Mаureen and Michael Staples appeal the denial of a federal tax deduction sought for payments made to the Church of Scientology. The tax court, on the authority of
Graham v. Commissioner,
Scientologists believe that in every person an immortal spiritual being exists independent of body and mind. A Scientologist becomes aware of this spiritual dimension through a process called “auditing.” Auditing sessions are сonducted individually, but are not individually tailored and are ritualistic in nature. Scientologists also take “courses” in which they study the doctrines, tenets, codes, policies, and practices of the Church, one of the doctrines being that spiritual gains result from this study itself. Participation in auditing sessions and doctrinal courses is conditioned on payment of a set charge, known as a “fixed donation,” from a schedule of fees established by the Church for all its activities.
The government has stipulated, for the purposes of this litigation, that Scientology is a religion and that the specific Scientology organization to which the payments were made was a qualified church and religious corporation under subsections 170(b)(l)(Á)(i) and (c)(2) and exempt from taxation under 26 U.S.C. § 501(a). The government also has stipulated that the сollection of fixed donations as a prerequisite to participation in the essential religious practices of Scientology is the Church’s only method of actively soliciting contributions from members. At oral argument the government recognized that under the stipulаtions the parties agree Scientology auditing sessions and doctrinal courses are bona fide religious practices.
These stipulations are in important respects contrary to the conclusions reached in
Church of Scientology v. Commissioner,
This court is bound to treat as conclusive and to enforce all fairly made and voluntary stipulations of fact.
Skeets v. Johnson,
A taxpayer may take a deduction under section 170 for a gift or contribution to a qualified religious corporation. This does not mean, however, that any payment to a qualified church is deductible; rather, the payment must be examined to seе whether it is a “gift” or “contribution” within the meaning of the statute.
Estate of Wood v. Commissioner,
The Staples urge, however, that no recognizable return benefit is received when the taxpayer through the payments was seeking strictly spiritual gain. For example, the Internal Revenue Service has ruled that deductions should be allowed for pew rents and periodic church dues and building fund assessments, Rev.Rul. 70-47, 1970-
A constructiоn of section 170 sensitive to religious practices would be consistent with the policies underlying the statutory provision.
Cf. Helvering v. Bliss,
Congress was addressing two principal concerns when it limited section 170 charitable deductions to “contributions.” First, Congress feared charitable organizations offering products and services in competition with those offered by business would gain unfair competitive advantage; and second, Congress recognized that when a contributor would receive a material quid pro quo, the amount of the donation available for the support of the charitable organization would be reduced by the cost of providing the tangible benefit.
See Haak v. United States,
Finally, as the Staples suggest in their brief, “our tax system does not treat religious services as commodities that are purchased in commercial transactions.” Form sometimes is important in identifying a section 170 contribution because a payment appearing to be a purchase of an item of value creates a presumption that the transaction was not a donation. Rev.Rul. 67-246, 1967-
In sum, we conclude that regardless of the timing of the payment or details of the church’s method of soliciting contributions from its members, an amount remitted to a qualified church with no return other than participation in strictly spiritual and doctrinal religious practices is a contribution within the meaning of section 170.
This conclusion we believe embodies our difference with the First Circuit, which in
Hernandez
acceрts participation in strictly spiritual and doctrinal religious practices as “adequate consideration” to take a payment out of the category of “contributions.”
See American. Bar,
Furthermore, these stipulations foreclose any reliance оn the Church of Scientology’s fixed donations as representing the value of its essential religious practices. Under *1328 the stipulations the fixed donations are not market prices set to reap the profits of a commercial moneymaking venture; rather, the Church of Scientology is a bona fide church which selected fixed donations as its mechanism for raising funds from its members.
Given our conclusion that participation in strictly religious practices is not a recognizable return benefit under section 170, the analysis in
American Bar
by its very nature is inaрplicable to the situation before us. In
American Bar
the taxpayer received an indisputably tangible benefit with a measurable secular market value, namely insurance, in return for his payments to a tax-exempt charitable organization. The Court analyzed the casе as one involving “dual payments” — that is, payments having the character both of contributions and of payments for valuable benefits received — and applied the rule that a taxpayer may deduct the portion of a dual payment which exceeds the market value of the tangible benefit.
Because we hold that the Staples’ payments to the Church of Scientology for participation in strictly religious practices were contributions within the meaning of section 170, we need not reach the constitutional arguments raised by the Staples. The order of the tax court is reversed.
