1978 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 192">*192 Petitioner's representatives are alleged to have orally furnished additional information to Internal Revenue Service representatives at conferences relating to petitioner's application for exempt status under
69 T.C. 570">*571 OPINION
In this action under
69 T.C. 570">*572 A. That the lawyer referral activities of Petitioner result in "substantial" private benefit for the panel members to whom clients are referred, and,
B. That the free legal services provided cannot be considered as charitable because they are provided to persons who are not indigent within the meaning of
The facts alleged in the petition "as a basis" for petitioner's exemption are as follows:
A. The activities of the referral service itself are absolutely free to all applicants, irrespective of financial status, and the service is totally dependent upon the legal community for its operating funds.
B. The panel members are expected by the service to handle the problems sent to them irrespective of the referred party's potential ability to pay, and a substantial portion of the referred attorney's total time spent on referral service applicants is donated altogether or at fees far below the normal fees charged1978 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 192">*196 by the referral attorneys for regular clients.
C. All donated time is passed along as inkind services to the Houston Legal Foundation, which is a service exclusively for the indigent.
1978 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 192">*197 Respondent's answer denies that he erred in his ruling that petitioner is not entitled to tax-exempt status and denies most of the facts alleged as a basis for the exemption claim.
The parties have filed a Stipulation as to Administrative Record to which are attached 14 documents, marked as exhibits 1-A through 14-N. In the stipulation the parties agree that those exhibits "constitute the entire administrative record." We interpret this stipulation to mean that the parties agree that the 14 enumerated exhibits are all the written documents properly includable in the administrative record and that the stipulation was not intended to foreclose petitioner's contention that the Court should consider the additional information referred to in the pending motion.
Petitioner's motion states that, in attempting to obtain an exemption under
Prior to the adoption of
In recognition of the limited scope of these declaratory judgment procedures, H. Rept. 94-658, 94th Cong., 1st Sess., 1976-3 C.B. (Vol. 2) 977, accompanying the enactment of
The court is to base its determination upon the reasons provided by the Internal Revenue Service in its notice to the party making the request for a 69 T.C. 570">*574 determination, or based upon any new argument which the Service may wish to introduce at the time of the trial. * * * 4
The report adds (at pages 979-980):
For an organization to receive a declaratory judgment under this provision, it must demonstrate to the court that it has exhausted all administrative remedies which are available to it within the Internal Revenue Service. Thus, it must demonstrate that it has made a request to the Internal Revenue Service for a determination and that the Internal Revenue Service has either failed to act, or has acted adversely to it, and that it has appealed any adverse determination by a district office to the national office of the Internal Revenue Service or has requested or obtained through the district director1978 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 192">*201 technical advice of the national office.
The requirement of the exhaustion of administrative remedies in
(a) General: Disposition of an action for declaratory1978 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 192">*202 judgment, which does not involve a revocation, will ordinarily be made on the basis of the administrative record, as defined in
1978 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 192">*203 The note accompanying and explaining
Although the Rule states that an action not involving a revocation will "ordinarily" be disposed of on the basis of the administrative record, there do not appear to be at this time any circumstances under which a trial will be held except as to disputed jurisdictional facts or to resolve disagreement between the parties as to the contents of the administrative record. It is expected that the Court's function will be merely to adjudicate whether the Commissioner's determination is erroneous (or in the case of a Section 367 action whether the Commissioner's determination is reasonable) upon the basis of the materials contained in the administrative record upon which the determination of the Commissioner was based. The facts and representations revealed by the administrative record will be assumed to be true for purposes of the proceeding, except of course as to ultimate conclusions and inferences that may be drawn therefrom or as to disputed jurisdictional facts. The entire second sentence and the word "ordinarily" in the first sentence appear in the Rule merely out of an abundance of caution to provide for the possibility1978 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 192">*204 of a trial on other facts or the presentation of evidence in the event that a situation not now contemplated might arise in which a trial would be appropriate.
The issue thus is whether petitioner's motion shows "good cause" within the meaning of
1978 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 192">*205 As explained in H. Rept. 94-658,
The reason for this requirement is apparent from an examination of the procedure prescribed. Such procedure contemplates consideration of applications at the District Director and National Office levels. SPR,
SPR,
It is the responsibility of the taxpayer to furnish to the National Office, within 21 calendar days after the conference, a written record of any additional data, line of reasoning, precedents, etc., that were proposed by the taxpayer and discussed at the conference but were not previously or adequately presented in writing. * * * 7
This rule requiring the taxpayer to reduce to writing all information he wishes to be considered is1978 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 192">*207 entirely reasonable. Obviously the burden of doing so should not be cast on respondent since that would spawn endless controversy over whether the Internal Revenue Service conferees fulfilled such obligation adequately. The applicant must furnish the writing so that the responsible official in the administrative hierarchy will have the information necessary to make the appropriate decision.
Ruling on an exemption1978 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 192">*208 application is basically an administrative function. The procedural rules indicate that the Internal Revenue Service does not investigate the facts submitted in support of an initial exemption qualification ruling. It accepts the submitted statements as true. To allow oral testimony as to what was said at the conferences at the various levels or as to facts not otherwise in the administrative record to be introduced in evidence by testimony or stipulation in a
While this conclusion at first blush may seem harsh, it is not. An adverse decision in a declaratory judgment proceeding does 69 T.C. 570">*578 not preclude the applicant from filing a new exemption application with which he furnishes the appropriate data for inclusion in the administrative record. Since a new administrative record would then underlie respondent's1978 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 192">*209 second denial of a favorable determination letter, this Court would not be precluded by principles of res judicata from entertaining a second petition to review respondent's second action. See H. Rept. 94-658, 94th Cong., 1st Sess., 1976-3 C.B. (Vol. 2) 978. Mere neglect to comply with the Commissioner's direction, quoted above, to furnish a written record of data orally furnished at District or National conferences is not good cause within the meaning of
Fay,
1. All section references are to the Internal Revenue Code of 1954, in the form applicable in this case.↩
2. All references to rules will be to the Rules of Practice and Procedure of this Court.↩
3.
(a) Creation of Remedy. -- In a case of actual controversy involving -- (1) a determination by the Secretary -- (A) with respect to the initial qualification * * * as an organization described in * * * *
(b) Limitations. --
* * * *
(2) Exhaustion of administrative remedies. -- A declaratory judgment or decree under this section shall not be issued in any proceeding unless the Tax Court, the Court of Claims, or the district court of the United States for the District of Columbia determines that the organization involved has exhausted administrative remedies available to it within the Internal Revenue Service. * * *↩
4. We need not now define the circumstances in which the introduction by respondent before the Court of new reasons for his denial of a favorable determination letter would constitute "good cause" for us to permit petitioner to introduce new evidence in rebuttal.↩
5.
(b) Definitions: As used in the Rules in this Title --
(10) "Administrative record" includes the request for determination, all documents submitted to the Internal Revenue Service by the applicant in respect of the request for determination, all protests and related papers submitted to the Internal Revenue Service, all written correspondence between the Internal Revenue Service and the applicant in respect of the request for determination or such protests, all pertinent returns filed with the Internal Revenue Service, and the notice of determination by the Commissioner. In addition --
* * * *
(ii) In the case of a determination relating to an exempt organization or a private foundation or a private operating foundation, the administrative record shall include the charter or articles of incorporation or association, or trust indenture or agreement, and any similar or related documents of the organization and any modifications thereof.
H. Rept. 94-658, 94th Cong., 1st Sess., 1976-3 C.B. (Vol. 2) 977-978, shows that Congress was aware of the Rules adopted by this Court under
6. Petitioner's motion is not clear as to whether petitioner's testimony or the suggested stipulation would be limited to a summary of the oral statements made by petitioner's representatives during the meetings in the District and National Offices on the exemption application or whether it would take a wider range. Either procedure would not be permissible under
7. The foregoing rule was in effect prior to the enactment of
"Any oral representation of additional facts or modication [sic] of the facts as represented or alleged in the application for a ruling or determination must be reduced to writing."
For a similar provision relating to declaratory relief under