DocketNumber: Docket No. 31804-88
Citation Numbers: 1991 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 107, 97 T.C. No. 45, 97 T.C. 643
Judges: GERBER,NIMS,CHABOT,WRIGHT,PARR,RUWE,COLVIN,BEGHE,SWIFT,WHALEN,JACOBS,WELLS
Filed Date: 12/12/1991
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/14/2024
*107
P referred clients to law firm A, by whom he was employed as an associate. He received a salary and a percentage of fees generated by the referred clients. P then left law firm A and became a partner of law firm B and agreed to turn over any income from his practice of law to B from that date forward. After he became a partner of B, P consulted concerning clients he had referred to A. With one exception, the fees were earned after P left A. When fees were received from A, P turned them over to B. B accounted for and reported the fees, for tax purposes, as partnership income which P reported in accord with his share of B's income. R determined that P should report all income from A because he had earned the income prior to its assignment to B and/or it was an assignment of income because it was not earned in the partnership business of B. P argues that he was required to consult and that the fees were not earned until the services were performed. P also argues that R's administrative position, as set forth in revenue rulings and approved by various courts, permits the reporting of the income by the partnership.
*643 Respondent, by means of separate notices of deficiency, determined deficiencies in Federal income *644 tax for petitioners' 1984 and 1985 taxable years in the amounts of $ 49,708 and $ 25,252, respectively. Respondent, in both years, also determined additions to tax under section 6653(a)(1) *109 additions to tax under section 6661 and increased interest under section 6621(c). The parties have also resolved the additions to tax under section 6653(a)(1) and (2) in connection with the adjustments concerning the Coal Venture II tax shelter for both taxable years. There remain for our consideration issues concerning: (1) Whether fees received from petitioner husband's prior law firm (where he was not a partner) are taxable to petitioner husband or the partners of his new law firm (where he is a partner); and (2) whether petitioners are liable for additions to tax under section 6653(a)(1) and (2) with respect to any portion of the deficiencies in income tax attributable to issue (1).
FINDINGS OF FACT
The parties' stipulations of facts and referenced exhibits are incorporated herein by this reference.
Petitioners*110 resided at Croton-On-Hudson, New York, at the time the petition was filed in this case. Stephen B. Schneer (hereinafter petitioner, when used in the singular, shall refer to Stephen B. Schneer), was a practicing attorney during the years 1983, 1984, and 1985. Until February 25, 1983, petitioner was an associate with the law firm of Ballon, Stoll & Itzler (BSI). BSI was a partnership. Petitioner was not a partner in BSI and he did not share in general partnership profits. Petitioner's financial arrangement with BSI consisted of a fixed or set salary and a percentage of any fees which arose from clients petitioner brought or referred to the firm.
*645 BSI did not have a written partnership agreement, and no written agreement existed in connection with petitioner's relationship as an associate with BSI. When petitioner left BSI he had an understanding that he would continue to receive his percentage of fees which arose from clients he had referred when he was an associate with BSI. Petitioner was expected to consult regarding clients he referred to BSI and whose fees were to be shared by petitioner. Petitioner would have become entitled to his percentage of the fees even if he had*111 not been called upon to consult.
After petitioner left BSI and while he was a partner of two other law partnerships (other than BSI) he consulted on numerous occasions concerning BSI clients. Most of the 1984 and 1985 fees received under this agreement were attributable to Terri Girl and Prince, clients that petitioner had brought to BSI. Neither the remaining BSI attorneys nor petitioner had contemplated whether petitioner would receive the fees if he refused to consult concerning the clients referred by petitioner. For the years under consideration, petitioner consulted with BSI attorneys on each occasion his services were requested. The services provided by petitioner to BSI consisted of legal advice and consultation on legal matters.
Late in February 1983, petitioner became a partner in the law firm of Bandler & Kass (B&K), and on August 1, 1985, petitioner became a partner in the law firm of Sylvor, Schneer, Gold & Morelli (SSG&M). BSI, B&K, SSG&M, and petitioner, at all pertinent times, kept their books and reported their income on the cash method of accounting. Neither B&K nor SSG&M had written partnership agreements. The agreement between the partners of B&K was that*112 each partner would receive a percentage of the partnership profits derived from all fees received beginning the date the partner joined the partnership. In addition, petitioner agreed to turn over to the partnership all legal fees received after joining the partnership, regardless of whether the fees were earned in the partnership's name or from the partnership's contractual relationship with the client. The same agreement existed between the partners of SSG&M, including petitioner.
*646 During 1984 and 1985, BSI remitted $ 21,329 and $ 10,585 to petitioner. The amounts represented petitioner's percentage of fees from BSI clients that he had referred to BSI at a time when he was an associate with BSI. With the exception of $ 1,250 for the 1984 taxable year, all of the fees received during 1984 and 1985 were for work performed after petitioner left BSI. Petitioner, pursuant to his agreements with B&K and SSG&M, turned those amounts over to the appropriate partnership. B&K and SSG&M, in turn, treated the amounts as partnership income which was distributed to each partner (including petitioner) according to the partner's percentage share of partnership profits.
BSI's 1984 records *113 reflect that of the $ 21,329 total, $ 944 was attributable to Prince and $ 17,060 was attributable to Terri Girl. The remainder of the $ 21,329 remitted for 1984 ($ 3,325) was attributable to BSI clients for which petitioner had not consulted since leaving BSI during February 1983. The 1985 records of BSI reflect that the entire amount ($ 10,585) was attributable to Prince. BSI records reflect that billings and fees were made and received from BSI clients at various times during the year, but that petitioner received one annual aggregate payment.
OPINION
We consider here basic principles of income taxation. There is agreement that the amounts paid to petitioner by his former employer-law firm are income in the year of receipt. The question is whether petitioner (individually) or the partners of petitioner's partnerships (including petitioner) should report the income in their respective shares.
The parties have couched the issue in terms of the anticipatory assignment-of-income principles. See
First, we examine the parties' arguments with respect to the assignment-of-income doctrine. Respondent argues that *647 petitioner earned the income in question before leaving BSI, despite the fact that petitioner did not receive that income until he was a partner in B&K and, later, SSG&M. According to respondent, by entering into partnership agreements requiring payment of all legal fees to his new partnerships, petitioner anticipatorily assigned to those partnerships the income earned but not yet received from BSI.
Respondent also raises the question of petitioner's method of accounting -- the cash method. Respondent notes that the cash method requires taxpayers to postpone reporting income until received, whether or not earned prior to receipt. See
The principle of assignment of income, in the context of Federal taxation, first arose in There is no doubt that the statute could tax salaries to those who earned them and provide that the tax could not be escaped by anticipatory arrangements and contracts however skillfully devised to prevent the salary when paid from vesting even for a second in the man who earned it. [
Respondent contends*118 that
*649 In this case, petitioner was not entitled to the referral fees unless the work for the referred clients had been successfully completed. On the other hand, petitioner would be entitled to the fees if the work was completed or if at the time of the assignment there was nothing contingent in petitioner's right to collect his percentage of the fees. Additionally, the majority of*119 the services had not been performed prior to petitioner's leaving BSI. In this regard services had been performed with respect to $ 1,250 prior to 1984. With respect to $ 3,325 of the $ 21,329 of fees received in 1984, petitioner did not consult and was not required to do anything subsequent to leaving BSI to be entitled to those fees. With respect to the remainder of the $ 21,329 for 1984 and all of the 1985 fees, petitioner was called upon to and did consult while he was a partner of B&K or SSG&M.
We must decide whether petitioner had earned the fees in question prior to assigning them to the B&K or the SSG&M partnerships. Although petitioner was on the cash method, the principles that control use of the cash method are not suited to this inquiry. For purposes of the assignment-of-income doctrine, it must be determined whether the income was earned prior to an assignment. The principles underlying the cash method do not focus upon when income is earned, the focus is upon when income is actually or constructively received. The accrual method, however, involves a question of when income is earned, rather than when it is received. We accordingly consider the principles underlying*120 the accrual method for the purpose of determining whether petitioner had "earned" the income in question prior to the time he agreed to turn it over to the B&K or SSG&M partnerships.
Income is said to accrue where the right to receive it becomes fixed, that is when there is an enforceable liability. See, e.g.,
To meet the requirements of the all-events test, there can be no substantial contingency to a taxpayer's right of receipt or as to the certainty of the amount to be received. Under the accrual method, income may not be subject to taxation at a time when payment remains subject to the discretion of the employer,
The transaction under consideration is one where petitioner had an agreement under which he would receive a percentage of fees received by BSI from clients who were referred by petitioner while he was an employee of BSI. Inherent in petitioner's unconditional right to payment is the condition precedent that billable services have been performed for the referred client. Additionally, petitioner's right to payment may also be subject to a second condition precedent that he may be required to consult and be involved in performing the services to be billed. Finally, there is the conditional aspect of payment. If the referred client does not pay for services rendered, then petitioner will not receive his percentage.
The possibility that the client might*122 not pay his obligation once services are performed is insufficient to cause the deferral of income for an accrual method taxpayer.
The record in this case reflects that, with the exception of $ 1,250 of services performed in prior years, the billings and payments in *123 question were performed and collected subsequent to the time of assignment of the income. The requirement that petitioner may have been called upon to consult is part of the contingency relating to the performance of the work prior to liability being established or fixed. The absence of consulting by petitioner is not decisive in the setting of this case. Additionally, as a corollary to the income principles, under section 461(h) a taxpayer is not entitled to a deduction under the accrual method unless there has been economic performance, i.e., the services have been performed or the property delivered.
With these principles as our guide, we hold that petitioner had not earned the fees in question prior to leaving BSI, with the exception of the $ 1,250 received for services performed in an earlier year. More specifically, we hold that petitioner earned the income in question while a partner of a partnership to which he had agreed to pay such income. With respect to substantially all of the fees in issue, BSI records reflect that clients were billed and payment received during the years in issue. *124 very least, questionable whether he would have received his share of the fee if the work had been successfully completed without him. Petitioner was requested to and did provide further services with regard to clients from which about 90 percent of the fees were generated. We note that BSI did not request consultation with respect to $ 3,325 remitted during 1984. However, that amount was not earned as of the time of the assignment because the work had not yet been performed for the BSI clients (irrespective of whether or not *652 petitioner would be called upon to consult). Accordingly, with the exception of $ 1,250 for petitioner's 1984 taxable year, we hold that petitioner had not earned the income in question prior to leaving BSI and did not make an anticipatory assignment of income which had been earned.
*125 Two additional related questions remain for our consideration. First, respondent argues that irrespective of when petitioner earned the income from BSI, "there was no relationship * * * [between] the past activity of introducing a client to * * * [BSI], and the petitioner's work as a partner with * * * [B&K or SSG&M]." According to respondent, petitioner should not be allowed to characterize as partnership income fees that did not have a requisite or direct relationship to a partnership's business. In making this argument, respondent attempts to limit and modify his longstanding and judicially approved position in
Federal income tax treatment of compensation received by a partner and paid over to a partnership where the partner, who uses the cash receipts and disbursements method of accounting, files his returns on a *653 calendar year basis and the partnership, which also uses the cash method, files its returns on a fiscal year basis. Advice has been requested regarding the Federal income tax consequences of a change in the terms of a partnership agreement to provide that all compensation received by the partners will be paid over to*127 the partnership immediately upon receipt. In the instant case, several individuals formed a partnership for the purpose of engaging in the general practice of law. Aside from the partnership business, each of the partners has performed services from time to time in his individual capacity and not as a partner. The several partners have always regarded the fees received for such services as compensation to the recipient as an individual. The partnership which was formed in 1954 and uses the cash receipts and disbursements method of accounting files its Federal income tax returns for fiscal years ending January 31, and the partners file their individual returns on the cash method for calendar years. Each partner reports his distributive share of the partnership income, gain, loss, deduction or credit for the partnership fiscal year ending within the calendar year for which his individual return is filed. All compensation received by each partner for services performed in his individual capacity is reported in that partner's return for the calendar year when received. It is proposed to amend the partnership agreement as of the beginning of the partnership's next fiscal year to*128 provide that all compensation received by the partners be paid over to the partnership immediately upon receipt. The question in the instant case is whether compensation remitted to the partnership pursuant to this provision will constitute partnership income. Similar inquiries were previously considered by the Internal Revenue Service. * * * In both instances, it was pointed out that a partnership could not exist for the purpose of performing the services for which the compensation and allowances were received, and, thus, the recipient partner would be required to report the taxable portion of the compensation and allowances in his individual return, even though these items were pooled with partnership earnings. * * *
A key requirement of this ruling is that the services for which fees are received by individual partners must be
In
In
Three aspects of this holding weaken its precedential value. First, the basis for the determination is unclear. The decision does not specify whether the taxpayer, in order to make a successful assignment for tax purposes, had to have been engaged only in the partnership's
*656 Finally, the
Respondent's rulings have approved*134 as partnership income fees generated by partners serving in individual capacities only tangentially related to the partner's employment in his or her partnership. See
Similarly, in
There is no need for us to adopt a broader view of petitioner's partnership in this case. His referral fee income was clearly earned through activities "within the ambit" of the business of his new partnerships. Their business was the practice of law as was petitioner's consulting activity for BSI. His work was incident to the conduct of the business of his partnerships. We decline to adopt respondent's more narrow characterization of the business of petitioner's new partnerships. Neither the case law nor respondent's rulings support such a characterization.
*657 Thus, we arrive at the final question in this case. We have already held that petitioner had not yet earned the majority of the income in question when he joined his new partnerships. Additionally, petitioner's fee income from his BSI clients qualifies, under the case law and respondent's rulings, as income generated by services sufficiently related to the business conducted by petitioner's new partnerships. If we decide that petitioner's partnerships should report the income in question, petitioner would be taxable*136 only to the extent of his respective partnership share. This would allow petitioner, through his partnership agreements with B&K and SSG&M, to assign income not yet earned from BSI. Thus, the case law and respondent's rulings permit (without explanation), in a partnership setting, the type of assignment addressed by
The Internal Revenue Code of 1954 provided the first comprehensive statutory scheme for the tax treatment of partnersand partnerships. No section of the 1954 Code, successive amendments*137 or acts, nor the legislative history specifically addresses the treatment of income earned by partners in their individual capacity but which is pooled with other partnership income. It is implicit in subchapter K, however, that the pooling of income and losses of partners was intended by Congress. This question is more easily answered where the partnership contracts with the client for services which are then performed by the partner. The question becomes more complex where the partner contracts and performs the services when he is a partner.
Moreover, no opinion contains a satisfactory rationale as to why partnership pooling agreements do not come within the holding of
The fundamental theme penned by Justice Holmes provides that the individual who earns income is liable for the tax. The pooling of income is essential to the meaningful existence of subchapter K. If partners were not able to share profits*139 in an amount disproportionate to the ratio in which they earned the underlying income, the partnership provisions of the Code would, to some extent, be rendered unnecessary. See S. Rept. 1622, 83d Cong., 2d Sess., 89 (1954) (Finance Committee listing "flexibility" among partners as one of prime objectives of 1954 subchapter K reforms). See also The provisions of subchapter K tacitly imply that the pooling of income is permissible. Said implication may provide sufficient reason to conclude that a partnership should be treated as an entity for the purpose of pooling the income of its partners. Under an entity approach, the income would be considered that of the partnership rather than the partner, even though the partner's individual efforts may have earned the income. If the partnership is treated as an entity earning the income, then assignment-of-income concepts would not come into play. *659 In this regard, an analysis*140 of personal service corporations (PSC's) may provide, by way of analogy, some assistance in reconciling the principles inherent in
*144 The theory concerning partnerships as entities is not easily defined. It is well established that the partnership form is a hybrid -- part separate entity, part aggregate. See
The principle we must analyze in this case involves the role of the partnership with respect to the function of earning income. A general partnership For purposes of an entity concept approach to partnerships, we must consider the type and source of income which should be included. *146 Because we have already determined that the type of activity generating the income is relevant to an assignment-of-income analysis in the partnership setting, we focus our analysis of partnerships as entities on situations where the income is of a type normally earned by the partnership. Only in such situations has a partner acted as part of the partnership entity. The entity concept as it relates to partnerships is based, in part, on the concept that a partner may further the business of the partnership by performing services in the name of the partnership or individually. The name and reputation of a professional partnership plays a role in the financial success of the partnership business. If the partners perform services in the name of the partnership or individually they are, nonetheless, associated with the partnership *662 as a partner. This is the very essence of a professional service partnership, because each partner, although acting individually, is furthering the business of the partnership. See a group of persons having a common business interest, working together in their respective spheres toward the successful operation and conduct of that business interest. It does not connote the idea that each and every working partner must punch a clock at eight o'clock in the morning and work continuously through the day until five o'clock. * * * Accordingly, in circumstances where individuals are not joining in a venture merely to avoid the effect of *149 There is no apparent attempt to avoid the incidence of tax by the formation or operation of the partnerships in this case. Petitioner, in performing legal work for clients of another firm, was a partner with the law firms of B&K and SSG&M. In view of the foregoing, we hold that, with the exception of $ 1,250 for 1984, the fee income from BSI was correctly returned by the two partnerships in accord with the respective partnership agreements. We find that petitioners are not liable for additions to tax under section 6653(a)(1) and (2) regarding the income received from BSI. To reflect the foregoing,
BEGHE,
I reach the majority result in the following two steps. Even if the assignment-of-income*150 doctrine requires petitioner to include in his gross income the amounts of the fees he earned and received from BSI after he became a *664 partner in B&K and in SSG&M, his payments of those amounts to B&K and SSG&M, pursuant to his agreements with those firms, entitled him to equivalent concurrent deductions as ordinary and necessary business expenses under section 162(a). See Kamin, "Partners Dealing with Each Other Through Partnerships," 46th Annual N.Y.U. Inst. on Fed. Tax 27-10 to 27-14 (1988) (example 3 and accompanying text). Those amounts thereby became partnership income distributable to all the partners, including petitioner, in accordance with the partnership agreements.
JACOBS,
WELLS,
The critical threshold issue framed by the majority is whether the fees were paid to petitioner for services he performed prior to leaving BSI or for services he performed after he left BSI. If the fees were for services performed by petitioner*151 prior to the time he left BSI, they are "past services" which should be taxed to petitioner under the rule of
To decide the issue, we must ask what petitioner did to earn the fees in question. The analysis necessary to such an inquiry*152 should be made by examining the agreement and course of dealing between petitioner and BSI. Instead, the majority inaptly uses accrual accounting principles to decide the issue and concludes that certain contingencies prevented the income from being earned by petitioner until after he *665 left BSI. I submit that accrual accounting principles have little to do with the analysis of whether a cash method taxpayer should be taxed on fees earned by him. Furthermore, even if the majority uses such principles only by analogy, I disagree with the conclusion it reaches under its own analysis. When the agreement and course of dealing between petitioner and BSI are examined closely, I am impelled to conclude that the fees in question actually were paid on account of petitioner's services in bringing or referring the clients to BSI, or at the very least, that petitioner failed to carry his burden of proving that the fees were not paid for such services.
The majority has found that, during the period he worked for BSI, petitioner's compensation included a portion of the fees generated by clients he brought to the firm. When petitioner left BSI, his understanding with BSI was that he would continue*153 to receive his percentage of the fees from such clients even if he had not been called upon to perform any consulting services. Petitioner was expected to consult with BSI regarding such clients, if called upon to do so, but neither BSI nor petitioner had contemplated whether petitioner would have been entitled to receive the fees if he refused to consult with BSI. Curiously, without a supporting finding of fact, the majority prefaces its analysis with the statement that "petitioner
After obscuring the issue by grounding its analysis on accrual accounting*156 principles, the majority finds that certain "contingencies" prevented petitioner from earning the income in question until after he had left BSI. Upon closer examination, the illusory nature of such contingencies becomes apparent. Petitioner's right to receive the fees was *667 contingent upon BSI's performance of services for the clients. While the fees were contingent upon the performance of services by BSI for the clients, such a contingency is not materially different than the one involved in
HALPERN,
*668 According to the majority, the mere redistribution of income within a partnership is inconsistent with the assignment-of-income doctrine. "In partnerships and personal service corporations an individual performs the services that earn income. In both, a separate entity -- the partnership or personal service corporation -- is cast as the 'earner' for tax purposes. That characterization in both situations is, in essence, an assignment of income." (Majority op. p. 25; fn. ref. omitted.)
This analysis wholly ignores the doctrine of agency. When a partner,
The majority's "resolution" of the perceived conflict is unsatisfactory. The majority considers the determinative question to be whether the income is "of a type normally *669 earned by the partnership. Only in such situations has the partner acted as part of the partnership entity." Majority op. p. 29. The majority requires merely that income "be earned from an activity which can reasonably be associated with the partnership's business activity." Majority op. p. 31. Thus, the majority would allow a partner to assign fees to the partnership if the work performed for such fees is similar to that performed by the *161 partnership, but not if the work is different. Majority op. p. 17.
The majority's distinction is unprincipled. *162 would mandate the distinction between the type of income normally earned by the partnership and the type of income that is not. It would make far more sense to ask, with agency principles in mind, whether the income in question was earned by the partnership or by the partner acting as an individual.
Furthermore, I must disagree with Judge Beghe's concurring opinion on several grounds. First, section 721 would *670 seem to prohibit any deduction for petitioner's contribution of money to the partnership. *163 162 was not raised by the parties and thus is an inappropriate basis for decision. Third, the majority opinion does not set forth sufficient facts to determine, under the theory of the concurring opinion, the timing of any available deduction.
For the foregoing reasons, I respectfully dissent.
1. Section references are to the Internal Revenue Code of 1954 as amended and in effect for the taxable years under consideration. Rule references are to this Court's Rules of Practice and Procedure.↩
2. The Supreme Court addressed respondent's concern in
3. See also discussion in 3 B. Bittker & L. Lokken, Federal Taxation of Income, Estates and Gifts, par. 75.2.1, p. 75-9 through 75-13 (1981).↩
4. With the exception of $ 1,250 for 1984, BSI records reflect a pattern of periodic billing of and payment by clients for work performed during each year. This indicates that we are not dealing with work already performed prior to petitioner's leaving BSI early in 1983. We also note that petitioner's 1983 taxable year is not in issue. That was the transitional year between petitioner's being an associate of BSI and becoming a partner of B&K. The likelihood of fees having been earned prior to petitioner's joining the B&K partnership would have been greater during 1983.↩
5. Respondent's attempt to limit the position in
6. We did state: "[the taxpayer] did not serve as a district court judge on behalf of the partnership."
7. See discussion in 3 B. Bittker & L. Lokken, Federal Taxation of Income, Estates and Gifts, par. 75.2.2, pp. 75-13 to 75-14 (1981).↩
8. One major variation exists in cases involving community property States, concerning which the Supreme Court distinguished
9. The same could be said of the normal corporate entity as well. The analogy only to PSC's, however, is slightly more apt because, as discussed below, the influence of the assignment-of-income doctrine depends to a large extent on the presence and status of the business form as an entity. In this regard, the corporate form and the partnership are at opposite ends of the spectrum. PSC's fall somewhere in between. This becomes clear through an analysis of the cases where the issue is whether the business form should be disregarded for tax purposes. Compare
10. Note that in some cases the act of incorporation itself will ostensibly act as the agreement to turn over all income earned.↩
11. It should be noted that in all of these cases, the assignment to the corporation was of income not yet earned. That is, in situations where the entity was validly cast as the earner of the income, the factual pattern involved an incorporation and subsequent earnings by the incorporator. Situations involving contrary facts are usually considered assignments of income.↩
12. We recognize that in a personal service corporation setting the person performing the service is an employee and that the contract to perform may be with the corporate entity. In a general partnership, the partners are principals and agents and not generally considered employees of the partnership. Partnerships, in the same manner as corporations, however, have employees who perform services contracted for by the partnership. That aspect draws a closer parallel between partnerships and personal service corporations for purposes of our analogy. This aspect does not answer the question concerning income of a partner becoming income of the partnership, but is concerned with the partnership's being treated as an entity for purposes of this issue.↩
13. Our discussion focuses upon professional partnerships composed of general partners who are actively engaged in a business venture. The principles here may not apply to limited or general partners who are mere passive investors and are not involved in the income earning process of the partnership.↩
14. In following this approach we can also look to the safeguards that are observed in the corporate setting where the entity is being misused. "The assignment of income doctrine * * * continues to be an essential tool * * * where the corporation is not respected by the taxpayer/shareholders as a separate entity which carries on business activities."
1.
2. In relying on petitioner's belief, the majority appears to suggest that the test of whether a taxpayer has earned income is subjective, and that income cannot be considered earned until the earner "believes" that he has earned it. Such a holding is contrary to established principles of income tax law and should not form the basis for deciding the true nature of a transaction for tax purposes.↩
3. Because contingencies only go to the question of when income should be taxed, i.e. timing, rather than the question of to whom the income should be taxed, i.e., who is the true earner, the fact that a payment is subject to a contingency does not answer the latter question -- it only answers the former.↩
4. The Uniform Partnership Act, sec. 9(1), provides that a (general) partner is an agent of the partnership. Moreover, a partner has the power to bind the partnership to any act that is "for apparently carrying on in the usual way the business of the partnership of which he is a member," unless the third party knows of some restriction on that power. 1 A. Bromberg & L. Ribstein, Partnership, sec. 4.01(b), at 4:3-4:4 (1988) (quoting Uniform Partnership Act, sec. 9(1)).
5. Had there been a novation, substituting the partnership for petitioner, then the partnership could properly be considered the earner of the income. In this case, however, there is no basis set forth in the majority opinion for concluding that a novation has taken place or that a substitution of Bandler & Kass for petitioner had been even discussed with Ballon, Stoll & Itzler. We are not privileged to simply assume a novation, since petitioner bears the burden of proof. Rule 142(a).↩
6. The majority fails to explain why the similarity of the work done by the partner to earn the fees to the work of the partnership is determinative. That failure not only casts doubt upon the correctness of this decision, but foreshadows the difficulty future courts will have in resolving the question: how similar is similar enough? Without any inkling of why similarity has been deemed important, future courts will lack any effective guidelines for answering that question.↩
7. The article cited by Judge Beghe↩ deals with contracts that are not partnerships for tax purposes. See Kamin, "Partners Dealing with Each Other Through Partnerships," 46th Annual N.Y.U. Inst. on Fed. Tax 27-3, n.5 (1988). Consequently, that article does not address the argument that section 721 precludes a deduction in this case.
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