DocketNumber: Docket Nos. 8761-72, 9292-72
Citation Numbers: 61 T.C. 343, 1973 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 8, 61 T.C. No. 38
Judges: Dawson
Filed Date: 12/10/1973
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/14/2024
*8
Petitioners were shareholders in a subch. S corporation that operated a restaurant in an apartment building owned by a partnership which was owned by the shareholders in exact proportion to their shareholdings. Following heavy losses incurred by the corporation, the partnership loaned $ 234,150 over 2 years to the corporation. Losses in excess of stock basis were incurred in these 2 years. Petitioners deducted the losses to the extent of their basis in loans made by the partnership.
*344 OPINION
In these consolidated cases, submitted pursuant to
Petitioners | Docket No. | Year | Amount |
E. J. Frankel and Z. T. Frankel | 8761-72 | 1969 | $ 4,788.57 |
Seymour Golden and Doris Golden | 9292-72 | 1969 | 2,302.00 |
The only question for decision is whether or not loans made by a partnership to a subchapter S corporation constitute an indebtedness within the meaning*10 of
Chequers Restaurant, Inc. (herein called Chequers), was an electing small business corporation as defined in section 1371 of the Code. It owned and operated a restaurant in The Regency during 1969.
From its incorporation on November 1, 1967, through December 31, 1969, Frankel owned 20 percent of the issued and outstanding common stock of Chequers. The cost of this stock was $ 40,000. The total capitalization of Chequers was $ 200,000.
From its incorporation on November 1, 1967, through December 31, 1969, Golden owned 5 percent of the issued and outstanding common stock of Chequers. The cost of this stock was $ 10,000.
*345 During 1969 Frankel owned a 20-percent capital interest in the Regency Apartments partnership.
During 1969 Golden owned a 5-percent capital interest in the Regency Apartments partnership.
For the fiscal year ended October 31, 1968, Chequers reported an operating loss of $ 171,927.
For the fiscal year ended October 31, 1969, Chequers reported an operating loss of $ 121,049.
On November 1, 1968, the Regency Apartments partnership loaned $ 199,432 to Chequers.
On October 31, 1969, the Regency Apartments*12 partnership loaned $ 34,718 to Chequers.
On his Federal income tax return for the year 1968, Frankel deducted $ 34,385 as his allocable portion of the total losses suffered by Chequers for the fiscal year ended October 31, 1968.
On his Federal income tax return for the year 1968, Golden deducted $ 8,596 as his allocable portion of the total losses suffered by Chequers for the fiscal year ended October 31, 1968.
On his Federal income tax return for the year 1969, Frankel deducted $ 24,210 as his allocable portion of the total losses suffered by Chequers for the fiscal year ended October 31, 1969.
On his Federal income tax return for the year 1969, Golden deducted $ 6,052 as his allocable portion of the total losses suffered by Chequers for the fiscal year ended October 31, 1969.
Both Frankel and Golden claimed losses on their 1969 Federal income tax returns on the ground that the loans made to Chequers by Regency Apartments constituted loans made by the individual partners of that partnership. Respondent disallowed the claimed losses to the extent of $ 18,595 for Frankel and $ 4,648 for Golden. The basis for such disallowance was that the loans made by Regency Apartments to Chequers*13 are not an indebtedness of the corporation to the shareholders.
Frankel Golden Initial investment in subch. S corporation $ 40,000 $ 10,000 Plus: Allocable share of 1968 loan 39,886 9,971 Summation of basis (1968) 79,886 19,971 Less: Allocable share of 1968 loss 34,385 8,596 Adjusted basis 1968 45,501 11,375 Plus: Allocable share of 1968 loan 6,944 1,736 Summation of basis (1969) 52,445 13,111 Less: Allocable share of 1969 loss 24,210 6,052 Adjusted basis 1969 (available under sec. 1374(c)(2)) 28,235 7,059
Respondent contends that the shareholder-members of the partnership may not claim, for the purposes of
The loans were made to the corporation by the partnership. A partnership may not be a shareholder in a subchapter S corporation. Sec. 1371(a)(2);
The benefits of the operating loss passthrough under
*347 Petitioners isolate the language "any indebtedness" and argue that any indebtedness to the shareholder in whatever form or manner incurred should be accounted for when computing the adjusted basis. From this premise they move to the position that the identical ownership interests as between the corporation and the shareholder necessarily require the conclusion that the indebtedness runs directly to the partners as shareholders.
In our opinion this argument overlooks the partnership, a vehicle chosen by petitioners for good and sufficient reasons. By design, there are definite differences between partnerships and subchapter S corporations. The original legislative proposals provide that electing corporations should be taxed exactly as partnerships under subchapter K. This view did not prevail. See S. Rept. No. 1622, 83d Cong., 2d*17 Sess., pp. 118-119, 452-455 (1954); compare
Various situations have arisen that differ from the statutory directive of
Individuals asserting that corporate indebtedness guaranteed by them represents in actuality corporate indebtedness running directly to them have been unsuccessful. See
No form of indirect borrowing, be it guaranty, surety, accommodation, comaking or otherwise, gives rise to indebtedness from the corporation to the shareholders until and unless the shareholders pay part or all of the obligation. Prior to that crucial act, "liability" may exist, but not debt to shareholders. [Citations omitted.]
Only where the guarantor actually performs is corporate indebtedness created within the meaning of
Where a trust is owed a debt by a subchapter S corporation and a shareholder of the corporation has a one-half interest in the trust, *348 the debt runs to the trust and not to the shareholder.
Where the sole beneficiary of an estate was the shareholder of a subchapter S corporation owing a debt to the estate, the shareholder was denied the loss passthrough because the debt did not run directly to her.
To our knowledge no case has yet dealt with the precise situation involved herein, i. e., a partnership whose capital interests are owned by individuals in exact proportion to their stock ownership in a subchapter S corporation. In
The existence of the partnership cannot be ignored here even though the partners were simultaneously shareholders in the subchapter S corporation. If the partners had directly loaned the money to the subchapter S corporation or treated it as an addition to capital, the result would be different. See*21
The distinctions that exist between partnerships, sole proprietorships, and corporations do so from a tax viewpoint by design. To treat the partnership loan as having been made directly by the partners would be to deliberately obfuscate the distinction where no such action is called for. See
Frequently, a guarantor of a loan to a subchapter S corporation agrees to be primarily liable by permitting the lender to proceed directly against him after a default. In such circumstances he has *349 assumed a greater risk than a guarantor who remains secondarily liable. This heightened risk was not sufficient to justify a finding that the loan runs directly from the corporation to the shareholder in
Petitioners argue that
The "concept of indebtedness of the corporation to the shareholders as employed in the statute was intended to be comparable to actual capital investment by the shareholders,"
*350 The situations where the indebtedness has been guaranteed, or runs directly to a trust or an estate, have all resulted in a denial of the loss passthrough to the extent of the debt. We think that a loan made by a partnership to the subchapter S corporation should receive the same treatment. If Congress should deem it appropriate to change
*25 Accordingly, we hold that the indebtedness running from Chequers, the electing small business corporation, to Regency Apartments, the partnership, was not an indebtedness of the corporation to Frankel and Golden, the individual partners. It therefore follows that the amount of the deduction to which Frankel and Golden are entitled is limited to their individual adjusted basis in the stock of the corporation and their individual adjusted basis in any indebtedness of the corporation to them. Respondent's determination is sustained.
1. All statutory references are to the Internal Revenue Code of 1954, as amended, unless otherwise indicated.↩
2. Limitation. -- A shareholder's portion of the net operating loss of an electing small business corporation for any taxable year shall not exceed the sum of -- (A) the adjusted basis * * * of the shareholder's stock in the electing small business corporation, * * *, and (B) the adjusted basis * * * of any indebtedness of the corporation to the shareholder * * *↩
3. The Senate bill with respect to subch. S corporations, which was not enacted, would have allowed a partnership to own stock, counting each partner as a shareholder. S. Rept. No. 1622, 83d Cong., 2d Sess., p. 453 (1954).↩
4. In rejecting petitioners' argument that a partnership should be treated as an aggregate of individuals rather than a separate entity, we find support in the recent Supreme Court decision in
5. See, for example, Pub. L. No. 91-683, 84 Stat. 2067, amending Internal Revenue Code of 1954 sec. 1372(e)(5)(C) in response to
Wheat v. United States , 353 F. Supp. 720 ( 1973 )
Nathan Hauptman, Trustee v. Director of Internal Revenue, ... , 309 F.2d 62 ( 1962 )
William H. Perry and Marian E. Perry v. Commissioner of ... , 392 F.2d 458 ( 1968 )
United States v. Basye , 93 S. Ct. 1080 ( 1973 )