DocketNumber: Docket Nos. 4267-76, 4268-76
Citation Numbers: 1978 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 21, 71 T.C. 290
Judges: Drennen
Filed Date: 11/27/1978
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
*21
Petitioner Hobart A. Lerner, an ophthalmologist, incorporated his practice into Hobart A. Lerner, M.D., P.C. He paid cash for all the issued stock of the corporation. At the same time, he created a trust for the benefit of his children which was to terminate in 10 years and 1 month, and transferred all of his medical equipment and furnishings to the trust. All of the net income of the trust was to be distributed to his children at least annually. Upon termination of the trust, the corpus and any accumulated income was to revert to Dr. Lerner. Dr. Lerner's attorney was named trustee. The trustee immediately entered into a lease with the corporation that was coextensive with the term of the trust, leasing all the medical equipment and furnishings to the corporation for a reasonable rent.
*290 In these consolidated cases respondent determined deficiencies as follows:
Docket No. | Petitioner | Year | Deficiency |
4267-76 | Hobart A. Lerner, | ||
M.D., P.C. | FYE Sept. 30, 1971 | $ 2,187.12 | |
FYE Sept. 30, 1972 | 2,211.51 | ||
4268-76 | Hobart A. Lerner and | ||
Elinor O. Lerner | 1970 | 8,171.60 | |
1972 | 3,213.68 |
*24 All of the issues raised by the notices of deficiency have been settled by the parties with the following exceptions:
(1) Whether rental payments made by a professional corporation to a "Clifford" trust established pursuant to
(2) Whether the rental payments described above are taxable as ordinary income to the corporate shareholder instead of to the income beneficiaries of the trust.
FINDINGS OF FACT
Most of the facts have been stipulated and are so found. The stipulation of facts, together with the exhibits attached thereto, are incorporated herein by reference.
During the taxable years 1970 through 1972, Hobart A. Lerner (hereinafter referred to as *25 Dr. Lerner) and Elinor O. Lerner resided in Rochester, N. Y. They filed their returns for the taxable years 1970 through 1972 with the North-Atlantic Service Center, Andover, Mass.
Dr. Lerner is a licensed physician specializing in ophthalmology. From 1949 until October 1, 1970, he was self-employed as an ophthalmologist.
Hobart A. Lerner, M.D., P.C. (hereinafter referred to as the corporation), is a professional service corporation incorporated by Dr. Lerner under the laws of the State of New York on September 21, 1970. Dr. Lerner's capital contribution was $ 500 for which he received 100 of the 200 shares authorized to be issued by the corporation. He was the corporation's sole shareholder, director, and president during the taxable years at issue; Elinor O. Lerner was the corporation's secretary. The corporation is a separate taxable entity for Federal income tax purposes.
The corporation filed its returns for the fiscal years ending September 30, 1971 and 1972, with the North-Atlantic Service Center, Andover, Mass.
The corporation was empowered by its certificate of incorporation to purchase or lease any real or personal property reasonably required in the conduct of its professional*26 business.
On October 1, 1970, the corporation commenced business. Dr. Lerner, Elinor O. Lerner, and others, including a licensed optometrist, became its employees. Dr. Lerner is the only physician employed by the corporation. All of the people who were employed by the corporation on October 1, 1970, had been previously employed by Dr. Lerner. The corporation charged *292 fees for the services rendered by its employees and reported them as taxable income on its tax returns.
On October 1, 1970, Dr. Lerner also executed a trust agreement for the benefit of his three minor children. The trust agreement had been drafted by Samuel Atlas, one of Dr. Lerner's attorneys. Atlas, who had known Dr. Lerner socially for many years, also was the trustee. The trust agreement provided in pertinent part:
1. The Grantor has simultaneously and with the execution of this agreement delivered and transferred to the Trustee all of the items of personal property set forth in Exhibit A attached hereto, which shall constitute the trust estate, subject to such items of personal property as in the discretion of the Grantor may from time to time be added to the trust estate, which the Trustee agrees*27 to hold in trust subject to the following terms, conditions, and purposes.
* * * *
3. The Trustee under this declaration of trust shall hold, manage, invest, and reinvest the trust property, shall mortgage, lease, sell or exchange item for item or item for like item of trust property, shall accumulate, take and hold items of property of income producing quality, unlike such items of property delivered by this agreement, and shall collect and receive the income therefrom and after deducting all necessary expenses, incident to the administration of this trust, shall distribute the entire net income to each of the beneficiaries or their designees, annually or more often in the discretion of the Trustee.
4. The trust provided herein shall terminate on November 12, 1980, or upon the earlier date of the death of the beneficiary of such trust. Upon the termination of such trust, or trusts, any accumulated and undistributed income together with the Corpus of the Trust shall be paid and distributed to Hobart A. Lerner, the Grantor, herein, or to his estate if he is not then alive.
5. In the administration of this trust or these trusts, the Trustee, shall have all of such powers as are exercised*28 in a fiduciary capacity, and authorized under the Laws of the State of New York, and such powers shall be exercised primarily in the interest of the beneficiaries as follows:
A. To hold and to continue to hold as an investment, the property received hereunder, and any additional property which may be received, so long as he deems proper, and to invest and reinvest in any securities or property, whether or not income producing, deemed by him to be for the best interest of the trust and the beneficiaries hereunder, and not withstanding that the same may constitute lease hold, royalty interest, patents, and to rent or lease any property of the trust for such time and upon such terms and for such price or prices as in his discretion and judgment may seem just and proper and for the best interest of the trust and the beneficiaries, irrespective of any other provisions or of the termination of any one of the trusts. Also, to sell and convey any of the property of the trust or any interest therein, or to exchange the same for other property, for such price or prices and upon such terms as in his discretion and judgment may be deemed for the best interest of the trust and the beneficiaries*29 hereunder * * * . [Also] to make all repairs and improvements at any time deemed necessary and proper to and upon the property constituting a part of the trust, and to build, construct, and complete *293 any building or buildings upon such property which in his discretion and judgment may be deemed advisable and proper and for the best interests of the trust and the beneficiaries hereunder * * *
* * * *
6. Notwithstanding anything herein contained to the contrary, no powers enumerated herein or accorded to the Trustee generally pursuant to law shall be construed to enable the Grantor, herein or the Trustee, or any other person to purchase, exchange or otherwise deal with or dispose of all or any part of the Corpus or income of the trust for less than an adequate consideration in money or money's worth, or to enable the Grantor to borrow all or any part of the Corpus or income of the trust, directly or indirectly, without adequate interest and or securities. No person other than the Trustee, shall have or exercise the power * * * of the trust, either by directing investments or reinvestments or by vetoing proposed investments or reinvestments, or to reacquire or exchange any*30 property of the trust or trusts by substituting other property of any equivalent value. * * *
* * * *
9. The trusts created herein shall be irrevocable and the Grantor hereby expressly weighs [
Also, on October 1, 1970, Dr. Lerner, as president of the corporation, and Samuel Atlas, as trustee for the trust, executed a lease whereby the property constituting the trust corpus was leased to the corporation for a term of 10 years and 1 month. Pursuant to the lease, the corporation agreed to pay the trustee $ 650 per month as rent. The lease also provided:
From time to time, at the request of the Lessee in writing, the Lessor may at his option add to the equipment herein leased, and upon delivery to the Lessee of any and all additional equipment, the monthly rental herein shall be *294 increased commencing with the first of the month next following the date of delivery by an amount to be agreed upon by the parties herein, which agreement shall be reduced in writing as a memorandum to be appended hereto and made a part hereof.
As the monthly rental payments were received from the corporation, the trustee placed them in a*32 savings account maintained in his name as trustee for the Lerner children. The rental payments and interest on the savings account were the trust's sole source of income.
From time to time during the taxable years at issue, Dr. Lerner requested the trustee to purchase various items of medical equipment and lease them to the corporation. Some of the items were too expensive and the trustee refused to make the purchases. However, on other occasions the trustee did make acquisitions and leased them to the corporation. The funds used to make the purchases were the amounts deposited in the savings account.
The purchases made by the trustee include wall-to-wall carpeting and furniture for the corporation's offices in early 1971. The total expense was $ 2,463.81 and was paid by the trustee in installments of $ 546.96 on March 30, 1971, $ 1,500 on May 20, 1971, and $ 930.95 on June 9, 1971.
On February 1, 1971, the original lease was modified by the parties to increase the monthly rental to $ 750 per month in anticipation of the above purchases.
During the period August 21, 1972, through August 8, 1973, the trust bought additional ophthalmological equipment which was included in the *33 lease to the corporation. This equipment cost a total of $ 2,649.03. *295 The trustee also refused to borrow*34 money to purchase equipment that was too expensive to be acquired from the trust funds. And the trustee refused to acquire certain stock in which Lerner was interested because he, the trustee, did not believe it would be a good investment.
The trustee did maintain insurance policies on the items leased by the corporation. And he paid one repair bill in 1973.
Pursuant to the lease and subsequent agreement, the corporation paid $ 8,600 to the trust during the corporation's fiscal year ending September 30, 1971, and $ 9,000 during its fiscal year ending September 30, 1972. The corporation claimed a deduction on its fiscal year 1971 and 1972 tax returns for these amounts. These deductions were disallowed to the corporation on the ground that the expenditures were not ordinary and necessary business expenses of the corporation.
The corporation also paid $ 650 to the trust as rent during the calendar year 1970. This amount, plus $ 9,000 paid by the corporation to the trust as rent during the calendar year 1972, were determined in the notice of deficiency *35 equipment leased by the corporation is not recognized for purposes of the Federal income tax.
OPINION
The basic facts in this case are relatively simple and undisputed. In 1970, Dr. Lerner, who until that time had been a self-employed ophthalmologist, incorporated his practice into a professional service corporation, Hobart A. Lerner, M.D., P.C., which was formed for the purpose of engaging in the practice of ophthalmology. Dr. Lerner acquired all of the issued stock of the corporation for $ 500 cash; he did not transfer the furnishings and equipment he used in his practice to the corporation. Instead, Dr. Lerner established a trust, with his attorney as trustee, to which he transferred his medical furnishings and equipment. The net income of the trust was to be distributed to his children at least annually. The trust was to terminate in 10 years and approximately 1 month, at which time the corpus and any accumulated*36 income of the trust was to revert to Dr. Lerner. The trustee, in turn, leased the medical furnishings and equipment to the corporation at a fair and reasonable rental for *296 a period coextensive with the life of the trust. The corporation paid the rent to the trustee, who either distributed it to the children or invested some portion thereof in additional medical equipment which was included in the lease for additional and reasonable rental. Dr. Lerner became an employee of the corporation and the corporation charged and received the usual fees for his services and those of certain other employees.
Respondent, in a rather scattergun approach, disallowed the rental as a deduction to the corporation and taxed such rental, which had been paid to the trust, as income to Dr. Lerner, presumably as dividends from the corporation. It is not entirely clear whether respondent determined that the rent was taxable to Dr. Lerner as a dividend received directly from the corporation or as the owner for tax purposes of the trust and taxable on the income thereof. One thing is clear -- respondent recognized the corporation as a separate taxable entity, taxing to it the income from the *37 practice of ophthalmology, but disallowing the rental deductions, thus resulting in the deficiency determined to be due from the corporation.
We turn first to the deductibility of the rent, and we find no valid reason to deny it to the corporation. *38 Respondent makes a half-hearted attempt to support his disallowance of the rental deduction by arguing that the corporation should be ignored and the transaction should be considered the same as a sale and leaseback between a grantor and his family trust, citing several cases in which the property was leased to partnerships in which the grantor or related individuals were partners. See
Respondent also relies on two Fifth Circuit cases,
Respondent does not really argue that the rental payments here involved do not qualify as rent under
The second issue is whether the rental paid by the corporation to the trust is taxable income to the beneficiaries of the trust or to the Lerners. The rationale for taxing the income to the Lerners set forth in the notice of deficiency and in respondent's opening statement assumes that the gift and lease are invalid for Federal income tax purposes.
This is not a typical sale-leaseback situation because the gifted property was leased to the corporation, a separate taxpayer, rather than the grantor. In the notices of deficiency, respondent's approach seems to be that the gift to the trust will not be recognized and that the equipment and furnishings were owned by Dr. Lerner and leased to the corporation. The rent paid by the corporation to the trust was determined to be "taxable income" to the Lerners. On brief respondent argues that --
Since there was no business purpose for the transactions * * * [the creation of the trust, the transfer of property to it, and the lease of the property by the trust to the corporation], the transfers must be disregarded for tax purposes. Therefore, the monthly rental payments are nondeductible and may be included in Dr. *43 Lerner's income. [Respondent's brief, p. 19.]
Respondent allowed the Lerners depreciation on the medical *299 equipment leased to the corporation since Dr. Lerner was determined to be the owner of the equipment.
It is rather difficult to follow respondent's reasoning. Respondent recognizes the corporation as the entity that is taxable on the income from the practice of ophthalmology and claims that Dr. Lerner was the owner of the equipment used therein. But he advances no valid argument why the corporation should be entitled to use the equipment rent free. The rent was reasonable and, as we stated above, was an ordinary and necessary business expense of the corporation, whether it was paid to the trust or to Dr. Lerner. Respondent's reasoning must assume that there was no sale or gift of the medical equipment to anyone and the trust should be ignored. For reasons hereinafter stated, we disagree.
By enacting
In determining the tax consequence of a gift-leaseback, two lines of thought have developed over the years. Respondent argues that the overall business-purpose test developed by the Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit and set forth in
In
*301 In
(1) The grantor must not retain substantially the same control over the property that he had before he made the gift.
(2) The leaseback should normally be in writing and must require payment of a reasonable rental.
(3) The leaseback (as distinguished from the gift) must have a bona fide business purpose.
(4) The grantor must not possess a disqualifying "equity" in the property within the meaning of
In reversing us in
Although we followed the Fifth Circuit approach in
We do not believe that an arrangement that is bona fide and arm's length in all respects but which results in splitting family income must be disregarded for tax purposes for the latter reason alone. The so-called Clifford provisions in the Code recognize that valid trusts can be created which result in splitting the family income and minimizing taxes if the grantor does not retain control of the property for his own benefit. The Fifth Circuit recognized this in its opinion*50 in
*51 We have already concluded for other reasons that the corporation is entitled to deduct the rentals paid. For the sake of completeness, however, we will briefly examine this transaction in the light of the requirements set forth in our
We are readily convinced that requirements 2, 3, and 4 as set out above were met. The lease was in writing and the rent was reasonable. The leaseback had a bona fide business purpose -- the equipment was required to conduct the business. And the grantor did not possess a disqualifying "equity" in the property within the meaning of
Under the terms of the trust, the trustee was given full and sole power to deal with the trust corpus and he was expected to use it in such a way as to produce income for the beneficiaries. The evidence indicates that*52 he had several appraisals made to determine the fair rental for the property. The lease was executed by the trustee and the corporation, and the rental was paid to the trustee when due. Under the terms of the lease it was anticipated that additional equipment would be purchased by the trust and added to the leased property. When this was done, the terms of the lease were reviewed and the rent was increased *303 to cover the additional equipment. The fact that the trustee relied on the advice of Dr. Lerner in purchasing additional equipment has no significance -- he could not be expected to know what additional medical equipment was needed. And the evidence does show that at times the trustee resisted the efforts of Dr. Lerner to buy equipment that was too expensive and to borrow funds from the trust. The fact that the trustee was a friend of Dr. Lerner does not mean that he was not independent -- the trustee was an attorney who knew that his obligations were to the beneficiaries of the trust. And we consider as minor the fact that the trustee insured the trust corpus which the corporation was obligated to keep in good repair.
The fact that causes us some trouble is that*53 the trustee used trust income to purchase additional equipment which would revert to Dr. Lerner on termination of the trust. However, under the terms of the trust, the trustee was expected to utilize the corpus of the trust to produce income and was to distribute
We conclude that even if the corporation be considered to be the alter ego of Dr. Lerner, the rent paid would have been deductible by the lessee.
Because of concessions made by the parties,
1. All section references are to the Internal Revenue Code of 1954, as amended and in effect in the years in issue, unless otherwise specified.↩
2. Although we have not set forth all the trust provisions, both parties agree that the trust is a "Clifford" trust. Respondent does not contend that the trust provisions fail to satisfy secs. 671-678.↩
3. There is some question whether the trust paid the equipment supplier $ 2,649.03 or $ 2,665.96, the amount shown on the supplier's bill introduced in evidence. Since the cost of three pieces of equipment itemized on the bill totaled exactly $ 2,649.03, which is the amount the trustee testified he paid, and the trustee also testified that the corporation and not the trust paid for supplies and minor repairs, we have adopted the $ 2,649.03 figure.↩
4. No deficiency was determined for the year 1971 in the notice of deficiency issued to the Lerners.↩
5.
(a) * * * There shall be allowed as a deduction all the ordinary and necessary expenses paid or incurred during the taxable year in carrying on any trade or business, including --
* * * * (3) rentals or other payments required to be made as a condition to the continued use or possession, for purposes of the trade or business, of property to which the taxpayer has not taken or is not taking title or in which he has no equity.↩
6. Neither party suggests that there might be a distinction between the rent for the property originally transferred to the trust and the rent for the property subsequently acquired by the trust and leased to the corporation, so we will not consider the possibility.↩
7. Generally speaking, secs. 673-677 treat the grantor as owner if he has a reversionary interest that will take effect within 10 years (
8. See also
Johnson v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue , 86 F.2d 710 ( 1936 )
I. L. Van Zandt and Ruth B. Van Zandt v. Commissioner of ... , 341 F.2d 440 ( 1965 )
Jack E. Golsen and Sylvia H. Golsen v. Commissioner of ... , 445 F.2d 985 ( 1971 )
C. James Mathews v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue , 520 F.2d 323 ( 1975 )