DocketNumber: Docket No. 1594-74
Judges: Forrester
Filed Date: 5/23/1979
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
Petitioner husband formed a professional corporation which elected subchapter S status. During its first taxable year, encompassing 14 days, the corporation adopted a pension plan and made its initial contribution to the plan from funds borrowed from petitioner. The pension plan deduction produced a net operating loss for the corporation which petitioners deducted on their return.
*378 Respondent has determined a deficiency in petitioners' Federal income tax for the taxable year 1970 in the amount of $ 13,187.43. 1 Concessions having been made, the sole remaining issue for our decision is whether petitioner husband's pension plan contribution made by his wholly owned subchapter *114 S corporation and deducted on its initial short taxable year return, pursuant to
FINDINGS OF FACT
Some of the facts have been stipulated and are so found.
Petitioners are married individuals whose joint Federal income tax return for the year in issue was filed with the District Director, Brooklyn, N.Y. At the time of the filing of this petition, they resided in New Hyde Park, N.Y. The issue herein concerns only Anthony LaMastro, who will hereinafter be referred to as petitioner.
Petitioner graduated from dental school in 1958. He entered the practice of dentistry as a self-employed person on February *115 15, 1959, and worked continually on a full-time basis in such capacity. On November 20, 1970, petitioner organized A. M. LaMastro, D.D.S., P.C. (hereinafter referred to as corporation), a professional service corporation. Its original assets consisted of $ 27,000 cash, accounts receivable, and goodwill. All of the stock of the corporation is now owned and has always been owned by petitioner. The corporation maintains its books and records and filed its first short-year return on the cash basis of accounting.
In addition to petitioner, the corporation had five other employees. The employees' names, annual salaries, ages, years *379 employed, and employee status as of December 3, 1970, are given below:
Annual | Years | Employee | ||
Name | salary | Age | employed | status |
Aida Rodriguez | $ 6,240 | 26 | 4 years | full time |
Karen Witz | 5,876 | 23 | 4 years | full time |
Fern Albala | 5,460 | 23 | 9 months | full time |
Myran Ayari | 1,392 | 33 | 2 years | part time |
Debra Cassini | 624 | 16 | 8 months | part time |
A. M. LaMastro, D.D.S. | 52,000 | 36 | 11 years | full time |
The initial fiscal year of the corporation was a short taxable period of 14 days commencing November 20, 1970, and ending December 3, 1970. The reason for the adoption of the initial short taxable year was to obtain two *116 pension plan contributions by petitioner's corporation prior to the application of the 1969 Tax Reform Act which applied to fiscal years commencing after December 31, 1970. 3
The corporation validly elected to be taxed as a small business corporation and filed a Form 1120-S, U.S. Small Business Corporation Income Tax Return, for the initial short taxable year beginning November 20, 1970, and ending on December 3, 1970. On that return, it deducted $ 24,000 as an expense attributable to a contribution for a money purchase pension plan which the corporation established on December 2, 1970. Gross receipts for this period were $ 5,462.15, and deductions, including pension plan contributions, were $ 31,258.84, resulting in a net operating loss of $ 25,796.69 for the initial short taxable year. In order to pay its expenses, including the $ 24,000 pension *117 contribution for the short taxable period, the corporation borrowed $ 26,000 from petitioner.
Taxable income or loss of the corporation, as reported on its Form 1120-S, is as follows:
Taxable | Taxable |
year ending | income (loss) |
12/3/70 | ($ 25,796.69) |
12/2/71 | (20,206.75) |
11/30/72 | (1,510.00) |
11/29/73 | $ 16,061.24 |
11/28/74 | 26,682.93 |
11/27/75 | 13,732.65 |
Petitioner's net Schedule C profit, direct compensation, and *380 deferred compensation (attributable to deductible pension plan contributions by the corporation) for taxable years 1966 through 1975, are as follows:
Net Schedule C | Direct | Deferred | ||
Year | profit | compensation | compensation | Total |
1 12/31/66 | $ 33,043 | $ 33,043 | ||
12/31/67 | 40,017 | 40,017 | ||
12/31/68 | 34,973 | 34,973 | ||
12/31/69 | 44,690 | 44,690 | ||
1/1/70 -- 11/19/70 | 76,936 | |||
11/20/70 -- 12/3/70 | $ 2,000 | $ 19,973 | 102,909 | |
12/4/70 -- 12/31/70 | 4,000 | |||
2*118 1971 | 53,000 | 19,917 | 72,917 | |
51,000 | 19,973 | 70,973 | ||
51,000 | 19,973 | 70,973 | ||
52,000 | 20,021 | 72,021 | ||
63,000 | 20,469 | 83,469 |
For the period prior to incorporation, petitioner's fees averaged approximately $ 50 per hour. At present, his fees average in the neighborhood of $ 90 per hour. Also, the nature of petitioner's services and the hours of such services performed for the corporation during the first short taxable year ending December 3, 1970, were essentially no different than those services performed in taxable year 1971.
Throughout his career, petitioner has been diligent in continuing his professional education. Every year he has attended the Greater New York Dental Meeting and has taken from 2 to 3 days of courses during such meeting. He has also completed a 4-month course in periodontal surgery at Queens Medical Center and is on the teaching staff at Booth Memorial Hospital.
On their joint Federal income tax return for the year ending December 31, 1970, petitioners claimed a net operating loss deduction of $ 25,796.69 with respect to a net operating loss reported by the corporation for its initial short taxable year ending December 3, 1970.
The statutory notice of deficiency increased petitioner's distributive share of income from the corporation by disallowing the corporation's *119 entire $ 24,000 contribution to the retirement plan trust because "the pension plan failed to meet the *381 requirements of
OPINION
The statutory notice raised the issue of qualification of the plan itself under
If contributions are paid * * * under a plan * * * such contributions * * * shall not be deductible under
There shall be allowed as a deduction all the ordinary and necessary expenses * * *, including -- (1) a reasonable allowance for salaries or other compensation for personal services actually rendered * * *
Thus, allowable deductions under
Our holding on this issue does not alter the fact that respondent bears the burden of proof on the unreasonable compensation issue since he raised it in his amended answer.
Turning to the merits, we note that respondent argues that the case of
We held in
Under
Petitioner argues that he was undercompensated for the years prior to incorporation and should be allowed a deduction for such undercompensated years. At trial, petitioner offered testimonial evidence to establish the amount of his undercompensation. Testifying as an expert in the field of dental economics, petitioner disagreed with our formulation of the value of personal services in
Here, however, it cannot be contended that petitioner was undercompensated when he was self-employed. Petitioner presented evidence that he earned less than other dentists in the area
Petitioner's expert testimony on the question of the value of his personal services focused on the amount of undercompensation that he experienced for the preincorporation years. As a conservative figure, he testified that $ 120,000 represented the amount of undercompensation because of the requisite capital investment that he had made in himself, in the form of education, during that period. Therefore, *124 petitioner urges this Court to adopt a rule that would not only allow the corporation to take into account, in determining the compensation paid to him, services performed prior to incorporation, but also would require the inclusion of some amount, as a human capital investment, in determining the value of his personal services rendered to the corporation.
For a variety of reasons, we decline to adopt such a rule. It is well settled that the individual identities of different taxable entities must be respected.
Petitioner's reliance on
The basis for petitioner's allegation that he was undercompensated, as a self-employed individual, was his testimony of such undercompensation based upon the capital investment in his education for the preincorporation years which he fully expected to recover upon incorporation. Since we adopt the rule of
As petitioner correctly points out in the instant case, unlike
The source of the corporation's pension plan contribution for the initial short taxable year was from a loan made by petitioner to his corporation. It verges on the chimerical to assume that a corporation with gross receipts of $ 5,462.15 for the short taxable year has received services from its sole shareholder-employee worth $ 21,973. Moreover, the parties stipulated that the type *385 and hours of service petitioner performed for the corporation during the short taxable year from November 20, 1970, through December 3, 1970, were no different from those he performed during any comparable *127 period in 1971.
Petitioner contended that respondent failed in his proof because no evidence of a comparative nature, with respect to the compensation paid others, was produced. Since petitioner, testifying as an expert on the question of comparability of his salary to other dentists within a 10-mile radius of petitioner's practice, offered the only evidence on this point, petitioner argues that respondent's failure to offer any evidence, or to successfully challenge such evidence, is fatal to his case. 6
We disagree. Such comparative data was not considered the best evidence in
For all of the above reasons, we have no difficulty in holding that the pension plan contribution made by petitioner's wholly owned subchapter S corporation and deducted on its initial short taxable year return ending December 3, 1970, encompassing 14 days, constituted an unreasonable compensation allowance for services rendered by petitioner to the extent of $ 19,207, thereby limiting petitioner's net operating loss passthrough for said taxable year to $ 6,589.69. See
Because of concessions,
1. This is the stated deficiency in the statutory deficiency notice. The deficiency now sought by respondent is less than this amount because respondent has reduced the amount of the disallowed pension plan contribution deduction by his amended answer and again by the stipulation herein.↩
2. Unless otherwise indicated, all statutory references are to the Internal Revenue Code of 1954.↩
3. The 1969 Tax Reform Act, under Pub. L. 91-172, sec. 531(a), added sec. 1379, "Certain Qualified Pension, Etc., Plans," which imposed certain limitations on qualified pension plan contributions with respect to small business corporations electing subchapter S treatment by generally restricting such contributions to self-employed plan limits.↩
1. Petitioner testified that during the taxable years 12/3/59 through 12/31/65, his average net Schedule C profit was $ 20,000.↩
2. Because the corporation selected a 52-53-week fiscal year with the taxable period ending on the Thursday closest to Nov. 30, these yearend dates will vary.
4. The amended answer was filed on Jan. 16, 1976, almost 2 years before the trial herein.↩
5. See also
6. We accord very little weight to petitioner's expert testimony on this question because it lacked specificity and amounted to broad generalizations, for instance:
A. Well, I know that there were practices in Queens with gross -- grossing $ 100,000.00 -- you know -- as a high -- as a high -- that was considered a high range, and I'm talking about my level of dentistry -- my type of office, and my level of dentistry, because that can vary considerably. * * *↩
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