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JAMES A. CAVANAUGH, JR., Petitioner v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, RespondentCavanaugh v. Comm'rDocket No. 30825-09.
United States Tax Court T.C. Memo 2012-324; 2012 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 325; 104 T.C.M. (CCH) 610;November 26, 2012, Filed*325Decision will be entered under
Rule 155 .George Tomas Rhodus , for petitioner.Duy P. Tran , for respondent.HOLMES, Judge.HOLMESMEMORANDUM OPINION HOLMES,
Judge : Twenty-seven-year-old Colony Anne (Claire) Robinson left Texas in November 2002 for a Thanksgiving vacation in the Caribbean with her boyfriend, his bodyguard, and another employee of the company that he had spent decades building.*325 She did not return home alive.
The coroner's report showed a massive amount of illegal drugs in her body and concluded that they were the likely cause of her death. Robinson's mother sued the boyfriend and his company for wrongful death. The parties settled. The company paid most of the $2.3 million settlement directly; the boyfriend contributed $250,000, which the company then reimbursed. The company then claimed the entire $2.3 million as a deduction, along with nearly $180,000 in related legal fees. The boyfriend's company is a corporation that elected long ago to have its income and deductions flow through to its owner's individual return. The parties have settled every other issue in the case, but the Commissioner is not willing to concede the deductibility of the settlement or the company's reimbursement *326 of the boyfriend's contribution.
Background James Cavanaugh is the CEO and sole shareholder of Dallas-based Jani-King International, Inc., which he founded in 1969 and has built into one of the most successful janitorial-services franchisors in the world. For the 2002 Thanksgiving holiday, Cavanaugh decided to rest from his entrepreneurial chores by going on a vacation to the Caribbean with Robinson. They traveled to Cavanaugh's villa in St. Maarten and were accompanied by Cavanaugh's *326 bodyguard, Ronald (Rock) Walker, *327 but by the time she filed the final version of her complaint it had sprouted causes of action for negligence, assault and battery, conspiracy, premises liability, strict liability, strict products liability, negligence
per se , and gross negligence. *327 She also swept in Jani-King—according to the complaint, it contributed to Robinson's death because its employees—Cavanaugh, Walker, and Fortner—were all acting within the scope of their employment.The Jani-King board of directors called a special meeting in September 2004. *328 Cavanaugh insisted that the case was frivolous, but also said he was willing to contribute $250,000 to settle it. He then recused himself from the meeting to allow the board to discuss the matter. (Cavanaugh was only one of Jani-King's four directors, but he was its sole shareholder and had the power to remove any director for any reason.) Jani-King's lawyers agreed with Cavanaugh that both he and the corporation would likely win the case. The lawyers nevertheless warned that juries are unpredictable and Jani-King's reputation could be soiled if the case dragged on or became more notorious. According to the board minutes, the remaining directors were quite worried about losing the case, and worried even more that Jani-King franchisees would jump in for a second helping of litigation if they thought Robinson's suit would hurt their own businesses. As a corporate franchisor, Jani-King's income depends on a stream of royalties, so this is plausible, but we do note that the minutes don't elaborate the extent or specific *328 bases of the directors' anxiety. *329 The Board then approved a settlement of up to $5 million, in addition to Cavanaugh's contribution.
The case trudged forward until August 2005, when Linda Robinson settled it for $2.3 million payable over two years. *330 Cavanaugh contributed $250,000, which Jani-King promptly reimbursed; in the end he paid nothing in his individual capacity to settle the case. And Jani-King on its 2005 and 2006 tax returns deducted the settlement amount (including the amount it reimbursed Cavanaugh) along with its own attorney's fees as ordinary and necessary business expenses.
In 2009 Cavanaugh received a notice of deficiency that raised numerous issues. The parties settled them all, except for the disallowance of deductions for the settlement payments and legal fees relating to the Robinson suit and its settlement. That issue was headed for trial in Dallas (Cavanaugh resided in Texas*329 when he filed his petition) when the parties agreed to submit it for decision under
Rule 122 .Discussion Their failure to settle these issues is entirely understandable. From Cavanaugh's perspective, it is an unfortunate fact of business life that corporations and prominent individuals get sued, sometimes on dubious facts and theories of liability. Settling such suits may be distasteful, but even a small chance of an enormous payout may justify a deal that protects assets from the uncertainty of litigation and protects a business reputation from scandal.
The Commissioner has a different view—he argues that however jumbled and wrinkly the legal topography created by the collision of Code, regulations, and caselaw may sometimes seem, it cannot possibly hide a crevice dark enough to successfully *331 shelter an argument that the price paid for the death of the boss's girlfriend is a deductible corporate business expense.
We must figure out two separate puzzles. We must first decide whether Jani-King can deduct its share of the settlement payments and the legal fees related to the lawsuit and settlement. Then we must decide if Jani-King can deduct Cavanaugh's $250,000 indemnification payment. We discuss each issue in turn.
*330 I. The Settlement Payment and Legal Fees Under
section 162 , a business may deduct ordinary and necessary business expenses. Broken into its component parts,section 162 allows a deduction for any expense that is• paid or incurred during the tax year,
• "ordinary",
• "necessary", and
• a "business" expense.
See, e.g., , 361 (1988). The Commissioner does not contest the first three points. The stipulation shows Jani-King and Cavanaugh paid the settlement costs and attorney's fees. Those costs were "necessary" because they were "appropriate and helpful," which is how the caselaw has interpreted that word.O'Malley v. Commissioner , 91 T.C. 352">91 T.C. 352See, e.g., , 689, 86 S. Ct. 1118">86 S. Ct. 1118, 16 L. Ed. 2d 185">16 L. Ed. 2d 185 (1966) (quotingCommissioner v. Tellier , 383 U.S. 687">383 U.S. 687 , 113, 54 S. Ct. 8">54 S. Ct. 8, 78 L. Ed. 212">78 L. Ed. 212, 2 C.B. 112">1933-2 C.B. 112 (1933)). And courts have *332 long considered legal fees and settlement costs, even if sporadic, to be "ordinary".Welch v. Helvering , 290 U.S. 111">290 U.S. 111See, e.g., .Tellier , 383 U.S. at 690It's section 162's last requirement—that the deduction be a "business", in contrast to a "personal", expense—that is the key issue. In the context of legal expenses and costs, the question usually turns on the "origin and character of the *331 claim" underlying the legal controversy.
See , 49, 83 S. Ct. 623">83 S. Ct. 623, 9 L. Ed. 2d 570">9 L. Ed. 2d 570, 1 C.B. 356">1963-1 C.B. 356 (1963).United States v. Gilmore , 372 U.S. 39">372 U.S. 39A. Whether Gilmore Applies Cavanaugh's first argument is that
Gilmore doesn't even apply, because "Jani-King is a business corporation which engages solely in business activities." He argues instead that we should analyze the deductibility of its expenses under (4th Cir. 1980).Kopp's Co. v. United States , 636 F.2d 59">636 F.2d 59In
, the son of a lumber-company president used a company car that his dad had lent him. The son had a bad driving record, and crashed the company car into another, and seriously injured the other car's driver.Kopp's Co. , 636 F.2d at 60Id. The injured driver sued the son, the company's president, and the company itself.Id. The company settled and deducted its share of the settlement and legal fees. The Fourth Circuit agreed *333 that it could, because the company was named in the suit and the company had "direct exposure to the risk of a monetary judgment."
. Many have written that this apparent focus on theId. at 60-61consequences of the claim rather than itsorigins appears to conflict withGilmore. See, e.g., (Ervin, J., dissenting); "Note: Federal Taxation—The Deductibility of Legal Expenses in the Fourth Circuit-Kopp's Co. , 636 F.2d at 61-62Kopp's Co. v. United *332States ," 17 Wake Forest L. Rev. 1008, 1017 (1981); "Note: The Transaction Approach to the Origin of the Claim Doctrine: A Proposed Cure for Chronic Inconsistency,"55 Brook. L. Rev. 905">55 Brook. L. Rev. 905 , 940-41 (1990) (suggesting misapplication of the origin-of-the-claim test). Appellate venue in this case, however, would normally lie in the Fifth Circuit. While that circuit uses the origin-of-the-claim test like everyone else,see , 166 (5th Cir. 1974) (applying the "origin standard" to determine whether an antitrust claim was deductible or capitalizable,Estate of Meade v. Commissioner , 489 F.2d 161">489 F.2d 161rev'g T.C. Memo. 1972-190 ), Cavanaugh is correct that it doesn't have any authoritative precedent on the specific issues here.And Cavanaugh is also correct that *334 we ourselves have cited
Kopp's Co. in later cases. He points us to , andSynanon Church v. Commissioner , T.C. Memo 1989-270">T.C. Memo. 1989-270 ,Nw. Ind. Tel. Co. v. Commissioner (NITCO), T.C. Memo. 1996-168, 1996 WL 147915">1996 WL 147915aff'd ,127 F.3d 643">127 F.3d 643 (7th Cir. 1997), for the proposition that a "a corporation engage[d] exclusively in business activities" isn't bound byGilmore . Both these cases, however, actually distinguishedKopp's Co. and declined to follow it.See ;NITCO , T.C. Memo. 1996-168, 1996 WL 147915, at *29 n.16 (Synanon Church , T.C. Memo. 1989-270Kopp's Co. distinguishable because here taxpayer engaged in substantial nonbusiness activities). These cases do not create an exception to the origin-of-the-claim test; they apply it to particular facts to decide whether the *333 activity involved was "business" or "nonbusiness". Our Court has never held that naming a company as defendant in a lawsuitipso facto makes legal fees or settlement costs into business expenses.See, e.g., .Synanon Church , T.C. Memo 1989-270">T.C. Memo. 1989-270B. Origin and Meaning of "Origin-of-the-Claim" This carries us back to
Gilmore . InGilmore , a husband argued that legal fees from his divorce were ordinary and necessary business expenses because he needed to shield *335 his business interests from his former wife's community-property claims. . The Supreme Court held instead that deductibility "depends on whether or not the claimGilmore , 372 U.S. at 41arises in connection with the taxpayer's profit-seeking activities," not on the "consequences " to the taxpayer "from a failure to defeat the claim." .Id. at 48Gilmore drew heavily on precedent holding that the costs of suits "directly connected with" or "proximately result[ing] from" a taxpayer's business were deductible business expenses.See, e.g., , 153, 48 S. Ct. 219">48 S. Ct. 219, 72 L. Ed. 505">72 L. Ed. 505, 66 Ct. Cl. 763">66 Ct. Cl. 763, 2 C.B. 267">1928-2 C.B. 267, T.D. 4222 (1928).Kornhauser v. United States , 276 U.S. 145">276 U.S. 145The Supreme Court also told us to focus on origins and not consequences in cases where the question wasn't whether an expense was deductible, but whether an expense was deductible or had to be capitalized. In
, 90 S. Ct. 1302">90 S. Ct. 1302, 25 L. Ed. 2d 577">25 L. Ed. 2d 577 (1970), a taxpayer tried to deduct the appraisal fees *334 he incurred during a shareholder dispute. He argued that the "primary purpose" in incurring the costs was to protect his business.Woodward v. Commissioner , 397 U.S. 572">397 U.S. 572 . The Court required him to capitalize the costs instead, laying down a general rule that the costs of acquiring or defending a capital asset get charged to the capital, *336 not current-expense, part of the ledger.Id. at 577 .Id. at 577-79We synthesized these holdings in
(1973). InBoagni v. Commissioner , 59 T.C. 708">59 T.C. 708Boagni , the taxpayer challenged the Commissioner's disallowance of a deduction for legal fees undersection 212 . Boagni argued that the fees were deductible because they were incurred in cases involving royalty interests. We reiterated that the origin-of-the-claim standard requires an examination of all the facts and circumstances such as "the issues involved, the nature and objectives of the litigation, *337 the defenses asserted, the purpose for which the claimed deductions were expended, the background of the litigation, and all facts pertaining to the *335 controversy." (citingId. at 713 , 151 (5th Cir. 1964),Estate of Morgan v. Commissioner , 332 F.2d 144">332 F.2d 144aff'g in part, rev'g in part and remanding 37 T.C. 31">37 T.C. 31 (1961)).We've often cited
Boagni , but some courts have urged caution in reading too much into the quoted passage's mention of the litigation'sobjectives and the deductions'purposes. The Ninth Circuit, for example, noted in , 680-81 (1982),Keller St. Dev. Co. v. Commissioner , 688 F.2d 675">688 F.2d 675aff'g T.C. Memo. 1978-350 , thatBoagni 's reference to "objectives" and "purposes" sits impermissibly close to the focus on "consequences" thatGilmore forbade and the primary-purpose test thatGilmore andWoodward rejected. We won't read our precedent to put us in conflict with the Supreme Court: As we held in , at *6, "[a]lthough we are instructed byPeters, Gamm, West & Vincent, Inc. v. Commissioner , T.C. Memo. 1996-186, 1996 WL 182545">1996 WL 182545Boagni v. Commissioner * * * to consider all the facts and circumstances, we are bound by the rule established byUnited States v. Gilmore * * * to look to the origin *338 of the underlying claim, and not the consequences."We have elsewhere called the test a "totality of the circumstances" test or looked at the "circumstances out of which the litigation arose."
See , 329 (1999);Guill v. Commissioner , 112 T.C. 325">112 T.C. 325 . But however we paraphrase the test,O'Malley v. Commissioner , 91 T.C. at 362 limits what facts we can *336 consider. We won't, therefore, look at the harm that Robinson's suit might have caused Jani-King's reputation or its other possible consequences. And in examining the factual allegations and legal theories underlying the particular claim, we don't need to decide whether they are correct.Gilmore , 118 (1990);Maxwell v. Commissioner , 95 T.C. 107">95 T.C. 107see also, e.g., , at *5 (not reaching the merits of the underlying claims). *339 Rather, we examine the facts as they fit in the overall context of the claim.Dogali v. Commissioner , T.C. Memo. 1995-39, 1995 WL 33280">1995 WL 33280The deductibility of Jani-King's portion of the settlement and its legal fees turns both on what the "claim" was and whether its "origin" lay in Jani-King's business.
See, e.g., ("We must identify the claim that gave rise to the legal fees * * * and then determine whether the claim was proximately related to the trade or business."). Our pursuit of the claim's origin *337 "does not contemplate a mechanical search for the first in the chain of events which led to the litigation," but requires instead "an examination of all the facts."Peters , T.C. Memo. 1996-186, 1996 WL 182545, at *5Id. (citing ).Boagni , 59 T.C. at 713Neither party disputes the "claim" here: Linda Robinson's *340 suit against Jani-King and Cavanaugh. They differ markedly, however, about the origin of that claim. Cavanaugh argues that its origin is Linda Robinson's contention that Jani-King killed Robinson by negligently allowing its employees to provide illegal drugs to her. The Commissioner disagrees and sees the origin of the claim simply as Robinson's death.
We agree with Cavanaugh that the Commissioner's view is one link too far down the chain
Boagni referred to. Robinson's death alone couldn't have made Jani-King—or anyone else, for that matter—liable. Instead, as the caselaw requires, we must examine Linda Robinson's underlying allegations.See ;Maxwell , 95 T.C. at 118see also, e.g., , at *6 (examining the complaints);Hauge v. Commissioner , T.C. Memo. 2005-276, 2005 WL 3214581">2005 WL 3214581 (examining SEC's allegations);Peters , T.C. Memo. 1996-186, 1996 WL 182545 at *6 (examining the origin of the underlying claims). She made allegations about Cavanaugh, Walker, and Fortner as employees of Jani-King, but we must ask whether as Jani-King'sDogali , T.C. Memo. 1995-39, 1995 WL 33280 at *6employees , those three undertook business or personal activities in St. Maarten. *338 It's their actions that matter. Linda Robinson alleged it was they who gave *341 Robinson the drugs that killed her, and while Jani-King could argue that they didn't give her the drugs or that even if they gave her the drugs, Jani-King wasn't liable under Texas law, neither of these defenses changes the fact that the conduct of these three is what precipitated Linda Robinson's suing Jani-King.But just because we find that the origin of Linda Robinson's claim lay in the conduct of the Jani-King employees doesn't mean that Jani-King may deduct the settlement costs and legal expenses. We must also identify whether this conduct arose from Jani-King's profit-seeking activities.
.O'Malley , 91 T.C. at 361The Commissioner argues that the parties stipulated that the trip to St. Maarten involved no business conduct, and that this fact alone means that he should win. Cavanaugh argues that tort claims against company employees are nearly certain to arise in business today, and that this makes them proximately related to undertaking business operations. But Cavanaugh cites no authority to support such a broad assertion.
Cavanaugh could have tried to analogize to cases that he and the Commissioner cite for other propositions, and where we allowed deductions for the costs of litigation. *342
See :• *339
(costs of suit deductible by corporation because negligently entrusted corporate property at issue);Kopp's Co. , 636 F.2d at 61•
, 1151-52 (10th Cir. 1979) (divorce costs deductible because wife enjoined business of husband's paving company);Dolese v. United States , 605 F.2d 1146">605 F.2d 1146•
(costs of suit against affiliated insurance carrier deductible because they "entirely" related to plaintiff's insurance business);Guill , 112 T.C. at 329-30•
(costs of defense against bribery charge deductible because they related to attempts by trucking business to influence current trucking-deregulation legislation);O'Malley , 91 T.C. at 362-64•
(costs of defending suit brought for conspiracy to defraud deductible because it implicated ongoing business operations);Hauge , T.C. Memo. 2005-276, 2005 WL 3214581, at *7•
, 431-32 (1984) (costs of suit resulting from fight on company property during business hours were deductible by corporation);Naporano Iron & Metal Co. v. United States , 6 Cl. Ct. 422">6 Cl. Ct. 422Each of these cases, however, involves using property actively employed in the company's
profit-seeking business or the actual conduct of a profit-seeking business, and none buttress Cavanaugh's position.Jani-King is a franchisor *343 of cleaning businesses. Even if Jani-King employees gave Robinson the drugs that killed her, Cavanaugh hasn't shown how those actions arose from, furthered, or used property directly employed in, Jani-King's franchising business. That makes this case a lot like
NITCO . The taxpayer *340 in that case owned an independent telephone company at a time when the FCC banned them from offering cable-television services within their telephone-service area. . The taxpayer owned no cable business, but allowed his two sons to use his phone company's leased office space, equipment, and employees to operate a cable business they owned.NITCO , 127 F.3d at 645 . He also paid their utility bills and wrote off substantial debt the cable business owed his telephone company.Id. at 646Id. After a competitor complained, the FCC intervened, resulting in lengthy and expensive litigation and a payment by the telephone company to the competitor. . Even though the telephone company directly supported the tortious conduct underlying the claim through its moneys, employees, and property, the Seventh Circuit refused to allow the telephone company a deduction for its costs.Id. at 645-46 .Id. at 646That court reasoned *344 that none of the telephone company's actions involved its "profit-making activities."
Id. Rather, "[i]ts involvement with [the cable business], far from being profit-driven, was a subsidy to [the telephone company's president's son]."Id. Whether or not a bodiless corporation is a "person", it certainly is controlled by flesh-and-blood people, who sometimes use corporate property for ends no reasonable person could call profit-seeking.Gilmore tells us to ferret out only profit-seeking activities and purposes.See *341 . Any other rule "carr[ies] us too far" and allows taxpayers to subvertGilmore , 372 U.S. at 46-48section 262 by running their expenses through corporate forms. (citingId. at 48 , 125, 72 S. Ct. 585">72 S. Ct. 585, 96 L. Ed. 791">96 L. Ed. 791, 1 C.B. 32">1952-1 C.B. 32 (1952)).Lykes v. United States , 343 U.S. 118">343 U.S. 118In this case, Jani-King employees were engaged in non-profit-seeking activities that did not arise from or further Jani-King's business, and were far from any company property. *345 We therefore hold that Jani-King's settlement costs and legal fees are personal costs and not deductible.
Rock Walker's conduct might present a closer question. Jani-King employed him as a bodyguard, and it's conceivable that Jani-King determined his security duties furthered its business objectives.
Cf. , 363 (1944) (expenses for chauffeur/bodyguard are deductible). The record, however, contains no evidence regarding his specific *342 duties at Jani-King, and we would be hard pressed to say that he was *346 acting within his "business" duties while on vacation in St. Maarten. Peters's hypothetical example of the bank executive who embezzles for personal gain: If Walker did provide Robinson with the cocaine that killed her, did he do so to carry out his "bodyguard" duties for Jani-King?Estate of Bartholomew v. Commissioner , 4 T.C. 349">4 T.C. 349See . Or, like the hypothetical fraudster, did Walker act for his own benefit or purposes? Cavanaugh bears the burden of proof on this point, and with the scant and unreliable evidence in the record we can't conclude that it was more likely than not that Walker's conduct arose from or furthered Jani-King's profit-seeking activities.Peters , T.C. Memo. 1996-186, 1996 WL 182545, at *6See .Gilmore , 372 U.S. at 48We *347 therefore conclude that none of the Jani-King employees' conduct that Thanksgiving weekend, whether proven or alleged, arose from Jani-King's profit-*343 seeking activities. Jani-King, therefore, cannot deduct the settlement costs or legal fees.
See . Deductibility of the Indemnity PaymentPeters , T.C. Memo. 1996-186, 1996 WL 182545, at *6Cavanaugh agreed to contribute $250,000 to the settlement payment from his personal funds. Jani-King reimbursed *348 him in full for this amount, and then deducted the payment as an ordinary and necessary business expense. We must figure out if this deduction is appropriate, *344 A.
Required Payment A corporation's payment of its own contractual obligations—even indemnification obligations—is generally an ordinary and necessary payment.
See , 663 (1954). According to Jani-King, the indemnity provisions of its bylaws required it to reimburse Cavanaugh, and therefore the reimbursement was deductible. We've held, however, that indemnification is not necessarily deductible just because it's contractually required.Union Inv. Co. v. Commissioner , 21 T.C. 659">21 T.C. 659See , at *104 (citingHIE Holdings, Inc. v. Commissioner , T.C. Memo. 2009-130, 2009 WL 1586044">2009 WL 1586044 , 359, 91 S. Ct. 1893">91 S. Ct. 1893, 29 L. Ed. 2d 519">29 L. Ed. 2d 519 (1971)). *349 *345 conditions indemnification on the person having acted in "good faith" and in his "reasonable" belief that he acted in accordance with Jani-King's best interests at the time.Commissioner v. Lincoln Sav. & Loan Ass'n , 403 U.S. 345">403 U.S. 345If a person meets these requirements, and is "wholly successful" in his defense, he is entitled to indemnification as a "matter of right." If he is only partially successful in the controversy, his indemnification is discretionary upon either the Board's or independent legal counsel's determining that he has otherwise *350 met the remaining standards. Cavanaugh submitted no evidence that either of these determinations was made, hasn't argued that he was "wholly successful" in his defense of the Robinson suit, and didn't explain how he met the remaining requirements for indemnification. Given this lack of proof, we find that Jani-King wasn't required to reimburse Cavanaugh for his portion of the settlement costs, and
and similar cases simply don't apply.Union Inv. Co. B. Voluntary Payment Even a taxpayer's voluntary payments may sometimes be deductible, however, if made to protect or promote his business.
See , 684-85 (1967). InLohrke v. Commissioner , 48 T.C. 679">48 T.C. 679Lohrke , a corporation became liable for the costs of a defective product. . The taxpayer agreed to become personally liable for the losses to protect the business relationship and *346 protect the corporation's reputation.Id. at 682Id. When the defective product could not be sold, the taxpayer paid customers on behalf of the corporation from his personal accounts. . He then deducted the payments underId. at 683section 162 , and we let him do so because his motive was "an *351 appropriate expenditure for the furtherance or promotion of that trade or business." .Id. at 688-89 didn't involve the type of paymentsLohrke did—payments of legal expenses and costs. AndGilmore Lohrke also didn't involve a corporation's paying the expenses of a shareholder, but rather a shareholder's paying the expenses of his corporation—a distinction that the Fifth Circuit has thought important.See , 156 (5th Cir. 1983) (holdingJack's Maint. Contractors, Inc. v. Commissioner , 703 F.2d 154">703 F.2d 154Lohrke "inapposite" where corporation paid shareholder's debt),rev'g T.C. Memo 1981-349">T.C. Memo. 1981-349 .In
, 179 (2000), we acknowledged these distinctions and in compliance with the Fifth Circuit's holding inHood v. Commissioner , 115 T.C. 172">115 T.C. 172Jack's Maint. Contractors limited application. In cases where a corporation pays the legal expenses of its "sole or controlling shareholder," we carefully *347 examine whether the corporation is paying "the expenses of another unable to do so."Lohrke 'sId. *352Like the taxpayers in
, Cavanaugh and Jani-King have made no such showing here. Cavanaugh ably paid all of the litigation costs and expenses—no surprise since Jani-King paid him no less than $1 million per year in 2005 and 2006 (not counting his $7 million and $16 million distributive shares of Jani-King's profits in 2005 and 2006, respectively). We conclude thatHood doesn't apply, and Jani-King cannot deduct the $250,000 payment, because here the taxpayer was more likely than not able to pay for himself.Lohrke But this isn't the only reason the payment is nondeductible. Quite apart from Cavanaugh's ability to pay is that
andLohrke don't stand outside ofHood shadow. For a corporation to be able to deduct the payment of another's obligation, that expense must still be a business expense. And where legal expenses or costs are involved, the origin-of-the-claim doctrine still applies. *348 InGilmore 's , *353Capital Video Corp. v. Commissioner , 311 F.3d 458 (1st Cir. 2002)aff'g T.C. Memo. 2002-40 , a sole shareholder of a porn distributor got messed up with the mob, and started to pay a bimonthly "tribute". . His unsavory associates compounded his problems by bringing the feds down on him: A grand jury eventually indicted him for conspiring to bribe a union official, and defraud the United States, and for transporting obscene materials across state lines using a common carrier.Id. at 461 . Facing big jail time, he pleaded guilty to one count of conspiring to evade income tax.Id. at 461-62 .Id. at 462Capital Video, his corporation, paid all his legal fees and costs, and then tried to deduct these expenses. The First Circuit agreed with this Court and the Commissioner that they weren't deductible. Capital Video's reliance on its own business judgment in paying the expenses was not enough; what was necessary was that the "origin of the expense * * * arose in connection with, or proximately resulted from, Capital Video's business activities" and that Capital Video hadn't shown that its shareholder's tax conspiracy was a necessary part of the mob tribute scheme or of Capital Video's business.
.Id. at 465-66Cavanaugh's portion of the settlement arose from *354 his personal, not his business, activities that fateful Thanksgiving holiday. Jani-King's $250,000 deduction also fails under
.Gilmore *349 This would normally be enough, but the Commissioner does make one more argument that's worth some mention. He correctly points out that we noted in
Hood that there is often lurking, in cases where a corporation pays the expenses of its controlling shareholder, a question of whether that payment is a nondeductible constructive dividend. . Relying onHood , 115 T.C. at 179-82Hood , he argues in his brief that we should find Jani-King's $250,000 payment a constructive dividend, and thus nondeductible.*350 For an S corporation that does have accumulated earnings and profits, a shareholder distribution is more complicated. The amount of a distribution that exceeds the corporation's accumulated adjustment account (AAA) is a dividend—but only to the extent it does not exceed the S corporation's accumulated E&P.
See sec. 1368(c)(2) . The portion of the distribution that doesn't exceed the AAA is taxable only to the extent it is greater than the shareholder's basis in his stock.See sec. 1368(c)(1) .When Jani-King reimbursed Cavanaugh $250,000 in 2005 its reported AAA was nearly $6.4 million. But the Commissioner introduced no evidence of Jani-King's accumulated E&P or Cavanaugh's basis in his Jani-King stock, which leaves us with no grounds to decide if the distribution is a constructive dividend.
*351 The Commissioner bears the burden of proof *356 on this issue. Decision will be entered under
Rule 155 .Footnotes
1. Though Walker's various "security" duties appear to be wholly focused on Cavanaugh, Walker was technically employed by Jani-King. Cavanaugh provides us no evidence regarding Walker's duties for Jani-King, and but the faintest sketch of what Walker did for him personally.↩
2. Over the course of amending her complaint, Linda Robinson detailed her daughter's relationship with Cavanaugh. She alleged that Cavanaugh preyed on young women, including Robinson's older sister, plied them with drugs, controlled their every move, and forced them to participate in diverse debauchery—helped along by his "vice man" Rock Walker and other Jani-King employees.↩
3. Cavanaugh introduced no other evidence regarding Jani-King's fear of being sued by its franchisees for publicity fallout from the Robinson litigation.
4. Jani-King is an S corporation, and so doesn't pay taxes itself.
Sec. 1363(a) . Its taxable income is also generally calculated as if it were an individual, not a regular corporation.Sec. 1363(b) . Thus, Jani-King accounted for its business activities using the taxable year and accounting method of Cavanaugh, its sole shareholder. Cavanaugh is a cash-basis, and thus calendar-year, taxpayer.See sec. 441 ;see also sec. 446(c) . Jani-King spread its deductions over two years because the amounts were paid over two years. (All section references are to the Internal Revenue Code in effect for the year in issue, unless otherwise indicated. All Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure.)5. Much of the caselaw in this area arises, like
Woodward , in fights over whether an expense related to a business activity should be deducted or capitalized.See, e.g., ;Newark Morning Ledger Co. v. United States , 539 F.2d 929 (3d Cir. 1976) (6th Cir. 1975);Brown v. United States , 526 F.2d 135">526 F.2d 135 (5th Cir. 1974);Kimbell v. United States , 490 F.2d 203">490 F.2d 203 (8th Cir. 1970);Helgerson v. United States , 426 F.2d 1293">426 F.2d 1293 (7th Cir. 1970). The question of whether an expense must be capitalized or can be immediately deducted usually involves facts one won't find in analyzing an expense for whether it's business or personal.Anchor Coupling Co. v. United States , 429">427 F.2d 429↩6. This makes sense: Since the underlying suit settled, the facts that could have made Jani-King liable never got established, and no factfinder ever passed on the merits of Robinson's claims. To reach the unestablished merits of a case in our Court punishes those parties who settle rather than litigate, which isn't in anyone's interest. Robinson's claims aren't frivolous on their face: Under Texas law, the crucial issue of whether Cavanaugh, Walker, and Fortner were acting within the scope of their employment is a jury question.
See, e.g., , 724 (Tex. App. 2004). Jani-King could have been found liable underArbelaez v. Just Brakes Corp. , 149 S.W.3d 717">149 S.W.3d 717respondeat superior as Robinson asserted.See (company failed to prove as matter of law that scope-of-employment suit lacked merit and case was remanded for a jury trial).id.↩ at 7187. We withhold judgment on facts similar to those in
, (1984). That case got its start in a fistfight between employees during business hours and on company property. The fight clearly didn't support the company's profit-seeking activities, but the Claims Court noted that the claim "arose directly" from the operation of the company's profit-seeking endeavors, for "[a] necessary aspect of conducting business is the effective human interaction of company personnel. It is, thus, impossible to separate the human incidentsNaporano Iron & Metal Co. v. United States , 6 Cl. Ct. 422">6 Cl. Ct. 422that occur in the course of transacting business from the conduct of the business itself." (emphasis added). If the Jani-King employees had been attending a conference in St. Maarten or if they had given Robinson the drugs that killed her back in Dallas, at Jani King's offices, and during business hours, our analysis might be different.Id.↩ at 4318. We also have no factual basis in the settlement agreement (or any other document) to allocate a portion of the settlement only to Walker's conduct, which is what we would have to do to sustain the deduction because of his actions alone.↩
9. Cavanaugh hasn't argued that he can deduct the expenses personally.
Cf. (raising the issue of one of the S corporation's members personally deducting legal fees held to be unrelated to S corporation's business activities). We deem this issue waived, but also note that Cavanaugh gave us no evidence that his own conduct in St. Maarten furthered a business or profit-making objective of his own. Similarly, neither Cavanaugh nor Jani-King has argued that we need to allocate between deductible and concededly nondeductible portions of the settlement.Peters , T.C. Memo. 1996-186, 1996 WL 182545, at *7 n.6See , 331 (1999) (litigation costs may be apportioned to deductible and nondeductible purposes (citingGuill v. Commissioner , 112 T.C. 325">112 T.C. 325 .Kurkjian v. Commissioner , 65 T.C. 862↩ (1976)))10. Cavanaugh could have argued that the payment should be deductible by Jani-King as salary compensation to him, but he hasn't.
Cf. (arguing the same). We deem this argument waived but could just as easily conclude that Cavanaugh hasn't introduced any evidence supporting it.Peters , T.C. Memo. 1996-186, 1996 WL 182545, at *6See id.↩ 11. Since
predatesUnion Inv. Co. , it lacks the necessary gloss regarding whether such an indemnification is a "business" as opposed to "personal" expense.Gilmore↩ 12.
Hood also introduced the concept of the payment of the expense being a "direct and proximate" primary benefit to the corporation,see , 181 (2000), but in the context of determining whether the payment was a constructive dividend,Hood , 115 T.C. 172">115 T.C. 172see ("The crucial test of the existence of a constructive dividend is whether 'the distribution was primarily for the benefit of the shareholder.'" (quotingid. at 180 , 1214↩ (5th Cir. 1978))).Loftin & Woodard, Inc. v. United States , 577 F.2d 1206">577 F.2d 120613. Under Subchapter C of the Code, the net income of a C corporation is taxed first at the corporate level, and a second time at the individual level when the corporation's shareholders receive distributions of those profits in the form of dividends.↩
14. He raised this issue for the first time in his brief. And it's an issue whose proof would require new evidence—whether a constructive dividend exists requires proof of Jani-King's accumulated earnings and profits and Cavanaugh's basis in his Jani-King stock. This makes it a new "matter", in contrast to a new "theory", which is simply a new argument about existing evidence.
See , 30↩ (2005). The party that raises a new matter has the burden of proving it. The Commissioner still wins on his main point that Jani-King can't deduct the $250,000 that it reimbursed Cavanaugh.Hurst v. Commissioner , 124 T.C. 16">124 T.C. 16
Document Info
Docket Number: Docket No. 30825-09.
Judges: HOLMES
Filed Date: 11/26/2012
Precedential Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 4/17/2021