DocketNumber: Docket Nos. 23243-13, 23720-13.
Citation Numbers: 2016 T.C. Memo. 188, 112 T.C.M. 415, 2016 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 187
Judges: LAUBER
Filed Date: 10/6/2016
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 4/18/2021
Decisions will be entered under
LAUBER,
Some of the facts have been stipulated and*189 are so found. The stipulation of facts and the attached exhibits are incorporated by this reference. Petitioner wife, Mary B. Hatcher, formerly Mary Bell (Mary), was single for taxable year 2008. She married Bradley J. Hatcher (Bradley) in July 2010. They resided in Texas when they filed the respective petitions.
Mary received an undergraduate business degree and an M.B.A. in corporate finance. From 2000 through 2010 she was employed by Blockbuster Corp., initially serving as vice president for investor relations and, from 2007 through 2009, as senior vice president and treasurer. In the latter capacity she was responsible for the company's investor relations, treasury functions, risk management, financial planning, and tax.
Mary's employment with Blockbuster ended in the summer of 2010. There-after she worked as an independent contractor for Blockbuster, consulting on several media-related transactions. Blockbuster reported her nonemployee compensation for 2010 on Form 1099-MISC, Miscellaneous Income. Since 2011 Mary has been a partner in a private equity firm specializing in transactions involving technology and media.
*191 Bradley likewise has an extensive business background, primarily*190 involving origination of real estate loans. As a result of the financial crisis he became unemployed in late 2009; during 2010 health problems limited his physical activity. He did not originate any real estate loans during 2010. However, he anticipated that he might return to this line of business in the future, e.g., when loans that he had brokered previously matured and the borrowers sought to refinance.
During 2004 and 2005 Mary made a series of loans to Brad Carpenter, whom she was then dating. Mr. Carpenter was unemployed at the time but was working on developing a golf-themed comic strip called "In the Rough." Mary advanced money to Mr. Carpenter to fund the development of his comic strip and to pay certain of his personal living expenses.
Mary first advanced $75,000 in March 2004. Mr. Carpenter signed a promissory note for that amount bearing interest of 5% annually. The note was to be repaid "based on mutually agreed company performance, beginning 1 year following distribution or licensing agreement" of his comic strip. Mary did not investigate Mr. Carpenter's ability to repay the loan when making this initial advance or any subsequent advances. She did not ask*191 him to provide bank *192 statements, credit reports, tax returns, or other financial information, nor did she require collateral.
In April 2004 Mary advanced Mr. Carpenter another $50,000, which he used to purchase a Hummer. Over the following year Mary made additional transfers to Mr. Carpenter. Although they stopped dating in August 2005, she continued to advance funds for two more months, with the last transfer occurring on October 21, 2005. In total she advanced Mr. Carpenter $430,500; respondent does not dispute that this constituted a bona fide debt.
On June 1, 2006, Mr. Carpenter signed a promissory note (Carpenter note) evidencing this indebtedness, which superseded the March 2004 note. This note explicitly stated that the purpose of the loan was to fund his personal expenses and the development of his comic strip. It bore interest of 5% and was payable in full on December 31, 2007.
Mr. Carpenter did not pay the Carpenter note at the prescribed time. However, he had obtained employment as the executive producer of a film project, and Mary believed that the resulting income might enable him to repay the note. In February 2008 and April 2010 she and Mr. Carpenter executed amendments*192 to the Carpenter note; the latter amendment required Mr. Carpenter to repay the note in monthly installments of $1,000. Between March and October 2010 he made six *193 payments totaling $7,000; he made no subsequent payments. Petitioners on their 2010 tax return did not report any interest income attributable to the Carpenter note.
During December 2010 Mary and Mr. Carpenter exchanged a series of emails in which she noted his default and demanded payment. Mr. Carpenter ex-pressed hope that he could still repay the Carpenter note, but in a December 17, 2010, email he stated: "I have no money." Mary viewed this statement as indica-ting that he would make no further payments.
In February 2011 Mary sent Mr. Carpenter a formal notice of default and filed suit in an attempt to collect on the Carpenter note. On February 15, 2012, she obtained a judgment against Mr. Carpenter for damages of $573,175 and attorney's fees of $50,000. In an effort to collect on this judgment, she served discovery to investigate Mr. Carpenter's sources of income; she alleged that he was receiving disability income of $7,500 per month and had bank deposits from an unexplained source. During late 2012 Mary was still in*193 negotiations in an effort to collect the debt. As of December 31, 2010, the Carpenter note had not become completely worthless.
Starting in 2004 Mary had used her business contacts to introduce Mr. Carpenter to people who might assist him in getting his comic strip syndicated. She *194 received no fees for these services. Apart from the Carpenter note and amendments thereto, there were no contracts between Mary and Mr. Carpenter. She obtained no ownership interest in the comic strip and had no right to share in any profits it might generate. Her sole opportunity for profit with respect to the comic strip was the repayment of the principal of the Carpenter note with interest.
During 2004-2010 Mary was not engaged in the trade or business of lending money or in any trade or business other than her employment with (or consulting for) Blockbuster. Her decision to lend money to Mr. Carpenter was motivated chiefly by their personal relationship. She would not have lent money to another individual or business on similar terms, and she did not lend money to anyone else during 2004-2010. She was not involved in the development of any media property, apart from Mr. Carpenter's comic strip, during*194 this period.
On October 21, 2010, Mary contributed the Carpenter note to MBH Partners, LLC (MBH), a limited liability company that she had formed the previous day. MBH had its business address at her home, and she was its sole member. Mary formed MBH as an entity through which she allegedly intended to conduct future advisory and consulting work. During 2010 MBH had no customers or clients, and it engaged in no lending activities or other trade or business. Mary's *195 principal purpose for contributing the Carpenter note to MBH was to enhance the appearance that the note was business-related.
Before his marriage to Mary in July 2010, Bradley resided in a house on Anita Street in Dallas, Texas (Anita property). Petitioners owned this house after the marriage; it was unoccupied during the first half of 2010 and occupied by a tenant during the second half. On Schedule E, Supplemental Income and Loss, petitioners reported for 2010 a loss of $21,625 attributable to the Anita property.
Petitioners produced no contemporaneous (or other) documentation concerning the amount of time they devoted to the Anita property. Bradley testified that, during the first half of 2010, he performed*195 routine maintenance and made light repairs to prepare the property for rental. He estimated that these chores consumed 10 to 15 hours per week. During the second half of the year, he estimated that he devoted 10 hours per month to the Anita property. Petitioners submitted no evidence on this issue apart from Bradley's testimony.
Mary timely filed her 2008 individual return reporting adjusted gross in-come (AGI) of $491,576 and tax due of $121,875. In February 2011 she filed an amended return for 2008 on which she claimed a $3,000 long-term capital loss *196 carryforward not reflected on her original return. The IRS abated tax of $1,379 attributable to this amended return and issued her a refund.
Mary prepared petitioners' 2010 joint return on which they reported negative AGI of $257,816. Petitioners included two Schedules C with this return. The first Schedule C, for a business described as "Financial and Real Estate Consulting," reported Mary's compensation from Blockbuster for her consulting services. The second Schedule C, for MBH, reported no revenues or income but claimed a bad debt loss deduction of $600,847 attributable to the alleged worthlessness*196 of the Carpenter note. This claimed loss deduction represented unpaid principal of $430,500 plus accrued interest of $170,347. Petitioners had not previously re-ported any of this interest as taxable interest on a Federal income tax return. On Schedule D, Capital Gains and Losses, petitioners reported for 2010 a net long-term capital loss of $433,985 from the sale of Blockbuster stock, coupled with a capital loss carryforward.
Petitioners' 2010 return created a net operating loss (NOL) that they allocated in full to Mary, and she then carried this claimed NOL back to her 2008 taxable year. In March 2011 she submitted Form 1045, Application for Tentative Refund, seeking a refund of $105,353 for 2008 on this ground. The IRS processed the Form 1045 and issued Mary the refund she requested. *197 The IRS selected petitioners' 2010 return and Mary's 2008 return for examination. It disallowed for 2010 the business bad debt deduction attributable to the Carpenter note and (as a corollary of that determination) disallowed the claimed NOL carryback to 2008. The IRS also disallowed the claimed Schedule E loss deduction, determining that petitioners were ineligible to deduct rental real estate losses*197 under
The Commissioner's determinations in a notice of deficiency are generally presumed correct, and the taxpayer bears the burden of proving those determinations erroneous.
Although petitioners assert*199 that the Carpenter loan was a business debt, they have not identified any trade or business with which it could be associated. Mary was not engaged in the trade or business of lending money when she advanced funds to Mr. Carpenter. When one individual lends money to another, "[t]he right to deduct bad debts as business losses is applicable only to the exceptional situations in which the taxpayer's activities in making loans * * * [are] so extensive and continuous as to elevate that activity to the status of a separate business."
*200 Nothing in the record indicates that Mary was ever in the business of lending money. She was employed full time by Blockbuster during 2004-2005, and she never lent money to anyone but Mr. Carpenter, whom she was dating at the time.
Nor was any loss on the Carpenter note "incurred in the taxpayer's trade or business," namely, Mary's occupation of serving as a Blockbuster employee.
*201 Finally, petitioners presented no evidence that Mary was engaged during 2004-2010 in any media-related business apart from that of being a Blockbuster executive or consultant. Citing her familiarity with licensing entertainment pro-ducts, petitioners urge that she engaged during 2004-2010 in the business of "developing media content," of which Mr. Carpenter's comic strip was supposedly an example. But she exercised these skills solely in her capacity as a Blockbuster*201 executive; there is no evidence that she offered (or would have been permitted by her employer to offer) these services to others. She cited no example of any content-development activity, apart from "In the Rough," with which she was involved during 2004-2010. And even there her role was limited to that of an investor: She financed Mr. Carpenter's activity rather than directly participating in it.
Assuming arguendo that Mary was engaged in some trade or business apart from her employment, the circumstances surrounding the Carpenter note indicate that it lacked a proximate relationship to such business. A loss is deductible as a business bad debt only if the taxpayer is in a business and the debt in question is proximately related to that business.
In
Several factors pointing to the nonbusiness character of the debt in
In an apparent effort to portray a personal bad debt as a business*203 bad debt, Mary contributed the Carpenter note to MBH in October 2010, shortly before declaring the note worthless. The Carpenter note clearly was not "acquired * * * in connection with" any trade or business carried on by MBH.
In sum, we find that the Carpenter note was not "created or acquired * * * in connection with" any trade or business conducted by Mary or MBH and that it was not "a debt the loss from the worthlessness of which * * * [was] incurred" in any trade or business conducted by Mary or MBH. Sec.
On the record before us, we conclude that the Carpenter note was not wholly worthless as of December 31, 2010. As an identifiable event establishing the note's worthlessness, petitioners point to the December 2010 email in which Mr. Carpenter stated: "I have no money." But petitioners' subsequent actions show that they had not abandoned reasonable hope of recovery.
In February 2011 petitioners commenced litigation against Mr. Carpenter to enforce repayment of the Carpenter note, and they secured a $573,175 judgment the next year. During 2012 they served post-judgment discovery on Mr. Carpenter in an effort to collect on this judgment, alleging that he had substantial monthly income and unexplained bank deposits. They continued negotiations with Mr. Carpenter through late 2012 in an effort to recover at least some portion of the debt. Given petitioners' extensive business and finance backgrounds, it is implausible that they*206 would have kept throwing good money after bad if they genuinely believed the Carpenter note had become wholly worthless two years previously.
Petitioners for 2010 incurred a rental real estate loss of $21,625 on the Anita property.
*207 Assuming arguendo that no deduction is available under
To qualify as a real estate professional, a taxpayer must (among other things) "perform[] more than 750 hours of services during the taxable year in real property trades or businesses in which * * * [he] materially participates."
Although Bradley actively participated in managing the Anita property and had previously originated real estate loans, we find that for 2010 he did not qualify as a real estate professional. He did not originate any real estate loans during 2010, and petitioners maintained no documentation of the time they devoted to the Anita property. Bradley credibly testified that he devoted 10 to 15 hours per week to the property during the first half of 2010 and 10 hours per month during the second half. This testimony indicates that he performed at most 450 hours of services in real property businesses during 2010. Because this is short of the 750 hours required, Bradley was not a real estate professional during 2010 and petitioners were not eligible to deduct their $21,624 rental real estate loss.*209
The Code imposes a 20% penalty upon the portion of any underpayment of income tax that is attributable (among other things) to "negligence" or any "substantial understatement of income tax."
In the case of an NOL carryback, the penalty for negligence applies to any portion of an underpayment for the carryback year that is attributable to negligence*210 in the year in which the NOL arose (loss year).
*210 Under
Mary was a sophisticated financial professional with an M.B.A. in corporate finance. She prepared her individual return for 2008 and petitioners' joint return for 2010. She testified that she relied principally on IRS Publication 535, Business Expenses, to determine that the Carpenter note was a business bad debt that had become worthless during 2010. Publication 535 notes that "a business bad debt is one that comes from operating your trade or business." It cautions taxpayers about the disparate*212 treatment of business and nonbusiness bad debts, directing them to Publication 550, Investment Income and Expenses, for instructions regarding the latter.
While testifying that she hoped to profit by lending to Mr. Carpenter, Mary did not explain why she believed that the Carpenter note was a business debt. Her act of contributing that note to MBH in October 2010 suggests that she actually held the opposite belief. MBH was a newly created entity that Mary formed as a vehicle for rendering future consulting services. She offered no plausible business reason for contributing to MBH, as its only asset, a former boyfriend's promissory note that she believed to be worthless. The Court infers that her actual reason for *212 making this contribution was to put the Carpenter note into a "business" to enhance the appearance that it was business related.
In any event, petitioners' overall conduct does not show that they made a good-faith effort to determine their correct tax liability with respect to the Carpenter note. The bad debt loss deduction they claimed included $170,347 of accrued interest. Publication 535, upon which Mary said she relied, explicitly informs taxpayers that they can claim a*213 business bad debt deduction for interest "only if the amount owed to you was previously included in gross income." Mary prepared all relevant tax returns, and she knew or should have known that no interest from the Carpenter note was ever included in her gross income.
Publication 535 also makes clear that a debt becomes worthless only when there is no longer any chance it will be repaid. Petitioners were actively pursuing collection remedies against Mr. Carpenter after December 31, 2010, including litigation that yielded them a $573,175 judgment in 2012. They were still pursuing collection from Mr. Carpenter in late 2012 in an effort to secure at least partial repayment of the Carpenter note. These facts show that petitioners did not regard the note as totally worthless at the close of the 2010 tax year.
We find that petitioners did not act with reasonable cause and good faith in claiming a business bad debt loss deduction for the Carpenter note on their 2010 *213 joint return and that they are liable for the accuracy-related penalty with respect to the portion of the underpayment attributable to disallowance of that deduction. We conclude that petitioners are also liable for the accuracy-related*214 penalty on the portion of the 2010 underpayment attributable to Bradley's unreported income of $3,600 and petitioners' unsubstantiated Schedule C deductions of $68,558.
For 2010 we reach the opposite conclusion with respect to the Schedule E loss of $21,625 and the additional self-employment tax.
To reflect the foregoing and the concessions of the parties,
Decisions will be entered under
1. All statutory references are to the Internal Revenue Code (Code) in effect for the years in issue, and all Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure. We round all monetary amounts to the nearest dollar.↩
2. For 2008 respondent concedes that petitioner wife is entitled to a deduction of $1,379 for a capital loss carryforward (and to a corresponding reduction to any penalty determined for 2008). For 2010 respondent concedes that petitioners are entitled to a deduction of $4,324 for health insurance premiums. For 2010 petitioners concede: (1) that petitioner husband failed to report $3,600 of nonemployee compensation; (2) that petitioners are not entitled to deductions in the aggregate amount of $68,558 as claimed on two Schedules C, Profit or Loss From Business; and (3) that petitioners are liable for additional self-employment tax, in the amount calculated by respondent, in the event we determine (as we do) that they are not entitled to the claimed business bad debt deduction. All other adjustments (apart from those discussed in the text) are computational. For 2008 respondent concedes that petitioner wife is entitled to a deduction↩
3. If the Carpenter note had become worthless during 2010, petitioners' capital loss would be limited to the unpaid principal, or $430,500. A bad debt deduction on account of accrued interest ($170,347 in this case) would be allowed only if that interest had previously been "returned as income."
4. Petitioners contend that Bradley was a real estate professional because he had extensive experience originating real estate loans before 2010. For purposes of deducting passive losses, however, the Code defines a real estate professional, not by reference to his skill set or experience, but by reference (among other things) to his "hours of services during the taxable year in real property trades or businesses."
5. The disallowance of the Schedule E loss deduction and the additional self-employment tax are not "tainted items" for purposes of calculating the substantial understatement penalty. The "tainted items" rule applies only to substantial understatements of income tax that are attributable to NOL carrybacks.
Commissioner v. Groetzinger , 107 S. Ct. 980 ( 1987 )
Fox v. Commissioner , 50 T.C. 813 ( 1968 )
Whipple v. Commissioner , 83 S. Ct. 1168 ( 1963 )
Indopco, Inc. v. Commissioner , 112 S. Ct. 1039 ( 1992 )
Crown v. Commissioner , 77 T.C. 582 ( 1981 )
Putoma Corp. v. Commissioner , 66 T.C. 652 ( 1976 )
Moss v. Commissioner , 135 T.C. 365 ( 2010 )
Melvyn L. Bell v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue , 200 F.3d 545 ( 2000 )
Putoma Corp., Successor by Merger of Pro-Mac Company, ... , 601 F.2d 734 ( 1979 )
Lucas v. American Code Co. , 50 S. Ct. 202 ( 1930 )
Welch v. Helvering , 54 S. Ct. 8 ( 1933 )
Dagres v. Commissioner , 136 T.C. 263 ( 2011 )