DocketNumber: Docket No. 16595-86
Judges: WELLS
Filed Date: 12/31/1990
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 11/21/2020
*2232 Respondent determined deficiencies in petitioner's Federal income tax as follows:
Taxable Year | Ended | Deficiency | 6653(a)(1) | 6653(a)(2) | ||
10/31/82 | $ 637,376.44 | $ 31,868.82 | 10/31/83 | 602,206.61 | 30,110.33 |
The issues to be decided are: (1) whether petitioner is taxable as a corporation or as a partnership; (2) the amount of compensation to be allowed as a deduction to petitioner for payments to its owner-employees; and (3) whether petitioner is liable for additions to tax under
FINDINGS OF FACT
Some of the facts are stipulated and are found accordingly. The stipulations and attached exhibits are incorporated herein 1990 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 735">*736 by reference. At the time the petition in the instant case was filed, Richlands Medical Association was a professional association under the laws of the State of Virginia with its principal place of business in Richlands, Virginia.
In 1917, the Mattie Williams Hospital (the Hospital) began operations in Richlands, Virginia. The Hospital was owned by Dr. W. R. Williams until his death in 1961, at which time ownership passed to Dr. Williams' heirs (some or all of whom are referred to herein as "the Williams heirs"). The Hospital was a relatively small facility, containing 76 beds, and was located in a rural, mountainous area. The predominant business activity in the area of the Hospital was coal mining. The services provided by the Hospital included emergency room service, electrocardiography, sonography, radiology, obstetrics, surgery, intensive care, and pediatrics.
During 1962, Richlands Medical Association (petitioner) was organized pursuant to the Professional Association Act of Virginia,
On October 26, 1981, petitioner's articles of association were amended. The amended articles of association (Articles) remained in effect throughout the years in issue, in addition to bylaws (Bylaws) governing the affairs of petitioner.
The owners, or "members," of a professional association organized under the Virginia Act are referred to as its "associates," and each associate is entitled to a "certificate of ownership" evidencing the proportional part of the association owned by him. Virginia Act
Petitioner's Articles listed 1990 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 735">*738 its associates as Doctors James H. McVey, William R. Strader, Ernest E. Moore, and Emile I. Khuri and listed those same individuals as petitioner's initial Board of Directors. Dr. Strader died during petitioner's taxable year ended October 31, 1982. Pursuant to the authority of
Under the Virginia Act, the board of directors of a professional association must be composed of at least three persons. Virginia Act
The Bylaws provided that petitioner's Board of Directors could hold its meetings at such times and places as it might designate, but was required to hold at least one meeting per quarter. During the taxable years in issue, petitioner's Board of Directors held at least 26 meetings, the minutes of which were recorded by petitioner's Executive Secretary pursuant to responsibilities outlined in the Bylaws. At those meetings, a variety of matters relating to the operation of the Hospital were discussed and voted upon, including: hiring decisions with respect to nonowner physicians, collections, pay raises and other personnel matters, purchases and leases of property, pension matters, litigation involving petitioner, and retention of accountants. The meetings sometimes were called on very short notice, depending on the urgency of the matters requiring attention.
The Bylaws provided 1990 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 735">*741 for the employment of a Hospital administrator who was to act as the representative of the Board of Directors in the management of the Hospital. The hospital administrator, however, was required to obtain approval from the Board of Directors for all expenditures not necessary to the everyday operation of the Hospital in excess of $ 1,000.
During the taxable years in issue, petitioner leased the Hospital from the Williams heirs under a seven year lease (the lease) commencing November 1, 1976, and ending October 31, 1983, for a monthly rental of $ 10,000. The lease provided that any fixtures, furniture, equipment or instruments purchased by petitioner, as well as any outstanding accounts receivable of petitioner, would become the property of the Williams heirs upon termination of the lease. The lease also provided that it would automatically terminate if, for any reason, petitioner had less than three members. The lease was signed by the President of petitioner solely on behalf of petitioner.
On November 1, 1977, petitioner, its associates, and the Williams heirs entered into an amendment to the lease and a financing agreement. The financing agreement provided that petitioner would 1990 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 735">*742 be the maker of a note (the note), to be endorsed by petitioner's associates, evidencing a loan of up to $ 800,000, which amount was needed to finance construction necessary to maintain licensure and accreditation for the Hospital under standards prescribed by the Virginia State Health Department. Additionally, the Financing Agreement provided that the lease would be extended for a term coincident with the term of the note, and that a person mutually acceptable to the Williams heirs and to petitioner would serve as petitioner's Hospital administrator.
On February 18, 1978, the note, in the amount of $ 800,000 payable in eight annual *2234 installments, was executed by petitioner and endorsed by its associates, who assumed joint and several liability on the note. Because the last installment of the note was due on October 15, 1986, the lease was extended until that date. No further extensions of the lease occurred subsequent to October 1986, and petitioner ceased operations in December 1986. Petitioner's Articles provided that "the duration of the association is to be perpetual."
Petitioner consistently filed its Federal income tax returns as a corporation on Form 1120.
During the years in issue, petitioner paid its associates the following amounts, and deducted such amounts as compensation of officers (Schedule E, Form 1120): Year Ended Year Ended Associate 10/31/82 10/31/83 Dr. James McVey $ 977,778 $ 873,298 Dr. Emile Khuri 702,524 672,871 Dr. Ernest Moore 566,552 523,831
Respondent, in his notice of deficiency, allowed as a compensation deduction with respect to each associate an amount equal to 100 percent of the "collections" recorded by petitioner as attributable to medical services performed directly for patients by such associate. The following chart illustrates the amount of such "collections" allowed by respondent, in addition to the amounts recorded by petitioner as "billed" for the medical services of each associate during the years in issue: Year Ended 10/31/82 Year Ended 10/31/83 Associate Billings Collections Billings Collections Dr. James McVey $ 622,260.36 $ 397.556.12 $ 592,470.60 $ 324,759.38 Dr. Emile Khuri 363,641.51 241,014.39 426,434.13 231,435.84 Dr. Ernest Moore 310,204.46 191,713.62 302,641.13 162,467.94
A comparison of the compensation paid to each associate with "billings" and "collections" indicates that each associate was paid, during the years in issue, not only substantially more than the collections recorded for his services but also substantially more than the billings for his services. For example, Dr. McVey's pay for the year ended 10/31/82 was approximately 157 percent of his billings and 246 percent of his collections; Dr. Khuri's pay for such year was approximately 193 percent of billings and 291 percent of collections.
Dr. McVey received his medical degree from the University of Virginia in 1957 an began his practice at the Hospital in 1958. His specialty was family medicine. On a daily basis, Monday through Friday, Dr. McVey saw an average of approximately 60 outpatients; on Saturdays, he saw an average 1990 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 735">*745 of 30-40 outpatients. Additionally, Dr. McVey saw approximately 40 inpatients on a daily basis. Dr. Khuri received his medical degree from the American University of Beruit in 1968. He began his practice in 1974 after completing four years of general surgery residency in Lebanon and two years of thoracic surgery residency at the University of California at Irvine. Dr. Khuri, who served as petitioner's President during the years in issue, worked at the Hospital about 55-60 hours per week in addition to hours "on call." He saw an average of approximately 25 outpatients and 7-8 inpatients per day at the Hospital.
There were no employment contracts fixing the renumeration of petitioner's associates. The Bylaws, however, provided that:
The Board of Directors at the end of the fiscal year shall divide the net profits in the following manner: 25.0% of the profits shall be divided equally among the associates, and the remaining 75.0% shall be divided according to each associate's productivity factor. The factor being his total net collections. The denominator being the total net collections of all associates.
As among the three associates, Doctors McVey, Khuri, and Moore, relative compensation 1990 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 735">*746 during the years in issue was roughly proportional to relative collections, as illustrated in the following chart: *2235
Individual's Compen- | ||
sation as | ||
Individual's Collections | Percentage of Total | |
as Percentage of Total | Associate of | |
Associate Associate Collections | Compensation | |
Year Ended 10/31/82 | ||
Dr. McVey | 48% | 44% |
Dr. Khuri | 29% | 31% |
Dr. Moore | 23% | 25% |
Year Ended 10/31/83 | ||
Dr. McVey | 45% | 42% |
Dr. Khuri | 32% | 33% |
Dr. Moore | 23% | 25% |
During the years in issue, petitioner employed other physicians, in addition to its associates, to work in the Hospital. There were eight of such nonowner physicians employed at the Hospital during the year ended 10/31/82, and ten of such physicians during the year ended 10/31/83. The nonowner physicians employed at the Hospital entered into written employment contracts with petitioner. The employment contracts submitted into evidence herein indicate that such physicians generally were paid on the basis of a fixed salary or a percentage of annual collections, whichever was greater, with such percentages ranging from 85 percent of 110 percent of collections. 1990 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 735">*747 Neither petitioner's associates nor the other physicians employed by petitioner paid rent for the use of Hospital facilities and equipment or paid the other expenses (such as nurses salaries) associated with private practices.
When a patient was treated at the Hospital, the Hospital issued a single bill which included charges for physician's professional services (the physician component) and for other Hospital services and items (the Hospital component). Included within the Hospital component of the bill were charges for "ancillary services" such as anesthesia, operating room, recovery room, drugs, x rays, etc. In the event that a bill was not paid in full and the payor failed to designate whether his payment was to be applied to the physician or Hospital component (nondesignated partial payments), petitioner's practice was to treat the payment as attributable to the Hospital component up to the amount of such Hospital charges. Nondesignated partial payments sometimes occurred in the case of payments by certain private insurance companies. With respect to payments received from Blue Cross/Blue Shield, all amounts from Blue Shield were allocated to physician services, and all 1990 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 735">*748 amounts from Blue Cross were allocated to the Hospital component of a bill. Similarly, all payments from Medicaid, Medicare, and other Government insurance programs were designated as attributable to either physician or Hospital services.
Petitioner's practice of allocating nondesignated partial payments to Hospital charges had the effect of reducing the "collections" recorded for its physicians. As noted above, petitioner's nonowner physicians were generally compensated based on a fixed salary or percentage of such "collections," whichever was greater. For the taxable year ended 10/31/82, petitioner's highest-paid nonowner physician received a salary of $ 146,574.00; for the taxable year ended 10/31/83, such salary was $ 214,011.90.
Mr. James L. Davis, who previously had been a co-administrator of the Hospital, became the full-time Hospital administrator in February 1982. As administrator, Mr. Davis was paid $ 86,863 for the taxable year ended 10/31/82 and $ 95,536 for the taxable year ended 10/31/83. The Bylaws required the Hospital administrator to attend all meetings of petitioner's board of directors and outlined his duties, including (1) supervision of all business affairs 1990 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 735">*749 of the Hospital such as records of financial transaction, collection of accounts, and purchase and issuance of supplies and drugs, (2) submission of monthly reports to the board of directors showing the professional service and financial activities of the Hospital, (3) annual submission to the board of directors of a plan of organization of personnel and others concerned with Hospital operation, (4) serving as a liaison between petitioner's board of directors and the Hospital's medical staff, (5) enforcing all rules and regulations for the conduct of the Hospital made by and under the authority of the Board of Directors, and (6) responsibility for overseeing the physical condition and repair of Hospital properties.
The compensation received by petitioner's associates during the years in issue substantially exceeded amounts received in prior years. While petitioner's gross income also increased over the same period, the increases in gross income were relatively small in comparison with the *2236 increases in compensation. The following chart illustrates the increases in petitioner's gross income during a six-year period ending with the years in issue.
Petitioner's | |
Year Ended | Gross Income |
(Form 1120, line 11) | |
10/31/78 | $4,642,842 |
10/31/79 | 5,323,688 |
10/31/80 | 6,378,191 |
10/31/81 | 7,378,715 |
10/31/82 | 9,951,916 |
10/31/83 | 10,308,289 |
The 1990 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 735">*750 chart below illustrates the increases in compensation and "collections" of Drs. McVey, Khuri and Moore during the same six-year period. As indicated in the chart, the increases in compensation which occurred starting with the years in issue were also high in relation to increases in "collections." Taxable Dr. McVey Dr. Khuri Year Ended Collections Compensation Collections Compensation 10/31/78 $ 249,254 $ 378,000 $ 101,600 $ 95,000 10/31/79 281,084 273,408 159,223 192,383 10/31/80 313,019 345,870 240,742 285,828 10/31/81 308,121 397,714 181,838 261,450 10/31/82 397,556 977,778 241,014 702,524 10/31/83 324,759 873,298 231,436 672,871 Taxable Dr. Moore Year Ended Collections Compensation 10/31/78 $ 76,311 $ 127,042 10/31/79 95,318 124,274 10/31/80 150,218 198,530 10/31/81 150,822 228,244 10/31/82 191,714 566,552 10/31/83 162,468 523,831
Thus, 1990 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 735">*751 between the years ended 10/31/78 and 10/31/81, Dr. McVey's compensation averaged approximately 121 percent of his collections. For the years in issue, however, Dr. McVey's compensation averaged approximately 256 percent of his collections. Similarly, Dr. Moore's compensation for the years ended 10/31/78 through 10/31/81 averaged approximately 143 percent of his collections while his compensation for the years in issue averaged approximately 308 percent of collections.
During the years in issue,
OPINION
In its amended petition, petitioner claims that, notwithstanding 1990 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 735">*752 its consistent reporting of income and deductions as a corporation, it properly was taxable as a partnership because it lacked the corporate attributes of continuity of life, centralization of management, limited liability, and free transferability of interests. In considering petitioner's claim to partnership status, 1990 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 735">*753 the 1960's, at which time the Treasury's litigating posture was to argue
Presumably concerned over the increasing adoption of qualified plans by professionals, Treasury attempted to overturn the result in
The Kintner Regulations contain the statement that:
Although it is the Internal Revenue Code rather than local law which establishes the tests or standards which will be applied in determining the classification in which an organization belongs, local law governs in determining whether the legal relationships which have been established 1990 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 735">*755 in the formation of an organization are such that the standards are met. Thus, it is local law which must be applied in determining such matters as the legal relationships of the members of the organization among themselves and with the public at large, and the interests of the members of the organization in its assets.
Viewing the Treasury's focus on the role of local law as "an invitation," numerous states passed "enabling" acts during the early 1960's aimed at allowing professional groups to attain corporate status for Federal income tax purposes. See Eaton,
In 1965, Treasury responded to the wave of state enabling acts by issuing amendments to the Kintner Regulations (referred to herein as "the 1965 Regulations") "designed to thwart the efficacy of state professional association acts to confer corporate status under the Kintner regulations."
In
In light of recent decisions of the Federal courts, the Service generally will treat organizations of doctors, lawyers and other professional people organized under state professional association acts as 1990 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 735">*758 corporations for tax purposes.
In addressing the classification issue herein, a number of cases holding the 1965 Regulations invalid are relevant in that those cases also held the organizations in question to be corporations under the Kintner Regulations. (As noted above, the Kintner Regulations remained in effect without any substantial change 1990 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 735">*759 during the taxable years in issue, the 1965 Regulations having been revoked by such time).
The parties are in agreement that the factors contained in the Kintner Regulations
The Kintner Regulations (hereinafter sometimes referred to as the regulations) set forth six characteristics ordinarily found in a corporation which distinguish it from other organizations. Those characteristics are (1) associates, (2) an objective to carry on business and divide the gains therefrom, (3) continuity of life, (4) centralization of management, (5) limited liability, and (6) free transferability of interests. The regulations go on to note that, in some cases, other factors may be found which may be significant in classifying an organization.
In deciding whether an organization properly is classified as a partnership, as opposed to a corporation, the first two characteristics listed above -- associates and an objective to carry on business and divide the gains therefrom -- are ignored, since those characteristics are common to both entities. The relevant determination thus turns on the existence of continuity of life, centralization of management, limited liability, and free transferability of interests with respect to the entity. 1990 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 735">*761
1.
Pertinent provisions of
the regulations are so clearly keyed to "dissolution" (a term encompassing * * * legal relationships * * *) rather than "termination of the business" (a phrase capable of more pragmatic interpretation encompassing the life of the business enterprise) * * *
See
Petitioner's argument also fails to take into account the fact that petitioner's Articles provided for business "purposes" broader than the operation of a hospital. The argument further assumes that an entity with a limited life automatically lacks continuity of life under the regulations. That is not the case; the regulations provide that if an organization is to continue for a stated period or until the completion of a stated transaction, the organization
Accordingly, we hold that petitioner possessed the characteristic of continuity of life.
2.
Pertinent provisions of
Virginia Act
During the taxable years in issue, petitioner's 1990 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 735">*769 Bylaws likewise provided that "The affairs of this association shall be under the management of its Board of Directors and such officers and agents as said Board may elect to employ, and that Board of Directors acts as a Committee as a whole."
At first blush, therefore, petitioner would appear to possess the characteristic of centralized management. Petitioner, however, argues on brief that:
The entire scope of providing acute care hospital services by Petitioner was through its Owner-Physicians and include hiring, firing, promoting, suspending and discharging hospital employees as well as overseeing the other day-to-day operations at the hospital. Indeed, the Owner-Physicians did not delegate the authority to hire, fire, reprimand, suspend, or promote hospital employees or to borrow money on behalf of Petitioner. In making the various business decisions for Petitioner, the Owner-Physicians did so as a group and regarded those decisions as being made not only for Petitioner but for each Owner-Physician as well. [Citations to record omitted.]
In its reply brief, petitioner also focuses on its check-signing authority arrangement, arguing that "all Owner-Physicians had to approve 1990 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 735">*770 any purchase in excess of $ 1,000 as well as endorsing any check of $ 1,000 or more." 1990 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 735">*771 payments on behalf of petitioner, implement Hospital policies, procedures, or protocols, and approve nonowner physician contracts, Dr. Khuri (who was petitioner's President during the taxable years in issue) testified that it was petitioner's
The stipulations submitted by the parties in the instant case contain similar contradictions with respect to the management of petitioner. The parties stipulated that "Beginning with the initial lease in 1964 and thereafter overall operations of the petitioner were under the direct *2241 charge of the owner physicians of petitioner. Petitioner through its owner physicians also approved and hired other physicians." 1990 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 735">*773 Other stipulations, however, refer to exhibits containing descriptions of (1) "duties performed by the Board of Directors of the petitioner" (and shared at various times by its members), and (2) "minutes of the recorded Board of Directors meetings of petitioner during the years in issue." An examination of those exhibits and their descriptions indicates that petitioner's Board of Directors and the officers elected by the Board of Directors managed the affairs of petitioner.
The confusion in the testimony and stipulations as to whether petitioner was managed directly by its associates or by its Board of Directors apparently is derived from the fact that petitioner's Board of Directors included, during the taxable years in issue, all three of its associates, or "owner-members." On brief, respondent acknowledges that all of petitioner's associates sat on the board, but argues that
Although in the years at issue, all of the associates of [petitioner] were also officers and members of the Board of Directors of the association, the business of Richlands Medical Association was clearly conducted by a centralized management as that term is used in
We agree with respondent.
In business corporations, except very small ones, the shareholders and directors are seldom identical. Usually less than all the shareholders are elected directors, and frequently less than all the directors are chosen as officers.
In categorizing an unincorporated professional association for tax purposes, it is unclear whether this
In another chapter, Eaton states:
While the Regulations under the 1939 Code and the cases emphasized the technical or formal representative capacity of those conducting the enterprise, the Kintner Regulations added the element 1990 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 735">*775 of numbers, indicating that the managers should consist of less than all the owners. The validity of this requirement is dubious at best. [Eaton at 27-25.]
In the instant case, even though all of the association's members happen to be members *2242 of its board of directors, i.e. the management group, at a particular time, this does not preclude the association from having centralized management, despite the parenthetical language of
The approach taken in the Revenue Ruling is consistent with our interpretation of the provision in the instant case. In our view, the parenthetical language of
Our interpretation of
In
In
These provisions of the trust agreement show that the trustees had broad powers to act on behalf of the trust, that their authority was not limited to purely ministerial acts, and that their actions did not require ratification by the beneficiary. It is immaterial whether, in reality, the petitioner could make the decisions for all the trustees; the significant fact is that the trustees had the power to act for the trust. See What is crucial 1990 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 735">*781 [with regard to centralized management] is the focus of authority in the *2243 hands of a particular group, in contrast to the mutual agency relationship of a partnership, in which each member can bind the organization by his acts; the corporate form "abhors anarchy of authority." (page 2-7) not managed by such Board of Directors, acting as such in a representative capacity. Finally, there is no Accordingly, we hold that petitioner possessed the characteristic of centralized management. 3. Pertinent provisions of The provisions of the Virginia Act regarding the liability of associates are 54-886. Provisions such as 54-892. Petitioner argues in its reply brief that it lacked the characteristic of limited liability because: "While We reject petitioner's arguments regarding the effect of its associates' endorsement or guarantee of petitioner's obligations. Any personal liability of petitioner's associates in that regard arose as a matter of We also reject petitioner's argument that its associates lacked limited liability by reason of their personal liability for the negligence or misconduct of those under their direct supervision and control. In order to evaluate the impact of the Virginia Act with respect to an associate's liability, we first must consider the general rules regarding tort liability of corporate agents. Especially relevant is the common law rule that a corporation's agents (including employees) remain liable for their own negligence notwithstanding the fact that such negligence occurs while performing services on behalf of the corporation. See Fletcher Cyclopedia of the Law of Private Corporations, sec. 1135 (1986 rev.); American Law Institute, 2 Restatement of the Law of Agency 2d (referred to hereinafter as Restatement), secs. 343, 350 (1958); H. Henn & T. Alexander, Laws of Corporations, p. 608 (3d ed. 1983); F. Mechem, A Treatise on the Law of Agency, secs. 1460-1461 (2d ed. 1982). While suing a corporation for the negligent acts of its agents is often "more convenient or effective" than suing the agent, corporate liability under the doctrine of respondeat superior is derivative, 1990 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 735">*787 or secondary, in nature and in no way shields an agent from liability for his own negligence. Mechem, Viewing the Virginia Act in the context of such a well-established rule regarding agent's liability, and having found no contrary rule under Virginia law, the statement in The notion that a corporation's agents may be held liable for the negligence of The superior or managing officer of a corporation cannot be held liable for the misconduct of a subordinate servant or employee unless the act is done with his consent or his order or direction, "and a representative of the master is not personally liable for the conduct of other agents or servants of the same master under him, unless he makes himself a participant therein in some way, either by actual participation, by See also Mechem, Several cases holding the 1965 Regulations invalid provide support for our analysis of limited liability in the instant case. In In Our holding that limited liability is present in the instant case is supported 1990 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 735">*795 further by recent *2246 state court decisions implementing provisions analogous to In This act does not modify any law applicable to the relationship between a person furnishing professional medical service and a person receiving such service, including liability arising out of such professional service. [ While we are aware of one North Carolina case in which the court interpreted a savings clause to preserve joint and several liability among physician-shareholders for each other's negligence, Accordingly, we hold that petitioner possessed the characteristic of limited liability. Because we have held that petitioner possessed three of the four characteristics distinguishing corporations from partnerships under We next address the issue of petitioner's deduction for compensation paid to its associates. The test of deductibility in the case of compensation payments is whether they are reasonable and are in fact payments purely for services. * * * An ostensible salary paid by a corporation may be a distribution of a dividend on stock. This is likely to occur in the case of a corporation having few shareholders, practically all of whom draw salaries. If in such a case the salaries are in excess of those ordinarily paid for similar services and the excessive payments correspond or bear a close relationship to the stockholdings of the officers of employers, it would seem likely that the salaries are not paid wholly for services rendered, but that the excessive payments are a distribution of earnings upon the stock. * * * The form or method of fixing compensation is not decisive as to deductibility. While any form of contingent compensation invites scrutiny as a possible distribution of earnings of the enterprise, it does not follow that payments on a contingent basis are to be treated fundamentally on any basis different from that applying to compensation at a flat rate. * * * In any event the allowance for the compensation paid may not exceed what 1990 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 735">*802 is reasonable under all the circumstances. It is, in general, just to assume that reasonable and true compensation is only such amount as would ordinarily be paid for like services by like enterprises under the like circumstances. In In the instant case, respondent determined that the deductions claimed by petitioner for amounts paid to its associates exceeded a reasonable allowance for salaries or other compensation for personal services rendered. The following chart lists the amounts allowed and disallowed by 1990 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 735">*805 respondent with respect to each associate:
Nothing contained in this act shall be interpreted to abolish, repeal, modify, restrict or limit the law now in effect in this state applicable to the professional relationship and liabilities between the person furnishing the professional services and the person receiving such professional service and to the standards for professional conduct. Any officer, shareholder, agent, or employee of a corporation organized under this act 1990 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 735">*790 shall remain personally and fully liable and accountable for any negligent or wrongful acts or misconduct committed by him, or by any person under his direct supervision and control, while rendering *2245 professional service on behalf of the corporation to the person for whom such professional services were being rendered.1990 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 735">*791
Focusing its attention on the above provision, the Fifth Circuit found that the entity possessed the attribute of limited liability under the
personal liability is limited in a professional corporation to the same extent as in any other corporation. Although a shareholder-employee must necessarily be responsible for his misconduct, the corporate form nonetheless shields the shareholder from a considerable amount of contractual and tort liability. [
Finding that the entity would qualify as a corporation under the Kintner Regulations, the Fifth Circuit went on to invalidate the 1965 Regulations as arbitrary and discriminatory.
Thus, as we have done in the instant case, the Sixth Circuit in
Each shareholder, employee or agent of a professional service corporation shall be personally and fully liable and accountable for any negligent or wrongful act or misconduct committed by him or by any person under his direct supervision and control while rendering professional services on behalf of such corporation.
Regarding the effect of such provision, the Appellate Division, citing a prior decision, stated that
the liability imposed upon a shareholder of a professional corporation 1990 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 735">*796 by
The court went on to conclude that the members of New York professional corporations are to enjoy limited liability with respect to ordinary corporate business debts such as the rents in issue in that case. 1990 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 735">*797
Focusing on that provision, the court rejected the plaintiff's argument that the provision imports the vicarious liability of the Uniform Partnership 1990 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 735">*798 Act to apply to associating physicians.
we have more than a little hesitation about determining corporateness by what some court might possibly do at sometime in the future; we think the more appropriate course is to accept the reasonable meaning of presently existing legal provisions.
As indicated by the above-quoted regulation, there is a two-prong test for deductibility under
the employee's qualifications; the nature, extent and scope of the employee's work; the size and complexities of the business; a comparison of salaries paid with the gross income and the net income; the prevailing general economic conditions; 1990 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 735">*804 comparison of salaries with distributions to stockholders; the prevailing rates of compensation for comparable positions in comparable concerns; the salary policy of the taxpayer as to all employees; and in the case of small corporations with a limited number of officers the amount of compensation paid to the particular employee in previous years. The action of the Board of Directors of a corporation in voting salaries for any given period is entitled to the presumption that such salaries are reasonable and proper. * * * [
The Sixth Circuit also expressed the general rule that in reasonable compensation cases, no single factor is decisive; rather, "every case of this kind must stand on its own facts and circumstances." Taxable Year Ended Deduction for Compensation 10/31/82 Allowed Disallowed Dr. McVey $ 397,556.12 $ 580,221.88 Dr. Khuri 461,509.61 Dr. Moore 191,713.62 374,838.38 10/31/83 Dr. McVey $ 324,759.38 $ 548,538.61 Dr. Khuri 231,435.83 441,435.17 Dr. Moore 162,467.94 361,363.06
Respondent's determination of the amount of compensation allowable as a deduction is presumed correct, and petitioner bears the burden of proving that a greater amount is appropriate.
At the outset, we note that in view of the large increases in associate compensation during the years in issue, the magnitude of such increases as compared with the increases in petitioner's gross income, and the failure of petitioner to pay dividends, a number of the factors listed in
Both of the parties in the instant case submitted expert reports with respect to the reasonable compensation issue. *2249 of departments of the Hospital, 1990 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 735">*807 while respondent's report focuses on their services as petitioner's officers.
The computations made in petitioner's expert report can be segmented into two categories. In one part of the report, petitioner's expert analyzes the amount reasonably payable to associates for patient services. In that regard, petitioner's expert uses collections from patients as a measure of reasonable compensation, but finds the "collections" figures actually recorded by petitioner to be artificially low and in need of adjustment. Petitioner's expert bases his conclusion that the "collections" figures recorded by petitioner were artificially low upon a comparison of such "collections" to the "billings" of petitioner's associates. His 1990 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 735">*808 report states that the ratio of collections to billings of petitioner's associates averaged 64.1 percent for the year ended October 31, 1982 and 54.4 percent for the year ended October 31, 1983. He then compares those ratios with a "national norm" of 92 percent. The report further concludes that the "startling difference" between the associates' collection ratios and the "national norm" was caused by petitioner's practice of allocating nondesignated partial payments to the Hospital component of a bill first, before crediting any portion of receipts to physician services. In that regard, the report states: "If the payments had been credited properly, the physician collection rates would have reflected the national norm of 92 percent of billings." Accordingly, petitioner's expert adjusts the "collections" of petitioner's associates upward, to 92 percent of their billings (i.e., the "national norm") and uses the resulting figures as reasonable compensation for patient services.
We find the analysis of petitioner's expert to be not entirely persuasive for two reasons. First, the conclusion of petitioner's expert that associate collections should be adjusted to reflect a "national norm" 1990 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 735">*809 is based on the assumption that petitioner's method of allocating nondesignated partial payments triggered the divergence from such national norm. However, neither petitioner's expert report nor any other evidence offered by petitioner analyzes the effect of petitioner's receipt allocation practices in quantitative terms. While petitioner's expert report asserts that "numerous patient ledgers were reviewed" to verify its conclusion, the report presents neither any tabulation of the amount of nondesignated partial payments nor any information as to the frequency of occurrence of nondesignated partial payments. Moreover, petitioner's expert report states that "generally," third party payors
Second, we are not convinced that the 92 percent collection rate used by petitioner's expert as a "national norm" actually represents an appropriate standard against which to measure petitioner's collections. Petitioner's expert admitted that the source of the 92 percent rate relied upon in his report was an article from "Medical Economics," entitled "Getting Paid is Getting Tougher," which specifically dealt with the collection ratios of
Like petitioner's expert report, the report of respondent's expert determines reasonable compensation for the associates'services to patients as a percentage of collections. 1990 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 735">*812 Respondent's *2250 expert, however, uses the collections figures actually recorded by petitioner as a base, and calculates reasonable compensation for the associates' services to patients as
Of the six employment contracts of nonowner physicians submitted into evidence in the instant case, only two provide for compensation equal 1990 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 735">*813 to 85 percent of collections (as an alternative to a fixed amount of compensation, with the physician receiving whichever is greater). Two of the contracts provide for fixed compensation or compensation based on 100 percent or 110 percent of collections, 1990 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 735">*814
Having weighed all of the evidence before us, we conclude that the adjustments to "collections" proposed by neither expert are appropriate. 1990 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 735">*815
We next consider the additional compensation warranted for other services performed by petitioner's associates. As noted above, petitioner's expert report assigned a separate value to the medically-oriented supervisory services of petitioner's associates. The report finds that the three associates collectively performed the functions of a director of intensive care, laboratory director, radiology director, stand-by and supervising emergency room physician, director of EKG, director of respiratory therapy, director of anesthesia, and chief of staff. The report then assigns an aggregate value to such services of $ 295,320 for the year ended October 31, 1982, and $ 310,860 for the year ended October 31, 1983, based on a review of salaries paid by Maryland hospitals having less than 200 beds." 1990 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 735">*816 expert report as follows: Service Provided Compensation Received Chief of Staff $ 43,200 Director of Intensive Care Unit 8,820 Emergency Room Department Physician Supervision and Stand by 77,400 Director of Anesthesia 57,780 Laboratory Director 60,300 Radiology Director 49,590 Director of Respiratory Therapy 4,770 Director of EKG 9,000 $ 310,860
For the year ended October 31, 1982, petitioner's expert applies a five percent discount to the above figures.
At trial, Doctors McVey and Khuri testified that petitioner's associates did have a variety of *2251 medical responsibilities at the Hospital in addition to direct responsibility for patient care, none of which they separately were compensated for. Dr. McVey testified that, during the years in issue, he served as chairman of the 1990 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 735">*817 physiotherapy department, chairman of the intensive care unit, chairman of the obstetrics department, chief of staff (at various times), and co-chairman of the mortality-morbidity conferences. He also testified that he and Dr. Moore were in charge of the emergency room, and that Dr. Moore was in charge of radiology as well as being laboratory director for the Hospital. Dr. Khuri testified that during 1982 and 1983, he served as chief of the medical staff, chief of surgery, director of anesthesia, director of respiratory therapy, chairman of the tissue committee and infection control committee and co-chairman of the mortality and morbidity conference.
While we believe that petitioner's associates were charged with medical responsibilities at the Hospital beyond ordinary patient care, we find the methodology used in petitioner's expert report to place a value on such responsibilities lacking in some respects. Notably, the report does not contain any information concerning the amount of time devoted to such responsibilities in either the Maryland hospitals surveyed or by petitioner's associates. Additionally, petitioner offered no significant information as to the hours spent by the 1990 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 735">*818 associates in their various capacities. The testimony of Dr. McVey on cross-examination also indicates that some of the medical "titles" held by petitioner's associates may have involved limited substantive responsibility, as such titles were unrelated to the associates' own medical specialties.
In other cases, we have indicated that it is inappropriate to determine "reasonable compensation" for one individual performing multiple roles by aggregating the salaries of multiple persons each performing one of those roles on a full-time basis.
Although petitioner's expert report arrives at specific compensation figures (for patient services and medical supervisory responsibilities) of $ 1,487,738 for the year ended 10/31/82 and $ 1,526,682 for the year ended 10/31/83, the report describes those amounts as "the
Perhaps in view of the disparity between the amount calculated in the report and the amount claimed as compensation deductions on petitioner's *2252 returns, petitioner's expert report states in conclusion that:
In addition, further evaluation is being conducted to determine a reasonable compensation level for the following services: (1) Ancillary services rendered to private patients in the office practice. (2) Administrative duties performed by the three principals for RMA and the inpatient hospital facility.
While petitioner's expert did
We decline petitioner's invitation to allocate a portion of the Hospital's ancillary service charges to its associates. First, petitioner has submitted no quantitative analysis of the "profit" or "markup" which a private physician might expect to earn for ancillary services, or the equivalent amounts which might be attributed to its associates. Second, petitioner has not shown that its associates actually 1990 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 735">*823 performed any services related to generating ancillary revenues, or that any such services would not be encompassed within the duties for which appropriate compensation has already been allowed. Third, petitioner admits that its associates did not incur the expenses which are incurred by private practitioners and has not explained why its associates should be treated exactly like private practitioners with respect to compensation. Petitioner's submission of schedules documenting outpatient ancillary charges and total Hospital collections for ancillary services during the years in issue, together with petitioner's imprecise and unsupported arguments about such services, are insufficient to support any allocation of additional compensation for such services. As we stated in
While petitioner's expert did not submit an additional report regarding "administrative" duties, respondent's expert assigned a value to the services of petitioner's associates as "president, vice 1990 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 735">*824 president and secretary-treasurer" of petitioner. Finding that the associates actually were "equal partners in a chief executive role," 1990 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 735">*825 respondent's expert report assigned a value of $ 90,750 to such services for each associate for the year ended October 31, 1982, and $ 97,500 for each associate for the year ended October 31, 1983. At trial, petitioner's expert appeared to agree that such amounts were reasonable and stated that they represented compensation for functions not considered in his report. On brief, petitioner states that the value of compensation for such executive functions is not in dispute. Accordingly, we will allow the additional amount found by respondent's expert as attributable to the associates' services as petitioner's officers.
At trial, petitioner attempted to introduce into evidence a letter from its expert 1990 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 735">*826 witness purporting to identify payments that related to services performed in prior years. That letter, however, was excluded from evidence on the grounds that it was not filed within the time *2253 provided by the Rules; respondent's objection to testimony by petitioner's expert that petitioner received money for past services during the years in issue also was sustained. In the absence of any reliable evidence demonstrating that the reimbursement requirements of various insurers produced financial distortions during the years in issue, and correlating such distortions with the compensation of petitioner's associates, we are unable to allow any additional compensation deductions based on petitioner's argument regarding reimbursement practices. 1990 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 735">*827
Petitioner also points to the fact that, in prior years, its associates consistently received compensation less than their "billings," arguing that such fact establishes that they were undercompensated in those years. Petitioner asserts that our decisions in
In
Although the corporation in
In response to petitioner's argument that
Petitioner does not understand the facts of
We agree with respondent. The fees "billed" to the corporation in
Petitioner also directs our attention to
In sustaining the compensation deduction claimed by the taxpayer in
We have considered all of petitioner's other arguments and find them without merit. In summary, we hold that petitioner was entitled to deduct the following amounts as reasonable compensation for the services of its associates:
Taxable Year Ended | Taxable Year Ended | ||
10/31/8210/31/83 | |||
Amount Attributable | |||
to Direct Patient Services | $ 830,294.13 | $ 718,663.16 | |
+ | |||
Amount Attributable | |||
to Medical Depart- | |||
mental Responsibilities | 190,000 | 200,000 | |
+ | |||
Amount Attributable | |||
to Services as | |||
Officers | 272,250 | 292,500 | |
Total | $ 1,292,544.13 | $ 1,211,163.16 |
We note in conclusion that the testimony offered by petitioner's associates and by its expert, as well as petitioner's Bylaws, indicate that it was petitioner's practice to distribute all funds left 1990 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 735">*832 after the payment of Hospital expenses (and the setting aside of reserves) among the associates at year end. During the years in issue, petitioner chose to treat all of those distributed amounts as deductible compensation. On cross-examination, petitioner's expert, who was a C.P.A., was unable to explain how petitioner ever could have been expected to end up with a "profit" at the corporate level using such system of compensation, preferring to note that another expert would be testifying on the entity classification issue. In
It seems clear from this testimony that under its contract with member physicians petitioner intended that all of its earnings in excess of amounts necessary for its operation, planned expansion, and reserves were to be distributed to its member-stockholder physicians. Viewed in that light the contract provides not only a method of computation 1990 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 735">*833 for services rendered but also a method for distribution of its profits to its stockholders.
We are convinced from this record that petitioner, after attaining its objective of providing adequate medical, surgical, and hospital facilities for the people of Klamath County, fully intended its earnings and profits should be distributed to its stockholders and that the method of doing so was that with which we are here concerned. * * * [
While the failure to pay dividends does not automatically trigger a finding that compensation paid to shareholders was unreasonable,
Petitioner, from his testimony, appears to have felt that he was worth whatever compensation he could withdraw from [his wholly-owned corporation]. While that approach is understandable, the Code establishes a different standard. * * * [
We have exercised our best judgment with the record before us to decide the "reasonalbe" value of the services performed by petitioner's associates. We note in conclusion that it is
Nevertheless, we must, as a matter of law, decide to what extent the earnings from their businesses can properly be paid to them as compensation and to what extent such earnings must be treated as the profits of their business with the resulting tax consequences.
Respondent also determined additions to tax for negligence under
Negligence is defined as a "lack of due care or failure to do what a reasonable and ordinarily prudent person would do under the circumstances."
In the instant case, we find that at least a portion of petitioner's underpayment was due to negligence. The deductions claimed by petitioner herein were substantially in excess of the amounts which we have found to represent a reasonable allowance for services provided. See While petitioner's returns in the instant case were prepared by a C.P.A., that fact, without more, does not insulate petitioner from the negligence addition. The addition provided by To reflect the foregoing, APPENDIX *2257 (b) (2) For purposes of this paragraph, dissolution of an organization means an alteration of the identity of an organization by reason of a change in the relationship between its members as determined under local law. For example, since the resignation of a partner from a general partnership destroys the mutual agency which exists between such partner and his copartners and thereby alters the personal relation between the partners which constitutes the identity of the partnership itself, the resignation of a partner dissolves the partnership. A corporation, however, has a continuing identity which is detached from the relationship between its stockholders. The death, insanity, or bankruptcy of a shareholder or the sale of a shareholder's interest has no effect upon the identity of the corporation and, therefore, does not work a dissolution of the organization. An agreement by which an organization is established may provide that the business will be continued by the remaining members in the event of the death or withdrawal of any member, but such 1990 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 735">*842 agreement does not establish continuity of life if under local law the death or withdrawal of any member causes a dissolution of the organization. Thus, there may be a dissolution of the organization and no continuity of life although the business is continued by the remaining members. (3) An agreement establishing an organization may provide that the organization is to continue for a stated period or until the completion of a stated undertaking or such agreement may provide for the termination of the organization at will or otherwise. In determining whether any member has the power of dissolution, it will be necessary to examine the agreement and to ascertain the effect of such agreement under local law. For example, if the agreement expressly provides that the organization can be terminated by the will of any member, it is clear that the organization lacks continuity of life. However, if the agreement provides that the organization is to continue for a stated period or until the completion of a stated transaction, the organization has continuity of life if the effect of the agreement is that no member has the power to dissolve the organization in contravention of the agreement. 1990 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 735">*843 Nevertheless, if, notwithstanding such agreement, any member has the power under local law to dissolve the organization, the organization lacks continuity of life. * * * (c) (2) The persons who have such authority may, or may not, be members of the organization and may hold office as a result of a selection by the members from time to time, or may be self-perpetuating 1990 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 735">*844 in office. See (3) Centralized management means a concentration of continuing exclusive authority to make independent business decisions on behalf of the organization which do not require ratification by members of such organization. Thus, there is not centralized management when the centralized authority is merely to perform ministerial acts as an agent at the direction of a principal. (4) There is no centralization of continuing exclusive authority to make management decisions, unless the managers have sole authority to make such decisions. For example, in the case of a corporation or a trust, the concentration of management powers in a board of directors or trustees effectively prevents a stockholder or a trust beneficiary, simply because he is a stockholder or beneficiary, from binding the corporation or the trust by his acts. However, because of the mutual agency relationship between members 1990 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 735">*845 of a general partnership subject to a statute corresponding to the Uniform Partnership Act, such a general partnership cannot achieve effective concentration of management powers and, therefore, centralized management. Usually, the act of any partner within the scope of the partnership business binds all the partners; and even if the partners agree among themselves that the powers of management shall be exclusively in a selected few, this agreement will be ineffective as against an outsider who had no notice of it. In addition, limited partnerships subject to a statute corresponding to the Uniform Limited Partnership Act, generally do not have centralized management, but centralized management ordinarily does exist in such a limited partnership if substantially all the interests in the partnership are owned by the limited partners. (d)
1. Unless otherwise noted, all section references are to the Internal Revenue Code as amended and in effect for the years in issue, and all Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure.↩
*. 50 percent of the interest payable on the portion of the underpayment due to negligence.↩
2. The Virginia Act was repealed in 1988. See n. 36, infra.↩
3. In their stipulation of facts, the parties agreed that Doctors McVey, Moore, and Khuri were the sole owners and directors of petitioner beginning in mid-1982 and "including all years in issue under the Notice of Deficiency." However, petitioner's tax return for the taxable year ended October 31, 1983, lists those three physicians as each owning only 25 percent of the "stock" in petitioner, for a total ownership of 75 percent. For purposes of our opinion, we follow the parties' stipulation as to ownership of the association. As noted above, interests in professional associations may be owned only by persons legally qualified to render the professional services for which the association is organized. While one exhibit in the record refers to the receipt of pension and other checks by Dr. Strader's widow, there is no indication in the record that she could have assumed Dr. Strader's status as an associate after his death.
4. Although the Bylaws stated that the number of directors could be determined by the associates from time to time,
5. Petitioner also deducted $ 12,000 for its taxable year ended October 31, 1982, and $ 9,000 for its taxable year ended October 31, 1983, as directors' fees. Those amounts were allowed by respondent.↩
6. The stipulated exhibit documenting the collections of petitioner's associates lists Dr. Khuri as having collections of $ 241,014.39 for the year ended October 31, 1982. The notice of deficiency apparently inverts two numbers, allowing $ 241,041.39 as a compensation deduction. We believe that the correct number is $ 241,014.39 and use that figure in our computations.↩
*. Collections and compensation of Dr. Strader, who died during the year ended 10/31/82, have been ignored for purposes of these computations.↩
7. Although Dr. Khuri testified that he became a "member" of petitioner in 1978, petitioner's returns for the years in issue indicate that Dr. Khuri did not become an officer of petitioner until the year ended October 31, 1982. Drs. McVey and Moore were apparently officers throughout the six-year period described in the chart. Petitioner's returns, however, indicate an increase in the "stock" ownership of Drs. McVey and Moore between the year ended October 31, 1979 and the year ended October 31, 1980.↩
8. Respondent has not asserted that petitioner is barred, under the doctrine of equitable estoppel, from denying its corporate status, and we therefore do not consider the issue of estoppel. Cf.
9. On the subject of centralized management, for example, former
Although a measure of central control may exist in a professional service organization, the managers of a professional service organization
For a detailed discussion of the 1965 Regulations and their effects, see Eaton,
10.
11. The only notable change in the relevant regulations as between 1960 and the years in issue was the deletion of Example (
12. Specifically,
13. The regulations, however, recognize a "modified form" of free transferability of interests which is accorded less significance than such characteristic when present in unmodified form.
14. We recognize that petitioner submitted an "expert report" prepared by a C.P.A. on the issue of classification and that such report was admitted at trial without objection. As such report addresses an issue for the Court to decide as a matter of law, we have ignored it. The term "petitioner's expert report" as used hereinafter does not refer to such report.
15. Petitioner, in its reply brief, argues that it failed to adhere to various procedural requirements of the Virginia Act, and that such statute, asserted by respondent to confer corporate status on petitioner, in reality reflects otherwise. Petitioner notes section 54-878 of the Virginia Act, which requires that articles of association be filed before a Virginia professional association is deemed formed, and section 54-879 of the Virginia Act, which requires that amendments to such articles also be filed, and asserts that it never filed its amended articles of association. Assuming arguendo that petitioner
16. There are apparently no recorded legislative committee reports dealing with the Virginia Act. See Comment, "Limited Liability for Shareholders in Virginia Professional Corporations: Fact or Fiction?,"
17.
18. In
It is not clear under Ohio law what the result would be were such a situation to exist. However, the fact that there might be a condition which would require the forfeiture of corporate status does not change the legal situation: Ohio has granted to such corporations continuity of existence.
19. Petitioner's argument on brief that "all" Owner-Physicians had to approve any purchase in excess of $ 1,000 as well as endorsing any check of $ 1,000 or more is not supported by the accompanying citation to the transcript. More specifically, the cited testimony (by Dr. Khuri) states that the
20. The following exchange took place on
Q: All right. Let's focus a moment on the operation of the Association. Who ran the Association, that is, Richlands Medical?
A: The board of directors.
Q:
A: Because I've been a member of the board of directors. I've been the president of the Association. I know how it was run. [Emphasis supplied.]↩
21. Petitioner's Medical Staff Bylaws, which provided rules governing the Hospital's medical staff, similarly defined the Hospital's "Governing Body" as "stockholders of the Richlands Medical Association T/A Mattie Williams Hospital."
22. See also Bittker & Eustice, Federal Income Taxation of Corporations and Shareholders, p. 2-6 n.13 (5th Ed. 1987) (noting that "A one-owner organization * * * may encounter difficulties in establishing that it possesses such corporate characteristics as continuity of life and centralized management"); Horsley, "The Virginia Professional Association Act: Relief for the Underprivileged?"
23.
24. We note that
25.
26. While we did not focus in
27. In the same paragraph, the Bittker & Eustice treatise notes the regulations' requirement that the managerial group be "composed of less than all the members."↩
28.
29. See
the personal liability of shareholders of a corporation organized under this act, in their capacity as shareholders of such corporation, shall be no greater in any aspect than that of a shareholder-employee of a corporation organized under [the general corporation laws]. [
Such amendment was not retroactive, and the Government argued that a Florida court might construe the original provision at issue in
30. The FloridaAct, unlike the Virginia Act, had a provision rendering Florida's general corporation laws applicable in all instances not covered specifically by the professional corporation law. The District Court (whose decision was affirmed by the Fifth Circuit) had cited such provision as "sharply limiting" the liability of the shareholder-professionals.
31. Because the professional corporation qualified as a corporation under the Kintner Regulations, the court found it unnecessary to decide the validity of such regulations.
32. The OhioAct's savings clause provided that:
[The provisions of the OhioAct] do not modify any law applicable to the relationship between a person furnishing professional service and a person receiving such service, including liability arising out of such professional service. [
33. The portion of the
34. While the Court of Appeals affirmed the Appellate Division decision quoted herein and did not explicitly disagree with any portion of the Appellate Division's analysis, the Court of Appeals in one portion of its opinion characterized
35.
36. In a Comment entitled "Limited Liability for Shareholders in Virginia Professional Corporations: Fact or Fiction?,"
37. The Fifth Circuit has explained the "reasonableness" requirement of
Because the shareholders will receive the profits of the business one way or the other, all parties prefer to characterize payments to shareholders as compensation. For that reason, a corporation may deduct compensation only to the extent that it is reasonable.
*. See footnote 6,
38. Petitioner's expert report was prepared by a partner specializing in health care consulting at a nationally known accounting firm. Respondent's expert report was prepared by an executive with a corporation engaged in the preparation of organizational studies including compensation studies. He also taught organizational evaluation in the Masters of Administration program at the University of Maryland and, in a book, wrote a chapter dealing with occupational issues.↩
39. The majority of respondent's expert report consists of tabulations of data aimed at demonstrating that the compensation paid to petitioner's associates was unreasonable. While we found the data relating to changes in associate compensation, patient collections and various income measurements of petitioner useful, many of the charts comparing petitioner with other enterprises were misleading in that they apparently compared the
Petitioner heavily focuses on the fact that respondent's expert compared data relating to taxpayers on the accrual basis with data from petitioner, a cash basis taxpayer. As we have not relied on those comparisons (which primarily deal with compensation as a percentage of sales) in reaching our conclusions herein, we need not address petitioner's arguments about the effect of its accounting method on the data.↩
40. We recognize that, in one of the contracts providing for "100%" of collections, a typed figure of 85 percent was crossed out and changed to 100 percent. We do not attach any significance to such fact, especially in view of the fact that in another contract, a typed figure of "100%" was changed in handwriting to 110 percent.↩
41. We note that the data submitted into evidence with respect to nonowner physicians
42. While we may accept the opinion of an expert in its entirety,
43. The amount which we hereby allow as compensation for services to patients is equal to the total amount allowed in respondent's notice of deficiency. Respondent argues on brief that the amounts allowed in his notice of deficiency were made up of two components -- namely, a "patient service" component equal to 85 percent of collections, and an "officer" component equal to 15 percent of collections. We, however, have found that the full amount allowed in the notice of deficiency constitutes reasonable compensation for services to patients. We note Dr. McVey's testimony that the hospital at which he practiced at the time of trial did not bill patients for his services.
44. Petitioner's expert explained at trial why Maryland data was used even though the Hospital was located in Virginia. He stated that, because of the extensive state filing requirements imposed on Maryland hospitals, "every major health care researcher in the country uses Maryland data base for any type of comparisons." He also explained that there is no similar data base for Virginia and noted the proximity of the two states.↩
45. We recognize that the compensation assigned by petitioner's expert to three of the positions in question is under $ 10,000 and suggestive of part-time work.↩
46. Petitioner's expert testified that he did not review each line in petitioner's Medicare cost reports, which were each about 100 pages long, but relied upon "overall Medicare methodology" and net payments for his conclusion. He also testified that associates' compensation for direct patient care services would not be reflected in the Medicare cost reports. The Medicare cost report excerpt submitted in evidence in the instant case does not refer separately to the compensation paid to petitioner's associates.
47. Although respondent's expert report listed Dr. Khuri as president, Dr. Moore as vice president, and Dr. McVey as secretary-treasurer, the record is unclear as to the offices held by Drs. McVey and Moore. Dr. McVey's testimony indicates that
48. We are reluctant to agree with the conclusion of respondent's expert that petitioner's associates participated
49. We note that petitioner admits on brief that the cost reimbursement methodology upon which it bases its argument also may result in situations where the health care providers must later
50. See
51.
(a) NEGLIGENCE OR INTENTIONAL DISREGARD OF RULES AND REGULATIONS WITH RESPECT TO INCOME, GIFT, OR WINDFALL PROFIT TAXES. --
(1) IN GENERAL. -- If any part of any underpayment (as defined in subsection (c)(1)) of any tax imposed by subtitle A, by chapter 12 of subtitle B or by chapter 45 (relating to windfall profit tax) is due to negligence or intentional disregard of rules or regulations (but without intent to defraud), there shall be added to the tax an amount equal to 5 percent of the underpayment.
(2) ADDITIONAL AMOUNT FOR PORTION ATTRIBUTABLE TO NEGLIGENCE, ETC. -- There shall be added to the tax (in addition to the amount determined under paragraph (1)) an amount equal to 50 percent of the interest payable under section 6601 --
(A) with respect to the portion of the underpayment described in paragraph (1) which is attributable to the negligence or intentional disregard referred to in paragraph (1), and
(B) for the period beginning on the last date prescribed by law for payment of such underpayment (determined without regard to any extension) and ending on the date of the assessment of the tax (or, if earlier, the date of the payment of the tax).
52. We note that at trial, petitioner's associates appeared to characterize the equal distributions as "draws" to meet living expenses.↩
53. On cross-examination, Dr. Khuri stated that he had not kept copies of the information given to petitioner's accountants or bookkeepers on how to divide petitioner's profits. On cross-examination, Dr. McVey testified that he did not know whether petitioner filed corporate or partnership returns.↩
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