DocketNumber: Docket Nos. 7492-72, 273-73
Citation Numbers: 63 T.C. 11, 1974 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 37
Judges: Featherston
Filed Date: 10/2/1974
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/14/2024
*37
B-G corporation made entries on its books at the end of each year accruing liabilities for payments under a profit-sharing plan meeting the requirements of secs. 401 and 501,
*11 Respondent has determined that each of the petitioners in these consolidated cases is liable as a transferee for income tax deficiencies due from 2560 Corp. (formerly B-G Equipment Co., Inc.), transferor, for the taxable years ended March 31, 1967, and March 31, 1968. The deficiencies so determined are in the amounts of $ 11,633.60 and $ 6,762.15 for those years, respectively. Petitioners acknowledge*41 that each of them is a transferee of the assets of 2560 Corp. within the meaning of section 6901,
FINDINGS OF FACT
Petitioners Gordon H. Gillis and Eleanor S. Gillis, *42 equipment. B-G filed its income tax returns using the accrual method of accounting and a fiscal year ending March 31.
Both petitioners participated in the operation of B-G's business. Mr. Gillis served as president of the corporation, overseeing the sales and service end of the business, and Mrs. Gillis served as vice president and treasurer, taking responsibility for administrative functions, office management, and financial affairs. Her duties included the maintenance of the corporation's books and records. Only she was authorized to sign checks on behalf of the corporation.
Effective April 1, 1962, B-G established a profit-sharing plan for its employees known as the "B-G Equipment Co., Inc. Employees' Retirement Income Plan" (hereinafter plan or B-G trust). The plan was amended on June 14, 1963, and by letter dated June 24, 1963, B-G was notified by the district director that the plan and trust, as amended, qualified under sections*43 401 and 501, respectively, as of April 1, 1962. Petitioners and an accountant who had assisted them in obtaining a favorable determination letter were designated as the trustees of the plan, but only Mrs. Gillis was active in that capacity. During the taxable years in issue, the plan maintained two savings accounts but did not have a checking account.
At the end of each taxable year, Mrs. Gillis would determine the amount to be contributed to the plan by multiplying the qualified payroll by 15 percent. She would then make journal and ledger entries, debiting the "Retirement Income Plan" expense account and entering a corresponding credit to the "Accrued Expenses" account. These bookkeeping entries were made on B-G's books. No independent set of financial books or records was *13 maintained for the plan itself, except for yearend summaries prepared by Mrs. Gillis.
Within 2 weeks of the close of each taxable year, Mrs. Gillis would send each plan member a written statement reflecting the amounts accrued to his individual plan account for the year just ended, together with a computation of the total amount contained in his account, as reflected on B-G's books. Thereafter, *44 acting principally on the advice of investment consultants, she would make investments in the name of the plan by causing B-G to issue its own check directly to a brokerage firm to purchase selected securities. Once such an investment was made, B-G's books would be adjusted by debiting the "Accrued Expenses" account and crediting the "Cash" account correspondingly.
On March 31, 1967, the last day of B-G's fiscal year, Mrs. Gillis made a journal entry on B-G's books, debiting the "Retirement Income Plan" expense account by $ 27,396.55 and crediting the "Accrual" expense account by the same amount. *45 At the close of its next fiscal year ended March 31, 1968, Mrs. Gillis again made a journal entry to B-G's regular books, debiting the "Retirement Income Plan" expense account and crediting the "Accrual" expense account by $ 36,044.15, an amount representing 15 percent of the qualified payroll for the fiscal period. During the period between December 20, 1967, and March 31, 1968, B-G purchased for the plan securities in the amount of $ 5,694.65 and contributed cash in the amount of $ 18,542.02. Thus, for the taxable year ended March 31, 1968, while B-G accrued on its books and deducted on its income tax return a profit-sharing plan contribution of $ 36,044.15, it in fact contributed cash and securities to the plan in the amount of only $ 24,236.67.
*14 On or about March 31, 1968, B-G sold substantially all its assets to an unrelated third party who agreed to retain B-G's deferred profit-sharing plan for those employees continuing to work for it after the closing date.
On or about August 5, 1968, B-G remitted $ 36,044.15 (plus interest not herein material) to Marine Midland Trust Co. of Rochester, N.Y., which had previously qualified as successor trustee of the B-G plan. This*46 sum represented the entire amount accrued on the books of B-G which had not previously been actually paid under the plan.
The following is a transcript of debits and credits made to the "Retirement Income Plan" account on B-G's books beginning March 31, 1966:
Date | Entry | Debit | Credit | Balance |
Mar. 31, 1966 | Accrual-receivable | $ 22,900.31 | 0 | $ 22,900.31 |
June 13, 1966 | Securities received | 0 | $ 24,998.84 | (2,098.53) |
Aug. 31, 1966 | Securities received | 0 | 5,003.30 | (7,101.83) |
Mar. 31, 1967 | Accrual-receivable | 34,498.38 | 0 | 27,396.55 |
May 17, 1967 | Securities received | 0 | 3,159.88 | 24,236.67 |
Dec. 20, 1967 | Securities received | 0 | 5,694.65 | 18,542.02 |
Mar. 31, 1968 | Accrual-receivable | 36,044.15 | 0 | 54,586.17 |
Mar. 31, 1968 | Cash received | 0 | 649.75 | 53,936.42 |
Mar. 31, 1968 | Cash received | 0 | 17,892.27 | 36,044.15 |
Aug. 5, 1968 | Cash received | 0 | 36,044.15 | 0 |
During the taxable years in issue, B-G's cash account never went below $ 119,393.24, and was as high as $ 458,805.09. The average monthly balance for the period March 31, 1967, through June 30, 1968, was $ 291,699.76.
On June 27, 1972, respondent sent a notice of liability*47 to each petitioner, as a transferee of the assets of B-G, determining a deficiency in B-G's income tax on the ground that deductions taken by B-G for contributions to the profit-sharing plan were excessive for the 2 years in issue since the claimed amounts were not paid in full within the time prescribed by
OPINION
The Code provision on pension, profit-sharing, and stock bonus plans (secs. 401 through 407) is designed "to encourage the setting up of retirement benefits by employers for their employees and in pursuance of this policy permits employers to take as a deduction amounts irrevocably set aside in a pension trust or other fund to provide annuities or retirement benefits for *15 superannuated employees." H. Rept. No. 2333, 77th Cong., 2d Sess. (1942),
In recognition of the fact that deferred-compensation plans are subject to abuse and tax avoidance, the statute places important restrictions on employers' deductions for contributions under such plans. One of those restrictions, found in
The evidence is abundantly clear that the payments here in dispute do not meet the requirements of
Petitioners make a series of resourceful arguments, emphasizing the accrual on the corporation's books of the liabilities to the B-G trust, notification to the employees of the accruals, the availability at all times of sufficient cash to pay the accruals, Mrs. Gillis' dual capacity as both the treasurer of the corporation and the trustee of the B-G trust, and her lack of knowledge that actual payment to the trust was required by the statute to be made within any specified time. Those facts, if they be true, do not show that the disputed amounts were irrevocably set aside in the trust or placed beyond the reach of creditors or the direct control of the corporation. The controlling statutes contain no exceptions allowing deductions in such circumstances.
Petitioners attempt to spell*51 out a theory that, since Mrs. Gillis was both treasurer of B-G and trustee of the B-G trust, she constructively received the payments as trustee within the prescribed time, citing a line of cases arising under section 267. They maintain that such "receipt" qualifies the payments. But Mrs. Gillis' status as a trustee entitled her to none of these payments until she took appropriate action as treasurer of the corporation to make the money available to the B-G trust.
*18 The statutory scheme, it seems clear enough, requires that an accrual basis taxpayer part with something of value to the pension plan trustee. Petitioner did not part with anything during the required time. It only accrued an obligation on its books. And that is not enough.
The same reasoning is applicable here.
*55
1. All section references are to the Internal Revenue Code of 1954, as in effect during the tax years in issue, unless otherwise noted.↩
2. For business purposes, Mrs. Gillis used her maiden name of Eleanor S. Beach.↩
3. The amount actually recorded was $ 26,746.80. The parties acknowledge that a mathematical error in addition was made on B-G's books and that the accrual of $ 26,746.80 was understated and in fact should have been in the amount of $ 27,396.55. The discrepancy is not material and is not in issue in this proceeding.↩
4.
(a) General Rule. -- If contributions are paid by an employer to or under a stock bonus, pension, profit-sharing, or annuity plan, or if compensation is paid or accrued on account of any employee under a plan deferring the receipt of such compensation, such contributions or compensation shall not be deductible under * * * (3) Stock bonus and profit-sharing trusts. -- (A) Limits on deductible contributions. -- In the taxable year when paid, if the contributions are paid into a stock bonus or profit-sharing trust, and if such taxable year ends within or with a taxable year of the trust with respect to which the trust is exempt under
5.
(6) Taxpayers on accrual basis. -- For purposes of paragraphs (1), (2), and (3), a taxpayer on the accrual basis shall be deemed to have made a payment on the last day of the year of accrual if the payment is on account of such taxable year and is made not later than the time prescribed by law for filing the return for such taxable year (including extensions thereof).↩
6.
(a)
7. The cases arising under sec. 267, cited by petitioners, include
8. The cases of
Time Oil Company v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue , 258 F.2d 237 ( 1958 )
F. & D. Rentals, Inc. v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue , 365 F.2d 34 ( 1966 )
Sachs v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue. Slaymaker Lock ... , 208 F.2d 313 ( 1953 )
Wasatch Chemical Company, a Utah Corporation v. ... , 313 F.2d 843 ( 1963 )
Fetzer Refrigerator Co. And Louisville Cooler Mfg. Co. v. ... , 437 F.2d 577 ( 1971 )
Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance v. United States , 53 S. Ct. 337 ( 1933 )