DocketNumber: Docket No. 3914-77
Citation Numbers: 75 T.C. 166, 1980 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 36
Judges: Raum
Filed Date: 10/22/1980
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/14/2024
*36
T received interest-free loans from a family corporation of which he was an officer-stockholder.
*166 OPINION
The Commissioner determined deficiencies in petitioners' income taxes as follows: *167
Year | Deficiency |
1973 | $ 1,575 |
1974 | 3,462 |
1975 | 1,976 |
*37 After concessions, the only issue presented by this fully stipulated case is whether Jack Baker, the husband petitioner, realized taxable income as a consequence of interest-free loans from Sue Brett, Inc., of which he is the president. He, his wife, and their children own all the issued and outstanding common stock of the corporation.
At the time of the filing of their petition herein, petitioners were New York residents.
During the years in issue, Mr. Baker maintained a running loan account with the corporation, and used the money borrowed to make estimated tax payments (Federal, State, and city). The loan account was maintained on the corporation's books as "Loans receivable -- Officers." There were no notes, no specific plan of repayment, and no interest was charged or paid. During 1973, Mr. Baker made monthly repayments in amounts of $ 1,000 to $ 3,000. In 1974, he made one repayment of $ 50,000, and made no repayments during 1975.
In the notice of deficiency, the Commissioner determined that petitioners realized unreported taxable income with respect to the stipulated average balances of the interest-free loans from the corporation (based on specified interest rates), as *38 shown in the following schedule:
Average | |||
loan | Interest | Interest | |
Year | balance | rate | income |
1973 | $ 36,870 | 9 percent | $ 3,318 |
1974 | 95,834 | 8 1/2 percent | 8,146 |
1975 | 52,689 | 7 1/2 percent | 3,952 |
The parties have stipulated that at a minimum, Mr. Baker would have had to pay interest at the above rates if he had borrowed from a lending institution.
At all times relevant, Sue Brett's accumulated earnings and profits were in excess of the amounts determined by the Commissioner to be the equivalent of interest on the interest-free loans. Mr. Baker's annual salary from Sue Brett, Inc., was *168 $ 78,000 in 1973 and 1974, and $ 79,500 in 1975. The parties have agreed that Mr. Baker's compensation from the corporation was not unreasonable and that additional compensation equivalent to the amounts determined by the Commissioner to be additional income to him would not result in unreasonable compensation if paid by the corporation.
On December 31, 1972, petitioners owned federally tax-exempt securities totaling $ 129,000, and during the years 1973, 1974, and 1975, they made investments of $ 45,000 in each year in federally tax-exempt securities. On December*39 31, 1975, they owned a total of $ 245,000 in such securities. The record does not show that there was any correlation in time or otherwise between the investments in the tax-exempt securities and the interest-free loans.
In asking us to sustain the deficiencies, the Government recognizes that its position is adverse to
(1) The Government's frontal attack upon
Our modern income tax laws have been in effect continuously since 1913, and the various applicable statutes, using one form of words or another, have characterized the income subject to tax in broad and sweeping terms. Yet, at the time
The problems gave us much difficulty because there appeared superficially to be but little difference between the interest-free use of corporate funds and the rent-free occupancy of corporate property by a stockholder or officer that had been held to constitute a tax benefit the fair value of which was includable in gross income. Conceptually, it did seem that the same result *42 should be reached in both types of cases. Yet, the fact that the Treasury had not theretofore -- for some 48 years -- attempted to treat as income the benefits attributable to such interest-free loans was highly troublesome. We searched for a distinction that would support the administrative practice which had endured for so long a period. And we found a difference in that if the taxpayer had undertaken to pay interest or rent, he would generally have been entitled to a deduction for the payment of interest but not for rent. Thus, the tax benefit resulting from the exclusion from gross income of any amount attributable to such an interest-free loan would be matched dollar for dollar by the tax benefit attributable to the interest deduction in the case of an interest-bearing loan, assuming of course that the interest were fixed at a fair rate. To be sure, there were peripheral situations in which the distinction would not hold, but in general, the neutralizing effect of the interest deduction did seem to afford a basis for supporting the differing treatment which the Government itself had long accorded to interest-free loans and rent-free use of property. In reaching our conclusion, *43 we recognized that "the question may not be completely free from doubt" (
Notwithstanding the potential importance of
* * * *
the prior practice spanned a period of 60 years -- from 1913 to 1973. There were undoubtedly at least many thousands of instances during this period when the issue could have been raised. We know that there are a great number of corporations that are wholly owned or subject to the control of a dominant stockholder. And we also know from the records in numerous cases that have been before us that the flow of funds -- often on an informal basis -- between *170 such stockholder and his corporation is a very common occurrence. Sometimes, notes are executed; at other times, there are merely book entries; and *44 at still other times, there may be no documentation whatever.
We have since refused to reconsider
In any event,
In order to give effect to petitioners' concession in respect of another issue,
1. An additional ground for regarding the problem as legislative rather than judicial was pointed out in
2.
No deduction shall be allowed for --
* * * * (2) Interest. -- Interest on indebtedness incurred or continued to purchase or carry obligations the interest on which is wholly exempt from the taxes imposed by this subtitle.↩
3. In presenting its principal argument that
"The question, of course, is whether the benefit derived from the interest-free loan is to be treated as having the quality of realized income; but it is not accurate to suggest that the availability of a related deduction is wholly irrelevant in determining whether the benefit involved should be treated as realized income. Thus, the repayment of a loan is ordinarily considered as a return of capital and not as a receipt of income; but if the creditor has previously charged off that loan and taken a bad-debt deduction in a prior year, the subsequent repayment is includable in gross income. Of course, the analogy is not perfect, but it serves to indicate that the quality of a benefit or receipt as income may be affected by considerations extraneous to the inherent nature of the benefit or receipt itself."↩