DocketNumber: Docket No. 5128-80.
Citation Numbers: 44 T.C.M. 1487, 1982 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 131, 1982 T.C. Memo. 617
Filed Date: 10/21/1982
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 11/20/2020
MEMORANDUM FINDINGS OF FACT AND OPINION
TANNENWALD,
FINDINGS OF FACT
Some of the facts have been stipulated and are found accordingly.
Petitioners, Howard J. Greenfield*132 and Pearl D. Greenfield, resided in White Plains, New York, at the time they filed the petition in the instant case. On September 16, 1975, petitioners entered into an agreement with Ribon Industries, Inc. (Ribon or the corporation) whereby petitioners agreed to sell 100 shares of Ribon stock to the corporation.
The agreement provided, in relevant part, as follows:
2. The purchase price is $400,000.00, $100,000.00 of which has been paid simultaneously with the execution of this agreement, and the balance of which the Corporation shall pay to the Sellers * * * in monthly installments of $5,000.00 each, together with interest at the rate of 8 1/2%, beginning on the 1st day of October, 1975 * * *.
12. The Corporation hereby agrees to loan to the Sellers the sum of Sixty Thousand ($60,000.00) Dollars on October 2, 1975, on a promissory note for said sum payable at the rate of Five Thousand ($5,000.00) Dollars per month beginning October 2, 1975, with interest at 8 1/2%, to be secured by the first notes coming due to the Sellers, including the note of October 1, 1975, which notes shall be delivered to the Corporation upon the making of said loan, which shall be repaid by the*133 cancellation of said notes on their due dates.
The agreement also provided that the 100 shares of stock were to be held in escrow until Ribon's note was paid in full. If Ribon defaulted on its obligation, petitioners could cause the escrow agent to sell the stock.
Petitioners' basis in the stock was $43,678. On their 1975 return, petitioners used the installment method to report the gain on the sale of the Ribon stock.
At the time petitioners entered into the agreement with Ribon, Harry Ayre (Mr. Ayre) was the president and chief executive officer of Ribon. On August 7, 1975, Mr. Ayre was convicted of bribery of a U.S. Government employee and was sentenced to 30 days' imprisonment and fined $3,500. On July 10, 1978, he was found guilty of income tax evasion and was sentenced to two years imprisonment and fined $30,000.
OPINION
We must determine: (1) if petitioners are entitled to report the gain on the sale of their Ribon stock on the installment method; (2) if petitioner may not utilize the installment method, whether the sale qualifies as an open transaction so that petitioners need recognize income only to the extent to which Ribon makes payment on its notes.
*134
The totality of the factors present in this case convinces us that petitioners have not satisfied their burden of proving that the $60,000 was a loan, rather than a partial*136 payment of the sales price.
Significant to our determination is the fact that petitioners and Ribon structured the transaction so that the "loan" was "repaid" by mere bookkeeping entries. The interest rate and monthly payment on Ribon's and petitioners' notes were identical. The agreement itself provided that petitioners' note would be "repaid by the cancellation of [Ribon's] notes on their due dates." Petitioners received the immediate and unrestricted use of funds which, due to the structure of the transaction, would never have to be repaid. The fact that no repayment would ultimately be necessary, due to the contemporaneous obligations incurred by Ribon, severely undercuts petitioners' characterization of the cash receipt as a loan. See
The interdependence of the sale and the "loan" also indicates that the cash received was, in*137 fact, sales proceeds. See
*141 Petitioners rely on the Sixth Circuit's opinion in
Pettioners' second argument is that they are entitled to treat the sale of stock as an "open transaction" and, accordingly, recognize no income until payments are received from Ribon. Initially, we note that this case does not involve a situation where the amount of the obligation cannot be calculated with any degree of certainty or where the taxpayer's right to receive payment of the obligation is conditional. In such situations, the courts have usually held that the open transaction doctrine is applicable. See, e.g.,
We have held that *143 the open-transaction doctrine also is applicable where the notes held by the taxpayer are "speculative." See, e.g.,
One factor which we consider in determining whether the notes were "speculative" is their marketability, which involves the subsidiary consideration of negotiability.
The stock sold to Ribon was placed in escrow as security for Ribon's notes. This factor tends to undercut petitioners' argument that it was unlikely that they would receive payment on the notes. See
In sum, petitioners have not carried their heavy burden of proving that Ribon's notes were speculative obligations. Accordingly, petitioners may not report the sale of this stock to Ribon as an open transaction.
Petitioners' attempt to utilize Mr. Ayre's conviction and the impact of the fines that he was called upon to pay to avoid the consequences of the transaction as structured is totally without merit.
1. Unless otherwise indicated, all section references are to the Internal Revenue Code of 1954, as amended and effect during the year at issue, and all Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure.↩
2. Petitioners argue that they and Ribon had some sort of initial oral agreement concerning the stock sale which did not include the "loan" provision and that it was 10 days later that petitioners realized that they needed the $60,000 cash. Even if we accept such testimony as true, the lapse of 10 days is not sufficient to convince us that the "loan" provision was independent of the sales transaction.↩
3. in
It may be supposed that if A sold property to B for $965,000, the latter paying $74,000 in cash and agreeing to pay the balance in stated installments during subsequent years, and if at the same time B "loaned" A an additional amount of $430,000, taking A's notes to mature coincidentally with installments due him, the understanding being that the notes would never be enforced against A, but that as installments and notes matured, the notes would simply be destroyed, a court would have little hesitancy in ignoring the idle form that the transaction took and in concluding that A had in fact received as his own the sum of $504,000. "A given result at the end of a straight path is not made a different result because reached by following a devious path."
4. As explained in
5. Nor does
In Re Applied Logic Corporation, Bankrupt. New Jersey ... , 576 F.2d 952 ( 1978 )
United States v. Robert I. Ingalls, Jr. And Mrs. Jane S. ... , 399 F.2d 143 ( 1968 )
Burnet v. Logan , 51 S. Ct. 550 ( 1931 )
Estate of Henry P. Lipman, Deceased, John F. Dodd, and ... , 376 F.2d 455 ( 1967 )
In the Matter of the Bohack Corporation, Debtor-In-... , 599 F.2d 1160 ( 1979 )