DocketNumber: Docket No. 3077-80.
Citation Numbers: 46 T.C.M. 1602, 1983 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 174, 1983 T.C. Memo. 616
Filed Date: 9/28/1983
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 11/21/2020
MEMORANDUM FINDINGS OF FACT AND OPINION
PARKER,
Some of the facts have been stipulated and are so found. The stipulation of facts and exhibits attached thereto are incorporated herein by this reference.
Petitioners Jamie L. Abdella (hereinafter "petitioner") and Leota T. Abdella, husband and wife, resided in Marlinton, West Virginia, at the time they filed their petition in this case. Petitioners filed a joint Federal income tax return for the taxable year 1976 with the Internal Revenue Service Center at Memphis, Tennessee.
In 1967, Edsel L. Lucas ("Lucas") and S. Franklin Burford ("Burford") each acquired 50 percent of the outstanding stock of Spruce Coal Sales, Inc. ("Spruce Coal"). Their total capital investment in Spruce Coal was less than $100,000. Spruce Coal owned 87 percent of the stock of S.S. "Joe" Burford, Inc. ("Burford, Inc."). Skip Carson ("Carson") and J.E. McDavid ("McDavid") owned equally the remaining 13 percent of the Burford, Inc., stock. Burford, Inc., was primarily engaged in the business of mining coal, and Spruce Coal was the sales organization.
Lucas and Burford were officers of both Burford, Inc., and Spruce Coal from before 1970 through November of 1976. Carson and McDavid*176 were not active in the management of Burford, Inc.
In 1967, Burford, Inc., was a very small scale mining business and its financial position was precarious. The years 1970 to 1972 were years of struggle for Burford, Inc., and its fiscal health worsened during this period. However, during the years 1974 to 1976 its fiscal health improved markedly.
In November of 1976, Lucas and Burford sold all of their Spruce Coal stock to Valley Industries, an unrelated third party. Each of them made a profit of over $4,000,000 and each received full payment of that amount by certified check. At the same time, Carson and McDavid also sold their stock in Burford, Inc., (the remaining 13 percent of Burford, Inc.'s outstanding stock) to Valley Industries. Carson and McDavid each received approximately $500,000. *177 Petitioner began working for Burford, Inc., in 1970 as a heavy equipment operator. Late in 1972, petitioner was promoted to superintendent of the company's strip mining operations and was employed by Burford, Inc., in that position at the time of the stock sale. He continued to work for Burford, Inc., until sometime in 1979, when he went to work for Rehobeth Coal Company ("Rehobeth Coal"). *178 was not increased, nor was it increased in 1979 when petitioner left Burford, Inc., to work for Rehobeth Coal. See footnote 3. During the period petitioner worked for Burford, Inc., his salary was comparable to the salaries received by persons holding comparable jobs with other coal companies. Petitioner was adequately compensated for his services.
In early December of 1976, after they had sold their Spruce Coal stock, Lucas and Burford each paid petitioner $15,000 by personal checks. About the same time, Lucas and Burford also made some payments to three other employees or former employees of Burford, Inc: Jim Little, Robert Phillips, and Rosa Runyon. The record does not show the amount paid to either Jim Little or Robert Phillips, but Rosa Runyon received $5,000 from Lucas and a similar amount from Burford. Jim Little was still an employee of Burford, Inc., at the time of the stock sale, but both Robert Phillips and Rosa Runyon had left the company's employ in 1970 or 1971.
Lucas also paid $2,000 to Cecil Washburn, who had left Burford, Inc.'s employ early in 1976. When Washburn left Burford, Inc., Lucas and Burford had promised Washburn some additional compensation stretched*179 over 30 to 60 days. When Burford, Inc., hired Jim Little early in 1976, Lucas and Burford were contemplating selling their Spruce Coal stock. Little had left a job in Charleston to go work for Burford, Inc. Lucas and Burford agreed to pay Little one year's salary if they sold Burford, Inc., within his first year, *180 and Burford would pay petitioner any money upon the sale by Lucas and Burford of their Spruce Coal stock. Lucas and Burford were under no contractual obligation to make any payments to petitioner, to Runyon, or to Phillips. Lucas and Burford never consulted with Carson and McDavid, Burford, Inc.'s former minority shareholders, regarding their payments to present and former Burford, Inc., employees. Carson and McDavid did not contribute any funds to any of the Burford, Inc., employees receiving these payments from Lucas and Burford. Except for these payments in December of 1976, Lucas and Burford had Petitioner had previously received bonus payments from Burford, Inc., by company checks and from which taxes were withheld. When he received the two checks from Lucas and Burford, petitioner specifically asked them about taxes on the $30,000, so that he would know how much of it he could spend. Lucas and Burford specifically*181 told petitioner that the taxes had been taken care of, that the checks were gifts, and that he did not have to pay taxes on gifts. Lucas was not knowledgeable about tax matters and relied upon Burford. Burford had directed Lucas to advise petitioner that he should treat the payment as a gift. Burford had attended New York University's graduate tax program in 1956 and had practiced tax law in New York City from 1956 to 1961 and in other localities until his acquisition of his Spruce Coal stock (and derivative ownership of Burford, Inc.) in 1967. Burford had also taught tax law for three years at Emory University's School of Law. Burford intended petitioner to rely upon his advice to treat the payments as gifts, and he believed that petitioner would so rely. When Lucas sent his check for $5,000 and Burford's check for $5,000 to Rosa Runyon, he enclosed the following note: Dec. 12, 1976 Dear Rosa, I assume you know by now that Frank [Burford] and I have sold the S.S. "Joe" Burford Co. We both feel that you played a very important part in the formation of that company, especially during the hard lean years. We hit it very lucky after we moved to Randolph County. Because*182 of your contribution to the sucess (sic) of the Burford, Co. we would like to show our appreciation to you by saying "thanks Rosa" and by enclosing a check from each of us for $5,000.00. Sincerely s/ Edsel [Lucas] Lucas' reasons for making his $15,000 payment to petitioner were the same as his reasons for paying Rosa Runyon $5,000. Both Lucas and Burford claimed deductions on their personal income tax returns for their respective payments to Burford, Inc., employees and former employees, including the $15,000 they each paid petitioner. At the time this case was tried, both Lucas and Burford had petitions pending with the Court for the calendar year 1976 that involved, On their 1976 joint Federal income tax return, petitioners did not report as*183 income the $30,000 received from Lucas and Burford, instead treating the payments as gifts. In his statutory notice of deficiency, respondent determined that these payments were taxable income. OPINION [T]he mere absence of a legal or moral obligation to make such a payment does not establish that it is a gift. * * * And, importantly, if the payment proceeds primarily from "the constraining force of any moral or legal duty," or from "the incentive of anticipated*184 benefit" of an economic nature, * * * it is not a gift. And, conversely, "[w]here the payment is in return for services rendered, it is irrelevant that the donor derives no economic benefit from it." * * * A gift in the statutory sense, on the other hand, proceeds from a "detached and disinterested generosity," * * * "out of affection, respect, admiration, charity or like impulses." * * * And in this regard, the most critical consideration, as the Court was agreed in the leading case here, is the transferor's "intention." * * * "What controls is the intention with which payment, however voluntary, has been made." [Footnotes and citations omitted.] Applying the principles set forth in the case law to the facts of this case, we conclude that the payments petitioner received from Lucas and Burford were gifts within the meaning of [I]t is doubtless relevant * * * that the transferor treats a payment as a business deduction * * *. But [this inference] cannot be stated in absolute terms. * * * The taxing statute does not make nondeductibility by the transferor a condition on the "gift" exclusion * * *. The conclusion whether a transfer amounts to a "gift" is one that must be reached on consideration of all the factors. Respondent's argument that the payments represent additional compensation to petitioner because of past undercompensation is not borne out by the facts. Petitioner considered himself adequately compensated, both within his company and in comparison to persons doing comparable work for other coal companies. Although both Lucas and Burford suggested in their testimony that petitioner was undercompensated, petitioner's testimony to the contrary is supported by the objective facts. Indeed, it is notable that after Valley Industries took over Burford, Inc., it did not increase petitioner's salary. Likewise, Rehobeth Coal, owned principally by Lucas, did not increase petitioner's salary when he later left Burford, Inc., to go to work for Rehobeth Coal. Respondent's argument is also undermined*190 by the fact that Lucas and Burford never consulted nor sought payments from the minority shareholders, Carson and McDavid, who shared proportionately the "benefits" of petitioner's allegedly undercompensated past services. We are satisfied that petitioner was not undercompensated, and this factor militates against respondent's argument that the payments were additional compensation. See As we see it, Lucas and Burford, after selling their Spruce Coal stock at an enormous profit on a minimal investment, chose to share some of those profits with certain employees and former employees of the corporation they, indirectly, had previously owned. The fact that the recipient (petitioner) previously performed services for a corporation (Burford, Inc.) indirectly owned and controlled by the payors (Lucas and Burford) does not necessarily make the payments compensation for past services. See and compare *192 Also probative are the contemporaneous statements of Lucas and Burford (the payors) to petitioner (the recipient) that the payments were "gifts" that petitioner did not have to pay any taxes upon. We believed petitioner's testimony as to those contemporaneous statements and found it consistent with the objective evidence in the record. *193 We conclude that the payments to petitioner by Lucas and Burford resulted from their generous decision to share the bounty of their enormous windfall with petitioner and other persons who, to some extent, may have helped enhance their profit on this stock sale. Such payments were motivated by "detached and disinterested generosity," "out of affection, respect, admiration or like impulses."
The intention of the transferor or donor is primarily a determination of fact "based ultimately on the application of the fact-finding tribunal's experience with the mainsprings of human conduct to the totality of the facts of each case."
1. Unless otherwise indicated, all section references are to the Internal Revenue Code of 1954, as amended and in effect during the taxable year in question.↩
2. Under the terms of the stock sale, Lucas, Burford, Carson, and McDavid were entitled to royalty payments out of Burford, Inc.'s future coal production, up to amounts approximately equaling the actual payments for their stock. At the time this case was tried, Lucas and Burford each had received $600,000 to $800,000 in royalties; Carson and McDavid each had received perhaps $100,000 in royalties.↩
3. In 1978, dissatisfied with his working conditions at Burford, Inc., and the nature of the mining operations having changed, petitioner contacted Lucas seeking employment with Rehobeth Coal. At that time, Rehobeth Coal had no position to offer him. Subsequently, in 1979, Lucas contacted petitioner offering him a job with Rehobeth Coal, which petitioner accepted.↩
4. The record is unclear, but it would appear that this was a corporate obligation of Burford, Inc., that it incurred through its officers and directors, Lucas and Burford, not a personal obligation of Lucas and Burford.↩
5. It also appears that this was a corporate obligation of Burford, Inc., as with the payments to Washburn. See footnote 4.↩
6. The contractual nature of the payments to Little and Washburn does not diminish the significance of the noncontractual nature of the payments to petitioner, Runyon, and Phillips. This is especially true where it is likely that these contractual obligations to pay Little and Washburn were those of the corporation rather than of its shareholders, Lucas and Burford. ↩
7. Compare
8. We also note that in a different factual setting even a strike benefit paid by a union may be a nontaxable gift.
9. Respondent has not argued that the payments to petitioner were compensation to induce him to greater productivity and efficiency with Burford, Inc., in order to enhance the value of the former shareholders' contingent royalty rights. See footnote 2. We do not consider this in our determination, although we note that the inclusion of former employees as recipients and the failure of McDavid and Carson, the minority shareholders, to make any such payments substantially undercut the force of any such argument.↩
10. The world of nontaxable gifts did not, as respondent suggests, begin anew with
11. Conversely, we did not believe the belated attempts of Lucas and Burford at the trial to change the characterization of what had been in 1976 a nice and generous action on their part. Lucas, unversed in tax matters, relied upon Burford's expertise. On direct examination, Burford testified as follows:
Q Did Mr. Abdella ever question you regarding the tax consequences of this $30,000 to him?
A Yes, he did.
Q And what did you tell him?
A I told him that my state of mind and the circumstances surrounding me determined the tax consequences to me and that they had no influence on the tax consequences to him and that the circumstances surrounding him and his state of mind when he received them would determine his tax consequences.
He asked me what I thought that was, and I told him in my opinion it was gift to him, but compensation by me * * *.
Any such legal advice by Burford would have been an astonishing error on the part of a tax lawyer. Since the Supreme Court's decision in 1960 in
Whipple v. Commissioner , 83 S. Ct. 1168 ( 1963 )
william-a-brown-joseph-h-ferrill-margaret-ferrill-frank-h-abbott , 398 F.2d 832 ( 1968 )
ernest-l-poyner-and-union-trust-company-of-maryland-executors-of-the , 301 F.2d 287 ( 1962 )
Lucy H. Harper v. United States , 454 F.2d 222 ( 1971 )
Marvin E. Jensen v. United States , 511 F.2d 265 ( 1975 )
Willkie v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue , 127 F.2d 953 ( 1942 )
Poorman v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue , 131 F.2d 946 ( 1942 )
Commissioner v. Duberstein , 80 S. Ct. 1190 ( 1960 )
United States v. Kaiser , 80 S. Ct. 1204 ( 1960 )
Estate of Sydney J. Carter, Deceased (A/k/a Sydney J. ... , 453 F.2d 61 ( 1971 )
Elsie F. Greentree v. United States , 338 F.2d 946 ( 1964 )
Mae N. Pearson v. United States , 519 F.2d 1279 ( 1975 )