DocketNumber: No. 4802-04
Judges: Kroupa
Filed Date: 10/27/2008
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 11/20/2020
MEMORANDUM FINDINGS OF FACT AND OPINION
KROUPA,
FINDINGS OF FACT
Some of the facts have been stipulated and are so found. The stipulation of facts and the accompanying exhibits are incorporated by this reference. Petitioner is a California corporation with its principal place of business in West Covina, California. Zaid Alhassen (Mr. Alhassen) owned 100 percent of the stock in petitioner, which operated a Dodge dealership.
Mr. Alhassen and *238 his two brothers owned 100 percent of Hassen Holding Co., the parent and owner of Hassen Imports Inc. Hassen Imports, Inc. was a 1-percent general partner of HIP, petitioner's landlord, which owned and leased to petitioner the site of the Dodge dealership (West Covina property).
HIP filed for chapter 11 bankruptcy in April 1998 to prevent foreclosure of the West Covina property. The mortgagor bank expressed its intent to "toss out" petitioner from the property during the bankruptcy proceeding. The leases between petitioner and HIP provide, however, that a foreclosing mortgagor is deemed to have assumed and agreed to carry out the covenants and obligations of the leases. Mr. Alhassen signed these leases as the representative for both petitioner and HIP. Petitioner participated in HIP's bankruptcy reorganization and was able to expand its business to two additional parcels of land that HIP acquired as a result of the reorganization. Petitioner directly paid $ 46,897 of bankruptcy-related fees in 1999 and $ 194,802 in 2000. Petitioner reimbursed HIP for $ 21,192 of bankruptcy-related fees in 1999 and $ 52,833 in 2000. Petitioner claimed these fees as deductions on its returns for the respective *239 years.
In an unrelated transaction, Mr. Alhassen entered into an agreement to purchase (purchase agreement) the assets of Clippinger, an established new car dealership in Covina, California. Mr. Alhassen assigned the purchase rights to petitioner, who consummated the purchase agreement with Clippinger in November 1999. Petitioner acquired Clippinger's inventory of new and used automobiles, automobile parts and accessories, new automobile deposits, fixed assets including shop equipment and machinery, and intangible assets including goodwill and trademark rights. Escrow documents list the Clippinger purchase price as $ 6,206,813.81. The purchase agreement assigned specific dollar values to the assets as follows: $ 250,000 to fixed assets, $ 1 to miscellaneous assets, and $ 3,500,000 to goodwill and other intangible assets.
Clippinger also required petitioner to assume Clippinger's legal fees for structuring a seller-financing arrangement when petitioner was unable to proceed with the transaction on a cash basis. Petitioner paid $ 100,000 in fees to Clippinger's counsel in 1999 for preparing multiple loan documents and lease agreements, and *240 petitioner incurred $ 19,251 of legal fees in 1999 and $ 19,214 in 2000 for its own representation in the Clippinger acquisition. Petitioner claimed all these fees, including those paid to Clippinger's counsel, on its returns for the respective years.
The parties also dispute whether $ 54,558 of miscellaneous legal expenses may be deducted for 1999. Inventory Write-Down Respondent also challenges petitioner's method of writing down inventory. *241 reference to the actual condition, mileage, or equipment options of any of the automobiles. Petitioner's write-down calculations show that the inventory write-down should have been $ 309,172.04 for 1999 and $ 344,207.67 for 2000. Petitioner recorded the inventory write-down adjustment for the years at issue, however, as a trial balance sheet item titled "UV Res for Writedown." Petitioner offset $ 340,181.09 against a reserve for each of the years at issue, rather than using the write-down amounts from its records. Petitioner's ending inventory for 2000 consisted of 96 automobiles, 35 of which had been listed in petitioner's ending inventory for 1999. Petitioner did not adjust the cost of these automobiles at the beginning of 2000 by the write-down taken at the end of 1999, resulting in a $ 79,824.75 overstatement of inventory write-down in 2000. Petitioner timely filed its Federal income tax returns *242 for the years at issue. Respondent examined petitioner's returns and issued a deficiency notice disallowing various deductions and cost of goods sold. The amounts still in dispute include legal fees incurred in the HIP bankruptcy, in the Clippinger acquisition, and for other legal expenses, as well as the cost of goods sold attributable to inventory write-down. OPINION We are asked to decide whether petitioner is entitled to deduct various legal expenses as ordinary and necessary business expenses under Courts apply the origin of the claim test to determine whether expenses are deductible *243 under Against this background, we address whether the legal fees petitioner incurred must be capitalized or are currently deductible. First we address the legal fees petitioner paid to defend HIP in the bankruptcy reorganization. Respondent determined that the bankruptcy-related *244 legal fees were ordinary and necessary expenses of petitioner but nevertheless were not deductible because they were rooted in the defense of title. Petitioner argues that these expenses were paid to stave off its extinction and are therefore deductible. We agree with respondent. Legal expenses incurred to defend claims that would injure or destroy a business are ordinary and necessary expenses. A taxpayer may not deduct the expenses of another as a general rule. See We now turn to the legal fees petitioner incurred to acquire Clippinger. Respondent argues that the $ 119,251 of legal expenses in 1999 and the $ 19,214 of legal expenses in 2000 are capital expenditures because petitioner incurred them while acquiring a capital asset. Petitioner counters that these fees are deductible because they relate *246 to inventory, which turns over every 90 to 150 days and does not provide significant benefit beyond a taxable year. Petitioner further argues that these fees were either directly linked to physical inventory and inventory financing or were related to the Clippinger purchase in which 74 to 90 percent of the purchase price was attributable to inventory. We agree with respondent that the expenses incurred in the Clippinger acquisition are not deductible because they constitute capital expenditures. It is well settled that legal expenses incurred in the acquisition or disposition of a capital asset are capital expenditures. Moreover, we find petitioner's argument that most of the Clippinger purchase price represented automobile inventory conflicts with the evidence in the record. Escrow documents list the Clippinger purchase price at $ 6,206,813.81, and removing the amounts allocated in the purchase agreement to non-inventory items *247 price allocated to inventory insufficient to overcome the information found in the escrow documents and purchase agreement. In addition, petitioner's records contradict its position that inventory turned over every 90 to 150 days as 35 of the 96 automobiles included in the 2000 year-end inventory were also listed in the 1999 year-end inventory. We conclude that the acquisition-related legal fees are not deductible as ordinary and necessary business expenses. Respondent also disallowed $ 54,448 of miscellaneous legal fees for 1999. Petitioner has not provided the Court with any information regarding these miscellaneous legal fees. Accordingly, we find that petitioner is not entitled to deduct these fees. We now turn to petitioner's method of accounting for inventory write-down. Respondent disallowed $ 306,163 of cost of sales expenses related to inventory write-down for the years at issue. Respondent argues that petitioner both failed to substantiate the write-downs and violated the regulations under A taxpayer using the lower of cost or market method of valuing inventory may write-down a decline in the value of merchandise from its cost to a lower market value in the year in which the decline occurs, even though the goods have not been sold. Petitioner's accountant determined market value for writedown purposes as the wholesale Kelly Blue Book value with the assumption that the automobiles were in average condition. *251 Petitioner's accountant testified that it is necessary to know the make, model, and year of the automobile, as well as the automobile's condition, mileage, and equipment options to determine the Kelly Blue Book value. Yet petitioner's write-down records do not include complete information. Petitioner's records lack the make, model, and year of several automobiles and do not include the mileage, condition, or options of any automobiles. Petitioner argues that this method is the industry standard and any differences between the method used and a more detailed analysis would have been immaterial. We are not persuaded given the incomplete write-down records and absence of any corroborating evidence to support the estimated Kelly Blue Book values. In addition, petitioner did not then use its write-down calculations of $ 309,172.04 in 1999 and $ 344,207.67 in 2000 to determine its cost of goods sold. Rather, petitioner violated the regulations when it substituted a reserve amount of $ 340,181.09 as the write-down for both years. See We find that petitioner did not adequately substantiate the inventory write-downs and relied on a reserve in violation of the section 471 regulations. We also find that petitioner failed to prove that the Commissioner's determination was arbitrary and an abuse of discretion. Accordingly, we sustain respondent's determination as to this issue. We next address whether petitioner is liable for the accuracy-related penalties under Petitioner reported income tax of zero for the years at issue and reported negative taxable income of $ 258,427 for taxable year 1999 and zero taxable income for 2000. Respondent has met his burden of production because the adjustments related to the conceded issues alone are sufficient to meet the *253 threshold amounts under While the Commissioner bears the burden of production under Substantial authority for the tax treatment of an item exists only if the weight of the authorities supporting the treatment is substantial in relation to the *254 weight of authorities supporting contrary positions. See The weight of authority consistently favored respondent. We found no merit to petitioner's arguments concerning the deductibility of the attorney's fees. In addition, petitioner's position regarding the inventory write-down explicitly contradicts the relevant income tax regulations. We now address whether petitioner adequately disclosed its position. No accuracy-related penalty may be imposed for a substantial understatement of income tax when the taxpayer adequately discloses the relevant facts affecting the tax treatment of an item and there existed a reasonable basis Petitioner did not provide sufficient facts to supply respondent with actual or constructive knowledge of the tax treatment of the disputed items. See We now address whether petitioner had reasonable cause. The accuracy-related penalty under Petitioner argues that it is not liable for the accuracy-related penalties because it relied upon the advice of its accountant concerning the tax treatment of the disputed items. Reliance on the advice of a competent adviser *257 can be a defense to the accuracy-related penalty. Petitioner has not shown that it supplied its accountant with all the correct and necessary information needed to establish its position, that its error in underreporting was the result of the preparer's mistake, or that it discussed the tax treatment of the legal fee deductions with its accountant before filing the returns. After considering all of the facts and circumstances, we find that petitioner has not established that it had reasonable cause and acted in good faith with respect to the substantial understatements of income tax. Accordingly, we sustain respondent's determination regarding the accuracy-related penalties for the years at issue. In reaching our holdings, we have considered all arguments *258 made, and to the extent not mentioned, we consider them irrelevant, moot, or without merit. To reflect the foregoing and the concessions of the parties,
1. All section references are to the Internal Revenue Code in effect for the years at issue, and all Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure, unless otherwise indicated.↩
2. The parties resolved issues relating to the deductibility of management fees, imputed interest, employee benefits expenses, transit expenses, and prepaid expenses, resulting in an $ 87,225 net increase in taxable income for 1999 and a $ 275,459 increase for 2000. Other issues are computational. In addition, we find no merit to petitioner's racial profiling argument.↩
3. Respondent originally disallowed $ 358,711 in miscellaneous legal fees but conceded that petitioner had substantiated and was entitled to claim $ 304,153.↩
4. The parties stipulated that it is industry custom to use the lower of cost or market method of inventory valuation under which items are valued at the lower of cost or market value. This method usually results in an adjustment to inventory, by means of a write-down of inventory to market value.↩
5. The amount representing non-inventory items includes $ 100,000 for legal fees paid to Clippinger's counsel, $ 250,000 for fixed assets, $ 1 for miscellaneous assets, and $ 3,500,000 for goodwill and intangible assets.↩
6. Petitioner also failed to provide invoices or records for the acquisition-related legal services, indicating that these services related specifically to physical inventory or inventory financing, nor did we find the accountant's testimony credible as to this issue.↩
7. Petitioner also argued that the inventory write-down had no taxable effect. We find this argument to be without merit.↩
8. We acknowledge than an official guide for used automobiles may be used to determine the market value for write-down purposes.
9. Respondent determined in the alternative that petitioner was liable for accuracy-related penalties for negligence or disregard of rules or regulations under
10. See
11. Petitioner presented no evidence concerning the issues of reasonable cause, substantial authority, or disclosure and reasonable basis in relation to its positions for the conceded issues and did not carry its burden as to these issues. See
12. A return position generally has a reasonable basis if it is reasonably based on one or more of the following authorities, among others: The Internal Revenue Code and other statutory provisions; proposed, temporary, and final regulations construing the statutes; court cases; and congressional intent as reflected in committee reports.
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