DocketNumber: Docket Nos. 7636-78, 3620-79.
Filed Date: 11/9/1984
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 11/21/2020
MEMORANDUM OPINION
On October 29, 1981, the Memorandum Findings of Fact and Opinion of this Court was filed (
Our conclusion that the Tax Court erred in holding Steffens was not engaged in the trade or business of being a * * * corporate director does not end the inquiry. In expanding the coverage of the social insurance programs to self-employed individuals, Congress intended to cover all gainfully employed individuals except certain defined classes of individuals. S.R. No. 1669,
*83 Pursuant to a joint motion for leave to submit case on remand under
We will not repeat in this opinion the findings of fact set forth in our prior opinion but will find only the additional facts stipulated by the parties necessary to an understanding of our conclusions.
Subsequent to his retirement from the Kansas-Nebraska Natural Gas Company (Kansas-Nebraska) in 1971, petitioner continued to serve as a member of the company's board of directors. As a director of Kansas-Nebraska, petitioner attended four meetings a year, each requiring only 6 hours or less of his time. Petitioner received director's fees of $2,200 and $3,600 from Kansas-Nebraska in 1975 and 1976, respectively. Members of the board of directors of Kansas-Nebraska were elected to serve on the board by stockholder vote on an annual basis. The fees received by members of the board of directors were established by the company's executive committee with fixed fees both for annual service upon the board and for the actual*84 number of board meetings attended. As a member of the board of directors, petitioner's function was to attend four director's meetings a year and generally review management's administrative policies.
(2) the performance of service by an individual as an employee, other than --
(A) service described in
(B) service described in
(C) service described in
(D) service*85 described in paragraph (4) of this subsection, and
(E) service performed by an individual as an employee of a State or a political subdivision thereof in a position compensated solely on a fee basis with respect to fees received in any period in which such service is not covered under an agreement entered into by such State and the Secretary of Health, Education, and Welfare pursuant to section 218 of the Social Security Act;
(3) the performance of service by an individual as an employee or employee representative as defined in section 3231;
(4) the performance of service by a duly ordained, commissioned, or licensed minister of a church in the exercise of his ministry or by a member of a religious order in the exercise of duties required by such order;
(5) the performance of service by an individual in the exercise of his profession as a Christian Science practitioner; or
(6) the performance of service by an individual during the period for which an exemption under subsection (h) is effective with respect to him.
The only exclusion from the definition of "trade or business" which*86 petitioner contends is applicable here is "the performance of service by an individual as an employee." We must therefore determine whether as a director of Kansas-Nebraska, petitioner was an employee of that corporation.
(b)
As we pointed out in
Among the relevant factors to which the courts have looked in determining the substance of the employment relationship are the following: (1) The degree of control exercised by the principal over*88 the details of the work, (2) which party invests in the facilities used in the work, (3) the opportunity of the individual for profit or loss, (4) whether or not the principal has the right to discharge the individual, (5) whether the work is part of the principal's regular business, (6) the permanency of the relationship, and (7) the relationship the parties believe they are creating.
In our view, it is clear that petitioner as a director of Kansas-Nebraska was not an employee of that company within the provisions of
*89 The record in this case does not show that Kansas-Nebraska had the power to control the details of petitioner's work as a director.
Petitioner has not shown the extent, if any, to which he used the facilities of Kansas-Nebraska to perform his duties as a director. In his capacity as a director, petitioner attended four meetings a year, each requiring 6 hours or less of his time, and in return he received $2,200 in 1975 and $3,600 in 1976 from Kansas-Nebraska. At the time petitioner elected to take early retirement from the employment of Kansas-Nebraska on July 1, 1971, he waived all employment benefits normally available to employees of Kansas-Nebraska. In pertinent part, the agreement between petitioner and Kansas-Nebraska provides as follows:
Section 4.
The Court of Appeals directed us to determine whether*90 petitioner fell within an excluded class as specified in
*. By order of the Chief Judge, this case was reassigned from Judge J. Gregory Bruce↩ to Judge Irene F. Scott.
1. Certain issues decided by this Court were not appealed to the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit and one of the issues involved in the appeal has been disposed of by agreement of the parties. ↩
2. Unless otherwise stated, all statutory references are to the Internal Revenue Code of 1954, as amended and in effect during the years here in issue.↩
3. Treasury regulations must be sustained unless unreasonable and plainly inconsistent with the Internal Revenue Code.
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