DocketNumber: Docket No. 12991-80.
Filed Date: 12/19/1983
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 11/21/2020
MEMORANDUM FINDINGS OF FACT AND OPINION
COHEN,
FINDINGS OF FACT
Petitioners resided in Garden Grove, California, during the years in issue and at the time their petition herein was filed. During 1976 and 1977, Mr. Schreiber was a chief executive assistant for the County of Orange, California, and Mrs. Schreiber was a teacher for the Newport Mesa Unified School District. Petitioners timely filed joint individual income tax returns for 1976 and 1977 with the Internal Revenue Service Center in Fresno, California.
Mr. and Mrs. Schreiber have each received "Credentials of Minister" from the Universal Life Church, Modesto, California (ULC Modesto), dated April 28, 1969. In 1970, Mr. Schreiber saw an article in the Wall Street Journal reporting that the Internal Revenue Service had disallowed a charitable contribution made by the pastor of a church because, inter alia, the charter of the church had expired. *31 No. 8156," reciting that a congregation "is started this date August 10, 1971" at petitioners' address in Garden Grove, California. The only other charter provisions set forth in the certificate were as follows:
By this agreement, the Universal Life Church, Inc. hereby authorizes this chartered congregation to open a bank account, or accounts with any other financial institutions, in the name of the Universal Life Church, Inc. [Emphasis added.]
On October 30, 1972, petitioners purchased approximately 20.85 acres of property in the County of Riverside, California (the Riverside property), for the sum of $73,500, payable over a 10-year period. From the time of purchase through the time of trial, petitioners paid all costs of acquisition and expenses*32 related to the Riverside property and deducted the interest and taxes paid on their individual income tax returns. The property remained unimproved through the time of trial.
We are not here concerned with any attempt to interfere with petitioners' right under the
To secure a deduction for a charitable contribution under section 170(a), (b)(1), and (c), *33 gift (see
On its face * * * section 170 reveals that Congress' intention was to provide tax benefits to organizations serving charitable purposes. The form of section 170 simply makes plain what common sense and history tells us: in enacting both section 170 and section 501(c)(3), Congress sought to provide tax benefits to charitable organizations, to encourage the development of private institutions that serve a useful public purpose or supplement or take the place of public institutions of the same kind.
* * *
When the Government grants exemptions or allows deductions all taxpayers are affected; the very fact of the exemption or deduction for the donor means that other taxpayers can be said to be indirect and vicarious "donors". Charitable exemptions are justified on the basis*34 that the exempt entity confers a public benefit--a benefit which the society or the community may not itself choose or be able to provide, or which supplements and advances the work of public institutions already supported by tax revenues. * * * [Fn. refs. omitted;
Although the Supreme Court in the
Mr. Schreiber testified that the Riverside property was acquired with the intention of donating it to the ULC Modesto and having a church constructed on the property. He further testified that petitioners gave portions amounting to approximately one-quarter of the property to the ULC Modesto in each of the years in issue*35 and that they intend to donate the balance of the property to the ULC Modesto in 1983. Petitioners argue that in April 1976 the Internal Revenue Service acknowledged, by issuance of a determination letter, the deductibility of contributions to the ULC Modesto as a result of a judicial finding that that church qualified as an exempt organization under section 501(c)(3), and that thereafter the contributions were made. See
There is no independent verification of Mr. Schreiber's testimony that the purported gifts occurred during the years in issue.He testified that he and Mrs. Schreiber executed two quit claim deeds dated December 10, 1976, and December 9, 1977, which purport to transfer portions of the Riverside property to "Universal Life Church, Inc., Modesto, California, Charter 8156." The copies of the deeds presented to the Court, however, were not notarized. No such deeds were ever recorded, and record title remains in petitioners' names. The purported quit claim deeds direct that tax statements should be mailed to petitioners' address, and they have continued to pay (and deduct) taxes and other costs related to the property.Petitioners offered in evidence a letter from the ULC Modesto, signed by Bishop R. E. Imbeau, Ph.D., dated September 27, 1983, in which the Modesto church purports to acknowledge acceptance of the deeds. The letter was excluded*37 as hearsay; but, even if it had been admitted, it does not indicate when the purported deeds were first received by the church in Modesto or offer any explanation as to the failure to record the deeds or to put them in a form acceptable for recording (i.e., acknowledged, see
Similarly, we are not persuaded that the purported contributions, if made, were made to a qualified entity. Petitioners contend that the contributions were made to the ULC Modesto and are deductible because the ULC Modesto is a qualified entity and recognized as such by the Internal Revenue Service.They apparently recognize the futility of arguing that a contribution to their chartered congregation would be deductible as a result of the exempt status of the ULC Modesto. See
Petitioners have not presented any evidence of the value of the interest purportedly transferred other than the cost of the whole parcel of property some years prior to the date of the purported gifts. (They have not even clearly stated how much of a deduction they are claiming.) Thus the deductions could not be allowed even if we were persuaded that petitioners had made a completed gift during the tax years in question to a qualified entity.