DocketNumber: No. 9423-98
Citation Numbers: 114 T.C. 1, 2000 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 1, 114 T.C. No. 1
Judges: Laro
Filed Date: 1/6/2000
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/14/2024
Decision will be entered under Rule 155.
P, a corporation the stock of which is owned 84 percent by S and
16 percent by two individuals unrelated to S, sells greeting
cards and other paper products bearing an image of one or more
of P's licensed cartoon characters. P's employees develop and
draw the originals of all of the characters, and P transfers the
original drawings to independent printing companies to reproduce
images of the drawings onto P's paper products, which are made
by the printers on P's behalf. The printers must reproduce the
drawings and make the products in accordance with P's
specifications, and they may not sell to a third party either
P's original drawings, or reproductions thereof, or P's paper
products.
HELD: P produces, rather than resells, its paper products;
thus, P does not qualify for the "small reseller" exception to
the uniform capitalization (UNICAP) rules of
HELD, further, P is not excepted from the UNICAP
rules by virtue of the artist exemption of sec.
"substantially all" of P's stock within the meaning of
HELD, *2 further, the "year of change" for purposes
of
year in which P's method of accounting is changed to
conform to the UNICAP rules), rather than the first
year to which the UNICAP rules apply.
*2 OPINION
LARO, JUDGE: This case is before the Court fully stipulated. See Rule 122. Respondent determined a $ 131,077 deficiency in petitioner's Federal income tax for its taxable year ended June 30, 1994. We decide primarily whether petitioner is subject to the uniform capitalization (UNICAP) rules of
BACKGROUND
All facts were stipulated. The stipulation of facts and the exhibits submitted therewith are incorporated herein by this reference. Petitioner is a corporation with a taxable year ending on *3 June 30. Its business is "social expression" through the original drawing of licensed cartoon characters and the dissemination of images of those drawings on certain paper products. Its principal place of business was in California when the petition was filed.
Eighty-four percent of petitioner's stock is owned by Suzy Spafford; the balance is owned by two individuals unrelated to her. Ms. Spafford is an artist who graduated from San Diego State University in 1967 with a bachelor's degree in fine arts. She obtained a teaching certificate in 1968 and taught high school art from 1968 through 1969. She began to develop cartoon characters in the 1960's, and she gradually developed petitioner's business from those characters. She incorporated petitioner's business in 1976, and she registered petitioner's name as a trademark with the Federal Government.
Petitioner sells paper products (primarily Christmas and greeting cards, but also secondary items such as stationery, calendars, recipe books, and invitations), each bearing a copy of one or more of its cartoon drawings. Petitioner's artistic work is all done at its headquarters in San Diego by Ms. Stafford and two nonshareholder employees. *4 Ms. Spafford is petitioner's principal artist; she has personally drawn and painted most of petitioner's original cartoon characters and *3 most of the scenes in which the characters appear. The other two employees also draw original cartoon characters and scenes; their drawings are reviewed, modified (as necessary), and approved by Ms. Spafford. Ms. Spafford and the two employees together draw between 300 and 400 cartoon character/scenes a year, and each character/scene is numbered and licensed.
Petitioner offers for sale at its headquarters all currently available merchandise that bears an image of at least one of its cartoon characters. Petitioner does not sell items that do not bear an image of at least one of its cartoon characters, and it does not sell its original cartoon drawings. Petitioner's primary customers are card and gift shops and licensing partners, and most of its nonlicensing partner sales are by or through independent sales representatives, each of whom has a specified sales territory and each of whom earns a straight sales commission. Sales representatives order petitioner's products directly from it, and they place the products in card and gift shops and the like. *5 Petitioner ships most of its inventory from its headquarters, where petitioner's employees generally package the paper products for sale to the retailers on the basis of the sales representative's orders.
Petitioner uses several independent printing companies to print its products. Generally, petitioner sends an original cartoon drawing to a printer, and the printer photographs the drawing, performs the necessary color separations, and creates "proofs" of a particular paper product in accordance with specifications dictated by petitioner (e.g., the size of the card to be printed, the color of ink, and the grade of the card stock to be used in printing the card). The printer uses its own paper and its own ink, and it holds title to and bears the risk of loss of the supplies and printed goods until it ships the goods back to petitioner for petitioner to accept or reject. If petitioner rejects the goods, it informs the printer of changes which must be made to meet petitioner's specifications.
Printers do not print petitioner's paper products absent an order from it, and they are not allowed to sell petitioner's paper products or any of petitioner's original cartoon characters or reproductions *6 thereof. Petitioner sends a purchase order to a printer indicating the number of a particular *4 paper product that it wants printed, and the printer prints the approximate number of products ordered. In the case of cards, the printer prepares an invoice with artist's adjustments noted and ships the printed items, per petitioner's instructions, to San Diego Bindery. Petitioner contracts with San Diego Bindery to cut the sheets of cards into individual cards and to fold each individual card, and San Diego Bindery bears the risk of loss if it damages any card during that process. San Diego Bindery ships the finished goods (with an invoice) to petitioner's headquarters, where petitioner stores all of its inventory.
In addition to selling products which bear at least one of its cartoon characters, petitioner enters into licensing agreements under which certain manufacturers are given the right to use one or more of petitioner's characters. Under a licensing agreement, petitioner generally charges the licensee a fee to use an original cartoon drawing and a royalty equal to a percentage of the licensed products sold. The licensees sell and distribute the products they create bearing images *7 of petitioner's cartoon characters. Petitioner does not sell its licensees' products through either its independent sales representatives or through its catalogue; most of the licensees sell and distribute their products themselves. Petitioner does sell all of its licensees' products at its retail store.
Petitioner has never adjusted the value of its inventory to reflect
Petitioner's gross receipts and other revenue for the subject year totaled $ 5,874,039. Of that amount, $ 5,241,830 was from sales, *8 e.g., cards 621,082
Books, calendars, & recipe cards 315,034
Wrap and tote 193,101
Invitations 191,280
Gift enclosures 86,425
Other items 275,052
_________
Total 5,241,830
_________
*5 For the 3 taxable years preceding the subject year, petitioner's gross receipts were $ 6,711,723, $ 6,772,772, and $ 5,898,638, respectively.
Respondent determined that petitioner is subject to the UNICAP rules. Respondent determined that petitioner's cost of goods sold for the subject year was overstated by $ 667,267 by virtue of the fact that petitioner had failed to change its method of accounting to account for the UNICAP rules.
DISCUSSION
We decide primarily whether petitioner is subject to the UNICAP rules of
COSTS OF CERTAIN EXPENSES.
(a) Nondeductibility of Certain Direct and
Indirect Costs. --
(1) In general. -- In the case of any
property to which this section applies, any
costs described in paragraph (2) --
(A) in the case of property
which is inventory in the hands of
the taxpayer, shall be included in
inventory costs, and
(B) in the case of any other
property, shall be capitalized.
(2) Allocable costs. -- The costs
described in this paragraph with respect to
any property are --
(A) the direct costs of such
property, and
(B) such property's proper
share of those indirect costs
(including taxes) part or all of
which are allocable to such
property.
*6 Any cost which (but for this subsection) could not be taken into account in computing taxable income for any taxable year shall not be treated as a cost described in this paragraph.
(b) Property to Which Section Applies. -- Except as
otherwise provided in *10 this section, this section shall
apply to --
(1) Property produced by the taxpayer. --
Real or tangible personal property produced
by the taxpayer.
(2) Property acquired for resale. --
(A) In general. -- Real or
personal property described in
section 1221(1) which is acquired
by the taxpayer for resale.
(B) Exception for taxpayer
with gross receipts of $ 10,000,000
or less. -- Subparagraph (A) shall
not apply to any personal property
acquired during any taxable year by
the taxpayer for resale if the
average annual gross receipts of
the taxpayer * * * for the 3-
taxable year period ending with the
taxable year preceding such taxable
year do not exceed $ 10,000,000.
* * * * * * *
(g) Production. -- For purposes of this section --
(1) In general. -- The term "produce"
includes construct, build, install,
manufacture, develop, or improve.
(2) Treatment of property produced under
contract for the taxpayer. -- The taxpayer
shall be treated as producing any property
produced for the taxpayer under a contract
with the taxpayer * * *.
(h) Exemption for Free Lance Authors,
Photographers, *11 and Artists. --
(1) In general. -- Nothing in this section
shall require the capitalization of any
qualified creative expense.
(2) Qualified creative expense. -- For
purposes of this subsection, the term
"qualified creative expense" means any
expense --
(A) which is paid or incurred
by an individual in the trade or
business of such individual (other
than as an employee) of being a
writer, photographer, or artist,
and
(B) which, without regard to
this section, would be allowable as
a deduction for the taxable year.
* * * * * * *
(3) Definitions. -- For purposes of this
subsection --
* * * * * * *
(C) Artist. --
(i) In general. -- The term
"artist" means any individual if
the personal efforts of such
individual create (or may
reasonably be expected to create) a
picture, painting, sculpture,
statue, etching, drawing, cartoon,
graphic design, or original print
edition.
(ii) Criteria. -- In
determining whether any expense is
paid or incurred in the trade or
business of being an artist, the
following criteria shall be taken
into *12 account:
(I) The originality
and uniqueness of the item created
(or to be created).
*7 (II) The
predominance of aesthetic value
over utilitarian value of the item
created (or to be created).
(D) Treatment of certain
corporations. --
(i) In general. -- If --
(I) substantially
all of the stock of a corporation
is owned by a qualified employee-
owner and members of his family (as
defined in section 267(c)(4)), and
(II) the principal
activity of such corporation is
performance of personal services
directly related to the activities
of the qualified employee-owner and
such services are substantially
performed by the qualified
employee-owner,
this subsection shall apply to any
expense of such corporation which
directly relates to the activities
of such employee-owner in the same
manner as if such expense were
incurred by such employee-owner.
(ii) Qualified employee-
owner. -- For purposes of this
subparagraph, the term "qualified
employee-owner" means any
individual who is an employee-owner
of the corporation (as defined *13 in
section 269A(b)(2)) and who is a
writer, photographer, or artist.
Petitioner makes two arguments as to why it is not subject to the UNICAP rules. First, petitioner argues, it is excepted from those rules because it is a small reseller under
Respondent argues that petitioner *14 does not meet the reseller exception because it produces rather than resells its paper products.
We agree with respondent that petitioner is subject to the UNICAP rules of
Petitioner focuses on the fact that the producers actually develop the paper products and argues therefrom that the printers are the producers of its products. We disagree with this argument. The printer's reproduction of petitioner's characters onto ordinary paper is merely one small step in petitioner's process of exploiting its characters as sellable images, and the reproduction process is mechanical in nature in that it *16 involves little independence on the printers' part and is subject to petitioner's control, close scrutiny, and approval. Petitioner personally selects the printers merely to reproduce the character's images in a specified manner onto standard sheets of plain paper. The printers cannot print the paper products without the cartoon images, and the finished products must conform to petitioner's specifications. Given the added fact that a printer does not acquire a proprietary interest in a cartoon drawing so that it may sell the drawing (or copy thereof) either separately or as part of a paper product, *9 we conclude that the printers are not producers because they never meet the necessary requirement of owning the paper products for Federal income tax purposes. See
Nor do we believe that a product such as petitioner's paper products may be considered within the meaning of
Petitioner focuses on the fact that the printers bear the risk of loss during the printing process. We do not find this fact dispositive as to who owns (and thus produces) the paper *10 products. The identification of the owner of property for purposes of the UNICAP rules does not necessarily *19 rest on who bears the risk of loss when the product is fabricated or assembled, or, for that matter, on who actually turns the screws or hammers the nails into the product. The owner of property must be identified from the facts and circumstances of the case, see
As to petitioner's second argument that it qualifies for
We must apply the term "substantially all" to determine whether petitioner qualifies for the exemption set forth in
Having concluded that petitioner is subject to the UNICAP rules, we now turn to the remaining issue; i.e., the year in which
(d) Effective date. --
(1) In General. -- Except as provided in
this subsection, the amendments made by this
section shall apply to costs incurred after
December 31, 1986, in taxable years ending
after such date.
(2) Special Rule For Inventory
Property. -- In *25 the case of any property which
is inventory in the hands of the taxpayer --
(A) IN GENERAL -- The amendments
made by this section shall apply to
taxable years beginning after
December 31, 1986.
* * * * * * *
Petitioner focuses on the fact that section 803(d)(2)(A) of the TRA provides explicitly that the amendments contained therein "shall" apply to taxable years beginning in or after 1987 and asserts that this language means that the "year of change" for purposes of
We agree with respondent.
In accordance with this firmly established law, the year of change in this case is the subject year; i.e., the first year in which petitioner's method of accounting *27 was changed to reflect the UNICAP rules. Petitioner attempts to distinguish this law by arguing that, as of its first taxable year beginning in 1987, TRA section 803(d)(2) changed its method of accounting to conform to the UNICAP rules as an operation of law. *29 We find that argument unpersuasive. The fact of the matter is that, up until and including the subject year, petitioner used a method of accounting that did not reflect the *14 UNICAP rules, and our holdings herein mean that petitioner must recompute its income for the subject year under a method of accounting that does take into account those rules. See also
All arguments not discussed herein are either irrelevant or without merit. To reflect concessions,
Decision will be entered under Rule 155.
1. The cost of goods attributable to those sales was $ 2,108,921. The only item reportedly included in that cost was "Purchases".↩
2. For purposes of
3. For purposes of
4. The case of
5.
6. Petitioner also discusses at length
(3) Resellers with property produced under
contract. Generally, property produced for a taxpayer
under a contract * * * is treated as property produced
by the taxpayer. * * * However, a small reseller is
not required to capitalize additional
costs to personal property produced for it under
contract with an unrelated person if the contract is
entered into incident to the resale activities of the
small reseller and the property is sold to its
customers. * * *
That section is inapplicable because petitioner has no resale activities in that it is not a reseller of its paper products.↩
7. The legislative history to the TRA reveals that Congress also equated a 95-percent test with the term "substantially all" for purposes of sec. 448(d)(2), a provision included in the TRA as sec. 801(a). See H. Conf. Rept. 99-841 (Vol. II) at II-287 (1986), 1986-3 C.B. (Vol. 4) 1, 287. The legislative history to TAMRA reveals that the joint conferees to that Act knew that the term "substantially all" had been equated with a 95-percent requirement. See H. Conf. Rept. 100-1104 (Vol. 2) at II-152 (1988),
8. None of the Senate's amendments are relevant for purposes of our discussion.↩
9. Petitioner argues that the Court should apply a "facts and circumstances test" to determine whether Ms. Spafford owns "substantially all" of petitioner's stock for purposes of
10. Petitioner also notes that the Commissioner had previously examined some of its earlier taxable years that postdated the effective date of the UNICAP rules and that the Commissioner had never changed its method of accounting for those years to conform to those rules. Petitioner suggests that the Commissioner now is estopped from making the
Schafer v. Helvering , 83 F.2d 317 ( 1936 )
Alvin v. Graff v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue , 673 F.2d 784 ( 1982 )
Graff Chevrolet Company v. Ellis Campbell, Jr., District ... , 343 F.2d 568 ( 1965 )
Charles Peckat Mfg. Co. v. Jarecki , 196 F.2d 849 ( 1952 )
norfolk-southern-corporation-and-affiliated-companies-norfolk-western , 140 F.3d 240 ( 1998 )
Dixon v. United States , 85 S. Ct. 1301 ( 1965 )
Polaroid Corporation v. The United States of America , 235 F.2d 276 ( 1956 )
Albertson's, Inc., Petitioner-Appellant-Cross-Appellee v. ... , 42 F.3d 537 ( 1994 )
Knight-Ridder Newspapers, Inc. v. United States , 743 F.2d 781 ( 1984 )
Automobile Club of Mich. v. Commissioner , 77 S. Ct. 707 ( 1957 )