DocketNumber: Docket Nos. 4781-68, 2346-69.
Filed Date: 6/13/1973
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 11/20/2020
MEMORANDUM FINDINGS OF FACT AND OPINION
TANNEWALD, Judge: Fiscal year ended Deficiency April 30, 1964 $1,755.74 April 30, 1965 1,814.20 April 30, 1966 50,859.49
Docket No. 2346-69 - William B. RoBards (hereinafter "RoBards")
Year | Deficiency |
1965 | $38,579.84 |
1966 | 17,213.53 |
*160 Various issues having been resolved or conceded by the parties, the only questions for consideration are:
(1) Whether the profit on the sale of two parcels of real estate is taxable to R & T for its fiscal year ended April 30, 1966 or to another corporation known as B & C Investment Corporation (hereinafter "B & C"); and
(2) If such profit is so taxable, whether RoBards received a constructive dividend in respect of the 3 transactions involved and, if so, in which taxable year.
Some of the facts have been stipulated and are incorporated herein by reference.
R & T had its principal place of business in Louisville, Kentucky, at the time the petition herein was filed. It filed timely income tax returns for its taxable years ended April 30, 1964, 1965, and 1966, with the district director of internal revenue, Louisville, Kentucky.
RoBards resided in Louisville, Kentucky, at the time his petition herein was filed. He filed timely income tax returns with the district director of internal revenue, Louisville, Kentucky, for 1965 and 1966.
RoBards has been a civil engineer for over 40 years (as of the date of trial) and is licensed as such by the state of Kentucky. For*161 some years prior to 1963, he was actively engaged in real estate development for himself and others. At all times relevant herein, he owned at least 50 percent of the outstanding stock of R & T *162 On August 26, 1963, the Louisville and Jefferson County Planning and Zoning Commission (hereinafter referred to as the Zoning Commission) approved R & T's plans for subdividing at least part of the 5 tract (including lots 86 and 89) for residential use. The envisioned extension of one of the streets to a nearby state highway made lots 86 and 89 particularly suitable for commercial use.
On September 12, 1963, B & C was incorporated. Also on this date, an application to have lots 86 and 89 rezoned for commercial use was submitted to the Zoning Commission in the name of "B & C Corporation" as both applicant and owner. The rezoning request was initially rejected by the Zoning Commission, but its decision was overruled in favor of the applicant by the Fiscal Court of Jefferson County on March 10, 1964.
On or about February 21, 1965, B & C granted Humble Oil & Refining Company (hereinafter "Humble"), in consideration of $100, a three-month option to purchase Lot 89 for $35,000. The option stated that B & C was the owner of the property. *163 6
On March 10, 1965, in return for $250, B & C granted Standard Oil Company (Kentucky) (hereinafter "Standard") a 120-day option to purchase lot 86 for $35,000.
By deeds dated March 19, 1965, R & T conveyed lots 86 and 89 to B & C for $6,500 each, with $1,000 paid at closing and promissory notes from B & C in favor of R & T for the balances. The purchase prices were the values agreed upon by petitioner, Linda Haggard, and Thieneman in 1963. These lots had a fair market value of $35,000 each at the time they were transferred to B & C by R & T.
Humble exercised its option and, on June 30, 1965, it purchased lot 89 for $35,000. Standard, however, did not exercise its option, but lot 86 was sold to Louis T. Roth and Boris Pressma for $35,000, also on June 30, 1965.
On March 19, 1965, B & C elected to be taxed as a small business corporation under Subchapter S of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954 for its fiscal year ending February 28, 1966. Its return for that year stated it had engaged in "no operations" prior to March 1, 1965. 7
B & C reported the sales of lots 86 and 89 as its own on its tax return for the fiscal year ending April 30, 1966. Respondent*164 determined that the sales by B & C were "sham" and that R & T was the true owner and seller of the lots in question. Accordingly, he removed the profit from the taxable income of B & C, determined that it should be taxable to R & T for its fiscal year ending April 30, 1966, and further determined that RoBards received a constructive dividend in 1966 in the corresponding amount.
The question before us as to whether R & T or B & C made the sales is purely factual.
requires us not only to find the surface facts but also to probe the reality of those facts. * * * Also the fact that related * * * parties are involved herein necessitates our close scrutiny. * * * On the other hand, while the petitioners bear the burden of proof herein, their burden cannot be made more onerous by virtue of the character of respondent's allegation. The phrase "sham transaction" is not magical. [Citations omitted.]
That the tax advantages of avoiding*165 tax at the corporate level, stemming from the fact that B & C was a Subchapter S corporation while R & T was not, 8 may have furnished the primary motivation is not controlling. See
At the trial, petitioner attempted to prove the existence of a two-year option granted to B & C by R & T in 1963 to purchase the two lots in question for $6,500 each. *166 In our opinion, the evidence in this respect is too meager to support the conclusion that any such option existed, and, indeed, petitioners seem to have abandoned on brief any contention based upon its existence. But the absence of such an option is not necessarily fatal to petitioners' 9 contention that B & C made the sales. We see no need to review all of the elements involved herein which have entered into our consideration as to whether the sales in question were made by R & T or B & C. The elements have been set forth in detail in our findings of fact. It is sufficient to record that, although the issue is not entirely free from doubt, we are satisfied that the role of R & T was sufficiently sanitized so that on balance the circumstances of this case fit the Cumberland mold. Consequently, we hold that the sales in question were made by B & C. Harry H. Hines, Jr. v. United States, F. 2d (C.A. 5, 1973). Compare
e eI Decisions will be entered under
*. Pursuant to a notice of reassignment sent to counsel for all parties, and to which no objections were filed, these cases were reassigned by the Chief Judge on December 11, 1972, from Judge Austin Hoyt to Judge Theodore Tannenwald, Jr.↩, for disposition.
1. Linda Haggard, one of RoBards' employees, apparently owned the other 50 percent. ↩
2. The nature of Thieneman's interest, after his withdrawal as an investor, is not clear, but apparently RoBards worked out some arrangement with him by which he was to receive some share of the expected profits on the land in question without having those profits subject to claims of his creditors. ↩
3. Orginally, the option document listed R & T as the owner, but the parties stipulated that the name of R & T was crossed out and the name of B & C was inserted prior to the time when the signed option was returned to Humble. ↩
4. Compare also
5. Paragraph 23 of the Stipulation of Facts reads as follows:
It is agreed that the petitioner did not receive a dividend from R & T Developers, Inc., in 1965, and the effect of this stipulation is that adjustment (c) to the Respondent's Statutory Notice of Deficiency for the year 1965 is reversed or eliminated.
Adjustment (c) related to another constructive dividend asserted by respondent. ↩
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