DocketNumber: No. 24688-04S
Judges: "Panuthos, Peter J."
Filed Date: 7/10/2006
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 11/20/2020
*5 PURSUANT TO INTERNAL REVENUE CODE SECTION 7463(b), THIS OPINION MAY NOT BE TREATED AS PRECEDENT FOR ANY OTHER CASE.
PANUTHOS, Chief Special Trial Judge: This case was heard pursuant to the provisions of
Respondent determined a $ 3,674 deficiency in petitioner's 2002 Federal income tax. After a concession by respondent, *6 under
Some of the facts have been stipulated, and they are so found. The stipulation of facts and attached exhibits are incorporated herein by this reference. Petitioner resided in Playa Del Rey, California, when his petition was filed. For convenience, we combine our findings and discussion herein.
Burden of Proof
Pursuant to
Issue 1. Whether Petitioner Was a Partner in PTSI
In 1990, petitioner entered into an agreement titled "Limited Partnership Agreement of Physical Therapist Search International, Ltd. Limited Partnership" (the agreement). The other party to the agreement was an Illinois corporation called PT Search International Ltd. (the corporation). The agreement provides that petitioner and the corporation "hereby enter into a limited partnership" for the purpose of placing physical therapists in hospitals and healthcare facilities. The agreement lists petitioner as a limited partner and the corporation as the general partner and tax matters partner.
The agreement provides that petitioner "shall make an Initial Capital Contribution in the amount of $ 100,000 and shall receive a four percent (4%) Participating Percentage" in PTSI. The agreement provides that the corporation shall contribute $ 50,000 and receive the remaining 96-percent participating percentage. "Participating Percentage" is defined as the interest of each partner in the partnership. Petitioner invested $ 100,000 as specified in the agreement. The*8 parties did not address whether the corporation invested $ 50,000 in PTSI, though we have no reason to believe it did not do so.
The agreement provides that petitioner shall receive distributions from PTSI in proportion to his participation percentage. Petitioner also is entitled to a "Preferred Return", which the agreement defines as "an amount equal to 10% annually, cumulative and non-compounded, on each Partner's Adjusted Capital Account". As is relevant here, the term "Adjusted Capital Account" means a partner's contributions to PTSI less any amounts distributed to him. Petitioner reviewed the agreement with his attorney before he signed it.
A partnership "includes a syndicate, group, pool, joint venture, or other unincorporated organization through or by means of which any business, financial operation, or venture is carried on, and which is not * * * a corporation or a trust or estate."
The agreement indicates that petitioner and the corporation intended to form a partnership, and that petitioner's $ 100,000 investment was a contribution of capital in exchange for a partnership interest. Petitioner, however, believes that the agreement created a creditor-debtor relationship and that the $ 100,000 was a loan to PTSI. He argues that the preferred return is similar to a loan repayment schedule because it entitles him to receive a return of principal along with a specified rate of interest. Petitioner contends the 4-percent participation percentage he received was collateral for the purported loan.
Where a taxpayer seeks to vary the form in which a transaction is cast pursuant to an arm's-length bargain, we require strong proof that the form of the transaction does not reflect its substance.
Petitioner challenges the form of the transaction based solely on*10 the allegedly debt like characteristics of the preferred return. In the context of partnership agreements, however, arrangements such as the preferred return are not unusual:
Many partnership agreements provide partners who contribute
capital with some sort of distribution preference. Frequently,
the preference is expressed as an annual percentage return on
invested capital. In this respect, if in no other, a
distribution preference may resemble a form of "interest" on
capital. This superficial resemblance is likely to be
misleading, however. Distribution preferences rarely have either
the economic or the tax attributes of true interest payments to
partners. [Whitmire et al., Structuring & Drafting Partnership
Agreements: Including LLC Agreements, par. 5.03 (3d ed. 2006).]
See also
Petitioner has not provided the strong proof necessary to vary the form in which his transaction with the corporation was cast. See
For its taxable year 2002, PTSI filed a Form 1065, U.S. Return of Partnership Income, reporting income of $ 168,957. PTSI prepared a Schedule K-1, Partner's Share of Income, Credits, Deductions, etc., reporting petitioner's distributive share of this income as $ 8,448. Petitioner did not report that amount on his 2002 Federal income tax return. Respondent determined that the $ 8,448 was includable in petitioner's gross income and issued petitioner a notice of deficiency.
A partnership is generally not subject to income tax. Persons carrying on the business as partners are liable for income tax in their separate or individual capacities.
Petitioner does not dispute the amount of PTSI's income in 2002. *13 Nor does he directly challenge the amount of his distributive share that PTSI reported. Instead, he believes he should not be taxed on the $ 8,448 because the corporation, as general partner of PTSI, allegedly committed various wrongful acts. Petitioner asserts the corporation refused to provide him with PTSI's financial information, refused to make distributions to him, and embezzled partnership funds.
Although we address the merits of petitioner's allegations infra, we do not do so here. That is because even if petitioner's assertions are true, petitioner must report his distributive share of PTSI's income in 2002. See
Issue 3. Whether Petitioner Is Entitled to a Theft Loss Deduction Under
Petitioner argues that any income he earned from PTSI in 2002 was "offset" by moneys owed to him by the partnership. Petitioner believes the preferred return provided for in the agreement entitled him to receive at least $ 10,000 per year from PTSI.
Petitioner bears the burden of proving a deductible loss, and he must establish the extent and amount of the loss.
It is unclear where petitioner resided in 2002. As a result, it is also unclear where petitioner may have*16 sustained his claimed theft loss. The record indicates that petitioner formerly resided in Illinois and currently resides in California. We set forth each State's theft statute.
Section 16-1 of the Illinois Criminal Code, in pertinent part, defines "theft" as follows:
Sec. 16-1. Theft. (a) A person commits theft when he
knowingly:
(1) Obtains or exerts unauthorized control over property of the
owner; or
(2) Obtains by deception control over property of the
owner; * * *
* * * * * * *
and
(A) Intends to deprive the owner permanently of the use or
benefit of the property; or
(B) Knowingly uses, conceals or abandons the property in such
manner as to deprive the owner permanently of such use or
benefit; or
(C) Uses, conceals, or abandons the property knowing such use,
concealment or abandonment probably will deprive the owner
permanently of such use or benefit. [720 Ill. Comp. Ann. 5/16-1
(LexisNexis 2006).]
In Illinois, the crime of theft includes theft by embezzlement. See
Every person who shall feloniously steal, take, carry, lead, or
drive away the personal property of another, or who shall
fraudulently appropriate property which has been entrusted to
him or her, or who shall knowingly and designedly, by any false
or fraudulent representation or pretense, defraud any other
person of money, labor or real or personal property * * * is
guilty of theft. [
2001).]
In California, the crime of theft also includes theft by embezzlement.
A. The Corporation's Alleged Refusal To Communicate With
Petitioner and Its Alleged Disappearance in 1993
Petitioner contends that from the inception of the partnership, the corporation refused to provide him*18 with PTSI's financial information. He also contends that sometime in or about 1993, PTSI and the corporation "disappeared for over 10 years", during which time he was unable to locate either company.
In August 1999, petitioner attempted to contact PTSI by letter. The agreement lists PTSI's principal place of business as an address in Glenview, Illinois (the Glenview address), "or such other place or places as the General Partner may designate." Petitioner sent a certified letter to the Glenview address, but the letter was returned to petitioner and marked "Unable to forward". The record does not describe the content of the letter. Nor does the record indicate whether petitioner made additional attempts to contact PTSI or the corporation before the notice of deficiency was issued in November 2004.
In July 2005, respondent's Appeals officer sent a letter to the corporation as PTSI's tax matters partner asking for information about petitioner and the partnership (the Appeals officer's letter). The Appeals officer's letter was sent to an address in Grayslake, Illinois (the Grayslake address). Paul Stern, who appears to have been an officer and/or director of the corporation, *19 to the Appeals officer in an undated letter (Mr. Stern's letter). Mr. Stern's letter states: (1) PTSI experienced several years of financial difficulty beginning in the mid-1990s; (2) as a result, PTSI was unable to make distributions to petitioner and ultimately ceased operations in 2004; *20 Petitioner testified that he also sent a letter to Mr. Stern at the Grayslake address in 2005 (petitioner's 2005 letter). We are skeptical of petitioner's contentions regarding PTSI's alleged disappearance. First, PTSI remained an active business in the Chicago metropolitan area *21 with the theory that PTSI was attempting to conceal itself from petitioner. Even if PTSI had been trying to conceal itself, it is difficult to believe that petitioner could not have located PTSI had he made reasonable efforts to do so. Second, although petitioner claims he diligently searched for PTSI after 1993, the only evidence of specific attempts to contact PTSI are the letters petitioner sent in 1999 and 2005. Petitioner did not describe what additional efforts, if any, he made to find PTSI, the corporation, or Mr. Stern. Furthermore, while petitioner emphasizes that his 1999 and 2005 letters were returned to him, it appears that both letters were sent to outdated addresses. Petitioner sent his 1999 letter to the Glenview address listed in the agreement. It is not clear when PTSI stopped using this address; however, the 1999 letter was returned and marked "Unable to forward". Had the letter been marked "Refused", it might have supported*22 petitioner's contention that Mr. Stern was unwilling to accept petitioner's correspondence. As it stands, the returned letter suggests only that PTSI had moved before the 1999 letter was sent and was no longer receiving forwarded mail from the Glenview address. With respect to petitioner's 2005 letter, Mr. Stern's letter indicates PTSI stopped using the Grayslake address in April 2004. The record does not explain why the Appeals officer's letter was forwarded to the corporation while petitioner's letter was not; however, this seeming anomaly does not establish that the corporation or Mr. Stern was attempting to avoid contact with petitioner. Finally, as for petitioner's claims that PTSI withheld information, Mr. Stern's letter indicates that PTSI prepared and mailed Forms K-1 to petitioner at the address PTSI had on file for him. Petitioner did not deny that he changed his mailing address, nor did he contend that he provided PTSI with updated information. In sum, while petitioner claims that PTSI "disappeared", petitioner appears to have made little effort to stay in contact with the partnership. B. PTSI's Alleged Failure To Make Partnership Distributions Petitioner*23 contends that PTSI did not make distributions to him at any time. Even if petitioner is correct, the agreement provides that no cash shall be distributed to the partners unless PTSI "has acquired a cash reserve of at least $ 350,000". As discussed supra, the agreement called for petitioner to contribute $ 100,000 and the corporation to contribute $ 50,000, for a total of $ 150,000. There is no indication PTSI accumulated the additional cash necessary to fund the cash reserve and enable the partnership to make distributions. To the contrary, the financial difficulties mentioned in Mr. Stern's letter indicate that PTSI was, in fact, losing money for most of its existence. Petitioner introduced no credible evidence to contradict the statements in Mr. Stern's letter. C. The Corporation's Alleged Embezzlement of Partnership Funds Petitioner contends that the corporation embezzled or "laundered" partnership funds. Petitioner also makes vague allegations of fraud against PTSI, the corporation, Mr. Stern, and other individuals. As evidence of the alleged wrongdoing, petitioner offers PTSI's Form 1065 for the taxable year 2002, including the Form K-1 prepared for the corporation, *24 which indicates the corporation received a distribution of $ 185,793 in 2002. As we understand his argument, petitioner contends that PTSI improperly made distributions to the corporation while refusing to make distributions to petitioner. The agreement provides that "Available Funds shall be distributed to the Partners pro rata in accordance with their Participating Percentages". This language indicates that if one partner receives a distribution, the other partners should also receive pro rata distributions. The parties agree that petitioner did not receive a cash distribution from PTSI in 2002. Thus, petitioner argues, the corporation violated the agreement and embezzled funds. We disagree. More than 10 years elapsed between the formation of the partnership and the distribution to the corporation. There may be a number of reasons why petitioner did not receive a cash distribution in 2002. However, we do not speculate as to those reasons. Petitioner did not introduce the testimony of Paul Stern or anyone else involved with the corporation or PTSI. Nor did he produce other credible evidence establishing that a theft loss occurred. Accordingly, petitioner has not met his burden of*25 proof and, therefore, is not allowed a deduction under Issue 4. Whether Respondent Is Estopped From Asserting a Deficiency Against Petitioner Respondent issued petitioner a notice of deficiency on November 1, 2004. On December 27, 2004, respondent sent petitioner a "closing notice", which states: "we were able to clear up the differences between your records and your payers' records. * * * If you have already received a notice of deficiency, you may disregard it. You won't need to file a petition with the United States Tax Court". Respondent's change in position raises the issue of equitable estoppel against respondent. "Equitable estoppel is a judicial doctrine that 'precludes a party from denying his own acts or representations which induced another to act to his detriment.'" Respondent has not explained why the closing notice was sent to petitioner. Nevertheless, we cannot apply equitable estoppel against respondent because petitioner timely petitioned the Tax Court. Thus, he did not rely to his detriment on the closing notice. Even if petitioner had relied to his detriment, there is no evidence of affirmative misconduct by respondent. Finally, we note that Petitioner*27 also notes that he received a closing notice for his taxable year 2001. Petitioner appears to argue that the favorable result reflected in the closing notice for that year should also apply to his taxable year 2002. We disagree. Each taxable year stands on its own, and the Commissioner may challenge in a succeeding year what was overlooked or condoned in previous years. See, e.g., Respondent's determination is sustained. In reaching our holding, we have considered all arguments made, and, to the extent not mentioned, we conclude that they are moot, irrelevant, or without merit. Reviewed and adopted as the report of the Small Tax Case Division. To reflect the foregoing, Decision will be entered under Rule 155.
1. Respondent concedes that petitioner is not liable for self-employment tax of $ 1,194. The adjustments in respondent's notice of deficiency not addressed in this opinion are computational.↩
2. Secs. 6221 to 6234 were added by the Tax Equity and Fiscal Responsibility Act (TEFRA) of 1982, Pub. L. 97-248, sec. 402(a) 96 Stat. 648, and provide for the determination of partnership items at the partnership, rather than at the individual partner, level. See
3. This figure represents the 10-percent preferred return on petitioner's initial $ 100,000 contribution. In his pretrial memorandum, however, petitioner asserts that his preferred return has increased to $ 20,000 per year. Based on our resolution of the third issue for decision infra, we need not decide whether petitioner's assertion is correct, and we do not address this issue further.↩
4. Mr. Stern signed the agreement on behalf of the corporation.↩
5. Neither Mr. Stern's letter nor the remainder of the record indicates what happened to PTSI's assets after the partnership ceased operations.↩
6. It is not clear why petitioner mailed this letter to the Grayslake address rather than the Oak Creek address listed in Mr. Stern's letter. We assume that petitioner sent his 2005 letter before receiving a copy of Mr. Stern's letter from respondent.↩
7. Both Glenview, Ill. and Grayslake, Ill. are located north of Chicago.↩
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