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LAWRENCE G. WILLIAMS, Petitioner v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, RespondentWilliams v. Comm'rNo. 10314-02; No. 3262-03July 22, 2004, Filed
United States Tax Court *33 Judgment entered for respondent with respect to deficiencies and for petitioner with respect to penalty under
section 6662(a) .P filed for bankruptcy on Dec. 3, 1990, at which time he
owned all of the shares of two S corporations. Both S
corporations sustained operating losses for 1990. P reported the
pro rata portion of the 1990 losses attributable to the
prebankruptcy period on his individual tax return for 1990,
resulting in a net operating loss, which he carried forward
through 2000. P was discharged in bankruptcy in 1997. R
disallowed the losses and issued notices of deficiency for 1996-
2000.
1. Held: Where P, an individual S corporation
shareholder, filed for bankruptcy before the corporation's
yearend, operating losses sustained by the corporation during
the year in which he filed for bankruptcy are reported by the
bankruptcy estate, not P, because income or loss of an S
corporation is determined as of the last day of the
corporation's taxable year.
2. Held, further, net operating losses to
*34 which P succeeded upon discharge in bankruptcy must be reduced
by the amount of discharge of indebtedness income that, pursuant
to
sec. 108(b)(2), I.R.C. , was excluded from his gross income asa result of his bankruptcy discharge.
3. Held, further, P is not liable for the
accuracy-related penalty under
sec. 6662(a), I.R.C. , for anyyear at issue.
Lawrence G. Williams, pro se.Lydia A. Branche , for respondent.Kroupa, Diane L.Diane L. Kroupa*145 KROUPA, Judge: Respondent determined deficiencies in petitioner's income taxes for the years 1996 through 2000 resulting from operating losses sustained by two S corporations in 1990 that petitioner reported on his individual tax return in 1990, the year in which petitioner filed for bankruptcy, and carried forward through 2000.
section 6662(a) for each year at issue.*35 The three issues for decision are:
(1) Whether petitioner or his individual bankruptcy estate (Estate) is entitled to report operating losses sustained during 1990 by two S corporations in which petitioner owned all of the shares as of the date of filing bankruptcy. We hold that the Estate, not petitioner, is entitled to report the losses.
(2) Whether petitioner is entitled to report carryforward losses to which he succeeded upon termination of the Estate after his debts were discharged in bankruptcy. We hold that he is not.
(3) Whether petitioner is liable for each year at issue for the accuracy-related penalty under
section 6662(a) *36 the Court fully stipulated underRule 122 . The stipulation of facts and the accompanying exhibits are incorporated by this reference, and the facts*146 are so found. *37Petitioner was a self-employed investment adviser for each year at issue. Petitioner owned all of the shares of two S corporations, Davidge & Co. (Davidge) and Kuma Securities (Kuma), until December 3, 1990, the date he filed for bankruptcy. The shares of both corporations became property of his Estate at that time. *38 attributable to the period January 1 through December 3, 1990, the date petitioner filed for bankruptcy. The remaining $ 259,717 (or 7.67 percent) of the loss for 1990 was allocated to the Estate.
Kuma sustained an operating loss of $ 155,593 during 1990. Similarly, the Schedule K-1 Kuma issued to petitioner for 1990 showed that $ 143,898 (or 92.33 percent) of the loss for 1990 was allocated to petitioner. This amount represents the pro rata portion of Kuma's loss attributable to the period January 1 through December 3, 1990, the*39 date petitioner filed for bankruptcy. The remaining $ 11,955 (or 7.67 percent) of the loss was allocated to the Estate.
Petitioner reported on his Federal income tax return for 1990 the pro rata share of the losses sustained by Davidge*147 and Kuma. The amounts that petitioner reported were attributable to the period January 1 through December 3, 1990, the date he filed for bankruptcy. Petitioner carried forward losses from 1991 through 2000. *40 issue are as follows:
Accuracy-related Penalty Year Deficiency 1996 $ 59,597 $ 11,919 1997 63,679 12,736 1998 30,524 6,105 1999 27,166 5,433 2000 12,681 2,536 Petitioner timely filed petitions with this Court contesting respondent's disallowance of the losses and liability for the accuracy-related penalty for each year at issue.
Petitioner received a discharge in bankruptcy on November 26, 1997. The $ 4 million Citibank loan was discharged.
I. Whether Petitioner or the Bankruptcy Estate Is Entitled to the 1990 LossesOPINION
The Bankruptcy Tax Act of 1980,
Pub. L. 96-589, sec. 3, 94 Stat. 3397">94 Stat. 3397 , addedsection 1398 to eliminate uncertainty and litigation by detailing how Federal income tax attributes and liabilities are to be allocated between the bankruptcy estate*41 and the individual debtor. Seesec. 1398 ; see also S. Rept. 96-1035, at 8-13 (1980),2 C.B. 620">1980-2 C.B. 620 , 623-626, 1980 IRB LEXIS 2391. Filing a bankruptcy petition creates a new taxable entity for Federal tax purposes, the bankruptcy estate, which is a separate and distinct taxpayer from the individual debtor. See11 U.S.C. sec. 541(a) *148 (2000) ;sec. 1398 . The debtor continues as a separate taxable entity during the pendency of the bankruptcy proceeding.Sec. 1398. Section 1398 dictates whether the bankruptcy estate or the individual debtor reports income, deductions, and credits and when either taxpayer succeeds to the tax attributes of the other.This is a case of first impression in which we must decide whether filing individual bankruptcy alters the rules that otherwise apply under subchapter S regarding the allocation and deductibility by an individual shareholder of losses of S corporations incurred in the calendar year in which the individual shareholder files for bankruptcy.
Respondent claims that the Estate is entitled to the entire loss generated by each of*42 Davidge and Kuma for 1990 even though it did not own any shares of either corporation until December 3, 1990, the date petitioner filed for bankruptcy. Respondent contends that the Estate is entitled to the entire loss generated during 1990 because the Estate owned all the shares of Davidge and Kuma as of December 31, 1990, the corporations' yearend.
Petitioner counters that he is entitled to approximately 11 months' worth of the losses generated during 1990. Relying on
section 1377(a)(1) , which allocates each item of corporate income or loss pro rata on a per share per day of ownership basis, petitioner argues that he should be allocated that portion of the loss generated by each corporation during the time in 1990 that he owned all the shares of Davidge and Kuma; i.e., the portion attributable to the period from January 1 through December 3, 1990. Petitioner essentially argues that bankruptcy proceedings do not alter the rules for allocating income and loss to S corporation shareholders undersection 1377 . He reasons that the transfer of his shares in Davidge and Kuma to his Estate should be treated like any other disposition under*43section 1377 entitling him to receive a pro rata share of each loss.We agree with respondent.
Section 1398 specifically applies to individuals in bankruptcy and must be considered before applying the rules ofsection 1377 to S corporation shareholders in bankruptcy. Undersection 1398(f)(1) , a transfer of an asset from the debtor to the bankruptcy estate when the debtor files for bankruptcy is not a disposition triggering tax consequences, and the estate is treated as the debtor would *149 be treated with respect to that asset. Therefore, the Estate is treated as if it had owned all the shares of Davidge and Kuma for the entire year and, accordingly, is entitled to the entire loss that each of Davidge and Kuma generated during 1990, including the loss attributable to each corporation for the period January 1 through December 3, 1990.Section 1398(e)(1) specifically addresses how income or loss should be allocated between the individual debtor and the bankruptcy estate. The bankruptcy estate is entitled to the individual debtor's items of income or loss from*44 the bankruptcy commencement date undersection 1398(e)(1) while any items of income or loss that the individual debtor received or accrued before filing for bankruptcy remain with the debtor. . In Gulley, we interpreted*45Gulley v. Commissioner , T.C. Memo 2000-190section 1398 as it pertained to a partnership interest of an individual partner who filed for bankruptcy. At issue in Gulley was whether a partnership loss incurred during the year in which the individual partner filed for bankruptcy flowed through to the partner or his bankruptcy estate. We held that the bankruptcy petition did not cause the partnership taxable year to close and that the prepetition losses flowed through to the bankruptcy estate, not the individual partner.Our rationale in
applies to these cases. Although there are distinctions between partnerships and S corporations, none mandate a different result here from our opinion inGulley . Both S corporations and partnerships determine income or loss as of the last day of the entity's tax year. SeeGulley secs. 706(a) ,1366(a) . The transfer of shares of an S corporation*150 or a partnership interest to an individual bankruptcy estate when the debtor files for bankruptcy does not trigger tax consequences undersection 1398(f)(1) and therefore does not require calculating items of income or*46 loss as between the individual debtor and the estate.In
and in these cases, the bankruptcy estate held the entire interest in each respective entity as of the entity's tax yearend. Neither the transfer by the taxpayer inGulley , nor the transfer by petitioner, to his respective bankruptcy estate is a taxable disposition underGulley section 1398(f)(1) . See also .Accordingly, as inSmith v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo 1995-406">T.C. Memo 1995-406 , the bankruptcy estate, not petitioner, is entitled to the income or loss of the S corporations.Gulley In these cases, by operation of bankruptcy law, the shares of Davidge and Kuma became property of the Estate when petitioner filed his bankruptcy petition on December 3, 1990. Before that date, none of the loss generated by Davidge or Kuma during 1990 was distributable to petitioner. The Estate held the shares on December 31, 1990, the taxable yearend for both corporations. There was no taxable disposition, and the Estate is treated as petitioner would have been treated with respect to the shares of Davidge and Kuma under
section 1398(f)(1) *47 . Thus, the corporations' losses flowed through to the Estate rather than to petitioner.We next address petitioner's argument that, because
subsection (g)(1) is the only subsection ofsection 1398 that deals specifically with losses,section 1398(g)(1) controls to entitle petitioner to the losses generated during the year in which he filed for bankruptcy. Petitioner reasons that the Estate succeeds solely to the debtor's net operating loss carryovers undersection 172 "determined as of the first day of the debtor's taxable year in which the case commences".Sec. 1398(g) . By focusing on the language "determined as of the first day of the debtor's taxable year in which the case commences" insection 1398(g)(1) , petitioner argues that the Estate does not succeed to any loss Davidge or Kuma generated during the year in which petitioner filed bankruptcy.Petitioner misconstrues
section 1398(g)(1) . Whilesection 1398(g)(1) deals with losses, it deals only with carryover losses (i. *48 e. , losses generated before the year in which the individual files for bankruptcy, not losses generated during the year in which the individual files for bankruptcy). The*151 losses at issue here are losses generated during the year in which petitioner filed for bankruptcy.For all the foregoing reasons, we hold that the Estate is entitled to report the losses Davidge and Kuma generated during the year in which petitioner filed for bankruptcy. Accordingly, we sustain respondent's determination in the notices of deficiency disallowing petitioner's losses from Davidge and Kuma in 1990.
II. The Loss Carryforward After Discharge
We turn next to the issue whether petitioner is entitled to report carryforward losses. We begin with some fundamental principles. First, a bankruptcy estate can offset income it generates during bankruptcy with any of the debtor's operating losses to which it succeeds. See
secs. 1398(e)(1) and(f)(1) ,172(b)(2) . Second, any loss the bankruptcy estate does not use in one year can be carried forward to offset income the bankruptcy estate generates in future years until termination of*49 the estate or until the entire loss is expended or expires.Sec. 172(b)(2). Third, if a loss carryforward remains after the termination of the bankruptcy estate, the discharged debtor succeeds to the assets and tax attributes of the bankruptcy estate, including loss carryforwards.Sec. 1398(i). While normally discharge of indebtedness income is taxable under
section 61(a)(12) , cancellation of indebtedness (COD) income realized as a result of a bankruptcy discharge is excluded from gross income in the year of discharge undersection 108(a) . In exchange for this exclusion, certain tax attributes that pass to the debtor from the bankruptcy estate must be reduced by the amount of debt discharged.Sec. 108(b)(2) . One such tax attribute is any remaining loss carryforward. Id.Petitioner was discharged in bankruptcy in 1997. Instead of petitioner succeeding to any loss carryforward from the Estate in 1997, respondent argues that any loss carryforward must be reduced dollar for dollar by the amount of debt discharged. We agree.
The net operating loss that each of*50 Davidge and Kuma sustained in 1990 flowed through on December 31, 1990, to the Estate, the sole shareholder at both S corporations' yearend.*152 The Estate carried forward these losses through 1997, the year in which the bankruptcy proceedings terminated. When petitioner was discharged in bankruptcy, any remaining losses in the Estate would have passed to him under
section 1398(i) . However, the discharged $ 4 million Citibank loan created COD income that was excluded from petitioner's gross income undersection 108(a) . Thus, any loss carryforward -- in this case, the loss approximating $ 3,500,000 -- otherwise available to petitioner upon the termination of the Estate is reduced dollar for dollar for the excluded COD income undersection 108(b)(2). Therefore, any loss carryforward of the Estate to which petitioner succeeded was reduced to zero undersection 108(b)(2)(A) . Petitioner had no loss in 1997 to recognize in that year or to carry forward to subsequent years.On the basis of the foregoing, we sustain respondent's determination in the notices of deficiency disallowing petitioner's*51 loss carryforwards.
III. Accuracy-Related Penalty
We turn now to respondent's determination in the notices of deficiency that petitioner is liable for the accuracy-related penalty under
section 6662(a) for each year at issue. Respondent has the burden of production undersection 7491(c) and must come forward with sufficient evidence that it is appropriate to impose the penalty. See , 446-447 (2001).Higbee v. Commissioner, 116 T.C. 438">116 T.C. 438Respondent determined that petitioner is liable for the accuracy-related penalty for a substantial understatement of income tax under
section 6662(b)(2) for each year at issue. There is a substantial understatement of income tax if the amount of the understatement exceeds the greater of either 10 percent of the tax required to be shown on the return, or $ 5,000.Sec. 6662(d)(1)(A) ;sec. 1.6662-4(a), Income Tax Regs.Respondent has met his burden of production with respect to petitioner's substantial understatement of income tax. The following table demonstrates that petitioner understated his income tax*52 for each year at issue in an amount greater than $ 5,000 or 10 percent of the tax required to be shown on his return.
*153
Year Tax Reported Required Tax Understatement 1996 $ 700 $ 60,297 $ 59,597 1997 536 64,215 63,679 1998 4,463 34,987 30,524 1999 11,846 39,012 27,166 2000 9,673 22,534 12,681 The accuracy-related penalty under
section 6662(a) does not apply to any portion of an underpayment, however, if it is shown that there was reasonable cause for the taxpayer's position and that the taxpayer acted in good faith with respect to that portion.Sec. 6664(c)(1) ;sec. 1.6664-4(b) , Income Tax Regs. The determination of whether a taxpayer acted with reasonable cause and in good faith is made on a case-by-case basis, taking into account all the pertinent facts and circumstances, the most important of which is the extent of the taxpayer's effort to assess his proper tax liability for the year.Sec. 1.6664-4(b)(1) , Income Tax Regs. Circumstances that may indicate reasonable cause and good faith include an honest misunderstanding*53 of law that is reasonable in light of all of the facts and circumstances.Sec. 1.6664-4(b) , Income Tax Regs.While the Commissioner bears the burden of production under
section 7491(c) , the taxpayer bears the burden of proof with respect to reasonable cause. . The mere fact that we have held against petitioner on the substantive issue does not, in and of itself, require holding for respondent on the penalty. SeeHigbee v. Commissioner , supra at 446 , 719- 720 (1994) (" Indeed, we have specifically refused to impose * * * [a penalty] where it appeared that the issue was one not previously considered by the Court and the statutory language was not entirely clear.").Hitchins v. Commissioner, 103 T.C. 711">103 T.C. 711We agree with petitioner that he made a reasonable attempt to comply with the Internal Revenue Code. Because this is a case of first impression, there was no clear authority to guide petitioner as to the complex and overlapping issues of tax and bankruptcy law. We note that respondent has not referred us to nor have we found any cases that have previously answered the questions before us. Petitioner*54 had an honest misunderstanding of the law, and the position petitioner took was reasonably debatable. Accordingly, in light of*154 all the facts and circumstances, we find petitioner acted reasonably and in good faith with respect to the underpayment for the years at issue and is not liable for the accuracy-related penalties under
section 6662(a) .We have considered the other arguments of the parties and, to the extent not discussed above, we conclude that the arguments are irrelevant, moot, or meritless.
To reflect the foregoing,
Decisions will be entered for respondent with respect to the deficiencies and for petitioner with respect to the penalty under
section 6662(a) .Footnotes
1. Petitioner originally filed a ch. 7 bankruptcy petition on Dec. 3, 1990, then converted it to a ch. 11 bankruptcy in 1991. The conversion is irrelevant for purposes of our analysis because
secs. 108 and1398↩ apply to both chapters if the debtor is an individual.2. All section and subchapter references are to the Internal Revenue Code in effect for the years at issue, unless otherwise indicated, and all Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure.↩
3.
Sec. 7491 is effective with respect to court proceedings arising in connection with examinations by the Commissioner commencing after July 22, 1998, the date the Internal Revenue Service Restructuring and Reform Act of 1998,Pub. L. 105- 206, sec. 3001, 112 Stat. 726">112 Stat. 726 , was enacted. Although the examinations for these cases began on Aug. 5, 1999, for 1996 through 1998 and on Apr. 4, 2002, for 1999 through 2000, these cases were submitted fully stipulated. Therefore, no facts are in dispute, and we decide these cases without regard to the burden-shifting rule ofsec. 7491(a)(1).↩ 4. These two cases were consolidated for trial, briefing, and opinion in an order from this Court dated May 15, 2003.↩
5. A debtor's assets, with exceptions not applicable here, become property of the bankruptcy estate when the debtor files the bankruptcy petition.
11 U.S.C. sec. 541 (2000)↩ .6. The record does not reflect financing information for Kuma. We assume that petitioner used portions of the Citibank loan to finance the operation of Kuma as well.↩
7. The pro rata portion is computed by assigning to each day an equal share of the loss for the year.
Sec. 1377(a)(1)↩ .8. The parties stipulated that petitioner made the election under
sec. 172(b)(3)↩ to forgo the carryback period and carry forward the losses. The years 1990 through 1995 are not before us.9. The notice of deficiency for 1996, 1997, and 1998 was issued on Mar. 20, 2002, and the notice of deficiency for 1999 and 2000 was issued on Nov. 22, 2002.↩
10. The parties stipulated that petitioner did not elect to bifurcate the 1990 tax year into short, prepetition and postpetition, years pursuant to
sec. 1398(d)(2)↩ .
Document Info
Docket Number: No. 10314-02; No. 3262-03
Citation Numbers: 123 T.C. 144, 2004 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 33, 123 T.C. No. 8
Judges: "Kroupa, Diane L."
Filed Date: 7/22/2004
Precedential Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/14/2024