DocketNumber: Docket No. 23214-92
Citation Numbers: 69 T.C.M. 2886, 1995 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 260, 1995 T.C. Memo. 259
Judges: GERBER
Filed Date: 6/13/1995
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 11/20/2020
1995 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 260">*260 Decision will be entered for petitioners.
MEMORANDUM FINDINGS OF FACT AND OPINION
GERBER,
Prior to beginning her skating business, Cathy made inquiries of the owners of a skating rink in Oliver Springs, Tennessee, about conducting a skating rink business. Additionally, through her own observations and patronage, Cathy reasoned that the previous skating rink in Morristown had been profitable. She considered several large rental buildings in the area and compared their costs and feasibility to accommodate a skating rink business. She settled on a building in the Panther Springs community of Morristown and entered into a lease for the building at $ 750 per month beginning in August 1985.
Prior to advancing money to Cathy for her skating business, petitioner made inquiries of an acquaintance who owned the Donelson Skating Rink in Nashville, Tennessee. After these discussions, and upon observing that operation, petitioner concluded that Cathy's skating business would be successful. Petitioner believed that Cathy could get the business started with about $ 20,000 of initial capital, which he agreed to advance her. Petitioner advanced $ 18,000 to Cathy via a cashier's check dated September 5, 1985, 1995 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 260">*263 and an additional $ 4,000 via a personal check dated September 21, 1985. Although petitioner expected Cathy to begin repaying the advances within 1 to 2 years after the business was started, he did not ask her to sign a note or other document indicating that the advances were loans, nor did he ask for or receive a security interest in the business's assets as collateral for the money advanced. Petitioner and his daughter did, however, have an agreement that the advances were loans and that they were to be repaid. Petitioner, in accord with the agreement, included the notation "loan" on the personal check dated September 21, 1985. At the time petitioner made the advances to Cathy, his financial condition was good; he owned and operated a garbage pickup business and earned approximately $ 10,000 per month. Petitioner was not knowledgeable about law or taxes.
At the time Cathy received the advances from petitioner, she began refurbishing the leased building. A large portion of the advances from petitioner were used to prepare the site, including painting and renovating the interior, resurfacing the floor, installing a light and sound system, and purchasing skates and skate equipment. 1995 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 260">*264 As additional capital was needed, Cathy sought financial assistance from petitioner. Petitioner advanced $ 14,890 additional capital to Cathy in cash or by check prior to the opening and during the first few months of operation. These additional advances are evidenced in the record by copies of four deposit slips dated October 15, 1985, October 18, 1985, November 11, 1985, and January 6, 1986, in the amounts of $ 3,390, $ 2,000, $ 1,889 (of which petitioner claims only $ 1,500 represents loan proceeds), and $ 2,500, respectively, and two canceled checks dated December 27, 1985, and June 8, 1986, in the amounts of $ 2,500 and $ 3,000, respectively. Petitioner again wrote the notation "loan" on the latter two personal checks. The deposit slips represent advances made solely in cash.
Cathy used some of the additional advances from petitioner to complete renovations on the skating rink, which opened for business in November 1985. The rink operated under the name Panther Springs MBC Skating (Panther Springs). Panther Springs was generally open three evenings per week, and occasionally on additional nights or during the day if business was expected or for private parties. In the1995 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 260">*265 first 5 months of operation, Panther Springs' gross receipts ranged from about $ 900 per month to about $ 1,300 per month.
By the end of the first year of operation, petitioner and Cathy were aware that Panther Springs was not a profitable business. Cathy was having difficulty meeting obligations and she began missing rent payments on the leased building. On Schedule C of her 1986 Federal tax return, Cathy reported gross receipts of $ 7,734 and a net loss of $ 9,564 from Panther Springs. Cathy reported no other income on her 1986 tax return.
By mid-1987, Cathy again sought financial assistance from petitioner, but he was unwilling because Panther Springs appeared to be a losing enterprise and Cathy's ability to repay was in question. Petitioner did, however, co-sign a $ 3,000 loan with Cathy, and she borrowed an additional $ 2,000 in her own name, for which she pledged her car as collateral. These loans gave Cathy a final opportunity to keep Panther Springs in operation.
Unfortunately, the business was ultimately unsuccessful. In August 1987, when Cathy was 10 months behind in rent, the landlord changed the locks on the doors, took possession of the equipment inside, and 1995 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 260">*266 sued Cathy for the back rent.
At the time Panther Springs was shut down, Cathy owed her suppliers and/or creditors more than $ 5,000, not including the unpaid rent or the amounts advanced from petitioner. Knowing that Cathy had limited other income, petitioner arranged for Cathy to meet with an attorney, Philip Kelly, to discuss her financial situation. In April 1988, Mr. Kelly prepared and filed on Cathy's behalf a petition under Chapter 7 of the Bankruptcy Code, wherein it was reported that Cathy's outstanding debts were $ 45,161.43, including $ 35,500 in loans from petitioner, with assets valued at $ 4,411. Cathy received a discharge in bankruptcy from her unsecured debts on September 7, 1988.
Petitioners' Federal income tax return for 1987, originally filed on August 8, 1988, contained a nonbusiness bad debt deduction of $ 35,000, which amount represented petitioner's claimed bad debt due to loans to Cathy. Petitioners amended their 1987 return on July 30, 1992, but no changes were made to the bad debt deduction in issue here.
Petitioner had established a pattern of lending money to other family members and friends. Between 1985 and 1988, petitioner made eight loans ranging1995 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 260">*267 in amounts from $ 3,000 to $ 30,000. As with the amounts furnished to Cathy, petitioner expected to be repaid for the advances. In most instances,
We note at the outset that intrafamily transactions are subjected to closer scrutiny,
In The decided cases considering the question whether 1995 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 260">*270 a purported debt is in fact a debt for tax purposes set forth various tests and criteria; in the final analysis, however, the question depends on the facts and circumstances of each case, with the taxpayer bearing the burden of proof. We must examine the facts before us in light of "the realities of the business world and the manner in which transactions are handled in the normal and ordinary course of doing business." * * * [
The record reflects that petitioner made advances totaling $ 36,890 to his daughter to capitalize the Panther Springs skating business. Of the total, $ 9,500 is evidenced by three personal checks, all of which contain the notation "loan". The remaining advances are evidenced by deposit slips, the majority of which occurred during September and October 1985, prior to the opening of the skating rink.
Petitioner and Cathy, both of whom were credible witnesses, testified that the advances were loans and that there was an agreement to repay them. We also emphasize petitioner's established pattern of making similar loans to other family members and friends, most of which have been made without1995 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 260">*271 a note or other loan documentation. All but one of the eight other advances petitioner made between 1985 and 1988 had been repaid or were being repaid at the time of trial.
Based on the record before us, we believe that loans were intended, and that petitioner expected to be repaid for the advances he made to Cathy. The notations on the three personal checks, petitioner's history of making similar loans to other family members and friends, and petitioner's and his daughter's undisputed, credible testimony that the advances to Cathy were intended to be loans, show the requisite intent to establish a debtor-creditor relationship.
In determining that true debt existed, we disagree with respondent's argument that Cathy's obligation to repay the advances was contingent on the success of her business. Instead, a fairer interpretation of the testimony is that Cathy expected to be able to repay the loans from income derived from Panther Springs -- which was her only source of income at the time -- not that she was obligated to make payments only from that source. See
At trial and in her amended answer, respondent argued for the first time that petitioner's loans to Cathy did not become worthless in 1987 and that petitioners' bad debt deduction in that year was premature.
A nonbusiness bad debt is deductible only in the year it becomes worthless.
In the present case, we think petitioner had reasonable grounds to conclude that his loans to Cathy became worthless in 1987. By the end of Cathy's first year in business, petitioner was aware that Panther Springs was not a profitable enterprise and that Cathy was having difficulty making rent payments and meeting other expenses. Although Cathy frequently requested financial assistance from her father to keep the business going, petitioner made his final loan to Cathy in June 1986 and was unwilling to make additional loans thereafter. In August 1987, Panther Springs was effectively closed down when the landlord changed the locks on the doors to the skating rink and seized the business' assets for nonpayment of rent. At that time, Cathy was insolvent; she was more than $ 45,000 in debt and her only remaining asset was an automobile that she had recently pledged as collateral on a loan.
Respondent argues that petitioner's failure to undertake collection efforts against Cathy militates against any1995 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 260">*274 allegation that the loans became worthless in 1987. We note, however, that legal action is not always required before a bad debt deduction is allowable. A bad debt may be deducted, for example, where the surrounding circumstances indicate that the debt is worthless and uncollectible, and legal action to enforce payment would in all probability not result in the collection of the debt.
Finally, respondent argues that Cathy's liability to petitioner did not become worthless in 1987 because Cathy had the ability to repay her father from her wages from nursing. We disagree. Cathy's part-time nursing earnings, coupled with Panther Springs' continuing financial difficulties, were insufficient to prevent her from becoming insolvent at the time the skating rink closed down in August 1987. Furthermore, 1995 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 260">*275 on this record, we are unable to determine Cathy's LPN earnings, or potential earnings. In sum, we find that, at the time Panther Springs went out of business, petitioners had reasonable grounds to conclude that Cathy would not be able to repay the funds loaned to her.
Accordingly, we hold that petitioners were entitled to a nonbusiness bad debt deduction in 1987.
1. All section references are to the Internal Revenue Code in effect for the year in issue, and all Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure.↩
2. The parties have stipulated facts and exhibits which are incorporated by this reference.↩
3. Of the eight additional advances made by petitioner between 1985 and 1988, two were loans made in conjunction with the purchase of real property for which written notes were prepared by the closing agents.↩
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