The FOUNDING CHURCH OF SCIENTOLOGY

                                       v.

                               The UNITED STATES.

                                  No. 226--61.

                         United States Court of Claims.

                                 July 16, 1969.

  Action by church to recover federal income taxes and assessed interest paid.

 The Court of Claims, Collins, J., held that where founder of church was not

 only paid, in addition to his salary, commissions and royalties but he and his

 family received unexplained payments in nature of loans and reimbursements,

 church was not entitled to exemption from federal income taxation under

 statute, which includes among those organizations exempt from taxation a

 corporation organized and operated exclusively for religious or educational

 purposes, no part of net earnings of which inures to benefit of any private

 shareholder or individual.

  Petition dismissed.



 [1] INTERNAL REVENUE

 Congress, when conditioning exemption granted to corporation organized for

 religious purposes upon "no part" of earnings being of benefit to a private

 individual, specifically intended that the amount or extent of benefit should

 not be the determining factor.  26 U.S.C.A. (I.R.C.1954) s 501(c) (3).



 [2] INTERNAL REVENUE

 Where founder of church was not only paid, in addition to his salary,

 commissions and royalties but he and his family received unexplained payments

 in nature of loans and reimbursements, church was not entitled to exemption

 from federal income taxation under statute, which includes among those

 organizations exempt from taxation a corporation organized and operated

 exclusively for religious or educational purposes, no part of net earnings of

 which inures to benefit of any private shareholder or individual.  26

 U.S.C.A. (I.R.C.1954) s 501(c) (3).

  *1197 Ronald Dreier, New York City, for plaintiff, Bella L. Linden,

 New York City, attorney of record. David Blasband, Peter C. Clapman, and

 Linden & Deutsch, New York City, of counsel.

  Michael I. Sanders, Washington, D.C., with whom was Asst. Atty. Gen., Johnnie

 M. Walters, for defendant.  Philip R. Miller and Norman J. Hoffman, Jr.,

 Washington, D.C., of counsel.



  *1198 Before COWEN, Chief Judge, and LARAMORE, DURFEE, DAVIS, COLLINS,

 SKELTON, and NICHOLS, Judges.

                                  OPINION [FN*]



      FN* The court is indebted to Trial Commissioner Donald E. Lane (now Judge,

     U.S. Court of Customs and Patent Appeals) for his opinion, findings of

     fact, and recommended conclusion of law.  Although the court reaches the

     same result, we decide the case on a different ground.



  COLLINS, Judge.

  This is a suit to recover Federal income taxes and assessed interest paid by

 plaintiff to defendant for the fiscal year ended June 30, 1956.  Defendant has

 counterclaimed for taxes assessed but unpaid for the fiscal years ended June

 30, 1956, June 30, 1958, and June 30, 1959.  The central issue presented is

 whether plaintiff is entitled to an exemption from Federal income taxation.

 The pertinent statute is section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code of

 1954, which includes among those organizations exempt from taxation a

 corporation 'organized and operated exclusively for religious * * * or

 educational purposes, * * * no part of the net earnings of which inures to the

 benefit of any private shareholder or individual * * *.'

  The facts set forth in detail in the findings can be briefly summarized to the

 extent pertinent here:

  Plaintiff is a District of Columbia corporation organized in 1955 with its

 purpose, as stated in the Certificate of Incorporation, '(t)o act as a parent

 church for the propagation of the religious faith known as 'Scientology,' and

 to act as a Church for the religious worship of that Faith.'  The beliefs of

 Scientology center around the spirit or 'thetan,' which is said to reside

 within the physical body of every human being.  Scientologists believe that the

 spirit is immortal and that it receives a new body upon the death of the body

 in which it then resides.  They also believe that in the course of its various

 lives the spirit is inhibited by 'detrimental aberrations,' or 'engrams,' which

 result from misdeeds or unpleasant experiences.  The objective of Scientology

 is to counteract this burden through 'processing,' also called 'auditing.'

 This objective which is the principal practice of Scientology, attempts to make

 the person being audited, called a 'preclear,' aware of these aberrations and

 engrams and thus reduce the burdens and inhibitions affecting his spirit.

 Processing is performed by ministers of the plaintiff, or persons studying to

 become ministers, and is done in individual sessions with an auditor processing

 a single preclear through the use of a Hubbard Electro-Meter or 'E-Meter.'  The

 E-Meter is an instrument which indicates changes in electrical resistance in

 the preclear's body, and changes in such resistance are viewed as an index of

 the activity of the spirit.  (See finding 10, infra.)

  Scientology is derived from the thoughts and writings of one L. Ron Hubbard.

 Its origin was an article written by Hubbard in the May 1950 issue of

 ASTOUNDING SCIENCE FICTION magazine, describing a new 'science' called

 Dianetics.  Dianetics, the creation of Hubbard, was offered primarily as a

 psychotherapeutic technique and was not presented as a religious discipline.

 Like its successor, Scientology, Dianetics employed a Hubbard E-Meter

 in its practice. In 1952 Hubbard began to focus his attention and his energies

 upon Scientology.  He founded the plaintiff organization and completely

 dominated every aspect of its affairs during the relevant period. At the same

 time he continued to direct the growth and affairs of Scientology organizations

 throughout the world.

  Persons coming to plaintiff for processing were usually required to sign a

 contract for a stated amount of auditing.  The normal contract covered 25 hours

 of processing at a rate of $20 per hour. Other blocks of processing were

 available, and the per-hour fee was slighty lower for larger amounts.  In

 addition to processing, *1199 another department of plaintiff offered

 various courses or training programs, and such instruction was also performed

 under contract for comparable fees.  Most students enrolled in these courses

 were studying to become auditors and/or ministers of Scientology.  Applicants

 were often required to contract for processing at the standard fee before being

 allowed to enroll as students.

  During the period in issue, more than 90 percent of plaintiff's income was

 received from the sales of processing and training services, including sales of

 E-Meters.  Additional income was realized from the sales of examinations and

 tests, tapes, and books, from minimal donations, and from various other

 sources.  Plaintiff's gross receipts were $102,604 for the fiscal year ending

 June 30, 1956; $179,491 for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1958; and $247,674

 for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1959.

  For his services to plaintiff, Hubbard was paid a salary of $125 per week from

 plaintiff's inception through March 29, 1957; during the period October 26,

 1956, through March 29, 1957, he also received an additional $125 per week

 which was designated as a 'fee.'  On March 29, 1957, plaintiff adopted a

 compensation scheme (known as the 'proportional pay plan') whereby Hubbard was

 paid, in lieu of salary, 10 percent of the gross income of plaintiff.  Other

 Scientology congregations, franchises, and organizations also paid Hubbard a

 portion of their gross income, usually 10 percent.  In addition, Hubbard

 received royalties on his numerous Scientology books, as well as

 lecture fees and other incidental income.

  During the taxable years in issue, Mary Sue Hubbard and L. Ron Hubbard, Jr.,

 the wife and son of plaintiff's founder, were compensated employees of the

 corporation.  Also, from June 1957 through February 1959, plaintiff issued

 weekly checks to Kay Hubbard, the daughter of L. Ron Hubbard.

  Defendant's position, briefly stated, is that plaintiff fails to qualify for

 the statutory exemption because (1) its sales of processing and training

 services constituted a substantial commercial (and hence nonexempt) purpose,

 and (2) a portion of its net earnings inured to the benefit of private

 individuals. Plaintiff denies both contentions.

  It is our opinion that plaintiff has failed to prove that no part of the

 corporation's net earnings inured to the benefit of private individuals, and

 plaintiff is not entitled to recover.  The court finds it unnecessary to decide

 whether plaintiff is a religious or educational organization as alleged, since,

 regardless of its character, plaintiff has not met the statutory conditions for

 exemption from income taxation.  In any event, the Government has not raised

 this issue.  Because of the manner in which the second question framed by the

 parties is resolved, we need not and do not determine whether plaintiff's

 operations were exclusively for religious or educational purposes.

  Implicit in section 501 is the recognition that certain institutions and

 organizations exist and function for purposes which Congress deems beneficial

 to society as a whole.  In order to foster these aims, funds which would

 otherwise be acquired and expended for the public good by the Government are

 left by Congress in the hands of these organizations to be used in furtherance

 of their beneficial ends.  See Duffy v. Birmingham, 190 F.2d 738, 740 (8th

 Cir. 1951). For that reason, it has been held that the exemption provisions

 should be liberally construed.  E.g., American Institute for Economic

 Research v. United States, 302 F.2d 934, 157 Ct.Cl. 548 (1962), cert. denied,

 372 U.S. 976, 83 S.Ct. 1109, 10 L.Ed.2d 141, rehearing denied, 373 U.S.

 954, 83 S.Ct. 1677, 10 L.Ed.2d 708 (1963).

  The statutory language also makes it eminently clear, however, that Congress

 intended to extend the exemption only when the sole beneficiary of the

 institutional operations was the public at large.  The substantial import of

 this express limitation cannot be ignored.  *1200 See Better Business

 Bureau of Washington, D.C., Inc. v. United States, 326 U.S. 279, 283, 66 S.Ct.

 112, 90 L.Ed. 67 (1945).  The congressional intent behind the conditional

 language of section 501(c)(3), coupled with the burden of proof placed upon

 the taxpayer in these circumstances (see, e.g., Kenner v. Commissioner of

 Internal Revenue, 318 F.2d 632 (7th Cir. 1963); Cleveland Chiropractic

 College v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 312 F.2d 203, 206 (8th Cir.

 1963)), requires plaintiff to clearly demonstrate its right to exemption. See

 New Jersey Auto. Club v. United States, 181 F.Supp. 259, 149 Ct.Cl. 344

 (1960), cert. denied, 366 U.S. 964, 81 S.Ct. 1913, 6 L.Ed.2d 1255 (1961).

  The term 'net earnings' in the inurement-of-benefit clause, as stated in

 section 501 and its predecessor, section 101 of the Internal Revenue Code

 of 1939, has been construed to permit an organization to incur ordinary and

 necessary expenditures in the course of its operations without losing its tax-

 exempt status. Birmingham Business College, Inc. v. Commissioner of Internal

 Revenue, 276 F.2d 476 (5th Cir. 1960); Enterprise Ry. Equip.  Co. v. United

 States, 161 F.Supp. 590, 142 Ct.Cl. 192 (1958); Mabee Petroleum Corp. v.

 United States, 203 F.2d 872 (5th Cir. 1953); Broadway Theatre League of

 Lynchburg, Va., Inc. v. United States, 293 F.Supp. 346, 355 (W.D.Va.1968).

  By analogy to the recurrent tax question in the business sphere, whether

 corporate officers' salaries are reasonable and deductible, or are excessive

 and disguise the distribution of dividends (see, e.g., Jones Bros. Bakery,

 Inc. v. United States, 188 Ct.Cl. ---, 411 F.2d 1282 (June 1969)), several

 decisions indicate that the payment of reasonable salaries by an allegedly tax-

 exempt organization does not result in the inurement of net earnings to the

 benefit of private individuals. Birmingham Business College, Inc. v.

 Commissioner of Internal Revenue, supra 276 F.2d at 480; Enterprise Ry.

 Equip.  Co. v. United States, supra; Mabee Petroleum Corp. v. United

 States, supra 203 F.2d at 876.  Of course, as the Birmingham Business College

 and Mabee Petroleum cases hold, excessive salaries do result in inurement of

 benefit.  Cf. also Duffy v. Birmingham, supra.  As always, whether the

 salaries paid are reasonable is a question of fact.  Compare, e.g., Mabee

 Petroleum Corp. v. United States, supra 203 F.2d at 875, with Jones

 Bros. Bakery, Inc. v. United States, supra, and cases cited.

  It is clear, however, that an organization's net earnings may inure to the

 benefit of private individuals in ways other than by the actual distribution of

 dividends or payment of excessive salaries.  General Contractors' Ass'n of

 Milwaukee v. United States, 202 F.2d 633 (7th Cir. 1953) (reports and surveys

 furnished to members); Chattanooga Auto. Club v. Commissioner of Internal

 Revenue, 182 F.2d 551 (6th Cir. 1950) (services to members); Underwriters'

 Laboratories, Inc. v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 135 F.2d 371 (7th

 Cir.), cert. denied, 320 U.S. 756, 64 S.Ct. 63, 88 L.Ed. 450 (1943) (reports

 and studies furnished); Spokane Motorcycle Club v. United States, 222

 F.Supp. 151 (E.D.Wash.1963) (goods, services, and refreshments given), and

 cases cited.  That the benefit conveyed may be relatively small does not change

 the basic fact of inurement.  Spokane Motorcycle Club v. United States,

 supra.

  We scrutinize the facts of the instant case in the light of these principles.

 According to the trial commissioner's findings, L. Ron Hubbard received over

 $108,000 from plaintiff and related Scientology sources during the 4-year

 period June 1955 through June 1959.  This figure represents $77,460 in fees,

 commissions, royalties, and compensation for services, plus $13,538 in payment

 for expenses incurred in connection with his services, as well as a total of

 $17,586 in reimbursement for expenditures made in plaintiff's behalf, in

 repayment of loans made to plaintiff and the New York organization, and as a

 loan from plaintiff to Hubbard.  As the commissioner found, and we agree, the

 precise nature of the *1201 loans and reimbursed expenditures does not

 appear in the record.  Nor do we find any explanation for most of the expenses

 paid.  The portion of the $77,460 actually paid by plaintiff amounted to

 approximately $6,000 in 1955--56, more than $11,550 in 1956--57, approximately

 $18,000 in 1957--58, and over $22,000 in 1958--59.

  Hubbard also had the use of an automobile at plaintiff's expense. During

 plaintiff's taxable years ending in 1958 and 1959, the organization provided

 and maintained a personal residence for Hubbard and his family.  Moreover, in

 addition to all the foregoing, Hubbard received a percentage (usually

 10 percent) of the gross income of affiliated Scientology

 organizations.

  For purposes of deciding this case, we do not consider the income accruing to

 Hubbard from the affiliated congregations and organizations as coming from

 plaintiff.  However, under the circumstances here, the fact that Hubbard had

 income from such closely related sources indicates that Hubbard's compensation

 from plaintiff was not for full-time service.  During the years in issue these

 other percentages, fees, and commissions, so far as the record shows, were

 apparently received or receivable by Hubbard for his personal use.  Such an

 arrangement suggests a franchise network for private profit and, in turn, casts

 doubt upon the propriety of the payments by plaintiff to Hubbard and the

 members of his family.  The fact that Hubbard was the recipient of income from

 plaintiff in the form of royalties and commissions likewise occasions an

 inference of personal gain.

  In this regard, we note the steady increase in Hubbard's compensation.

 Originally salaried at $125 per week, Hubbard received $250 the following

 year, $125 of which is described merely as a 'fee.' In March of 1957, Hubbard

 began to receive 10 percent of plaintiff's gross income.  Although the

 organization's gross receipts in fiscal year 1957--58 were less than in fiscal

 year 1956--57, Hubbard's income pattern is still one of growth.  Moreover, the

 record supports the conclusion that plaintiff and Scientology generally have

 consistently grown since the years in issue, while Hubbard, or his

 communication center in England, has continued to receive a percentage of the

 income of plaintiff and affiliated organizations.

  When, with this general background, we consider that Hubbard, the dominant

 figure in Scientology, and his wife were two members of plaintiff's 3-man board

 of trustees during the relevant period, it is not inappropriate to require

 plaintiff to justify the payments made to Hubbard and his family in the nature

 of loans, reimbursements for expenditures in plaintiff's behalf, for expenses,

 and other purposes.  Not only can these payments, in the absence of

 explanation, be properly attributable to the individuals as income (cf.

 Parker v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 365 F.2d 792 (8th Cir. 1966),

 cert. denied, 385 U.S. 1026, 87 S.Ct. 752, 17 L.Ed.2d 674 (1967);

 see also Kenner v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 318 F.2d 632 (7th Cir.

 1963)), but the logical inference can be drawn that these payments were

 disguised and unjustified distributions of plaintiff's earnings.

  In addition to the unexplained amounts received by Hubbard described above,

 his family received the following additional payments entirely, or almost

 entirely, from plaintiff:

  Mary Sue Hubbard, the wife of plaintiff's founder, had income from September

 1955 through December 1958 by virtue of renting property owned by her to

 plaintiff.  Her total receipts from this venture were $10,685.  Payments

 amounting to $1,450, attributable to the debts of her son, were made in 1956

 and 1957.  A completely unexplained figure of $250 and loans of $800 were

 received in 1958--59.

  L. Ron Hubbard, Jr., was the recipient of loans in 1955--56 and 1958--59

 totaling $1,226.  He was reimbursed for expenditures of approximately $200 in

 behalf of plaintiff in 1957--58 and 1958--59.

  *1202 In fiscal years 1957--58 and 1958--59, Kay Hubbard, the daughter,

 received payments, generally designated as salary or wages, totaling $3,242.

 The record is devoid of any evidence showing services performed by Miss Hubbard

 for plaintiff. This amount includes loans of $550 made in 1958.

  What emerges from these facts is the inference that the Hubbard family was

 entitled to make ready personal use of the corporate earnings.  Cf.

 Birmingham Business College, Inc. v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue,

 supra at 276 F.2d 480.  We have no evidence that the rental paid by plaintiff

 for Mrs. Hubbard's property was reasonable, or that such an arrangement was

 beneficial or desirable to the corporation.  Inflated rental prices can amount

 to inurement of benefit.  See Texas Trade School v. Commissioner of Internal

 Revenue, 272 F.2d 168 (5th Cir. 1959).

  Similarly, the purpose of the loans made to the Hubbards is unexplained.  We

 do not know whether the terms were financially advantageous to plaintiff or

 whether in fact the loans were ever repaid.  Indeed, the very existence of a

 private source of loan credit from an organization's earnings may itself amount

 to inurement of benefit.  For comparable reasons, the proof concerning

 the payments for expenses and expenditures in behalf of plaintiff is also

 defective.

  In substance, then, nothing we have found in the record dispels the

 substantial doubts the court entertains concerning the receipt of benefit by

 the Hubbards from plaintiff's net earnings.  Since plaintiff has failed to meet

 its burden of proof, we hold therefore that a part of the corporate net

 earnings was a source of benefit to private individuals.

  In this regard, we think it immaterial whether the benefit is viewed as

 inuring to Hubbard--by easing his obligation to support his family--or directly

 to the respective members of the family.  All the Hubbards were persons 'having

 a personal and private interest in the activities of the organization.'

 Treas.Reg. s 1.501(a)--1(c).

  [1] The extent of the seeming benefit to Hubbard's family might appear

 relatively small, but plaintiff has not suggested that it was de minimis, and

 we cannot so conclude from the evidence before us. It is our opinion, from an

 examination of the statute and the decided cases, that Congress, when

 conditioning the exemption upon 'no part' of the earnings being of benefit to a

 private individual, specifically intended that the amount or extent of benefit

 should not be the determining factor.  See Spokane Motorcycle Club v. United

 States,  supra.

  With respect to Mr. Hubbard, plaintiff seeks to bring itself within the

 doctrine of the cases cited above which hold that reasonable salaries paid by a

 corporation do not result in inurement of benefit to private individuals.  Even

 had the compensation paid to Hubbard been demonstrably reasonable, however,

 this showing would not remedy the defects in proof concerning the additional

 payments to Hubbard, or, of course, his family.  If in fact a loan or other

 payment in addition to salary is a disguised distribution or benefit from the

 net earnings, the character of the payment is not changed by the fact that the

 recipient's salary, if increased by the amount of the distribution or benefit,

 would still have been reasonable.

  [2] For all the above reasons, therefore, the court concludes that plaintiff

 has failed to prove its entitlement to exemption from income taxation under

 section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954.  Plaintiff's claim

 is denied, and the petition is dismissed.  Defendant is entitled to

 prevail on its counterclaims.  In accordance with the stipulation of the

 parties, as reflected in unchallenged findings of the commissioner, judgment is

 entered for defendant in the amounts of $3,262.75 for the fiscal year ending

 June 30, 1956, $5,399.03 for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1958, and

 $7,381.97 for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1959. As part of the judgment,

 defendant is entitled to statutory interest of 6 percent on all three sums from

 the respective appropriate dates.