1979 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 89">*89
Petitioner is the nonprofit incorporation of the department of anesthesiology of a
72 T.C. 681">*681 OPINION
Respondent has failed to determine whether petitioner qualifies for exemption from Federal income tax under
This case was submitted for decision on a stipulated administrative 72 T.C. 681">*682 record under
Petitioner B.H.W. Anesthesia Foundation is a nonprofit Massachusetts corporation. Its principal place of business is located in Boston, Mass. Petitioner filed its application for recognition of exemption under
1979 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 89">*92 Petitioner is affiliated with the Boston Hospital for Women and Harvard University Medical School, both of which are organizations described in
Because of various problems with this arrangement, petitioner 72 T.C. 681">*683 was formed. Basically, petitioner is the incorporation of the hospital's department of anesthesiology. Petitioner is composed of and controlled by its members, all of whom must be both staff physicians of the department and faculty members of Harvard University Medical 1979 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 89">*93 School. Most control, however, rests directly or indirectly with the department's chairman. Continued membership in petitioner depends upon the member physician's continued association with the hospital and Harvard.
Petitioner's members provide all their services to the department of anesthesiology. They conduct research and provide anesthesiological services to the hospital's patients. In addition, they provide clinical and classroom instruction to Harvard's students and the hospital's interns and residents. A significant amount of time also is devoted to administrative duties. Moreover, member physicians serve all hospital patients without regard to ability to pay. Thus, more than 10 percent of the patients served by petitioner's members are served without compensation.
Petitioner generally bills the hospital's patients or their insurance carriers directly for services rendered by its member physicians. Despite the large number of patients served without compensation and the substantial amount of time devoted by its physicians to nonclinical teaching and research, petitioner still bills and collects sizable amounts each year. In the year ending September 30, 1976, for example, 1979 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 89">*94 petitioner had net patient receipts of $ 636,669. The amounts so collected are disbursed under the joint direction of the department chairman and petitioner's board of directors.
A large percentage of the receipts is applied towards the member physicians' salaries. Again, using 1976 as an example, physicians' salaries totaled $ 253,754 or about 40 percent of total receipts. This does not reflect an additional academic salary paid to the physicians by the hospital. The rest of the receipts are applied towards the various costs of operating the department. These include accounting costs, library costs, the costs of office supplies, etc. The largest disbursement other than physicians' salaries is for "hospital charges." In 1976, for example, this totaled $ 295,417. It represents various charges by the hospital for expenditures incurred on behalf of the department. They include the salaries of nurses and various other costs of 72 T.C. 681">*684 operating the department. All funds not used to meet physicians' salaries are used to cover department and hospital costs.
Again, the amounts paid to the member physicians are in addition to their academic salaries, which are paid by the hospital. 1979 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 89">*95 Those amounts, however, are limited by Harvard's System of Titles and Appointments to twice the maximum academic salary that the physician may be paid. Although that limit is rarely reached, the physicians probably could earn considerably more in private practice.
Further, we do not find any direct correlation between petitioner's gross receipts and the salaries paid to its members. Gross salaries paid to members were 78.4 percent of gross receipts for 1970, 82.4 percent for 1971, 53.7 percent for 1972, 54.4 percent for 1973, 50.7 percent for 1974, and 39.8 percent for 1976. Some of the variation in those figures is probably attributable to a decline in the number of member physicians. There were 24 members listed for 1970 and 14 for 1976. The total salaries paid, however, also decreased from about $ 331,000 in 1970 to about $ 254,000 in 1976, while the average salary paid to members increased slightly from about $ 13,800 in 1970 to about $ 18,000 in 1976. Thus it appears that most of the increase in petitioner's gross receipts has not been applied to its members' salaries.
In addition, considering the nature of their work and their skills, none of the members' individual salaries1979 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 89">*96 is unduly large. In 1974, the latest year for which individual salaries are listed in the record, petitioner paid only two members slightly more than $ 40,000 for their services. The other full-time members each were paid between $ 16,000 and $ 28,000.
Respondent contends that petitioner is not an organization described in
1979 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 89">*97
* * * * (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, * * *
Respondent concedes that petitioner engages in activities that accomplish charitable and educational purposes. Petitioner's activities unquestionably promote health in the community and educate Harvard's medical students. As such, it generally may qualify for exemption under1979 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 89">*98
Clearly, if an organization is conducted for private profit or the benefit of private interests, it will not be exempt under
In determining whether the salaries paid by petitioner to its members are reasonable, we must look at all the facts and circumstances surrounding petitioner's operations. See generally E. Fisch, D. Freed & E. Schachter, Charities and Charitable Foundations, sec. 900 (1974). One factor to consider is whether comparable services would cost as much if obtained from an outside source in an arm's-length transaction. See
Based on the entire administrative record, we have no doubt that the salaries paid to petitioner's member physicians are reasonable. Petitioner is an integral part of the hospital and Harvard University Medical School, both of which are organizations described in
Moreover, petitioner is serving all patients without regard to ability to pay and in fact serves more than 10 percent of its patients without charge. Its operations so clearly accomplish exempt purposes that respondent concedes that point. But regardless of any such concessions, we could not find otherwise. Petitioner is an integral part of the hospital and Harvard. See
Based on the foregoing, we hold that petitioner is not operated for the profit or private benefit of its members and that it is an organization described in
1. Unless otherwise stated, all statutory references are to the Internal Revenue Code of 1954, as amended.↩
2. Petitioner and respondent fail to discuss this important jurisdictional requirement on brief probably because respondent concedes this point. However, this Court's jurisdiction may not be invoked by the consent or concessions of the parties. Because of this, we have necessarily made an independent review of the record. Bearing in mind that the burden of proof on this point is on petitioner,
3. Respondent has chosen not to base his position on the proscription against the net earnings of an organization inuring to the benefit of private individuals -- a separate requirement for qualification under
"Actually, the prohibition against private inurement of earnings appears redundant, since private inurement is clearly incompatible with being organized and operated 'exclusively' for charitable purposes. For example, inurement of contributions or principal of a charitable organization would presumably be as fatal to exempt status as inurement of 'net earnings.' In the final analysis the two conjunctive 'requirements' may simply be component parts of the broad concept 'charitable.'"↩