DocketNumber: Docket No. 13220-79.
Filed Date: 12/23/1981
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 11/20/2020
SUPPLEMENTAL MEMORANDUM OPINION
GOFFE,
On December 1, 1981, respondent filed in the instant case a Motion for Reconsideration and Revision of Opinion and a motion with the identical caption in
The O'Heron and Platzer cases were tried separately. Because respondent's motions raise a procedural question, we must necessarily file opinions in both the O'Heron and Platzer cases in order to fully set forth the procedural details involved*20 in the respective cases.
The common issue in both cases is a factual one concerning a payment of $ 100,000 each by Mr. O'Heron and Mr. Platzer to a Mr. Hoffman whom we found to be an employee of Messrs. O'Heron and Platzer.
In the Memorandum Findings of Fact and Opinion filed in the instant case we held some of respondent's arguments, advanced for the first time on brief, to be untimely and accordingly declined to consider them. Respondent, in his Motions for Reconsideration and Revision of Opinion, moves that we reconsider our holding as to one of the untimely arguments. In his motion he contends that an opinion of this Court, affirmed by the Court of Appeals to which appeals in the instant cases would lie, is contrary to our holding in favor of petitioners in the instant cases on the Mardigian property issue.
We have granted respondent's Motion for Reconsideration and Revision of Opinion in part and in response file this Supplemental Opinion. However, we reconsider our opinion filed on November 5, 1981, only as to the procedural question raised in respondent's motion and will not disturb the findings of fact because respondent has not moved that we reconsider our findings of fact. Because we find
in
We held that the issue in the case was whether the payments to corporate officers represented reasonable allowances for services performed in carrying on the business of the corporation and, therefore, the question of whether the payments were capital in nature was embraced within the issue upon which petitioner had the burden of proof. The Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed, framing the issue in the same manner as did we. It pointed out that if the salaries were not paid for carrying on the business of the corporation, they were not ordinary expenses and the taxpayer had the burden not only to establish that the salaries were reasonable in amount but also that they were ordinary and necessary in carrying on the business of the corporation.
The explanation of the adjustment to the taxpayer's tax liability framed in the statutory notice of deficiency in
We found as a fact that Mr. Hoffman was an employee, not a joint venturer. Respondent abandoned the argument that the payment to Hoffman was an expense of sale. The specificity of the language of the statutory notice of deficiency coupled with the continued specificity of the nature of the issue as framed by respondent's counsel in his trial memorandum and opening statement distinguishes the facts here from those in
Having held, therefore, that the new theory of respondent contained in
The rule controlling the Commissioner's right to rely on a particular theory is dependent upon his providing the taxpayer fair warning of his intention to proceed under such theory. "Fair warning in this context means that a taxpayer must not, by reason of the Commissioner's failure to timely notify him, have been prejudiced or harmed in his ability to prepare for trial."
Our inherent authority is to decide cases upon issues properly before us. This case may well have presented opportunities for applying
In affirming, the Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit held
If a violation of a particular Internal Revenue Code section, Treasury regulation, or theory based on sections or regulations is involved, the Commissioner should notify the taxpayer of that section, egulation or theory. The failure to advise the taxpayer of such information is extremely prejudicial. Deficiency assessments are usually presumptively correct, and the taxpayer has the burden to prove them wrong. *27 "(b)
Fully advising the taxpayer includes recitation of the Code sections and theories on which the Commissioner relies.
We will now examine the record in this case in light of
In the statutory notice of deficiency mailed to petitioners, the Commissioner disallowed petitioner's payment to Mr. Hoffman with the following explanation:
It is determined that the claimed deduction of $ 100,000 as O'Heron-Platzer Trust Management Fee is unallowable as an ordinary deduction because the amount is a part of $ 200,000 representing the purchase*29 of a third-party joint/venturer's share of the profits from the sale of that shown as the Michigan [Mardigian] Property. (See adjustment "C" for computation of corrected gain from the sale of said property.) Accordingly, your 1974 taxable income is increased $ 100,000.
Alternately, it is determined that the claimed deduction of $ 100,000 is unallowable as an ordinary deduction because the amount is part of $ 200,000 representing a cost of the sale of that shown as the Michigan [Mardigian] Property.
Respondent did not plead any additional grounds for the disallowance of the deduction in his answer nor did he move to file an amended answer for such purpose.
In his trial memorandum tendered to this Court prior to trial, respondent framed the Mardigian property issue to be presented as follows:
1. Whether $ 200,000.00 paid in 1974 by Clarence J. O'Heron and Peter J. Platzer to a corporation wholly owned by one Ralph Hoffman is deductible ($ 100,000.00 by each O'Heron and Platzer) under
Counsel for respondent, after reciting the facts on the Mardigian property issue as he saw them, described respondent's position as follows in his opening statement:
It's respondent's contention that the $ 200,000.00 was simply the purchase of Mr. Hoffman's interest in the profits of the venture, and a capital expense. Alternatively, if the $ 200,000.00 did not represent the purchase of Mr. Hoffman's interest, it was nothing more than a finder's fee or a commission paid to him for his part in locating the property and disposing of it, again, a cost of sale and a capital expense. Under no circumstances can the $ 200,000.00 be compensation for the modest amount of management services which Mr. Hoffman performed with respect to the building itself. Your honor, because of the manner in which these parties have dealt, through oral contracts, through closely held corporate entities, through trusts, it's somewhat difficult for respondent to say just exactly what the payment was but it is not difficult to say what the payment was not. And it was not compensation for*31 Ralph Hoffman's management services over this thirteen-month period, a period in which the property itself generated substantial losses. The only way petitioners can prevail is if they establish that the payment represented compensation, and reasonable compensation, for Mr. Hoffman's management services. And the evidence will clearly show that this was not the case.
To sum up respondent's theories at the time the trial began, they were that the $ 200,000 payment to Hoffman did not represent compensation for management services rendered but, instead, represented a payment for Hoffman's share of the proceeds from the sale of the Mardigian property or, alternatively, represented a cost of sale of the property. As counsel for respondent stated in his opening statement, "The only way petitioners can prevail is if they establish that the payment represented compensation, and reasonable compensation, for Mr. Hoffman's management services."
The record discloses nothing to indicate that petitioners' counsel in both cases, respondent's counsel, or the Court, thought the issues to be anything different as the trial progressed. At the conclusion of the trials, counsel for respondent made*32 no oral motion to conform the pleadings to the proof, nor did he ever file any such motion.
The parties briefed the Mardigian property issue in the instant case. In his opening brief respondent, consistent with the first ground in the statutory notice of deficiency, his attorney's trial memorandum and his attorney's opening statement, stated in the "Points Relied Upon" section: "It is respondent's position that petitioner, Platzer and Hoffman were co-joint ventures, and that the $ 200,000.00 was for the purchase of Hoffman's interest, a capital expense." In addition, however, for the first time, respondent added the following theory:
Furthermore, even if the Court were to determine that Hoffman was not a co-joint venturer, but only an employee of petitioner and Mr. Platzer, the amount paid for his services is not deductible as an ordinary and necessary business expense. The record clearly shows that the services performed by Mr. Hoffman were directly connected to the renovation of the building, necessary to make it suitable for rental use. The amount paid for such services must be capitalized, [citing
At no time previous to this*33 had respondent brought to the attention of petitioners' counsel or the Court, the opinion of this Court or the Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit, in
Counsel for petitioners, at no time prior to filing their reply brief, indicated any knowledge of the new theory raised by respondent and did not cite
In our opinion, we agreed with petitioners and held that respondent's new theory was untimely and would not be considered. In his motion for reconsideration respondent argues that the new theory he advanced for the first time on brief was not a new issue under the rationale of
The following summarizes the vacillations in respondent's theories:
1. Cost of acquiring Hoffman's interest in profits from sale of Mardigian property;
2. Cost of sale.
1. Cost of acquiring Hoffman's*34 interest in profits from sale of Mardigian property.
1. Cost of acquiring Hoffman's interest in profits from sale of Mardigian property;
2. Finder's fee or commission, i.e., cost of sale.
1. Cost of acquiring Hoffman's interest in profit from sale of Mardigian property;
2. Services performed by Hoffman were connected with the renovation of the building and were, therefore, capital in nature.
If counsel for respondent had moved to conform the pleadings to the proof at the conclusion of the trial, and if counsel for petitioners had objected we would have had the flexibility to permit petitioners to offer additional evidence or take other appropriate steps to protect petitioners' rights.
We hold, therefore, that
1.
2. All section references are to the Internal Revenue Code of 1954, as amended.↩
6.
7. In
8. Of course, if a certain Code section, regulation or theory has not been specifically raised in the notice of deficiency, in the pleadings, or at trial and if there is an absence of surprise on the taxpayer's part, the taxpayer has no reason to complain.