The State

They had claimed that part of their payments to Jewish day schools constituted charitable contributions and cited an IRS break given to Church of Scientology members.

Los Angeles Times/January 30, 2002
By Henry Weinstein

A federal appeals court Tuesday unanimously denied the claim of a North Hollywood couple that they were entitled to a partial tax refund for tuition payments they made to two Orthodox Jewish day schools.

The couple had contended that 55% of the tuition payments--the portion of the school day devoted to religious education--represented charitable contributions to a tax-exempt religious organization.

Michael and Marla Sklar also maintained that they were entitled to the refund because the Internal Revenue Service since 1993 has permitted members of the Church of Scientology to obtain deductions for "auditing," the process Scientology adherents use for spiritual self-examination. In essence, three judges of the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that two wrongs don't make a right, upholding a ruling of a U.S. Tax Court judge denying the refund.

The judges said the Sklars were not entitled to a refund under either IRS regulations or applicable Supreme Court precedents.

The leading precedent, the judges said, is a 1989 high court decision holding that payments Scientologists made for "auditing" did not constitute charitable contributions.

That decision, Hernandez vs. Commissioner, was based on a section of the Internal Revenue Code that states that quid pro quo donations, for which a taxpayer receives something in return--such as education--are not deductible. The Hernandez decision held that the section applies to religious quid pro donations.

In Tuesday's decision, the appellate court criticized the IRS for refusing to disclose the terms of a 1993 settlement with the Church of Scientology. That agreement, among other things, permits Scientologists to get deductions in conflict with the 1989 Supreme Court decision, according to the 9th Circuit.

In support of their claim, the Sklars presented a 1997 Wall Street Journal article that provided details of the settlement. The 9th Circuit said that since the IRS failed to present any contradictory evidence on the nature of the settlement, the court was obliged to accept the Sklar's representations.

The settlement ended years of litigation that began in 1967 when the agency said the church should lose its tax-exempt status because it was, in reality, a for-profit enterprise that enriched its officials.

Although it was not directly at issue in the case, the 9th Circuit panel said that "it appears to be true that the IRS" had given Scientology a "preference in the interest of settling a long and litigious tax dispute."

In his majority opinion, Judge Stephen Reinhardt suggested that the preference represented unconstitutional favoritism toward a religious organization. Judges Harry Pregerson and Barry G. Silverman joined in the ruling.

In a separate concurring opinion, Silverman made an allusion to the Passover Holiday when he asked:

"Why is Scientology training different from all other religious training? We should decline the invitation to answer that question. The sole issue before us is whether the Sklars' claimed deduction is valid, not whether members of the Church of Scientology have become the IRS's chosen people."

In a highly unusual move, Silverman invited people who are troubled by the IRS settlement with Scientology to file a lawsuit to unravel the deal.

"If the IRS does, in fact, give preferential treatment to members of the Church of Scientology--allowing them a special right to claim deductions that are contrary to law and disallowed to everybody else--then the proper course of action is a lawsuit to put a stop to that policy.

"The remedy is not to require the IRS to let others claim the improper deduction, too," Silverman wrote.

Jesse Choper, a constitutional law professor at UC Berkeley's Boalt Hall School of Law, said Tuesday's ruling appeared to be correct, based on the Internal Revenue Code and the prior cases interpreting it.

Choper also said that he believed taxpayers would have standing to bring a suit challenging the IRS settlement with Scientology under a 1968 Supreme Court decision, Flast vs. Cohen.

In that case, the high court upheld a taxpayer's standing to challenge federal subsidies to parochial schools as violating the 1st Amendment's prohibition against government establishment of religion.

Michael Sklar said he was disappointed that the decision "didn't address the serious inequities on the part of the government--basically subsidizing one religion to the exclusion of all others."

He added: "The problem with Judge Silverman's remedy is there is no way to undo the past. Scientology already has gotten the benefit."

Sklar's attorney Jeffrey I. Zuckerman said he was considering asking for a rehearing before a larger panel of 9th Circuit judges or asking the U.S. Supreme Court to review the decision.

No one was available at the IRS for immediate comment.


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