DocketNumber: Docket No. 1143-14
Citation Numbers: 111 T.C.M. 1120, 2016 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 29, 2016 T.C. Memo. 29
Filed Date: 2/24/2016
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 4/18/2021
An appropriate decision will be entered.
BUCH,
On the basis of the evidence presented at trial, we find that we do not need to address burden shifting under*30
Dr. Vandenbosch was 46 years old and married to Mrs. Vandenbosch during 2011, the year in issue.
Dr. Vandenbosch is an anesthesiologist. He is the director of the operating room and the chief of anesthesia services at Palm Bay Hospital. He is also the president of Palm Bay Anesthesia Associates, P.A., which he and three partners formed in the mid-nineties.
Palm Bay Anesthesia Associates adopted a self-directed SEP plan agreement with Edward D. Jones & Co., L.P. (Edward Jones), for Dr. Vandenbosch and the other partners. Through*31 the SEP plan agreement Palm Bay Anesthesia Associates could make deductible contributions to the plan, which contributions would be placed in the partners' self-directed IRAs that were set up through the SEP plan agreement. Edward Jones is the custodian of Dr. Vandenbosch's SEP-IRA.
Dr. Vandenbosch could request that Edward Jones invest the SEP-IRA funds in specific assets, such as mutual funds and stocks. Dr. Vandenbosch believed that he was able to direct the funds in any way and that Edward Jones *32 would facilitate the transaction. Whenever Dr. Vandenbosch wanted to invest the funds, he would contact a representative at Edward Jones and instruct that representative what assets to trade or buy. The representative would then invest in those assets. Before 2011 Dr. Vandenbosch directed Edward Jones' representatives to invest in mutual funds and stocks.
Dr. Vandenbosch met Mr. Carver in the operating room in 1998 when Mr. Carver was working as a licensed radiology technologist. Before becoming a radiology technologist, Mr. Carver spent time working as a stockbroker.
Dr. Vandenbosch and Mr. Carver developed a friendship outside of the hospital. They went golfing and out*32 to dinners. Because Dr. Vandenbosch believed that Mr. Carver was knowledgeable about investments, he often sought Mr. Carver's opinion on the stock market and investment opportunities. Dr. Vandenbosch believed that Mr. Carver was always correct in his investment advice.
In early 2011, while Mr. Carver was discussing his current investment activities, he explained to Dr. Vandenbosch that he was involved in a company named Altenesol, which publicly traded as IAHL. IAHL was formed to develop a *33 liquefied natural gas plant in Colombia. By 2011 IAHL was working with an investment bank to raise capital to begin the project.
At that time Mr. Carver owned an interest in IAHL, and he was IAHL's vice president of marketing and sales. He primarily sought out investors to raise capital for the project. Mr. Carver told Dr. Vandenbosch that IAHL needed capital for its expenses and that any loan would be repaid quickly because IAHL expected to receive funding from a large Colombian company. Dr. Vandenbosch explained that he had $125,000 available in his SEP-IRA that Mr. Carver could use for developing IAHL.
On March 1, 2011, Dr. Vandenbosch and Mr. Carver executed a contract memorializing*33 an agreement to lend money to IAHL. The note was titled "Corporate Loan Agreement/Promissory Note", and it recited that it was between "IAHL or John Carver" as the borrower and "Mark J. Vandenbosch, SEP IRA" as the lender. Under the heading titled "Loan Amount" the parties agreed to "$125,000 (One hundred twenty five thousand dollars and 00/100)". The parties did not specify when or how the funds would be advanced.
The parties provided far more detail for how the loan would be repaid. The parties specified the payment terms, interest rate, date of payment, late payment *34 penalty, and place of payment. They agreed that the borrower was required to pay the lender $125,000 together with a flat $25,000 interest payment on the maturity date, May 31, 2011. If the payment was not made by the maturity date, an additional flat late payment fee of 5% would be imposed after 90 days, regardless of whether the borrower repaid the loan on the 91st day or at any time thereafter. Perhaps most importantly, the parties agreed that the borrower would repay the loan to "Mark J. Vandenbosch" at his personal residence.
On the signature page Dr. Vandenbosch and Mr. Carver signed the note in their personal capacities.*34 Dr. Vandenbosch signed his name above the line that read "Mark J. Vandenbosch" and that denominated him as lender. He did not indicate that he was signing on behalf of his SEP-IRA. Likewise, Mr. Carver signed his name on the line that read "John R. Carver" and that denominated him as borrower. Mr. Carver did not indicate that he was signing on behalf of IAHL.
Although the note stated that IAHL or Mr. Carver was the borrower, Dr. Vandenbosch and Mr. Carver believed that Mr. Carver was the true borrower. Mr. Carver testified that he included IAHL in the borrower's name because he wanted Dr. Vandenbosch to know that the loan was for IAHL's expenses and advancing the project but that he would be responsible for repaying the loan. Likewise, Dr. Vandenbosch was (and still is) looking to Mr. Carver for repayment.
On March 7, 2011, Dr. Vandenbosch took the following steps to fulfill the obligation under the note: 1. Dr. Vandenbosch signed a form titled "Retirement Distribution or Internal Transfer". He requested that Edward Jones distribute $125,000 from his SEP-IRA into his joint account with Mrs. Vandenbosch at Edward Jones. He did not elect to have Federal and State*35 income tax withheld. He checked a box indicating "I am under the age of 59 1/2. (IRS premature distribution TAX APPLIES * * * )". 2. Edward Jones distributed $125,000 from Dr. Vandenbosch's SEP-IRA into the Vandenbosches' joint account at Edward Jones. 3. Dr. Vandenbosch wired $125,000 from the joint account to his personal account at BankFirst. 4. Dr. Vandenbosch wired $125,000 from the BankFirst account to "John R. Carver" at a JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A. (Chase) account.
The loan has not been repaid. IAHL did not accept the offer from the Colombian company for financing. Additionally, Mr. Carver asked for and received extensions of the due date on the loan because IAHL has not yet generated revenue.
Likewise, Dr. Vandenbosch has not sought repayment of the loan. Although the interest amount and late payment fees are flat, Dr. Vandenbosch has *36 not been concerned about repayment because he views his investment as a way for him to get his metaphorical foot in the door.
In addition to lending money to IAHL, Dr. Vandenbosch is now an investor in IAHL. He rolled over funds from his SEP-IRA to an IRA account with E*Trade Financial Corp. (E*Trade) to purchase shares of stock of IAHL. Likewise,*36 he rolled over funds from his E*Trade account into a Roth IRA at E*Trade, which now holds IAHL stock. Additionally, Dr. Vandenbosch and his son own a joint account with right of survivorship at E*Trade, and that account holds IAHL stock.
Mr. Carver believes that he will be able to repay the loan eventually. Currently, IAHL has the contracts to begin building a liquefied natural gas plant. Before construction can begin, IAHL must obtain additional permits. Dr. Vandenbosch is also confident that Mr. Carver will repay the loan.
In January 2012 Dr. Vandenbosch received from Edward Jones a Form 1099-R, Distributions From Pensions, Annuities, Retirement or Profit-Sharing Plans, IRAs, Insurance Contracts, etc., reporting a gross distribution of $125,000. The form bears a code indicating that the withdrawal is an early distribution and that the entire $125,000 is taxable.
*37 The Vandenbosches employed Maizel & Maizel Accountants to prepare and file their joint Form 1040, U.S. Individual Income Tax Return, for 2011. The Vandenbosches have been using the firm for over 20 years. Dr. Vandenbosch explained to his return preparer what had happened with the distribution and provided his return preparer*37 with the note and information about the wire transfers that ended with Mr. Carver's receiving the funds. The Vandenbosches reported that they received $125,000 in pensions and annuities; however, they reported it was a nontaxable rollover. With their return, the Vandenbosches included a copy of a letter from Maizel & Maizel Accountants which stated that the return preparer believed that the funds were directly rolled over from the SEP-IRA to IAHL's account or John R. Carver's account. They also included a copy of the note.
The Commissioner examined the Vandenbosches' 2011 return and issued a notice of deficiency on December 2, 2013, making adjustments to taxable income from the distribution and determining an additional tax under
While residing in Nevada, the Vandenbosches timely petitioned for redetermination of the deficiency. They challenge the Commissioner's determination that the distribution is taxable and that they are liable for the additional tax under
The Vandenbosches argue that they did not receive a distribution from their SEP-IRA because the various*38 transactions beginning with the note and ending with the funds being transferred to Mr. Carver should be viewed as a whole, collapsed, and treated as an investment by the SEP-IRA in IAHL. The Commissioner argues that this was a taxable distribution that was used to finance a loan to Mr. Carver. Further, the Commissioner argues that both of the Vandenbosches' theories fail because the promissory note was not a bona fide investment because Dr. Vandenbosch and Mr. Carver signed in their personal capacities and because the loan was never repaid.
In general, the Commissioner's determinations in a notice of deficiency are presumed correct, and taxpayers bear the burden of proving otherwise.
An IRA is a trust created or organized in the United States for the exclusive benefit of an individual or his or her beneficiaries if the trust meets the requirements of
"It is well settled that a taxpayer who receives amounts under a claim of right or without restrictions as to its disposition must include such amounts in *41 gross income."*41 The Vandenbosches argue that Dr. Vandenbosch did not have a claim of right to the $125,000 withdrawn from the SEP-IRA because he was acting as a conduit or an agent in transmitting the funds to Mr. Carver. This is the factual element common in all claim of right doctrine cases--that is, the receipt of money by a taxpayer with an "imperfect right to retain it."*42 The record before us demonstrates that Dr. Vandenbosch had a claim of right with respect to the $125,000 withdrawn from his SEP-IRA. At all times, Dr. Vandenbosch had unfettered control over the funds. *42 Nevertheless, the Vandenbosches argue that because Dr. Vandenbosch had a prior obligation to provide funds to Mr. Carver, he was acting as a conduit or an agent in arranging the transfer. Indeed, "[t]he underlying principle [in the claim of right doctrine] is that the taxpayer is allowed to exclude from his income money received under an unequivocal contractual, statutory, or regulatory duty to repay it, so that he really is just the custodian of the money."
Dr. Vandenbosch had unfettered control over the funds. Upon distribution, the taxpayer in
Likewise, Dr. Vandenbosch's facts are distinguishable from the facts in
Nonetheless, the Vandenbosches argue that because Dr. Vandenbosch had a prior obligation to provide funds to Mr. Carver, he was acting as a conduit or an agent in arranging the transfer. They rely on
Dr. Vandenbosch had control over the funds upon receipt and is entitled to control those funds upon repayment, as well. Dr. Vandenbosch's free movement of the funds demonstrates that he had complete control over them upon receipt. Moreover, the note requires that the loan be repaid to Dr. Vandenbosch, not to the SEP-IRA. The evidence, both how he used the funds and his personal entitlement to repayment of the funds, is clear that he was not a mere conduit and that he had (and will have) a claim of right over those funds.
A rollover under
Because the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, to which this case would be appealable, has not explicitly adopted the
On the basis of the examination of the record before us and the parties' arguments at*51 trial, we find that we do not need to address burden shifting under
To reflect the foregoing,
1. Unless otherwise indicated, all section references are to the Internal Revenue Code in effect for the year in issue, and all Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure.↩
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Schoof v. Commissioner , 110 T.C. 1 ( 1998 )
neonatology-associates-pa-v-commissioner-of-internal-revenue-tax-court , 299 F.3d 221 ( 2002 )
Rolfs v. Commissioner , 668 F.3d 888 ( 2012 )
Lashells' Estate v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue , 208 F.2d 430 ( 1953 )
Continental Illinois Corporation, Also Known as Continental ... , 998 F.2d 513 ( 1993 )
Sol Diamond and Muriel Diamond v. Commissioner of Internal ... , 492 F.2d 286 ( 1974 )
Welch v. Helvering , 54 S. Ct. 8 ( 1933 )
North American Oil Consolidated v. Burnet , 52 S. Ct. 613 ( 1932 )
ray-h-schulz-and-doris-l-schulz-v-commissioner-of-internal-revenue-john , 294 F.2d 52 ( 1961 )
Illinois Power Company v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue , 792 F.2d 683 ( 1986 )
albert-h-and-doris-g-throndson-v-commissioner-of-internal-revenue , 457 F.2d 1022 ( 1972 )
commissioner-of-internal-revenue-v-carl-l-danielson-and-pauline-s , 378 F.2d 771 ( 1967 )