DocketNumber: Docket No. 4789-79
Judges: Wiles
Filed Date: 2/18/1981
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
1981 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 172">*172
Petitioner purchased stock from her father in exchange for her promise to pay her father and his wife an annuity of $ 15,000 per year for as long as either of them lived. In exchange for the annuity, the father made an absolute assignment of the stock to petitioner. Although petitioner's obligation to make the promised annuity payments was not contingent upon sufficient dividend income from the purchased stock, she did not have sufficient income and assets to make the payments without those dividends.
76 T.C. 232">*232 Respondent determined a $ 2,520 deficiency in petitioner's 1974 income tax. The sole issue for decision is whether petitioner, the obligor under a private annuity agreement, is entitled to an interest expense deduction for 1974 under
All the facts have been stipulated and are found accordingly.
76 T.C. 232">*233 Petitioner Rebecca Bell resided in Jekyll Island Marina, Ga., when she filed her 1974 income tax return and when she filed her petition in this case.
Prior to December 4, 1972, petitioner's father, Charles R. Bell (hereinafter Mr. Bell), was the sole owner of 2,820 shares of the common stock of the Nodaway Valley Bank, Maryville, Mo. (hereinafter Nodaway), which represented 23.5 percent of Nodaway's outstanding common stock. Other members of Mr. Bell's family, including his wife, Lela Hackney Bell (hereinafter Mrs. Bell), petitioner, and petitioner's sister, owned 1,260 shares of Nodaway. Together, Mr. Bell and his family owned 34 percent of Nodaway's outstanding stock.
Sometime prior to December 4, 1972, petitioner entered into negotiations with Mr. Bell for the purchase of 1,400 shares of his Nodaway stock. Pursuant to these negotiations, certain projections were developed which reflected both the financial and tax aspects of purchasing the stock by means of a private annuity arrangement which would pay Mr. Bell and Mrs. Bell $ 15,000 per year so long as either of them lived. On the basis1981 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 172">*175 of an age of 60 for Mr. Bell and an age of 62 for Mrs. Bell, the projections determined, pursuant to Table LT6, Actuarial Values II, IRS Publication 723A (1970) (hereinafter Table LT6), that the present value of the annuity would be $ 174,270. Furthermore, the application of
On December 4, 1972, petitioner and Mr. Bell entered into an agreement (hereinafter the agreement) whereby Mr. Bell sold to petitioner 1,400 shares of Nodaway stock, with an agreed fair market value of $ 173,600, in exchange for petitioner's promise to pay Mr. Bell and Mrs. Bell $ 15,000 per year for the remainder of their joint lives and the life of the survivor of them. The material provisions of the agreement provided as follows:
This is an Agreement entered into this 4th day of December, 1972, by and between REBECCA BELL, an individual, residing in New York, New York, (hereinafter referred to as "Transferee"), and CHARLES R. BELL, an individual, residing in Maryville, 1981 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 172">*176 Missouri, (hereinafter referred to as "Transferor").
76 T.C. 232">*234 Witnesseth:
Whereas, Transferor is the owner of One Thousand Four Hundred (1,400) shares of stock in NODAWAY VALLEY BANK; and
Whereas, Transferor desires to assure a fixed annual income for the remainder of his life and the remainder of the life of Transferor's wife, LELA HACKNEY BELL, regardless of whether or not the said stock earns any dividends; and
Whereas, Transferee desires to own said stock and is willing to make fixed annual payments to Transferor and his wife in exchange therefor, for the remainder of Transferor's life and the remainder of the life of Transferor's wife, LELA HACKNEY BELL; and
Whereas, Transferor and Transferee have mutually agreed that the One Thousand Four Hundred (1,400) shares of stock presently owned by Transferor have a fair market value of One Hundred Twenty-Four Dollars ($ 124.00) per share;
Now Therefore, in consideration of the mutual covenants contained herein, the parties agree as follows:
(1) Transferor hereby sells, transfers, and assigns absolutely to Transferee One Thousand Four Hundred (1,400) shares of common stock in NODAWAY VALLEY BANK.
(2) In consideration of Transferor's 1981 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 172">*177 sale, transfer and absolute assignment of said One Thousand Four Hundred (1,400) shares of stock as provided in paragraph (1) above, Transferee hereby agrees to pay to Transferor and Transferor's said wife an annuity of Fifteen Thousand Dollars ($ 15,000.00) per annum during their joint lives and the life of the survivor of them. The first such annual payment shall be due on the first anniversary of this Agreement, beginning in the year 1973, and subsequent annual payments shall be made in each year on the anniversary date of this Agreement.
(3) Parties hereby expressly agree that Transferee's obligation under the preceding paragraph shall terminate upon the death of the survivor of Transferor and Transferor's said wife, and no heir, legatee, creditor or beneficiary of either the estate of Transferor or Transferor's said wife, nor the estate of either, shall have any rights whatsoever under this Agreement; provided, however, that if the survivor of Transferor and Transferor's said wife shall die prior to the receipt of any amount owed to the survivor of Transferor and Transferor's said wife under this Agreement for any year, then the amount otherwise payable to Transferor or Transferor's1981 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 172">*178 said wife for that year shall be paid to such beneficiary as is designated by the survivor of Transferor and Transferor's said wife, in writing. In the absence of such designation, such payment shall be made to the estate of the survivor of Transferor and Transferor's said wife.
(4) Transferee shall be absolutely liable for payments due under paragraph (2) of this Agreement and such payments are in no way contingent upon Transferee's future earnings on NODAWAY VALLEY BANK stock.
(5) It is expressly understood that Transferor retains no security interest, mortgage, lien or pledge with respect to the shares of stock transferred under this Agreement.
(6) Transferor hereby warrants that he has good title to the stock 76 T.C. 232">*235 transferred hereunder, and that said stock is free and clear of all liens, pledges and incumbrances of any kind whatsoever.
On the date of the agreement, Mr. Bell was 60 years of age and Mrs. Bell was 62 years of age. They had a joint life expectancy of 24.6 years, and based upon such life expectancy, the expected return from the annuity was $ 369,000. The present value of the annuity received by Mr. Bell was $ 174,270.
The agreement represents the entire understanding1981 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 172">*179 between petitioner and Mr. Bell regarding the transaction therein undertaken. Petitioner has not executed any note to Mr. Bell in connection with the agreement, and Mr. Bell has not loaned petitioner any money to make the payments required under the agreement. At the time petitioner and Mr. Bell executed the agreement, petitioner intended to claim an interest expense deduction for a portion of each payment made thereunder. Petitioner is not in the business of writing annuity contracts for profit and is not an obligor under any other annuity agreement.
From 1973 through 1976, petitioner received dividends on the Nodaway stock transferred to her by Mr. Bell in excess of the payments she was required to make under the agreement. Aside from the Nodaway stock and the dividends she receives on the Nodaway stock, petitioner does not have sufficient financial assets or annual income to make the payments required under the agreement.
In addition to the agreement with petitioner, Mr. Bell also entered into an agreement with petitioner's sister whereby he transferred 1,400 shares of Nodaway common stock to her in exchange for her promise to pay him and his wife $ 15,000 per year during their1981 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 172">*180 joint lives. Mr. Bell agreed to sell the 2,800 shares of Nodaway common stock to petitioner and her sister in exchange for annuities for two reasons. First, the annual payments of $ 30,000 which Mr. Bell would receive from petitioner and her sister were sufficient in combination with his other income to satisfy his own and his wife's anticipated living expenses. Second, Mr. Bell wanted petitioner to own the Nodaway stock, but petitioner was unable to purchase the stock with a lump-sum payment.
During 1974, petitioner paid Mr. Bell $ 15,000 pursuant to the agreement. On her 1974 income tax return, petitioner claimed an interest expense deduction of $ 7,915.45, computed on the basis of the amount of the payment that would be treated as ordinary 76 T.C. 232">*236 income to Mr. Bell. In the notice of deficiency, respondent disallowed the claimed interest expense deduction.
OPINION
We must decide whether petitioner is entitled to an interest expense deduction for 1974 under
Petitioner claims that the negotiations and the subsequent agreement contemplated and accomplished the purchase of the Nodaway stock at1981 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 172">*181 its current fair market value in exchange for an annuity of an equal value, 1981 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 172">*182 determined by discounting the expected return from the annuity at an interest rate of 6 percent pursuant to Table LT6.
We hold that petitioner is not entitled to the claimed interest expense deduction for 1974. This Court and other courts have held that no part of the payments made pursuant to a private annuity agreement for the purchase of property is deductible as interest under
1981 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 172">*185 Essentially, petitioner is asserting that the present value of the annuity, as determined pursuant to respondent's actuarial tables, constitutes an indebtedness for purposes of
Under the terms of the agreement, Mr. Bell made an absolute assignment of the Nodaway stock to petitioner in exchange for her promise to pay an annuity, foregoing the payment of any definite sum of money. The agreement did not give petitioner the use of any of Mr. Bell's funds. To the contrary, upon the execution of the agreement, she owned the stock and owed nothing under the agreement except the first payment, obligating herself to make additional payments only if Mr. Bell or Mrs. Bell survive to the date on which those payments are due. Moreover, in addition to the degree of uncertainty inherent in any private annuity transaction, petitioner's promise to pay the annuity is not secured and her ability to pay the annuity is, in fact, contingent upon sufficient dividend income from the acquired Nodaway stock. Furthermore, petitioner was not in the business of writing annuity contracts for profit, but obligated herself to pay for the annuity only to acquire the stock. It is clear that Mr. Bell did not forbear the collection of any ascertainable amount owed to him by petitioner pursuant to the sale, but accepted petitioner's tenuous annuity obligation as full payment for the stock. 1981 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 172">*187 Under these circumstances, we are convinced that petitioner's annuity obligation is too indefinite to constitute an indebtedness within the meaning of
Finally, petitioner argues that the instant case is distinguishable from prior cases dealing with the deductibility of annuity payments because there was no evidence in those cases indicating that interest was a separately negotiated factor in determining the amount of the annuity. We reject this argument. Aside from the fact that upon executing the agreement petitioner intended to deduct a portion of each payment as interest, there is also no such evidence in the instant case. Moreover, even if the record showed that the negotiations contemplated that a portion of each annuity payment would represent interest, the fact that the parties to an agreement deem certain payments interest does not establish the deductibility of those payments. In order to be deductible as interest, those payments must1981 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 172">*189 arise with respect to an indebtedness. Accordingly, since we have already found that the agreement created no indebtedness, petitioner's argument is without merit. See
To reflect the foregoing,
1. All statutory references are to the Internal Revenue Code of 1954 as amended.↩
2. Petitioner's cryptic arguments fail to acknowledge that the agreed fair market value of the Nodaway stock was $ 173,600 ($ 124 x 1,400), and not $ 174,270, the present value of the annuity. Nevertheless, for the remainder of this opinion, we will assume that the agreed fair market value of the Nodaway stock equaled the present value of the annuity, $ 174,270.↩
3.
4. Mr. and Mrs. Bell's joint life expectancy of 24.6 years.↩
5. The ratable portion of the total alleged interest allocable to 1974 was $ 7,915.85 ((369,000 -- 174,270) / 24.6), while the amount of the annuity payment treated as ordinary income to Mr. Bell and claimed as interest by petitioner was $ 7,915.45. The difference between these figures is attributable to an error in petitioner's calculation of the amount of each annuity payment which would be treated as ordinary annuity income to Mr. Bell.↩
6.
7. See
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