DocketNumber: Docket No. 1432-79
Judges: Featherston
Filed Date: 12/23/1981
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
Petitioner Gerrit B. Lemmen purchased a herd of cattle in 1973 for a stated price of $ 40,000 and a second herd of cattle in 1974 for a stated price of $ 20,000. At the time of these purchases, the fair market value of the cattle was $ 7,000 per herd. In connection with each purchase, petitioner entered into a maintenance contract under which the seller agreed to breed and otherwise care for the cattle in exchange for some of the heifer calves and all of the bull calves to be born during the term of the contract. Petitioner did not expect to realize any income from his cattle-breeding ventures on an annual basis; however, it was his objective ultimately to derive a profit from the sale of each herd as a result of increases in the price of cattle and in the size of his herds.
*1326 Respondent determined deficiencies in petitioners' Federal income taxes as follows:
Year | Deficiency |
1973 | $ 10,030 |
1974 | 19,905 |
1975 | 4,369 |
After concessions by both parties, the issues remaining for decision are:
(1) Whether petitioner Gerrit B. Lemmen's investment in polled Hereford cattle during the years in question constituted an activity engaged in for profit, and, if so;
(2) Whether the excess of the purchase price of the cattle *1327 over their fair market value at the time of purchase represents an intangible asset that is not subject to amortization or depreciation.
FINDINGS OF FACT
At the time the petition was filed, petitioners Gerrit B. Lemmen (hereinafter petitioner) and Judith K. Lemmen, husband and wife, were legal residents of Bloomfield *7 Hills, Mich. They filed joint Federal income tax returns for 1973, 1974, and 1975 with the Internal Revenue Service Center, Cincinnati, Ohio.
During the years in question, petitioner was employed fulltime as a lumber broker. In addition, he operated his own wholesale lumber business during 1973, 1974, and 1975. In each of those years, petitioner's income from his employment and business was in excess of $ 100,000, and he was subject to a marginal Federal income tax rate of at least 50 percent.
In August 1968, Calderone-Curran Ranches, Inc. (CCR), was incorporated under the laws of Michigan, with its principal place of business in Grass Lake, Mich. CCR was engaged in the business of raising and maintaining registered polled Hereford cattle for breeding purposes, both for its own account and for the account of others. It offered the cattle for sale to investors in "managed breeding herds" consisting of 10 female animals each.
CCR offered the herds for sale through the brokerage firm of Manley, Bennett, McDonald & Co. Dale Uhas (Uhas), a "registered representative" employed by that firm, contacted petitioner in early 1973 concerning the possibility of petitioner's investing in a CCR *8 herd. *1328 the age mix of a particular herd will be comparable to the age mix of each other herd." The selection of particular cattle for each herd was to be made by CCR and was not subject to the approval of individual investors. The prospectus stated that each investor in a herd "may enter into a Maintenance Contract with * * * [CCR] for the care and breeding of the cattle. "It further stated as follows:
Purchase of the herds offered hereby is subject to a high degree of risk. * * * Such a purchase is considered suitable primarily by investors in the higher tax brackets because of certain tax benefits available under present provisions of the Internal Revenue*9 Code. * * *
* * * *
The herds offered hereby are designed to permit persons with high ordinary taxable income to become breeders of registered purebred Polled Hereford cattle and to build herds through use of * * * [CCR's] management and facilities.
The prospectus discussed in considerable detail the Federal income tax consequences (e.g., investment credit, depreciation, ordinary income versus capital gain) that could result from the purchase of a herd and the subsequent sale of the herd or individual animals from it. *10 that *1329 would be incurred in the year of purchase and during the following 7-year period. *11 lot of bad things about cattle." Petitioner had no experience in raising or selling cattle.
Uhas has never been a rancher. He does not hold a degree in animal husbandry and, apart from persons who represented CCR, did not consult with anyone holding such a degree at the time he became involved with the CCR offering. Uhas was able to evaluate the cattle-maintenance and breeding programs of CCR only in terms of the credentials of the persons responsible for those programs. However, he was qualified to independently evaluate the office operations and business practices of CCR from a managerial standpoint.
On or about February 11, 1973, Uhas sent to petitioner the schedule on page 1332 detailing the cash outlay and tax benefits that would be involved in purchasing a CCR herd and holding it for 7 years.
In late March 1973, petitioner and Uhas visited the CCR ranching facility in Grass Lake, Mich. They were given an extensive tour of the ranch by Harold Schroeder (Schroeder), an officer of CCR who was primarily in charge of the daily operation of the ranch. Schroeder informed them that CCR produced its own feed and that a very low percentage of its cattle were lost to disease. Petitioner *12 and Uhas were generally impressed with the ranch, which appeared to them to be well organized and maintained.
At some point during the tour of the ranch, Schroeder showed petitioner and Uhas market data compiled by the American Polled Hereford Association with respect to recent and historical sales of cattle similar to those offered for sale in CCR's managed breeding herds. *14 Schroeder stated that the *1330
PRO FORMA INVESTMENT ANALYSIS (1 HERD -- 10 COWS) | |||
* * * * | |||
DEFERRED PAYMENT PLAN | |||
Herd purchased in June | |||
Herd | Available | ||
owner's | Annual | tax | Investment |
calendar | cash | deduction | tax |
year | outlay | Depreciation | credit |
(1) | (2) | (3) | (4) |
1 | $ 37,200 | $ 13,495 | $ 2,604 |
2 | 6,780 | ||
3 | 4,841 | ||
4 | 3,456 | ||
5 | 2,468 | ||
6 | 2,330 | ||
7 | 2,330 | ||
8 | |||
37,200 | 35,700 | 2,604 |
PRO FORMA INVESTMENT ANALYSIS (1 HERD -- 10 COWS) | |||
* * * * | |||
DEFERRED PAYMENT PLAN | |||
Herd purchased in June | |||
Investment cost after tax deductions | |||
50% Bracket | |||
Herd | |||
owner's | Annual | ||
calendar | tax | Annual | Cumulative |
year | savings | cost | cost |
(1) | (5) | (6) | (7) |
1 | $ 9,352 | $ 27,848 | $ 27,848 |
2 | 3,390 | (3,390) | 24,458 |
3 | 2,420 | (2,420) | 22,038 |
4 | 1,728 | (1,728) | 20,310 |
5 | 1,234 | (1,234) | 19,076 |
6 | 1,165 | (1,165) | 17,911 |
7 | 1,165 | (1,165) | 16,746 |
8 | 16,746 | ||
20,454 | 16,748 | 16,746 |
PRO FORMA INVESTMENT ANALYSIS (1 HERD -- 10 COWS) | |||
* * * * | |||
DEFERRED PAYMENT PLAN | |||
Herd purchased in June | |||
Investment cost after tax deductions | |||
60% Bracket | |||
Herd | |||
owner's | Annual | ||
calendar | tax | Annual | Cumulative |
year | savings | cost | cost |
(1) | (8) | (9) | (10) |
1 | $ 10,701 | $ 26,499 | $ 26,499 |
2 | 4,068 | (4,058) | 22,431 |
3 | 2,905 | (2,905) | 19,526 |
4 | 2,073 | (2,073) | 17,453 |
5 | 1,481 | (1,481) | 15,972 |
6 | 1,398 | (1,398) | 14,574 |
7 | 1,398 | (1,398) | 13,176 |
8 | 13,176 | ||
24,024 | 13,176 | 13,176 |
PRO FORMA INVESTMENT ANALYSIS (1 HERD -- 10 COWS) | |||
* * * * | |||
DEFERRED PAYMENT PLAN | |||
Herd purchased in June | |||
Investment cost after tax deductions | |||
70% Bracket | |||
Herd | |||
owner's | Annual | ||
calendar | tax | Annual | Cumulative |
year | savings | cost | cost |
(1) | (11) | (12) | (13) |
1 | $ 12,051 | $ 25,149 | $ 25,149 |
2 | 4,746 | (4,746) | 20,403 |
3 | 3,389 | (3,389) | 17,014 |
4 | 2,419 | (2,419) | 14,595 |
5 | 1,727 | (1,727) | 12,868 |
6 | 1,631 | (1,631) | 11,237 |
7 | 1,631 | (1,631) | 9,606 |
8 | 9,606 | ||
27,594 | 9,606 | 9,606 |
PRO FORMA INVESTMENT ANALYSIS (1 HERD -- 10 COWS) | ||
* * * * | ||
DEFERRED PAYMENT PLAN | ||
Herd purchased in June | ||
Herd | Estimated | |
owner's | progeny | Estimated |
calendar | added to | size of |
year | herd | herd |
(1) | (14) | (15) |
1 | 10 | |
2 | 2 | 12 |
3 | 4 | 16 |
4 | 5 | 21 |
5 | 7 | 28 |
6 | 9 | 37 |
7 | 12 | 49 |
8 | 17 | 66 |
56 | 66 |
*1331 price of such cattle could easily reach $ 1,000 per head during the ensuing 12-year period. Petitioner further investigated the desirability of investing in a CCR herd by contacting others who had previously done so.
In discussing with petitioner the merits of investing in a CCR herd, Uhas pointed out that the maintenance fee provided for in the maintenance contract offered to the purchaser of a herd was a specified portion of the progeny to be born to the herd. Petitioner and Uhas agreed that this would be beneficial to a purchaser because (1) he would be protected from uncertain maintenance costs in the future, and (2) CCR would have an incentive to properly maintain the herd so as to ensure that high quality progeny would be produced. In addition, Uhas and petitioner felt that there was value to the investor in the "economic size" of CCR and in the fact that CCR had invested substantial amounts to purchase quality bulls for use in its breeding program.
The maintenance contract offered by CCR was for an initial term of 7 years with an option in the herd purchaser to extend the contract for 5 years thereafter. The contract included a commitment by CCR to repurchase the herd and progeny at the end of the 12-year period for prices stated *15 in the contract. CCR projected that, at the end of the 12-year period and after payment of the annual maintenance fee in progeny, the original herd of 10 animals would have increased to 182 animals. Petitioner thought that, even if he took the CCR projection "on a 75 percent basis," the purchase of a herd would be a good investment, considering the repurchase *1332
PRO FORMA INVESTMENT ANALYSIS | ||||||
(1 Herd -- 10 Cows / Filing Joint Return) | ||||||
Cum. | Annual | Available | Inv. | |||
mo. | cash | tax deductions | tax | |||
Year | pymts. | outlay | Dep. | Int. | Total | credit |
(1) | (2) | (3) | (4a) | (5) | (6a) | (6b) |
1973 | 8 | $ 11,100 | $ 14,286 | $ 1,467 | $ 15,753 | $ 2,800 |
1974 | 20 | 6,600 | 7,347 | 2,077 | 9,424 | |
1975 | 32 | 3,600 | 5,248 | 1,967 | 7,215 | |
1976 | 44 | 3,600 | 3,748 | 1,849 | 5,597 | |
1977 | 56 | 4,400 | 2,677 | 1,706 | 4,383 | |
1978 | 68 | 6,400 | 2,597 | 1,456 | 4,053 | |
1979 | 80 | 12,000 | 2,597 | 954 | 3,551 | |
1980 | 84 | 6,894 | 0 | 118 | 118 | |
84 | 51,594 | 38,500 | 11,594 | 50,094 | 2,800 |
PRO FORMA INVESTMENT ANALYSIS | ||||||
(1 Herd -- 10 Cows / Filing Joint Return) | ||||||
50% Tax bracket | 60% Tax bracket | |||||
An. cost | Cum. cost | An. cost | Cum. cost | |||
An. net | after | after | An. net | after | after | |
Year | tax svgs. | tax svgs. | tax svgs. | tax svgs. | tax svgs. | tax svgs. |
(1) | (6c) | (7) | (8) | (6d) | (9) | (10) |
1973 | $ 10,677 | $ 423 | $ 423 | $ 12,252 | ($ 1,152) | ($ 1,152) |
1974 | 4,712 | (1,112) | (689) | 5,654 | (2,054) | (3,206) |
1975 | 3,607 | (7) | (696) | 4,329 | (729) | (3,935) |
1976 | 2,799 | 801 | 105 | 3,358 | 242 | (3,693) |
1977 | 2,191 | 2,209 | 2,314 | 2,630 | 1,770 | (1,923) |
1978 | 2,026 | 4,374 | 6,688 | 2,432 | 3,968 | 2,045 |
1979 | 1,776 | 10,224 | 16,912 | 2,131 | 9,869 | 11,914 |
1980 | 59 | 6,835 | 23,747 | 70 | 6,824 | 18,738 |
27,847 | 23,747 | 23,747 | 32,856 | 18,738 | 18,738 |
PRO FORMA INVESTMENT ANALYSIS | ||||
(1 Herd -- 10 Cows / Filing Joint Return) | ||||
70% Tax bracket | ||||
An. cost | Cum. cost | Est. | ||
An. net | after | after | size | |
Year | tax svgs. | tax svgs. | tax svgs. | of herd |
(1) | (6e) | (11) | (12) | (14) |
1973 | $ 13,827 | ($ 2,727) | ($ 2,727) | 10 |
1974 | 6,597 | (2,997) | (5,724) | 12 |
1975 | 5,051 | (1,451) | (7,175) | 16 |
1976 | 3,918 | (318) | (7,493) | 21 |
1977 | 3,068 | 1,332 | (6,161) | 38 |
1978 | 2,837 | 3,563 | (2,598) | 37 |
1979 | 2,485 | 9,515 | 6,917 | 49 |
1980 | 82 | 6,812 | 13,729 | 66 |
37,865 | 13,729 | 13,729 | 66 |
(4a) Computed on the basis of a 7-year life with a salvage value of $ 150 per animal; 200% declining-balance method used, switching to straight-line when advantageous.
(6a) Total available tax deduction, sum of columns (4a) and (5).
(6b) Net investment tax credit equal to 7% of the purchase price of a herd.
(6c), (6d) & (6e) Purchaser's net tax savings computed by applying the appropriate tax bracket to the tax deductions [col. (6a)] and the tax credit [col. (6b)] in the year of purchase.
NOTE: The above schedule reflects the first monthly payment paid on May 30, 1973, and the herd being purchased in March and April 1973.
*1333 commitment and the fact that he was "protected" from maintenance for 12 years.
On April 30, 1973, petitioner purchased a herd of 10 purebred polled Hereford cows (herd No. *17 1) from CCR for $ 40,000. This purchase was made pursuant to a deferred-payment plan under which petitioner gave CCR a downpayment of $ 7,500 and a negotiable promissory note for the balance of $ 32,500. The note was payable over 7 years in semiannual installments with interest at the rate of 7 percent. Petitioner was personally liable for the repayment of the note; it was not a nonrecourse obligation.
In connection with the purchase of herd No. 1, petitioner on the same day entered into a maintenance contract with CCR. Under the contract, CCR agreed to "care for, supervise, feed and maintain" petitioner's animals and to "provide the necessary bull battery and breed" his animals. CCR further agreed that, during the term of the contract, it would "substitute a comparable purebred Polled Hereford female animal" for any animal in petitioner's herd over 1 year of age and under 11 years of age that died or was, in the opinion of CCR, infertile, or that should, in its opinion, be culled from the herd or destroyed. The contract provided for a maintenance fee to be received by CCR as follows: *18 born to the HERD and (ii) three of the first nine Heifer Calves, and one of each nine Heifer Calves thereafter, born to the HERD;
The *19 maintenance contract provided for an initial term of 7 years. Under a supplemental agreement between petitioner and CCR, executed on the same day as, and appended to, the maintenance contract, petitioner was given the option to extend the contract for an additional 5 years. During this "Renewal Period," CCR was to receive as its maintenance fee all bull calves and one of every four heifer calves born to petitioner's herd; however, as was the case under the provisions pertaining to the initial 7-year term of the contract, CCR was to receive heifer calves only to the extent that the total number of animals remaining in petitioner's herd would equal or exceed herd-size projections made by CCR. *20 Petitioner was granted the option to pay a cash maintenance fee during the "Renewal Period" in lieu of the progeny maintenance fee set forth in the supplemental agreement.
The supplemental agreement also provided petitioner with an option to require CCR to purchase his entire herd (except for the original 10 animals) for specified prices at the end of the "Renewal Period" if he (1) had exercised his option to *1335 extend the maintenance contract through the "Renewal Period" and (2) had not sold any of the original herd or progeny during the initial 7-year term or during the "Renewal Period" of the contract, "except for the sale of infertile or dead animals or animals which * * * CCR has otherwise recommended in writing to be sold." Under this provision, if petitioner were to exercise his option, CCR would be obligated to pay $ 300 for animals up to 1 1/2 years of age, $ 600 for animals from 1 1/2 to 5 years of age, and $ 400 for animals 5 years of age or older however, CCR was not obligated to pay a total purchase price of more than $ 80,000 or to purchase less than all of the progeny in the herd. In connection with this provision, the agreement sets forth *21 extended payment terms for the purchase of the herd by CCR.
In elaborating upon the repurchase obligation of CCR contained in the supplemental agreement, the supplement to the prospectus stated in part as follows:
Based upon the assumptions applied in arriving at the pro forma estimate of progeny in the herd owner's 13th calendar year in the table above, *22 estimates. * * *
The supplement to the prospectus stated that --
In determining whether or not to exercise his option to require the Company to purchase his herd at the end of the renewal period, the herd owner should compare the then cash market value of his herd as against the prices offered by the Company and the then discounted value of the Company's extended payment terms as well as the Company's ability to fulfill its obligation under the terms of the promissory note.
The supplement to the prospectus pointed out that it might be desirable for the herd owner to obtain an independent *1336 appraisal of his herd prior to exercising his option and that upon request from the herd owner CCR would supply the names of independent appraisers located in the area where the owner's herd was being maintained.
Sometime prior to April 1974, CCR sent petitioner a letter describing the tax benefits to which herd ownership entitled him. A set of sample completed tax return forms showing how to claim the investment credit and the deductions for interest payments and depreciation attributable to the cattle was attached to the letter.
Subsequently, Schroeder informed Uhas that CCR had *23 herds, each comprising 10 cows that were scheduled to calve in the spring of 1975, available for sale at a price of $ 20,000 cash. CCR guaranteed that, by June 30, 1975, each herd purchased under this offer would have increased to 20 animals as a result of the addition of 10 heifer calves. *24 letterhead, pertaining to the growth of a herd purchased under the terms of the new offering: ESTIMATED HERD INVENTORY Herd owner's Cash Progeny Estimated calendar year outlay growth herd size Date of purchase $ 20,000 10 Dec. 31, 1974 10 June 30, 1975 10 20 June 30, 1976 6 26 Sept. 20, 1976 6 32 HERD GROWTH BY CLASSIFICATION Herd owner's Herd 2-Year-old 12 to 18 Heifer calendar year cows or young cows months calves Date of purchase 10 June 30, 1975 10 10 June 30, 1976 10 10 6 Sept. 20, 1976 10 10 6 6
Herd valuations are determined basically from the reported sale prices received per lot as reported by the American Polled Hereford Association's official publication, the Polled Hereford World. The 8/15/74 published report stated that the female price per lot was $ 864.
Approximate herd size after 7 years of herd growth is 70 to 75 head of females.
At this point in time, petitioner had visited the ranch 2 or 3 times in connection with his investment in herd No. 1. He was impressed with the CCR operation and was interested in a second investment opportunity. He believed that the new offering was a good deal.
On September 20, 1974, *25 petitioner purchased his second herd of 10 purebred polled Hereford cows (herd No. 2) from CCR for $ 20,000 cash. No written purchase or maintenance agreements were executed with respect to this transaction.
On or about September 27, 1974, Uhas sent petitioner a letter setting forth the tax deductions available as a result of the purchase of herd No. 2.
During 1973 and 1974, the fair market value of a polled Hereford cow was $ 700. Thus, at the time they were acquired, the fair market value of each of the herds purchased by petitioner was $ 7,000.
The prospectus given to petitioner prior to his investment in herd No. 1 states that CCR had acquired only a small portion of the animals offered for sale at $ 40,000 per herd and that it expected to acquire most of the remaining cattle to be sold under the offering at prices "between $ 400 and $ 1,200 per animal and at an average price of $ 600 per animal." The prospectus further states as follows:
The prospectus warns that, in view of the markup involved with respect to the herds offered by CCR, a herd purchaser should anticipate a loss if he resells his cattle relatively early after their acquisition.
On his Federal income tax return for 1973, petitioner reported $ 40,000 as his cost basis in herd No. 1. He reported a cost basis of $ 20,000 in herd No. 2 on his Federal income tax return for 1974. On these tax returns, petitioner claimed investment credits and deductions for depreciation with respect to his investments in the cattle. He claimed depreciation as to herd No. 1 and herd No. 2 on his Federal income tax return for 1975.
Throughout 1973, 1974, and 1975, *27 petitioner derived no pleasure or recreation from his involvement with CCR. Sometime during 1976, CCR went into bankruptcy due to significant increases in farm expenses and depressed prices in the cattle industry. As a result, the maintenance contracts petitioner had acquired became worthless. The Bank of the Commonwealth, assignee of petitioner's promissory note, gave petitioner the option of selling his cattle to the bank for $ 250 per head in discharge of the balance due on the note. He declined the option, took possession of the cattle, and arranged for their care on the Tom Reed Ranch. In 1978, he sold all of his cattle for $ 8,188.
In his notice of deficiency, respondent determined that petitioner's "cattle breeding activity" was not an activity engaged in for profit and that, therefore, the depreciation claimed by petitioner with respect to the cattle in 1973, 1974, and 1975 was not allowable. As a consequence of this determination, respondent also disallowed the investment credits claimed by petitioner in 1973 and 1974. In addition, respondent made the following alternative determination:
In the event it is held that this activity was engaged in for profit, it is determined *28 that the alleged purchase prices of the cattle was [sic] in excess *1339 of their fair market value. The excess over fair market value is an intangible asset and is not depreciable.
OPINION
Consistent with the notice of deficiency, respondent contends that petitioner's cattle-breeding activity was "not engaged in for profit" within the meaning of
In general, deductions are allowable under
*1341 We think petitioner had the requisite profit motive to qualify for the claimed investment credits and depreciation deductions. We point out that this is not a "hobby loss" case, the type of case toward which
We begin with the objective *35 fact that petitioner made a reasonable inquiry before making the investment to see that it had profit potential. Although he was not a cattle expert and did not consult independent experts, before purchasing herd No. 1 in 1973 he visited the CCR ranch and reviewed its operations. Based on his inspection, he concluded that the ranch was well managed. He learned that the ranch produced its own feed and used scientific breeding practices to upgrade the herd. Petitioner's inquiries of others confirmed his conclusion that the ranch was well managed, and he was advised that it was solvent. *1342 percent per year and that they would be worth $ 1,000 per head at the end of 12 years.
Petitioner did not expect to make money immediately but intended to hold herd No. 1 for 12 years. He testified that he thought he could "go in for 12 years, they would take care of my cattle, sell my cattle, I come up with a net profit." In reaching his conclusion, he gave weight to the projection in the prospectus showing that he would have 182 cattle at the end of 12 years and that CCR would pay him $ 80,000 for his herd. *36 As he explained it, "I invest $ 40,000.00, I get $ 80,000.00 back, that's $ 40,000.00 capital gain."
In weighing and considering the investment merits of the program, petitioner and Uhas focused not only on tax consequences but on certain provisions of the maintenance contract offered to herd purchasers. The contract covered a 7-year term with an option to renew for an additional 5 years. No cash outlay for the 12-year period beyond the initial $ 40,000 would be required in the 1973 transaction because the maintenance fees provided for in the contract were a specified portion of the progeny to be born to the herd. The contract included a provision requiring the replacement by CCR of animals between the ages of 1 and 11 in the event *37 of death or infertility. In addition, CCR would be obligated (at the purchaser-owner's option) to purchase all animals owned by the purchaser at the end of the 5-year renewal period for prices (subject to an aggregate maximum price of $ 80,000) specified in the maintenance contract. As petitioner points out, those prices, which constituted the minimum that an investor could receive after 12 years, assured the investor of a profit of some $ 29,000 *1343 assuming that herd growth approximated CCR's projections. *38 1 year of age, i.e., those which were not covered by CCR's replacement obligation under the maintenance contract. Petitioner testified, however, that he learned on his visit to the ranch that the mortality rate of the cattle was very low. We think it significant in this connection that respondent merely questioned, but did not introduce evidence to undermine, the reasonableness of CCR's herd growth projections. More importantly, however, petitioner, in analyzing the CCR investment, did not accept those projections at face value but took them "on a 75 percent basis." On this conservative basis, petitioner could still have obtained a substantial profit without the benefit of the investment credit or any depreciation deductions. *39 Respondent also questions whether petitioner ever intended to hold herd No. 1 for 12 years. He contends that petitioner could have withdrawn from the maintenance program by abandoning his cattle in an early year when tax savings exceeded cash outlay because, respondent states, it was not likely that CCR would press petitioner's obligation for the *1344 balance due on the $ 32,500 note. However, there is absolutely no evidence to show that petitioner at any time intended to "withdraw" from the program under such circumstances or that CCR would not have enforced the obligation. *40 Had petitioner intended to withdraw from the program, CCR's bankruptcy in 1976 provided the perfect opportunity for him to do so and harvest his tax losses. He did not do so. Instead, he rounded up his cattle and moved them to another ranch.
Although the record with respect to petitioner's investment in herd No. 2 leaves something to be desired, we find that it, too, was made with the objective of deriving an economic profit apart from the tax benefits. At the time that he made this investment, petitioner had the benefit of experience with his investment in herd No. 1 and had visited the CCR ranch several times. The tax benefits resulting from this purchase, while not insubstantial, were reduced due to the fact that petitioner paid cash for herd No. 2. The fact that he paid cash of $ 20,000, the total purchase price, in 1974 for this herd strongly suggests that he bought this herd as well as the one in 1973 for the purpose of making a profit.
We have no doubt that, in making his initial decision to buy the cattle, petitioner took into account the investment credit and tax deductions to which he would become entitled. In fact, he frankly so testified at the trial, and the prospectus explicitly states that the purchase of cattle "is considered suitable primarily by investors in the higher *41 tax brackets because of certain tax benefits available" to them. Petitioner had substantial income from sources other than his cattle-breeding investments. Cf.
For our purposes, in weighing the importance of the tax considerations present in these transactions, however, the precise nature of the tax benefits obtained by petitioner is *1345 important. We are not dealing with nonrecourse liabilities designed to enlarge a taxpayer's basis for depreciation or gain or loss. *42 In the case of the 1974 investment, petitioner paid the full purchase price ($ 20,000) in cash. In the case of the 1973 investment, petitioner paid $ 7,500 in cash and signed a negotiable promissory note in the amount of $ 32,500 for the balance, payable over 7 years, with some two-thirds of the balance due during the last 3 years.
As *44 respondent apparently recognizes, the tax consequences of true business transactions are a legitimate and, often, paramount concern of the interested parties. The tax law, itself, contains many provisions, including the provisions for accelerated depreciation and the investment credit, designed to encourage certain courses of business or investment activity. In contending that petitioner purchased the cattle "primarily to benefit from the tax savings," however, respondent seems to suggest that an activity may be considered as "not engaged in for profit" if it appears that tax reasons affected the decision to enter into the activity, as opposed to some other money-making venture.
Having found that petitioner's investment in CCR herds was an activity engaged in for profit, we must now consider respondent's alternative determination. Relying upon
Petitioner's *47 primary position is that he paid $ 40,000 for herd No. 1 and $ 20,000 for herd No. 2 in arm's-length transactions with CCR and that his basis for depreciation of the cattle should be the amounts actually paid for them. In the alternative, petitioner argues that amounts paid by him in excess of the fair market value of the cattle should be allocated to the maintenance contracts and that, as part of the cost of acquiring those contracts, such amounts are amortizable.
We agree with respondent that the basis in petitioner's cattle should be limited to their fair market value. We agree with petitioner, however, that the amounts paid by him in excess of the fair market value of the cattle should be allocated to the maintenance contracts.
As a general rule, the basis of property for tax purposes will be its cost (
does not apply where a transaction is not conducted at arm's-length by two economically self-interested parties or where a transaction is based upon *48 "peculiar circumstances" which influence the purchaser to agree to a price in excess of the property's fair market value.
In terms of the total consideration passing between petitioner and CCR as a result of the herd-purchase and maintenance agreements, petitioner's dealings with CCR were clearly carried on at "arm's length." We have no doubt that both petitioner and CCR were, in general, "economically self-interested." Nonetheless, we think that this was not the case with respect to the establishment of a purchase price for the cattle independent of the maintenance contract offered to a herd purchaser.
The herd-purchase and maintenance agreements with respect to each herd were formally separate agreements, with separately stated consideration. *49 petitioner on brief, herd owners "were not required to enter into the maintenance contracts and could have exercised complete control over their herds by the simple expedient of removing their herds from the Calderone-Curran ranches." Normally, this would be evidence that the price of the cattle in each transaction was separately bargained for; however, this option to exercise control over a herd without regard to the maintenance contract was more apparent than real.
From the prospectus, it is clear that the stated price of herds was highly inflated above the market value of the animals and that the stated consideration for the maintenance contracts *1349 was less than the cost of comparable service from other sources. The prospectus states that a "purchaser should anticipate a loss if he resells his cattle relatively early after their acquisition." The prospectus also warns that if a purchaser is forced to find some organization other than CCR to manage his herd, "the maintenance *50 fee may be substantially higher than that offered" by CCR. In this connection, it should be emphasized that CCR was not simply selling cattle; it was offering "managed breeding herds" to investors. Thus, although the cattle-purchase and maintenance agreements were formally independent of each other, we think that petitioner has most aptly characterized the nature of his dealings with CCR when he states that he "purchased a package which contained two elements: (1) the cattle; and (2) the maintenance contract."
There is no evidence that any of the cattle purchased by petitioner possessed special characteristics which would give them a value in excess of the stipulated fair market value of cattle.
Clearly, however, in purchasing a "package" comprising cattle and a maintenance contract, petitioner had an obvious incentive to agree to an inflated purchase price for the cattle (at the expense of what might otherwise be treated as prepaid maintenance) so as to increase the investment credit and deductions for accelerated depreciation to which he would be entitled. At the same time, CCR in offering "managed breeding herds" had an incentive to include disguised future maintenance fees in the *51 sales price of the cattle. By so doing, CCR could confer the above tax benefits on its investors at little or no cost to itself, thus sweetening the investment for the high-bracket taxpayers for whom the breeding program was designed. In these "peculiar circumstances" (
It is true, as petitioner emphasizes, that payment of the stated purchase price was in no way contingent upon the performance by CCR of its obligations under the maintenance contracts. However, we think this was simply one of the risks that petitioner was willing to assume in the hope of increasing the tax benefits resulting from the purchase of cattle; his *1350 inquiries prior to the purchase of herd No. 1 convinced him that CCR was solvent and capable of fulfilling its obligations.
Moreover, petitioner implicitly admitted that he knew the considerations stated in the contracts were unrealistic. When asked at trial to explain the difference between the $ 40,000 price for herd No. 1 (with respect to which a 7-year maintenance contract *52 and 5-year renewal option was offered) and the $ 20,000 price for herd No. 2 (which carried with it a 3-year maintenance contract), petitioner answered that it was attributable to "the maintenance contract * * *, three years against seven." We do not think petitioner has ever seriously believed that the stated purchase price of either herd was paid solely for the cattle.
Respondent relies upon
The prospectus attributes the difference between the price CCR received for the cattle and the price it paid for them (which was approximately the stipulated fair market value) to a variety of "costs and factors," including breeding and maintenance of animals prior to sale, investigation and inspection of the cattle in order to obtain quality animals, *1351 transportation *54 and insurance for purchased animals, veterinarian fees, costs of the offering, financing costs, overhead charges, and a profit to CCR. As respondent points out, these items, "together with * * * CCR's grazing lands, breeding program, and guarantee against infertility and other undesirable characteristics, must account for some portion of the purchase price paid for the respective herds."
We agree that part of the consideration is attributable to these "costs and factors." Many of the items emphasized by respondent, however, are maintenance related (e.g., grazing lands and breeding programs, as well as the bulk of overhead charges and a profit to CCR). As previously pointed out, CCR was in the business of selling "managed breeding herds." Once having obtained a fair price for the cattle, it could profit only by carrying out the maintenance contracts.
To the extent that those "costs and factors" relied upon by respondent as the basis for finding a nonamortizable asset are not maintenance related, we think they simply represent an attempt by CCR to give the appearance of economic reality to the inflated prices assigned to its herds in the prospectus. Some of those items, such as transportation, *55 inspection of animals, and veterinarian fees, were includable in the fair market value of the cattle on hand at the CCR ranches where delivery was made. Other items, such as breeding prior to sale, appear to be without substance. *56
It is well established that an intangible asset, such as a contract right, is depreciable or amortizable to the extent that it has a reasonably determinable useful life. E.g.,
The maintenance contract entered into in connection with the purchase of herd No. 1 had an initial term of 7 years, with an option to renew for an additional 5 years. Petitioner argues that amortization with respect to this contract should be computed over a 7-year period. We disagree. Petitioner testified that in analyzing the profitability of his first investment he focused on the entire 12-year period and on CCR's "repurchase" obligation at the end of that period. Petitioner has convinced us that it was a very definite possibility, if not a certainty, that he would have opted to renew the maintenance contract had CCR not gone bankrupt. For this reason, amortization with respect to the maintenance contract for herd No. 1 should be computed with reference to a 12-year life.
To reflect the foregoing,
1. Petitioner had previously done business with Uhas.↩
2. The description of tax consequences was based on the assumption "that herd purchasers will be deemed for federal income tax purposes to be engaged in the trade or business of farming (specifically, the holding of cattle for breeding purposes)."↩
3. The analyses were "based upon the assumption that the herd owner will be entitled to the most favorable tax treatment presently available under applicable tax laws." The prospectus recommended "that each potential purchaser consult his own tax advisor in order that the effects of the purchase of a herd hereunder may be determined with specific reference to his own tax situation and any changes in the applicable law."↩
4. Payment of the full purchase price in cash entitled the purchaser to a discount equal to 7 percent of the purchase price.↩
5. One such analysis, absent the notes containing qualifying assumptions and explanations, is set forth below for illustrative purposes as shown on p. 1330.↩
6. The market data shown to petitioner and Uhas at the ranch was not made part of the record. We note that the prospectus contained the following:
"There is a market for individual female purebred Polled Hereford animals. The following table sets forth certain information with respect to sales of female purebred Polled Hereford animals at least one year of age at public auctions and otherwise in the United States and Canada, as recorded by the American Polled Hereford Association. The highest reported public auction price ever paid for such an animal was $ 25,700, in February, 1970."
Total | ||||
Reported | Approximate | Approximate | recorded | |
sales | range | average | transfers | |
at public | of prices | price | of registered | |
Period | auctions | received | received | ownership Except for reported sales at public auctions included herein, no representation can be made with respect to the purchase price, if any, received in these transactions. |
9/1/70-8/31/71 | 12,645 | $ 235-$ 6,500 | $ 478 | 57,024 |
9/1/71-6/30/72 | 8,845 | 265- 5,000 | 537 | 72,121 |
7. In the text of the contract, petitioner is referred to as the "Owner" and CCR is referred to as Calderone-Curran or the "Company."↩
8. "Schedule B," which contained CCR's projection of the herd growth to be experienced by a herd purchaser over a 7-year period, is as follows:
SCHEDULE B | |
(to maintenance contract) | |
Cumulative herd size | |
Herd owner's | for purposes of par. 3 of |
calendar year | maintenance contract |
1 | 10 |
2 | 12 |
3 | 16 |
4 | 21 |
5 | 28 |
6 | 37 |
7 | 49 |
8 | 66 |
9. The projections for the "Renewal Period" were set forth in the supplement to the prospectus as follows:
Herd owner's | Estimated progeny | Estimated |
calendar year | added to herd | size of herd |
9 | 15 | 81 |
10 | 22 | 103 |
11 | 24 | 127 |
12 | 30 | 147 |
13 | 35 | 182 |
This table was subject to adjustment by CCR, "in a manner consistent with the method by which it was originally computed, to reflect the adverse effect of any sale by the OWNER of any of the HERD, except as recommended in writing by the Company, prior to or during the five (5) year period included in such table."
10. See note 9
11. The guaranty was to be implemented through CCR's agreement to exchange heifer calves for all of the bull calves born in the spring and its agreement to give the purchaser a heifer calf with respect to any cow that failed to calve in the spring.↩
12. Apparently, the terms of this 3-year maintenance contract were identical to the 7-year contract covering herd No. 1, except there was no option to extend the 3-year agreement and CCR was not to receive any progeny from the first group of calves born to herd No. 2 in payment of the maintenance fee under the 3-year agreement.↩
13. We note that this table, reproduced here, does not reflect herd growth over a 3-year period.↩
14. The term "net price" as used here refers to the amount to be received by CCR after underwriting discounts and commissions, which amounted to 8 1/2 percent of the purchase price.↩
15.
(a) General Rule. -- In the case of an activity engaged in by an individual or an electing small business corporation (as defined in section 1371(b)), if such activity is not engaged in for profit, no deduction attributable to such activity shall be allowed under this chapter except as provided in this section.
(b) Deductions Allowable. -- In the case of an activity not engaged in for profit to which subsection (a) applies, there shall be allowed -- (1) the deductions which would be allowable under this chapter for the taxable year without regard to whether or not such activity is engaged in for profit, and (2) a deduction equal to the amount of the deductions which would be allowable under this chapter for the taxable year only if such activity were engaged in for profit, but only to the extent that the gross income derived from such activity for the taxable year exceeds the deductions allowable by reason of paragraph (1).
(c) Activity Not Engaged in for Profit Defined. -- For purposes of this section, the term "activity not engaged in for profit" means any activity other than one with respect to which deductions are allowable for the taxable year under
(d) Presumption. -- If the gross income derived from an activity for 2 or more of the taxable years in the period of 5 consecutive taxable years which ends with the taxable year exceeds the deductions attributable to such activity (determined without regard to whether or not such activity is engaged in for profit), then, unless the Secretary or his delegate establishes to the contrary, such activity shall be presumed for purposes of this chapter for such taxable year to be an activity engaged in for profit. In the case of an activity which consists in major part of the breeding, training, showing, or racing of horses, the preceding sentence shall be applied by substituting the period of 7 consecutive taxable years for the period of 5 consecutive taxable years.
16.
17.
18.
19.
"The determination whether an activity is engaged in for profit is to be made by reference to objective standards, taking into account all of the facts and circumstances of each case. Although a reasonable expectation of profit is not required, the facts and circumstances must indicate that the taxpayer entered into the activity, or continued the activity, with the objective of making a profit. * * *"
20. The prospectus contains operating statements of CCR for 1968-71 which show that it made a substantial, increasing profit in the last 3 years and had only a relatively small loss in 1968. The prospectus also contains a balance sheet for CCR as of Dec. 31, 1971, reflecting a stockholders' equity of $ 5,449,401.↩
21. See
22. This figure is calculated as follows:
Maximum aggregate price to be paid by CCR | |
at end of 12 years | $ 80,000.00 |
Less: Total cash outlay involved in purchasing | |
herd No. 1, including interest to be paid over 7 years | $ 50,777.99 |
Profit | 29,222.01 |
23. Compare
24. Taking CCR's projection as 75-percent accurate, petitioner's profit without regard to taxes on a sale to it under the repurchase obligation at the end of 12 years would be as follows:
Number | ||||
of cattle | Contract | 75 Percent | Proceeds | |
projected | Age of cattle | price | of projection | of sale |
35 | Up to 1 1/2 years | $ 300 | 26 | $ 7,800.00 |
91 | 1 1/2 to 5 years | 600 | 68 | 40,800.00 |
56 | Over 5 years | 400 | 42 | 16,800.00 |
65,400.00 | ||||
Less total cash outlay | 50,777.99 | |||
Profit | 14,622.01 |
25. According to the pro forma investment analysis sent to petitioner by Uhas in February 1973, the cumulative cost after tax savings was less than the cumulative cash outlay only in 1974 (by $ 689) and in 1975 (by $ 696). Considering that there would have been a substantial balance remaining on a negotiable promissory note at the end of any one of those years, these tax savings hardly seem to be sufficient inducement to make the investment with the intent to abandon the cattle and reap the "tax savings."
26. Compare
27. Liability on the promissory note was not conditioned on CCR's performance of its maintenance contract, and the prospectus cautioned purchasers as follows:
"The Promissory Notes signed by purchasers of herds on the deferred payment plan are negotiable. If the Company [CCR] assigns or pledges the Notes to a financing institution, investors may have no defense against such institution in the event the Company defaults on its obligations under the Sale Agreement and/or the Maintenance Contract. * * *"↩
28. When CCR went into bankruptcy in 1976, petitioner's note had already been assigned to the Bank of the Commonwealth, and there is no evidence to suggest that petitioner did not pay the note in full.↩
29. Respondent's suggestion that petitioner could have made money more safely by depositing the purchase price in a bank than he could have by investing in a CCR herd is irrelevant. As stated in
30. The Commissioner has recognized, for example, that
31. No writings were executed with respect to the purchase of herd No. 2, but the record indicates that the purchase and maintenance agreements were basically similar to those entered with respect to herd No. 1.↩
32. In
In this connection, we note that we find respondent's reference to cases involving the transfer of the "going concern value" of a business to be inapposite here. Petitioner did not purchase a going concern. He purchased cattle with maintenance contracts which were not assignable by him.↩
33. The pro forma investment analysis in the prospectus contemplated that an investor's herd would not be bred until 3 months after its purchase by the investor.↩
34. A "statement of operations" of CCR was included in the prospectus, and it contains the following information:
Aug. 28 | |
(date of inception) | |
to Dec. 31, | |
1968 | |
Revenues: | |
Sales of purebred | |
herds | $ 212,500 |
Herd maintenance income | |
(Note 3) | 37,500 |
Costs of sales and expenses: | |
Cost of purebred | |
herds sold | 209,380 |
Cost of purebred | |
cattle replacements | |
Selling commissions | |
Herd and ranch | |
maintenance expenses | 76,232 |
Selling, general, and | |
administrative expenses | 10,261 |
Years ended Dec. 31 -- | |||
1969 | 1970 | 1971 | |
Revenues: | |||
Sales of purebred | |||
herds | $ 1,714,954 | $ 2,149,019 | $ 5,869,511 |
Herd maintenance income | |||
(Note 3) | 11,850 | 223,850 | 366,050 |
Costs of sales and expenses: | |||
Cost of purebred | |||
herds sold | 363,802 | 352,795 | 728,970 |
Cost of purebred | |||
cattle replacements | 65,828 | 155,525 | |
Selling commissions | 17,328 | 122,684 | 515,294 |
Herd and ranch | |||
maintenance expenses | 347,986 | 606,000 | 1,045,986 |
Selling, general, and | |||
administrative expenses | 51,819 | 113,872 | 242,606 |
Although this information deals with the years 1968 through 1971, the prospectus indicates that during those years CCR sold managed breeding herds similar to those offered under the prospectus. We think that the vast surplus of revenues from sales of purebred herds over the cost of those herds, when compared with the great deficit of herd maintenance income under the amount of the expenses incurred in maintaining the herds and the ranch, is revealing. Although some of the disparity between expenses and maintenance income is apparently due to the cost of raising purebred bulls and feeder cattle, it seems clear that CCR did not look solely to "herd maintenance income" to cover the expenses of maintaining those herds. Instead, it inflated the initial sales price of the cattle for this purpose.
35. Although the straight-line method under which amortization is computed will not reflect the fact that maintenance costs would be lower in the early years and increase over the term of the maintenance contracts, we think that this factor of increasing costs is adequately reflected in both maintenance contracts because CCR would receive an increasing number of progeny from growing herds as part of its maintenance fee.↩
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