1970 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 29">*29
55 T.C. 320">*320 Respondent determined deficiencies in petitioner's income tax for fiscal years 1964 and 1965 in the amounts of $ 2,768 and $ 2,998, respectively. The only question presented is whether amounts 55 T.C. 320">*321 paid to a Christian Science practitioner and taken as business expenses for "professional services" on petitioner's income tax returns are deductible under
FINDINGS OF FACT
Some of the facts have been stipulated by the parties. The stipulation of facts, together with the exhibits attached thereto, are incorporated herein by this reference.
The Fred W. Amend Co. (hereinafter referred to as petitioner or Amend) is a corporation, having been organized under the laws of the State of Illinois on January 12, 1921. Its principal office and factory were located in Danville, Ill., at the time the petition herein was filed. Its administrative1970 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 29">*31 and sales offices were, however, located in Evanston, Ill.
For the fiscal years ending October 31, 1964, and October 31, 1965, petitioner filed its U.S. corporation income tax returns with the district director of internal revenue, Springfield, Ill.
Petitioner is a manufacturer and distributor of jellied candies which it sells in various sized packages under the trade name of "Chuckles." During the years in issue, petitioner employed approximately 173 hourly paid employees at its plant in Danville. Additionally, during fiscal year 1964 and 1965, 41 and 44 persons, respectively, were hired on a salary basis. Through Continental Insurance Co., petitioner provided full-scale hospital and health benefits for all of these employees.
Until 1956, Fred W. Amend (hereinafter Fred) presided over petitioner as president and treasurer. However, in that year his son-in-law, A. F. Rathbun, was made president. Fred remained as treasurer, and in 1959 also assumed the office of chairman of the board of directors -- both of which offices he occupied at the time of the within proceeding. The following table reflects the ownership interest in petitioner held by Fred and his family during each of1970 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 29">*32 the years in issue:
Number of shares issued of all classes 2 | ||||
Preferred | Percent | Common | Percent | |
Fred W. Amend | 84 | 6.80 | 13,182 | 37.63 |
Mrs. Tulita H. Amend, wife | 96 | 7.77 | 3,453 | 9.86 |
Mrs. Dorothy Chamberlain, daughter | 2,500 | 7.14 | ||
Mrs. Jane Nitschke, daughter | 2,500 | 7.14 | ||
Mrs. Marjorie Rathbun, daughter | 2,500 | 7.14 | ||
Fred A. Rathbun, son-in-law | 63 | 5.10 | 727 | 2.08 |
Unrelated stockholders (74 at 10/31/64) | ||||
(73 at 10/31/65) | 993 | 80.33 | 10,164 | 29.01 |
1,236 | 100.00 | 35,026 | 100.00 |
55 T.C. 320">*322 As treasurer and board member, Fred played an active role in supervisory aspects of petitioner's business activities. Armed with daily report sheets and monthly financial statements, Fred was also able to keep abreast of all matters relating to cash flow, inventory status, and customer payments. Fred was also chairman of the corporation's executive committee. As such, he was responsible for convening meetings of the committee, during which time problems exposed by the daily1970 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 29">*33 report sheets were discussed by Fred and the other members of the committee.
Fred's annual salary, as well as the salaries paid to other Amend executives for the years indicated were as follows:
Fiscal years ended Oct. 31 -- | |||||
1961 | 1962 | 1963 | 1964 | 1965 | |
Fred W. Amend: Director, | |||||
chairman of the board, | |||||
treasurer, and member of the | |||||
executive committee | $ 36,515 | $ 40,187 | $ 38,241 | $ 37,825 | $ 32,800 |
A. F. Rathbun: Director, | |||||
president, and member of the | |||||
executive committee | 35,107 | 40,557 | 47,103 | 47,412 | 40,544 |
J. C. Miller: Director, | |||||
executive vice president, | |||||
and member of the executive | |||||
committee | 29,462 | 33,637 | 33,993 | 35,996 | 31,412 |
Carl W. Werner: Controller | |||||
and member of the executive | |||||
committee | 13,904 | 13,230 |
R. M. Halverstadt (hereinafter Halverstadt) was, during the years in issue, a Christian Scientist practitioner and teacher. Halverstadt, a graduate of the University of Chicago where he had majored in economics, had become a full-time Christian Science practitioner around 1923, and had uninterruptedly practiced that calling, in the Chicago, Ill., area, up to the time of the trial herein. As a Christian Science practitioner, 1970 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 29">*34 Halverstadt's services were made available to many members of the Chicago Christian Science community.
Halverstadt was first contacted by Fred in 1954. Thereafter, Fred, a non-Christian Scientist who, nevertheless, contributed 10 percent of his income to the Christian Science Church, regularly sought spiritual assistance from Halverstadt in matters pertinent to both his (Fred's) personal and business endeavors. Typically, their meetings and telephone consultations would begin with Fred defining a problem with which he was faced. Halverstadt would then ask a series of questions designed to give Fred a fuller appreciation of the requirements of the problem. With the insight provided by Halverstadt's counsel, Fred was often able to return to his business or private affairs, and approach problems with detachment and new understanding.
Halverstadt never offered concrete solutions to any of the matters he discussed. Instead, Halverstadt, after exploring a problem via the questioning process mentioned above, would devote his energies to invoking the presence of the Divine Mind.
55 T.C. 320">*323 By way of background, it is the belief of the Christian Science Church that God -- the Divine Mind1970 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 29">*35 -- is spiritually present in all things, and that the universality of His presence is felt by all men since they are the collective embodiment of His spiritual fullness. If, therefore, man -- being the paradigm of this divine omnipresence -- is to succeed in his temporal endeavors, he must strive to achieve an awareness consonant with the universal spirituality with which all men have been endowed. Accordingly, Halverstadt, as a Christian Science practitioner, sought to bring to his followers the spiritual awareness needed for success in their day-to-day activities. This he attempted to do by "prayerful consideration," in which he prayed to and sought guidance from the Divine Mind, and by "spiritual clarification" -- the term used by Fred to describe the nature of the service provided to him by Halverstadt.
As indicated earlier, Fred consulted Halverstadt on a regular basis. During such consultations, Fred sought counsel on matters germane to both his personal and business life. For his assistance, Halverstadt charged Fred $ 3 for each consultation; and though such fees were initially paid by Fred, Amend reimbursed him for all payments attributable to consultations in which Amend's1970 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 29">*36 business matters were discussed. Such reimbursements were paid to Fred through the Evanston office. However, in 1961, Fred decided that, from an accounting standpoint, payments to Halverstadt for consultations which were business (Amend) oriented ought to be paid directly to Halverstadt through the corporation's accounting office in Danville. It was also decided that Halverstadt should be placed on retainer so that he would be available whenever a problem relating to the business arose. With these considerations in mind, the following resolution was adopted by the corporation on April 11, 1961:
Whereas, in the opinion of the members of this Board the services of a Christian Science Practitioner, as a consultant for employees with respect to matters which so disturb them as to handicap them in performing their services for the company, and also as a consultant of the officers as to the best approach to corporate problems, would be to the corporation's advantage and further the corporate enterprise.
Resolved, that Fred W. Amend, the Chairman of the Board of Directors of this corporation be authorized to arrange for the employment of a Christian Science Practitioner by the Company1970 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 29">*37 on such terms as he considers appropriate and in the best interests of this corporation.
As consideration for the retainer arrangement, Halverstadt was to be paid a monthly stipend of $ 400 a month -- an amount unilaterally arrived at by Fred.
Although Halverstadt's services could have been utilized by various members of Amend's supervisory staff, Fred was the only Amend 55 T.C. 320">*324 employee to avail himself of such services. Indeed, lower-ranking Amend employees were not even advised of his availability. During the years in issue, Fred and Halverstadt considered a broad spectrum of problems relating to Amend's business. Among such problems considered were matters dealing with machine output, labor-management relations, and the type of packaging to be used in the production of Amend's candy products. Consultations which were of a personal nature were independently billed at the customary rate of $ 3 per session, and were paid for by Fred out of his personal funds.
For the years in issue, Fred, who was 73 years of age in 1964, enjoyed good health. During this period he spent his summers in Michigan and his winters in Florida. The duration of his visits to either of these places1970 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 29">*38 was not disclosed.
The retainer arrangement with Halverstadt continued uninterruptedly during the years subsequent to 1961, and as Fred's estimation of the value of his services to Amend increased, so did the terms of the retainer. For the 2 years in question, Amend paid Halverstadt amounts of $ 5,500 and $ 6,200, respectively. The deduction of these amounts as "professional services" on Amend's U.S. corporation income tax returns led to the deficiency assessment herein.
OPINION
During the years in issue petitioner authorized the retention of a Christian Science practitioner purportedly to counsel its employees on matters germane to their well-being and the well-being of the petitioner's business. At the behest of Fred Amend, petitioner's treasurer and founder, the resolution authorizing the retention of a Christian Science practitioner was enacted in 1961, and empowered Fred to retain a person of his choosing. The man employed, R. M. Halverstadt, was an obvious choice in that Fred had utilized his services for many years.
Whether by design or happenstance, once retained, Halverstadt saw only Fred. The "spiritual clarifications" provided by such visits enabled Fred to tackle 1970 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 29">*39 corporate problems with objectivity and resolve. The cost of the retainer was charged to an account called "professional services," and was taken as a deduction on the corporation's income tax returns for each of the years under review. The primary question presented is whether, under
To characterize as vexatious the task of determining whether an expenditure is "ordinary and necessary" to a taxpayer's business is to define in mild terms a problem as convoluted as the scope of human 55 T.C. 320">*325 experience is wide.
In the case at bar, petitioner is a corporation. Nevertheless, the services which gave rise to the expenditures it incurred were primarily for the benefit of one of its key executives. Even so, it is argued that the derivative benefits gained by it as a result of these expenditures provided the essential nexus needed for deductibility under
Although it is clear that some expenditures which are helpful to an executive in the fulfillment of his corporate duties are deductible,
Over the years, much has been said in an effort to reconcile the business expense provisions of
We believe that a hearing aid is so personal as to come within the meaning of
In the instant case, we believe the "spiritual clarification" provided to Fred by Halverstadt was so personal as to come within the injunction of
Hence, it can be seen that it was not Fred's skills as a businessman which Halverstadt sought to enhance. Rather, what was sought was a state of harmony in which Fred's business thinking would be brought into conformity with an ordered universe governed by the Christian Science Church's concept of the Divine Mind. As such, 1970 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 29">*45 if our understanding 55 T.C. 320">*327 of this very difficult question is correct, we see little difference between the services provided by Halverstadt and those regularly provided by the duly ordained representative of any other faith whose task it is to bring spiritual understanding to man in his temporal surroundings. In each case we believe the benefits derived from the services rendered by such men are inherently personal, and, therefore, not susceptible to treatment under
Having arrived at the conclusion stated above, we now turn to petitioner's alternate claim in which it is contended that if Halverstadt's services are found to have been conferred on Fred as a personal benefit, then the value of such service should be treated as additional salary deductible under
1970 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 29">*46 It is a well-established maxim that where a corporation assumes the cost of benefits which are personal to one of its shareholders, the value of such benefits may constitute a distribution taxable to the shareholder as a dividend and not deductible by the corporation.
In addition to the fact that petitioner has failed to establish any intent on its part to provide Fred with additional remuneration during the years in issue, cf.
Petitioner cites respondent's
1970 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 29">*49 Basing our determination on the record as a whole, we conclude that the amounts in question were not intended as additional salary to Fred. Accordingly, such amounts are not deductible by petitioner under either of its theories.
1. All statutory references, unless otherwise indicated, are to the Internal Revenue Code of 1954, as amended.↩
2. All voting stock.↩
3.
(a) General Rule. -- In computing net income no deduction shall in any case be allowed in respect of -- (1) Personal, living, or family expenses, except extraordinary medical expenses deductible under section 23(x).↩
4. Petitioner, for the first time in its brief, also argues that the cost of Halverstadt's retention and, accordingly, the cost of the services performed by him qualify as medical expenditures within the meaning of
Fred's testimony indicates that during the years in issue he enjoyed very good health. Furthermore, Fred, though believing in the benefits of "spiritual clarification" was not a practicing Christian Scientist; and, it is, therefore, not altogether certain that Fred would have approached Halverstadt with respect to problems affecting his (Fred's) health. Moreover, while it is arguable that the services provided by Halverstadt could be characterized as psychotherapeutic in nature, see
5. The record does not reveal the amount of earnings and profits which the corporation had available for the payment of dividends during each of the years in issue. However, the burden of proof with respect to this matter rests with the petitioner.
6. "Advice has been requested with respect to the tax treatment of amounts expended by an executive, or an employer on behalf of an executive, who avails himself of reconditioning and health-restoring services afforded by certain resort hotels and athletic clubs.
* * * *
"Where an employer pays the expenses of one of its executives incurred in connection with securing the benefits of the reconditioning program offered by a resort of the type mentioned above, such expenditures generally constitute additional compensation to the executive and he is required to include the amount thereof in gross income for Federal income tax purposes. Expenditures which are compensatory in nature are deductible by an employer under