DocketNumber: Docket No. 5405-67
Citation Numbers: 52 T.C. 281, 1969 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 132
Judges: Tannenwald
Filed Date: 5/15/1969
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
*132
Petitioner Joseph Garrison was the principal stockholder-officer-employee of a corporation and received a purported $ 40,000 bonus for his services. The bonus was authorized and paid after the corporation had determined to liquidate, ceased doing business, and sold its operating assets. On audit of the corporation's return, respondent disallowed $ 15,000 of the bonus as excessive compensation and the corporation conceded the disallowance.
*282 Respondent determined a deficiency in petitioners' income tax for the year 1964 in the amount of $ 4,474.82. The sole issue for our determination is whether $ 15,000 of a bonus paid by Garrison Produce Co. to petitioner Joseph M. Garrison, which was admittedly excessive compensation, is taxable as compensation or as a liquidating distribution. Certain other adjustments on which the parties have reached agreement will be reflected in the Rule 50 computation.
FINDINGS OF FACT
All of the facts are stipulated and are found accordingly.
Petitioners (hereinafter referred to individually as Joseph or Ida) are husband and wife, who had their legal residence in University Heights, Ohio, at the time *134 of filing the petition herein. They filed an initial and an amended joint Federal income tax return for the taxable year 1964 with the district director of internal revenue, Cleveland, Ohio.
Joseph and one Joseph Fisher formed a partnership known as Garrison Produce Co. (hereinafter referred to as Produce) in 1947 to engage in the wholesale egg, produce, paper bag, and packaging business. They formed a corporation of the same name in 1951, which issued 75 shares of stock to each of the former partners in exchange for the net assets of the partnership.
In 1953, Joseph Fisher retired from the business, and thereafter the 150 outstanding Produce shares were held as follows: Joseph, 115 shares; Ida, 30 shares; and Murray B. Garrison (hereinafter Murray), petitioners' son, 5 shares. Joseph continued as president and general manager; Ida became a director and was elected secretary and treasurer but took no active part in the business and received no salary; Murray became a director and vice president and participated in the daily operation of the business.
Throughout its existence, Produce engaged in the candling and processing of eggs and, at the height of its operations, employed 30*135 to 35 persons. Joseph's compensation, which consisted of a fixed salary plus a bonus of 2 percent of annual sales, increased periodically, although prior to 1963 he never received the full bonus. Produce's sales for the year 1963 were $ 1,864,521.23.
On October 26, 1963, Produce adopted a plan to liquidate within 12 months. It ceased business on November 1, 1963, and all of its operating assets were sold in that month. Notice of the plan of liquidation was filed with the Internal Revenue Service on November 20, 1963.
For the year 1963, Joseph received a salary of $ 15,000 and Murray received a salary of $ 11,600. Bonuses were voted for Joseph and Murray in the amounts of $ 40,000 and $ 22,000, respectively, for the year *283 1963 at the annual shareholders meeting on January 27, 1964. These were not paid until March 9, 1964, when Joseph received $ 40,000 and Murray only $ 20,000. The liquidation of Produce was completed on July 31, 1964, when Joseph received $ 36,685 in cash and property, Ida, $ 9,570, and Murray, $ 1,595, for a total of $ 47,850, or $ 319 per share. Petitioners' basis in their 145 shares of Produce stock was $ 28,000.
For Federal income tax purposes, *136 petitioners reported the $ 40,000 payment as compensation received in 1964 and Produce deducted the bonus as accrued compensation for the year 1963.
Upon audit of Produce's 1963 tax return, Produce and respondent agreed that $ 15,000 of the amount received by Joseph and $ 11,600 of the amount received by Murray as bonuses constituted excessive compensation and were accordingly not deductible.
Petitioners thereafter amended their 1964 income tax return and filed a claim for refund, characterizing the $ 15,000 of concededly excessive compensation as a "liquidating dividend," and therefore taxable as capital gain. *137 stockholder-officer-employee of a closely held corporation in liquidation, which the respondent and the corporation subsequently agreed was excessive in part, may be treated as a distribution in liquidation and therefore entitled to capital gains treatment under
Initially, petitioners assert that, by reason of the prior disallowance, respondent is estopped from claiming that the excessive payment did not constitute a liquidating distribution. We find this contention to be without merit. In the instant case, different parties are involved and respondent's determination has not been the subject either of prior litigation or of a binding agreement to which the corporation or petitioners were parties. Under these circumstances, the doctrine of equitable estoppel -- which, in any event, has found scant acceptance in the field of taxation -- is inapplicable.
Various unsuccessful attempts have been made to characterize amounts disallowed as excessive compensation as nontaxable receipts in the hands of the recipients. Thus, such amounts have been refused the status of gifts.
Whether or not a corporate distribution is a dividend or something else, such as a gift, compensation for services, repayment of a loan, interest on a loan, or payment for property purchased, presents a question of fact to be determined in each case. * * * [See
*142 Respondent's regulations recognize the factual foundation for such a determination in the case of distributions by an ongoing corporation.
*143 Produce adopted the plan of liquidation on October 26, 1963, sold its operating assets on November 5, filed the plan of liquidation with the Internal Revenue Service on November 20, voted to pay the amounts in question on January 27, 1964, made payment therefor on March 9, and completed the process of liquidation on July 31. This sequence of events leaves no doubt that Produce embarked upon and continued to conclusion a bona fide process of complete liquidation, during the period relevant to the transaction involved herein, and that any distribution during that period to Joseph, in his capacity as a shareholder, would have been treated as a distribution in liquidation under
We recognize that neither the full bonus payments nor the amounts determined to be excessive bear a clearly discernible relationship to the stockholdings of Joseph and Murray in Produce. Nevertheless, in the context of dealings between the members of a family and their closely held corporation, the non-prorata character of a payment to the shareholders does not, standing alone, preclude characterization of the payment as a dividend.
In the instant case, the recipients of the payments were father and son, the son receiving more than his prorata share. The petitioners herein were the owners of 96 percent of the outstanding stock of Produce and holders of two of the three seats on the board of directors. Under such circumstances, acceptance of the suggestion that the payments lack the characteristics of a distribution in liquidation, because not pro rata with respect to the stock, when the shareholders and directors are all members of an immediate family, *145 would require us to fly in the face of a "pattern of family solidarity" which so often affects the conduct of closely held family corporations. See
To reflect the other items disposed of by agreement*148 between the parties,
1. The issue covered by this claim for refund arises herein as a cross-claim by petitioners against respondent's deficiency, which is based on other items not contested herein. See sec. 6512.↩
2. All references are to the Internal Revenue Code of 1954, as amended.↩
3. There is a further line of cases denying the recipient of excessive compensation a deduction of an equivalent amount in the year of receipt.
4. Indeed, even if the respondent had characterized the disallowance as a dividend, we would not be bound thereby. Cf.
5.
(b) * * *
(1) Any amount paid in the form of compensation, but not in fact as the purchase price of services, is not deductible.
6. Respondent has not argued that for tax purposes a prorata amount might be taxable to Joseph as a liquidating distribution, with a resulting gift to Murray.↩
7. The stipulation of facts simply states that the $ 15,000 "was excessive compensation and therefore not deductible." Petitioners on brief assert that the report of examination of Produce's tax return labeled this amount as a dividend, but that report is not in evidence.↩
8. This is to be contrasted with the situation that existed in
sterno-sales-corporation-v-the-united-states-colgate-palmolive-company , 345 F.2d 552 ( 1965 )
Flanagan v. Helvering , 116 F.2d 937 ( 1940 )
Estate of Carl J. Guenzel, Deceased, Ernest Usher Guenzel ... , 258 F.2d 248 ( 1958 )
Ruth T. Lengsfield, Coralie Mayer Lengsfield and Blanche L. ... , 241 F.2d 508 ( 1957 )
Powers Photo Engraving Co., Inc. v. Commissioner of ... , 197 F.2d 704 ( 1952 )
Smith v. Manning (Two Cases) , 189 F.2d 345 ( 1951 )
Anna I. Woodworth v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue , 218 F.2d 719 ( 1955 )
Smale & Robinson, Inc. v. United States , 123 F. Supp. 457 ( 1954 )
North American Oil Consolidated v. Burnet , 52 S. Ct. 613 ( 1932 )
Kennemer v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue , 96 F.2d 177 ( 1938 )
Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Fleming , 155 F.2d 204 ( 1946 )
Healy v. Commissioner , 73 S. Ct. 671 ( 1953 )
Automobile Club of Mich. v. Commissioner , 77 S. Ct. 707 ( 1957 )
Beatrice Levin v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue , 385 F.2d 521 ( 1967 )
Television Industries, Inc. v. Commissioner of Internal ... , 284 F.2d 322 ( 1960 )