation of petitioner’s allocations of its 1985 and 1986
    mailing campaign “joint expenses” between public education and
    fundraising:
    - 83 -
    NOTE 4--ALLOCATION OF JOINT COSTS OF MAILINGS:
    Expenses related to both * * * [prospect mailings and
    housefile mailings] are allocated to public education
    and fundraising based on the relative content and
    intent of all mailings. The content of each and every
    mailing is evaluated to determine what percentage of
    the mailing satisfies the goal of educating the public
    and what percentage of the mailing deals with
    fundraising. Public education includes any information
    about cancer, its treatment and cures as well as
    discussion of the Council’s [petitioner’s] programs in
    research and cancer patient services. Fundraising
    includes direct requests for money as well as emotional
    appeals intended to solicit funds. The relative
    content of individual * * * [prospect mailings and
    housefile mailings] are summarized and a composite
    percentage is determined which is then applied to total
    costs. Since the goals of the direct mail campaign are
    to educate the public and to raise funds, none of the
    costs directly associated with the mailings are
    allocated to management and general [expenses?].
    Petitioner’s 1988 financial statement, published as part of
    petitioner’s Annual Report for 1988, contain the following
    explanation of petitioner’s allocations of its 1987 and 1988
    mailing campaign “joint expenses” between public education and
    fundraising:
    NOTE 5--ALLOCATION OF JOINT COSTS OF MAILINGS:
    In 1988, the Council [petitioner] incurred joint costs
    of $3,156,765 for informational materials and
    activities that included fundraising appeals. These
    joint costs are expenses related to both * * *
    [prospect mailings and housefile mailings] and have
    been allocated as follows: $1,463,432 to public
    education and $1,693,333 to fundraising. In allocating
    the joint costs between public education and
    fundraising, the Counsel evaluates the content or
    message of the mailing and the intended audience. If
    the content is information about cancer, its
    treatments, cures and prevention and requests for the
    reader to take some action other than sending a
    contribution, then the public education function has
    - 84 -
    been fulfilled. An audience selected because of its
    interest in cancer and other health related issues also
    indicates the reason for the mailing is public
    education. Conversely, if the message is a direct
    appeal for funds and sent to individuals based on their
    ability to contribute money, then the fundraising
    function has been fulfilled. All circumstances
    surrounding a mailing with regard to content and
    audience are examined together to arrive at the joint
    allocation of costs for each mailing between public
    education and fundraising.
    In 1987, the Council incurred joint costs of $9,705,721
    for informational materials and activities that
    included fundraising appeals. Of those costs,
    $4,306,377 was allocated to public education and
    $5,399,344 was allocated to fundraising. Expenses
    related to both * * * [prospect mailings and housefile
    mailings] were allocated to public education and
    fundraising based on the relative content and intent of
    each mailing without regard to intended audience.
    NCIB did not accept petitioner’s allocations of its 1985,
    1986, and 1987 mailing campaign expenses to public education.     In
    preparing its reports on various charitable organizations, NCIB
    generally accepted the financial information contained in a
    charitable organization’s financial statements, except for the
    charitable organization’s allocation of its fundraising appeal
    expenses to exempt purpose activity.   While aware of SOP 78-10
    and SOP 87-2, NCIB examined the reasonableness of the allocations
    made by the charitable organization.   For example, as indicated
    above, in a report it issued on petitioner, NCIB concluded that
    petitioner’s fundraising expenses for 1985 equaled about 97.7
    percent of the related contributions petitioner received.
    With respect to petitioner’s 1988 mailing campaign “joint
    expenses”, petitioner’s certified public accounting firm
    - 85 -
    experienced considerable difficulty in applying SOP 87-2 and was
    unable to conclude what portion of the 1988 direct mail campaign
    expenses qualified as joint expenses.   The accounting firm
    essentially let petitioner itself decide how to categorize and
    allocate the expenses.
    The compensation that W&H received under the Contract by way
    of direct payment by petitioner and by way of the value of W&H’s
    use of the names generated by petitioner’s fundraising efforts,
    exceeded reasonable compensation.
    Respondent’s revocation of petitioner’s favorable letter
    ruling retroactively to the start of the Contract was not an
    abuse of discretion.
    OPINION
    I. Status Under Secs. 501(c)(3) and 170(c)(2)
    Section 501(a) provides that “An organization described in
    subsection (c) * * * shall be exempt from taxation under this
    subtitle”.21
    In order to be described in section 501(c)(3),22 an
    21
    Exceptions from this broad rule because of secs. 502
    (relating to feeder organization), 503 (relating to prohibited
    transactions by certain categories of transactions), 501(b)
    (relating to unrelated business income), and various other
    provisions of the Code do not appear to be issues in the instant
    case.
    22
    Sec. 501(c)(3) provides, in pertinent part, as follows:
    (continued...)
    - 86 -
    organization must meet all of the following criteria:   (1) it
    must be both (a) organized and (b) operated, exclusively23 for
    certain specified exempt purposes, including charitable,
    educational, and scientific purposes; (2) no part of its net
    earnings may inure to the benefit of any private shareholder or
    22
    (...continued)
    SEC. 501. EXEMPTION FROM TAX ON CORPORATIONS, CERTAIN
    TRUSTS, ETC.
    *   *   *    *   *   *   *
    (c) List Of Exempt Organizations.--The following
    organizations are referred to in subsection (a):
    *   *   *    *   *   *   *
    (3) Corporations * * * organized and operated
    exclusively for * * * charitable, scientific, * * * or
    educational purposes * * *, no part of the net earnings
    of which inures to the benefit of any private
    shareholder or individual, no substantial part of the
    activities of which is carrying on propaganda, or
    otherwise attempting, to influence legislation, * * *
    and which does not participate in, or intervene in
    (including the publishing or distribution of
    statements), any political campaign on behalf of (or in
    opposition to) any candidate for public office.
    The text includes an amendment made by sec. 10711(a)(2) of the
    Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1987 (OBRA 87), Pub. L. 100-
    203, 
    101 Stat. 1330
    , 1330-464. This amendment applies to
    activities after Dec. 22, 1987, the date of the enactment of the
    Act. This amendment relates only to political campaigns, and so
    does not affect the instant case.
    23
    “Exclusively”, in this context, means that there is no
    nonexempt purpose that is “substantial in nature”. Better
    Business Bureau v. United States, 
    326 U.S. 279
    , 283 (1945);
    Living Faith, Inc. v. Commissioner, 
    950 F.2d 365
    , 370 (7th Cir.
    1991), affg. 
    T.C. Memo. 1990-484
    ; Stevens Bros. Foundation, Inc.
    v. Commissioner, 
    324 F.2d 633
    , 638 (8th Cir. 1963), affg. on this
    issue 
    39 T.C. 93
    , 109 n.10 (1962).
    - 87 -
    individual; (3) no substantial part of its activities may consist
    of lobbying efforts; (4) no part of its activities may constitute
    intervention or participation in any political campaign on behalf
    of, or in opposition to, any candidate for public office (sec.
    501(c)(3)); and (5) its purpose must not be “contrary to a
    fundamental public policy”.       Bob Jones University v. United
    States, 
    461 U.S. 574
    , 592 (1983).       See generally, American
    Campaign Academy v. Commissioner, 
    92 T.C. 1053
    , 1062-1063 (1989).
    These requirements are stated in the conjunctive.        Petitioner’s
    failure to satisfy any of these requirements would be fatal to
    its qualification under section 501(c)(3).         American Campaign
    Academy v. Commissioner, 
    92 T.C. at 1062
    ; Stevens Bros.
    Foundation, Inc. v. Commissioner, 
    39 T.C. 93
    , 109-110 (1962),
    affd. on this issue 
    324 F.2d 633
    , 637-640 (8th Cir. 1963).
    Donations to section 501(c)(3) organizations generally are
    deductible for income tax purposes under section 170.        Secs.
    170(a), 170(c); Bob Jones University v. Simon, 
    416 U.S. 725
    , 727-
    728 (1974).   Section 170(c)24 defines the term “charitable
    24
    Sec. 170(c)(2) provides, in pertinent part, as follows:
    SEC. 170. CHARITABLE, ETC., CONTRIBUTIONS AND GIFTS.
    *   *    *     *      *   *   *
    (c) Charitable Contribution Defined.--For purposes of
    this section, the term “charitable contribution” means a
    contribution or gift to or for the use of--
    *   *    *     *      *   *   *
    (continued...)
    - 88 -
    contribution” to mean a contribution or gift to or for the use of
    certain types of organizations enumerated thereunder.     With a few
    minor differences, the organizations and requirements listed in
    section 170(c)(2) are virtually identical to those described in
    section 501(c)(3).     In view of the nearly identical statutory
    language, the courts have applied many of the same standards in
    interpreting section 170(c)(2) and section 501(c)(3).     See Bob
    Jones University v. United States, 
    461 U.S. at 586-587
    .     For
    24
    (...continued)
    (2) A corporation * * *--
    (A) created or organized in the United States
    or in any possession thereof, or under the law of
    the United States, any State, the District of
    Columbia, or any possession of the United States;
    (B) organized and operated exclusively for *
    * * charitable, scientific, * * * or educational
    purposes * * * ;
    (C) no part of the net earnings of which
    inures to the benefit of any private shareholder
    or individual; and
    (D) which is not disqualified for tax
    exemption under section 501(c)(3) by reason of
    attempting to influence legislation, and which
    does not participate in, or intervene in
    (including the publishing or distributing of
    statements), any political campaign on behalf of
    (or in opposition to) any candidate for public
    office.
    The text includes an amendment made by sec. 10711(a)(1) of OBRA
    87, Pub. L. 100-203, 
    101 Stat. 1330
    , 1330-464. This amendment
    applies to activities after Dec. 22, 1987, the date of the
    enactment of the Act. This amendment relates only to political
    campaigns and so does not affect the instant case.
    - 89 -
    convenience, we shall refer to section 501(c)(3), but our
    analysis and conclusions, in the context of the instant case,
    will apply equally to section 170(c)(2).
    In the instant case, respondent contends only that (1)
    petitioner was not operated exclusively for exempt purposes
    because its “activities served private commercial purposes;”     (2)
    petitioner “operated in large part for the private benefit of
    W&H;” and (3) petitioner’s net earnings inured to the benefit of
    private shareholders or individuals.   Respondent does not contend
    that petitioner is an “action” organization (sec. 1.501(c)(3)-
    1(c)(3), Income Tax Regs.), has not raised any contention that
    petitioner has failed to satisfy any of the other requirements
    discussed above for exemption under section 501(c)(3), and does
    not dispute petitioner’s organization exclusively for exempt
    purposes.   Respondent further acknowledges that respondent bears
    the burden of proof in establishing inurement, because
    respondent’s notice of revocation did not indicate that inurement
    was a ground for the revocation.   Rule 217(c)(2)(B); Dumaine
    Farms v. Commissioner, 
    73 T.C. 650
    , 659-660 (1980).
    We note that while the inurement prohibition and the private
    benefit analysis under the operational test of the Treasury
    regulations may substantially overlap, the two are distinct
    requirements which must independently be satisfied.   American
    Campaign Academy v. Commissioner, 
    92 T.C. at 1068
    -1069.     However,
    it is not clear that the first two of respondent’s contentions--
    - 90 -
    activities serving private commercial purposes, and operation for
    the private benefit of W&H--are meaningfully different
    requirements, at least in the context of the instant case.
    We consider first the issue of inurement.
    In order for an organization to qualify for exemption under
    section 501(c)(3), no part of the organization’s net earnings may
    inure to the benefit of any private shareholder or individual.
    Sec. 501(c)(3); sec. 1.501(c)(3)-1(c)(2), Income Tax Regs.
    A “private shareholder or individual” is broadly defined as
    any person having a personal and private interest in the
    activities of the organization.     Sec. 1.501(a)-1(c), Income Tax
    Regs.     Such private shareholders or individuals are sometimes
    referred to for convenience as “insiders”.     See American Campaign
    Academy v. Commissioner, 
    92 T.C. at 1066
    ; Sound Health
    Association v. Commissioner, 
    71 T.C. 158
    , 185-186 (1978).
    We consider first whether W&H was an insider with respect to
    petitioner, and then whether there was an inurement of
    petitioner’s net earnings to W&H.25
    A. W&H As Insider
    25
    Petitioner does not make the argument that W&H cannot
    be an insider under the statutory language because W&H is not a
    shareholder in petitioner and is not an individual. Accordingly,
    we do not consider that question. See Estate of Fusz v.
    Commissioner, 
    46 T.C. 214
    , 215 n.2 (1966). In any event, sec.
    501(c)(3) deals with whether there is an inurement “to the
    benefit of any * * * individual”. If there were an inurement to
    W&H, then it may well be that any such inurement would be “to the
    benefit of” W&H’s owners--the individuals Watson and Hughey.
    - 91 -
    Petitioner maintains that (1) “the inurement doctrine
    applies only to insiders who receive an impermissible benefit
    from the organization, not to third parties with whom the exempt
    organization contracts for services” (emphasis in original); (2)
    petitioner was independent of W&H, and the two entities “had no
    common directors, officers or employees;” and (3) petitioner--and
    not W&H--had “control” in that (a) petitioner directed its
    charitable program, (b) petitioner “renegotiated the contract
    with W&H in mid-stream, gaining an important financial
    advantage,” (c) petitioner “diligently exercised its right of
    review over all proposed mail copy, mailing lists, vendor’s
    invoices, and volume and frequency of mailings”, and (d)
    petitioner “exercised ultimate ‘control’ by terminating its
    relationship with W&H.”
    Respondent contends that “an ‘insider’s’ control consists of
    a meaningful opportunity to influence any portion of the
    organization’s activities that could readily be manipulated to
    the benefit of the insider.”   Respondent asserts that in the
    instant case “the record clearly shows that W&H controlled most
    of * * * [petitioner’s] income and assets, including controlling
    most uses of (and all rental income from) * * * [petitioner’s]
    donor and non-donor names, even after the five-year term of the
    contract.”
    Petitioner rejoins that its board of directors retained
    ultimate control, and, to the extent that any control over any
    - 92 -
    assets or activities was delegated to W&H, petitioner’s board of
    directors exercised due diligence in supervising W&H’s actions.
    Mailers contends that, if a charity and an “outsider”
    negotiate a contract at arm’s length, then the contract does not
    make that person an insider for inurement purposes with respect
    to that contract.   The contract between petitioner and W&H was
    negotiated at arm’s length and was “market rate”, Mailers
    asserts, and so W&H was not an insider and there was no inurement
    to W&H.
    American-Sector contends that “the case law often labors to
    craft metaphysical distinctions between these requirements”--the
    ban on “private inurement”, the ban on “private benefit”, and the
    general requirement that a charity be organized and operated
    “exclusively for an exempt purpose”.
    We agree with respondent’s conclusion.
    The term “private shareholder or individual” appears at
    present in sections 170(c) (three places), 501(c) (eight places),
    528(c)(1)(D), 833(c)(3)(A)(vi), 2055(a), 2522 (four places), and
    4421(2)(B).   This term has been unchanged since the Revenue Act
    of 1924, Pub. L. 176, 68th Cong., 1st. Sess., ch. 234, 
    43 Stat. 253
    , 271, 282.   The Revenue Act of 1921, Pub. L. 98, 67th Cong.,
    1st Sess., ch. 136, 
    42 Stat. 227
    , 241, 253, used the term
    “private stockholder or individual”, as did the prior Revenue
    Acts back to the Tariff Act of 1913, Pub. L. 16, 63d Cong., 1st.
    Sess., ch. 16, 
    38 Stat. 114
    , 172.   The term “private stockholder
    - 93 -
    or individual” also appears in section 38 of the Tariff Act of
    1909, commonly called the Corporation Excise Tax Act of 1909,
    Pub. L. 5, 61st. Cong., 1st Sess., ch. 6, 
    36 Stat. 11
    , 113.
    Neither the parties nor the amici have directed our attention to,
    and we have not found, any statutory explanation of any of these
    terms.   Our examination of the legislative history of the Revenue
    Act of 1924 has not turned up any explanation of the shift from
    “stockholder” to “shareholder”.   We note that the
    Administration’s proposed bill leading to the Revenue Act of 1924
    retained the word “stockholder”, while the bill as reported by
    the House Ways and Means Committee used the word “shareholder”.
    We note also that the term “private stockholder or individual”
    appears in paragraph (2) of section 2055(a) (and its 1939 Code
    predecessor, section 812(d)), while the term “private shareholder
    or individual” appears in paragraph (4) of the same section
    2055(a).   We have not found any explanation of the intended
    difference between “stockholder” and “shareholder”, nor any
    reason why “stockholder” was replaced by “shareholder” in the
    Revenue Act of 1924.   See Western Natl. Mut. Ins. Co. v.
    Commissioner, 
    102 T.C. 338
    , 354 (1994), affd. 
    65 F.3d 90
     (8th
    Cir. 1995).
    Section 1.501(a)-1(c), Income Tax Regs., provides as
    follows:
    (c) “Private shareholder or individual” defined. The
    words “private shareholder or individual” in section 501
    refer to persons having a personal and private interest in
    - 94 -
    the activities of the organization.
    See sec. 1.501(c)(3)-1(c)(2), Income Tax Regs.
    This definition is unchanged from Regs. 65, art. 517 (1924),
    except that the older regulations use “individuals” and
    “corporation”, instead of “persons” and “organization”,
    respectively.   Art. 517 of Regs. 65 is essentially similar to
    Regs. 45, art. 517 (1920).   In general, the case law appears to
    have drawn a line between those who have significant control over
    the organization’s activities and those who are unrelated third
    parties.   People of God Community v. Commissioner, 
    75 T.C. 127
    ,
    133 (1980).
    We proceed to consider whether, and if so then to what
    extent, W&H controlled petitioner’s activities.
    On the one hand, neither W&H nor Watson nor Hughey was a
    director or officer of petitioner, nor did any of them have a
    formal voice in the selection of any director or officer of
    petitioner.
    On the other hand, in exchange for (a) funds to keep
    petitioner operational and get it past its 1984 financial crisis
    and (b) fundraising services, W&H received (1) compensation, (2)
    effectively exclusive control over petitioner’s fundraising
    activities, including supposedly separate computer activities,
    and (3) substantial control over petitioner’s finances.   The
    amounts that W&H would advance for petitioner’s operational costs
    and as capital for petitioner’s fundraising costs were not
    - 95 -
    specifically contracted for, but were essentially discretionary
    with W&H.
    Moreover, up until the execution of the April 1987 addendum
    to the Contract, petitioner was fully liable on a recourse basis
    to repay W&H for the excess draws petitioner received.   This
    repayment liability caused petitioner’s certified public
    accounting firm to express serious concern about petitioner’s
    continued existence and economic viability, in the accounting
    firm’s management letter dated May 23, 1986, to petitioner’s
    board of directors and Executive Committee.
    Although petitioner had a longstanding existence before its
    involvement with W&H, the position W&H occupied in relation to
    petitioner, during 1984 and 1985, was in many ways analogous to
    that of a founder and major contributor to a new organization.
    Petitioner, which was on the brink of insolvency, was being
    heavily financed and kept in existence by W&H pursuant to the
    fundraising arrangement that petitioner and W&H entered.
    Petitioner became dissatisfied with its lack of control over
    the Escrow Account funds.   In 1986 and 1987, petitioner made a
    number of concerted efforts to obtain more control over the
    Escrow Account.   However, its efforts were unsuccessful as a
    result of W&H’s refusal to give up control over the account.    W&H
    continued to retain control over the Escrow Account long after it
    and petitioner knew the direct mail fundraising campaign was
    financially successful.
    - 96 -
    W&H’s control over petitioner’s fundraising campaign is
    further manifested by petitioner’s unsuccessful efforts to obtain
    a copy of its own housefile in July 1988, about 11 months before
    the contract ended.    W&H refused to provide to petitioner a copy
    of its housefile until the contract was over.    It instructed
    Wiland, the computer company W&H selected to maintain
    petitioner’s housefile, not to comply with petitioner’s July 1988
    request.    Despite the extensive efforts of its attorney,
    petitioner was unable to obtain its complete housefile until
    after the Contract ended.
    From a practical standpoint, W&H exercised substantial
    control over petitioner’s finances and direct mail fundraising
    campaigns during the period from 1984 through 1989.    In light of
    W&H’s extensive control over petitioner and petitioner’s near-
    insolvent financial condition when the fundraising arrangement
    was entered into in June 1984, we conclude that W&H was an
    “insider” with respect to petitioner.
    Petitioner and Mailers contend that one cannot become an
    insider merely by entering into an arm’s-length negotiated
    contract.    We are not aware of any such “one-free-bite” principle
    in this part of the law.    Whether the control thus transferred,
    or shared, makes the transferee an insider depends on the
    circumstances.    The arrangement authorized by the Contract in the
    instant case was not a “one-shot deal”, but a 5-year
    relationship, involving many transactions during its term.     The
    - 97 -
    arm’s-length negotiations may have a significant bearing on the
    fairness of the Contract, but they do not inoculate W&H against
    insider status.
    Mailers makes a further argument along this line by pointing
    out that--
    even the definition of self-dealing provides that the term
    does not include ‘a transaction between a private foundation
    and a disqualified person where the disqualified person
    status arises only as a result of such transaction.’ 
    Treas. Reg. §53.4941
    (d)-1(a).
    However, the cited regulation explains this rule in the very
    next sentence, as follows:
    For example, the bargain sale of property to a private
    foundation is not a direct act of self-dealing if the seller
    becomes a disqualified person only by reason of his becoming
    a substantial contributor as a result of the bargain element
    of the sale.
    Thus, the cited regulation (which does not apply to public
    charities anyway) focuses on the “one-shot deal” and does not
    appear to immunize a substantial course of dealing merely because
    the substantial course of dealing is pursuant to one contract
    (and its amendments and extensions).
    We conclude that the cited regulation, fashioned in an
    environment of “disqualified persons” and “prohibited
    transactions”, is distinguishable from what we face in the
    instant case, viz, “insiders” and “inurement”.
    We hold, for respondent, that W&H was an insider with regard
    to petitioner.
    - 98 -
    B. Did Any of Petitioner’s Net Earnings Inure to W&H?
    Petitioner points out that respondent has the burden of
    proof, and contends that respondent has failed to carry this
    burden.
    Respondent acknowledges having the burden of proof, but
    contends that this burden has been carried because it was shown
    that W&H received “excessive and unreasonable compensation (and
    other private benefit)” from petitioner.
    Mailers argues that private inurement does not result from a
    third-party contract for fair market value and contends that the
    Contract was at “Market Rate”, especially in light of all the
    facts and circumstances when the Contract was executed.
    We agree with respondent’s conclusion.
    An organization’s payment of reasonable compensation to an
    insider for services performed for the organization would not
    constitute inurement of net earnings,26 but payment of excessive
    compensation would.   United States v. Dykema, 
    666 F.2d 1096
    , 1101
    (7th Cir. 1981); Unitary Mission Church v. Commissioner, 
    74 T.C. 507
    , 514 (1980), affd. without published opinion 
    647 F.2d 163
     (2d
    Cir. 1981).   Whether the compensation in question is reasonable
    26
    Neither side suggests that we should examine the
    statutory term “net earnings”, and so we do not. See People of
    God Community v. Commissioner, 
    75 T.C. 127
    , 132 n.5 (1980); Alive
    Fellowship of Harmonious Living v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1984-
    87 n.21; see also discussion in B. Hopkins, The Law of Tax-Exempt
    Organizations, sec. 13.4 (6th ed. 1992).
    - 99 -
    is a question of fact.   Founding Church of Scientology v. United
    States, 
    188 Ct. Cl. 490
    , 
    412 F.2d 1197
    , 1200 (1969).      Factors
    similar to those considered in determining reasonable
    compensation under section 162(a)(1) are examined.       Founding
    Church of Scientology v. United States, supra; B.H.W. Anesthesia
    Foundation v. Commissioner, 
    72 T.C. 681
    , 686 (1979).       In
    determining whether there has been an inurement of net earnings
    we are to consider all forms of compensation, and not merely
    direct payments from the organization to the insider.       Founding
    Church of Scientology v. United States, supra; Unitary Mission
    Church v. Commissioner, 
    74 T.C. at 512
    -513.
    A cap or limit on the contingent compensation that may be
    earned under a particular incentive formula, can be considered a
    factor supporting the reasonableness of that contingent
    compensation arrangement.   See People of God Community v.
    Commissioner, 
    75 T.C. at 132
    .
    At trial, petitioner and respondent offered the testimony of
    several expert witnesses on the issue of whether W&H received
    more than reasonable compensation.       As trier of fact, we are not
    bound by the opinion of any expert witness and will accept or
    reject expert testimony, in whole or in part, in the exercise of
    sound judgment.   Helvering v. Nat. Grocery Co., 
    304 U.S. 282
    , 295
    (1938); Silverman v. Commissioner, 
    538 F.2d 927
    , 933 (2d Cir.
    1976), and cases there cited, affg. 
    T.C. Memo 1974-285
    .
    - 100 -
    Petitioner offered the testimony of three expert witnesses:
    (1) James Feldman (hereinafter sometimes referred to as Feldman),
    a professional direct mail marketing and fundraising consultant;
    (2) J. Curtis Herge (hereinafter sometimes referred to as Herge),
    an attorney practicing in the Washington, D.C., area, who has
    advised nonprofit organizations and professional fundraisers
    about fundraising contracts and represented such clients in the
    negotiation of their fundraising contracts; and (3) Richard S.
    Steinberg (hereinafter sometimes referred to as Steinberg), an
    economist who has specialized in the economics of nonprofit
    organizations.
    Respondent offered the testimony of four expert witnesses:
    (1) Nora Carrol (hereinafter sometimes referred to as Carrol), a
    professional fundraising and marketing consultant, (2) John Kehoe
    (hereinafter sometimes referred to as Kehoe), a professional
    fundraiser who at the time of the trial specialized in mailing
    list brokerage services, (3) William C. McGinly (hereinafter
    sometimes referred to as McGinly), president of the Association
    for Healthcare Philanthropy, a professional organization of
    health care facility and hospital executives concerned with
    fundraising, marketing, and public relations, for nonprofit
    health care facilities and hospitals, and (4) Robert S. Tigner
    (hereinafter sometimes referred to as Tigner), general counsel
    for the Association of Direct Response Fundraising Counsel
    - 101 -
    (hereinafter sometimes referred to as ADRFCO), a professional
    organization of professional fundraising companies that provide
    direct response consulting services to nonprofit organizations.
    Herge attached to his expert report copies of 21 fundraising
    agreements for various nonprofit organizations filed with
    Virginia’s Office of Registrations, Division of Consumer Affairs.
    Herge asked the Virginia Office of Registrations to provide him
    with copies of all fundraising agreements filed with it by up to
    10 to 12 professional fundraisers during a specified time period.
    From the agreements thus provided, Herge selected agreements
    which he believed were representative and typical of the
    agreements similar to petitioner’s found in the market place.
    These 21 fundraising agreements were entered into during the
    period from 1984 through 1992.   They involve various professional
    fundraisers and client organizations.   Nineteen of the 21 client
    organizations involved in these agreements have been recognized
    by respondent as being exempt from Federal income tax either
    under section 501(c)(3), 501(c)(4), or 501(c)(5).   Four of the 21
    agreements essentially provide that the nonprofit organization
    client is fully liable on a recourse basis for the fundraising
    expenses.   The remaining 17 agreements are essentially “no-risk”
    contracts for the nonprofit organization.   However, a few of the
    essentially “no-risk” agreements require the nonprofit
    organization client to either contribute a specified amount of
    - 102 -
    the initial capital to conduct the mailing campaign or bear
    financial responsibility for certain specified types of expenses.
    Without going into an analysis of each of these expert
    witness’ testimony, we draw the following overall conclusions
    from their testimony:
    1.   Contingent-fee charitable fundraising arrangements occur
    with modest frequency.   Although some in the fundraising field
    regard such arrangements as being improper, others treat such
    arrangements as an ordinary part of the fundraising landscape.
    It is expected that a fundraising arrangement with a contingent-
    fee element would present opportunities for greater total
    compensation for the fundraiser than a similar fundraising
    arrangement that does not have a contingent-fee element.
    2.   No-risk charitable fundraising arrangements occur with
    less frequency.   They may take various forms, most of which may
    more appropriately be labeled as “limited risk”, rather than “no-
    risk”.    It is expected that a fundraising arrangement with a no-
    risk or limited-risk element would involve greater total
    compensation for the fundraiser than a similar fundraising
    arrangement that does not have a no-risk or limited-risk element.
    3.   As petitioner’s experts Feldman and Herge point out, co-
    ownership of mailing lists is typical in no-risk charitable
    fundraising arrangements and is regarded as a method of enhancing
    compensation to the fundraiser without requiring the charitable
    - 103 -
    organization client to actually write checks.   Although such co-
    ownership is understood to be an element of compensation, it has
    the side effect of making it more difficult to determine what is
    the total compensation to the fundraiser.   Note that petitioner’s
    Form 990 did not report this as an element of compensation paid,
    and respondent does not suggest that petitioner should have tried
    to find out how much W&H earned as a result of this feature of
    the fundraising agreement.   In the instant case, the co-ownership
    had features that significantly restricted petitioner’s use of
    its own mailing list.27   Under section 18 of the Contract, all of
    these restrictions even survive the term of the Contract.    In
    addition, W&H and petitioner interpreted the Contract to permit
    W&H to exchange petitioner’s mailing list for another
    organization’s mailing list and then require petitioner to
    “reimburse” W&H for the expense that W&H did not in fact incur
    because of the exchange of mailing lists.   A side effect of this
    feature is that in such a situation a payment by petitioner to
    W&H which appeared to be a simple reimbursement of W&H’s out-of-
    pocket expenses would in fact have been additional compensation
    by petitioner to W&H.
    27
    See sec. 14 of the Contract, set forth supra. The
    Contract expressly forbids petitioner to “rent, exchange, lease,
    sell or give away” the names and addresses that W&H develops “to
    any other parties for any purpose whatsoever.” On the other
    hand, the Contract expressly permits W&H to use these names and
    addresses “in any way it so desires and for any purpose it may so
    determine.”
    - 104 -
    4.   Petitioner’s mailing fees under the Contract--$0.05 per
    prospect letter and $.10 per housefile letter--were within, but
    about the high end of the range of charges in what Herge
    described as a representative group of fundraising contracts.
    Petitioner was charged package fees for housefile mailings under
    the Contract.   In Herge’s group of contracts, package fees were
    ordinarily found only in conjunction with lower mailing fees; in
    only one instance in this group (The Viguerie Co.’s contract with
    The Solidarity Endowment) was there both a package fee and a high
    mailing fee.    As Tigner points out, it is difficult to evaluate
    the reasonableness of a particular mailing fee unless one
    understands the volume of mailings that are anticipated.    In
    general, the greater the volume of mailings anticipated, the
    smaller the mailing fees.   This relationship was clearly
    recognized in five of the fundraising contracts in Herge’s group
    of contracts, involving four different fundraisers, which
    provided graduated mailing fees, depending on the volume of
    mailings actually sent.   Thus, when the parties to a fundraising
    contract do not have a basis for confidently estimating the
    volume of mailings to be sent, a graduated mailing fee schedule
    is a device that may be used to protect both sides.   In April
    1986 petitioner and W&H agreed to a cap on housefile mailing fees
    in exchange for a reduction, from 70 to 50 percent, in the
    cumulative net income from housefile mailings that petitioner was
    - 105 -
    guaranteed to receive.     The $50,000 cap applied to any single
    housefile mailing of more than 500,000.
    5.    In almost all of Herge’s group of contracts the exempt
    organization could terminate the fundraising contract with some
    form of advance notice.     The longest notice so required is 120
    days and the shortest is 30 days.     Often these contracts provide
    that an exempt organization that terminates its fundraising
    contract becomes liable for mail campaign losses.     In contrast,
    the Contract does not make any provision for petitioner to
    terminate it by giving notice or for cause.     On the contrary, the
    Contract provides that, during its entire 5-year term, W&H would
    be petitioner’s exclusive fundraiser, and specifically forbids
    petitioner to “retain or use the services of any other person or
    company to provide counsel or advice to [petitioner] in
    conducting its direct mail solicitations.”
    Thus, W&H had an effective way to limit its risk if the
    Contract did not prove to be productive--W&H could reduce or
    eliminate the monthly draws that it allows petitioner to take and
    it could end the advances used to fund future mailings for
    petitioner.     Once petitioner had grown accustomed to this
    lifeline, petitioner could not remain viable without continued
    infusions; W&H could figuratively pull petitioner’s plug and
    thereby effectively rid itself of future losses or insufficiently
    profitable obligations.     Petitioner, on the other hand, had no
    exit.     Presumably, petitioner could have refused to authorize
    - 106 -
    more mailings, but petitioner could not use another fundraiser no
    matter how unhappy it was with how the Contract was working out.
    This suggests that the uncertainties normally attendant on a no-
    risk contingent fee arrangement warranted less of a premium to
    W&H under the circumstances of the Contract than might be
    appropriate in the usual run of no-risk contingent fee cases.
    The dollar amounts in some of the tables set forth supra in
    our Findings of Fact in many instances do not properly match the
    dollar amounts in other tables.   This results from the
    inconsistent and usually unreconciled exhibits that the parties
    introduced in the extensive record in the instant case.
    Nevertheless, the following conclusions may fairly be drawn from
    the information we have:
    1. W&H’s services under the Contract netted petitioner
    about $2¼ million for its own uses unrelated to the
    Contract.   Tables 1, 2, and 10.
    2. This net is less than 10 percent of what donors
    contributed to petitioner in the fundraising campaign.
    Tables 1 and 10.
    3. Petitioner directly paid more than $4 million to W&H
    as fundraising fees.   Tables 3 and 7.
    4. In addition, petitioner paid almost $4 million to
    Washington Lists, a division of W&H, for list rental fees
    and commissions.   Tables 4 and 7.
    5. More than 10 percent of petitioner’s payments to
    - 107 -
    Washington Lists were for rentals of lists that W&H or
    Washington Lists had obtained at little or no cost by
    exchanging petitioner names.    Table 8.
    6. Although the record does not show how much W&H or
    Washington Lists profited from being able to use petitioner
    names for mailing list exchanges on behalf of W&H’s other
    clients, it does show that about 5 percent of petitioner’s
    payments to Washington Lists were for rentals of lists that
    W&H or Washington Lists had obtained at little or no cost by
    exchanging W&H masterfile names.     Table 8.
    At trial, Watson testified that the mailing fee rates that
    W&H charged to petitioner under the Contract were equal to the
    highest rates that he understood professional fundraisers in the
    Washington, D.C., area charged their nonprofit organization
    clients in no-risk fundraising contracts.     In his letter dated
    June 1, 1987, to petitioner’s executive director, Watson proposed
    that petitioner and W&H agree to an early renewal of the Contract
    and enter into a new proposed contract that would replace and
    supersede the Contract.    Under the proposed contract Watson
    enclosed, W&H’s mailing fees would be reduced from $.05 to $.03
    per prospect letter and from $.10 to $.07 per housefile letter.
    When W&H entered into contracts with AICR on a no-risk
    basis, AICR’s mailing fees were 20 percent less than what
    petitioner had to pay, and AICR did not also have to pay package
    fees.   Supra table 5.    The second 1983 AICR contract and the 1984
    - 108 -
    AICR contract, both of which were entered into before the
    Contract, showed W&H’s understanding of the uses of graduated
    mailing fees.
    The market, as exemplified by Herge’s sample of fundraising
    contracts, provided two significant checks on excessive
    compensation in no-risk situations--early termination rights for
    the exempt organization (almost all the contracts) and graduated
    mailing fee (five contracts).    Until the April 1986 agreement,
    the Contract did not provide either of these checks on the effect
    of high mailing fees, thereby reducing the market justification
    for charging what Watson acknowledged to be equal to the highest
    rates in the Washington, D.C. area.
    Although our inquiry in the instant case is to some extent
    similar to that in section 162(a)(1) cases, this inquiry is
    easier in one important respect--if we determine that there is
    excess compensation in a section 162(a)(1) case, then we must set
    a dollar amount on that excess, while in the instant case we
    merely have to determine whether there is excess compensation and
    need not then set a dollar amount.        Airlie Foundation, Inc. v.
    United States, 75 AFTR 2d 95-2068, 95-2070, 95-1 USTC par. 50279
    (D.C. Cir. 1995); Orange County Agr. Soc., Inc. v. Commissioner,
    
    893 F.2d 529
    , 534 (2d Cir. 1990), affg. 
    T.C. Memo. 1988-380
    ; see
    Church of Scientology of California v. Commissioner, 
    823 F.2d 1310
    , 1316 (9th Cir. 1987), affg. 
    83 T.C. 381
    , 491-492 (1984);
    Founding Church of Scientology v. United States, 412 F.2d at
    - 109 -
    1202; Unitary Mission Church v. Commissioner, 
    74 T.C. at 513
    .
    But see Carter v. United States, 
    973 F.2d 1479
    , 1486 n.5
    (majority opinion), 1489-1490 (Tang, J., concurring in part and
    dissenting in part) (9th Cir. 1992).
    The instant case does not involve an insider’s embezzlement
    or any other kind of theft or use of assets unbeknownst to the
    other insiders.   What we conclude to be excessive compensation
    resulted from what petitioner and W&H apparently believed the
    Contract permitted or required.   The fact that the Contract was
    bargained for is a significant factor pointing toward
    reasonableness.   Sec. 1.162-7(b)(2), Income Tax Regs.   However,
    even under the standards of section 162(a)(1) the bargaining
    factor does not by itself conclusively protect an arrangement
    from a determination that the compensation was unreasonable; we
    are required to consider all the circumstances.   Sec. 1.162-
    7(b)(3), Income Tax Regs.
    Our examination of the other contracts provided by Herge, of
    the multiplicity of compensation sources that W&H had under the
    Contract, of the open-ended nature of W&H’s charges under the
    Contract even though graduated fees were already being used in
    the industry--and specifically by W&H in connection with AICR--
    convinces us that the initial risk that W&H bore did not justify
    so high a level of compensation. We are not holding that an
    arm's-length arrangement that produces a poor result for an
    organization necessarily would cause the organization to lose its
    - 110 -
    tax-exempt status.   We conclude, and we have found, that the
    compensation that W&H received under the Contract by way of
    direct payment by petitioner and by way of the value of W&H’s use
    of names generated by the fundraising efforts that petitioner
    already paid for, exceeded reasonable compensation.
    As a result, we conclude that, as of the June 11, 1984, date
    on which the Contract started, the Contract was not a reasonable
    contingent compensation arrangement, that W&H’s compensation
    under the Contract exceeded reasonable compensation, and that
    thus there was an inurement to an insider, in violation of the
    restrictions in sections 501(c)(3) and 170(c)(2)(C).
    It is suggested that the $2¼ million that petitioner cleared
    during the course of the Contract may justify such high
    compensation.   However:   (1) The $2¼ million is so small in
    comparison to the amounts of contributions, of W&H compensation,
    of postage and shipping costs, of printing and publications
    costs, and of mailing list rental costs, as to be almost an
    incidental product of the fundraising campaign; and (2) W&H was
    supposed to provide a substantial asset to petitioner--a
    housefile that petitioner could exploit in future fundraising
    (see supra findings under Direct Mail Fundraising)--but W&H’s
    services were a practical failure in this regard.    Thus, the
    magnitude of W&H’s compensation is not justified by adequacy of
    results.
    We hold for respondent on this issue.
    - 111 -
    II. Retroactivity of Respondent’s Revocation of
    the Prior Favorable Ruling Letter Issued to Petitioner
    Petitioner contends that it was improper for respondent to
    revoke the prior favorable ruling letter retroactively to June
    11, 1984, the date on which petitioner entered into the Contract.
    Petitioner contends that the retroactivity of the revocation (1)
    violates its Fifth Amendment due process rights and (2)
    constitutes an abuse of respondent’s discretion under section
    7805(b).    Petitioner’s constitutional arguments were considered
    and dealt with in United Cancer Council, Inc. v. Commissioner,
    
    100 T.C. 162
     (1993), and in the hearing that preceded that
    opinion.    Petitioner asks the Court “to reconsider our previously
    detailed arguments, and we also note our preservation of the
    issues in the event of an appeal.”      We believe that our earlier
    rulings in this matter were correct and that there is no need to
    restate them.    We proceed to consider the abuse-of-discretion
    issue under section 7805(b).28
    28
    Sec. 7805(b) provides as follows:
    SEC. 7805. RULES AND REGULATIONS.
    *   *   *     *   *   *   *
    (b) Retroactivity of Regulations or Rulings.--The
    Secretary may prescribe the extent, if any, to which any
    ruling or regulation, relating to the internal revenue laws,
    shall be applied without retroactive effect.
    This provision was extensively revised by sec. 1101(a) of the
    Taxpayer Bill of Rights 2, Pub. L. 104-168, 
    110 Stat. 1452
    ,
    1468 (1996), effective for regulations which relate to statutory
    (continued...)
    - 112 -
    The Supreme Court has held that respondent has broad
    discretion under section 7805(b) and its predecessor, in deciding
    to revoke a ruling retroactively, and that such a determination
    is reviewable by the courts only for abuse of that discretion.
    Automobile Club v. Commissioner, 
    353 U.S. 180
    , 184 (1957); see
    Dixon v. United States, 
    381 U.S. 68
     (1965).        See generally,
    Virginia Education Fund v. Commissioner, 
    85 T.C. 743
     (1985),
    affd. 
    799 F.2d 903
     (4th Cir. 1986).
    More recently, in a different but analogous setting, we
    described review of exercise of discretion as follows:
    Whether the Commissioner has abused his discretion is a
    question of fact. Buzzetta Construction Corp. v.
    Commissioner, 
    92 T.C. 641
    , 649 (1989); Estate of Gardner v.
    Commissioner, 
    82 T.C. 989
    , 1000 (1984). In reviewing the
    Commissioner’s actions, however, we do not substitute our
    judgment for the Commissioner’s, nor do we permit taxpayers
    to carry their burden of proof by a mere preponderance of
    the evidence. Buzzetta Construction Corp. v. Commissioner,
    28
    (...continued)
    provisions enacted after July 30, 1996, and so does not affect
    the instant case. We note that present sec. 7805(b)(8) provides
    as follows:
    SEC. 7805. RULES AND REGULATIONS.
    *   *   *     *   *   *   *
    (b)   Retroactivity of Regulations.--
    (8) Application to rulings.--The Secretary
    may prescribe the extent, if any, to which any
    ruling (including any judicial decision or any
    administrative determination other than by
    regulation) relating to the internal revenue laws
    shall be applied without retroactive effect.
    - 113 -
    
    92 T.C. at 648
    ; Mailman v. Commissioner, 
    91 T.C. 1079
    , 1084
    (1988); Pulver Roofing Co. v. Commissioner, 
    70 T.C. 1001
    ,
    1011 (1978). Taxpayers are required to clearly show that
    the Commissioner’s action was arbitrary, capricious, or
    without sound basis in fact. Knight-Ridder Newspapers v.
    United States, 
    743 F.2d 781
    , 788 (11th Cir. 1984); Mailman
    v. Commissioner, 
    91 T.C. at 1084
    ; Drazen v. Commissioner, 
    34 T.C. 1070
    , 1076 (1960). [Capital Federal Savings & Loan v.
    Commissioner, 
    96 T.C. 204
    , 213 (1991).]
    The Contract caused the inurement violation.   It is not
    “arbitrary, capricious, or without sound basis in fact” for
    respondent to determine that the revocation of the favorable
    ruling letter should relate back to the start of the Contract.
    Neither the parties nor the amici refer to section
    601.201(n)(6), Statement of Procedural Rules, nor to Rev. Proc.
    90-27, 1990-
    1 C.B. 514
    , both of which provide, in pertinent part,
    that “The revocation [of an exemption ruling] * * * may be
    retroactive if the organization * * * operated in a manner
    materially different from that originally represented”.   The
    start of the Contract marked a substantial change in petitioner’s
    operations.   This change was material with respect to inurement.
    Petitioner has not suggested that there was any event after the
    start of the Contract which marked a change in W&H’s actions, or
    W&H’s rights under the Contract, such that there was an inurement
    after that event or change but not before that event or change.
    If the revocation, which occurred after the Contract expired, had
    been made prospective only, then the revocation would have been a
    meaningless act.
    We conclude that (1) the retroactivity of the revocation to
    - 114 -
    the start of the Contract is not an abuse of discretion when
    tested by the usual standards, (2) petitioner does not maintain
    that these standards have been modified as a result of section
    601.201(n)(6), Statement of Procedural Rules, or Rev. Proc. 90-
    27, and (3) the retroactivity would not be an abuse of discretion
    even if the usual standards were so modified.    See Capital
    Federal Savings & Loan v. Commissioner, 
    96 T.C. at 217
    -219, 223.
    We hold that respondent’s determination, that the revocation
    be retroactive to the start of the Contract, was not an abuse of
    discretion.
    In light of our holdings for respondent, we do not consider
    whether petitioner should be denied tax-exempt status for other
    reasons, whether anyone’s actions violated postal regulations and
    if so what effect that should have on petitioner’s exempt status,
    whether petitioner and W&H engaged in a joint venture, whether a
    portion of petitioner’s expenses is properly allocable to public
    education, or whether any particular feature of the Contract
    constituted a “per se” violation of any of the requirements of
    sections 501(c)(3) and 170(c)(2).   Finally, section 4958,
    imposing an excise tax on “excess benefit transactions”, applies
    only to transactions occurring on or after September 14, 1995,
    and so does not apply to the instant case.
    Decision will be entered
    for respondent.
    - 115 -