DocketNumber: Docket No. 10233-78.
Citation Numbers: 42 T.C.M. 423, 1981 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 371, 1981 T.C. Memo. 370
Filed Date: 7/20/1981
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 11/21/2020
Petitioner sold his 51-percent interest in a trailer park to Deen and reported the sale on the installment method as prescribed in
MEMORANDUM FINDINGS OF FACT AND OPINION
STERRETT,
FINDINGS OF FACT
Some of the facts have been stipulated and are so found. The stipulation of facts, together with the exhibits attached thereto, are incorporated herein by this reference.
Petitoners John L. Connell and Ketna S. Connell, husband and wife, resided in Gainesville, Florida at the time the petition herein was filed. A timely joint Federal income tax return for the calendar year 1974 was filed by petitioners with the Internal Revenue Service Center, Chamblee, Georgia. Ketna S. Connell is a party herein solely by virtue of her filing a joint return with John L. Connell (hereinafter petitioner).
On December 22, 1971, John D. Deen entered into a contract to purchase certain real estate from Lovette Jackson and Dorothy M. Jackson. This contract, as amended, provided that the purchase of *373 the Jackson real estate would be closed by January 15, 1974. The contract also provided for an option to purchase additional real estate, such option expiring on January 15, 1977.
Thereafter, on June 4, 1973, petitioner and Billy A. Myrick entered into an agreement (Agreement) ith Deen whereby they agreed to pay Deen $ 500,000 in exchange for Deen's assignment to them of his rights and interest in the December 22, 1971 contract. As part payment of the purchase price to Deen, petitioner and Myrick executed a promissory note dated June 4, 1973 and payable to Deen in the face amount of $ 400,000, bearing an interest rate of 8 percent per annum. The note was payable in eight equal annual installments of $ 50,000 plus accrued interest, commencing on June 5, 1974 and continuing on June 5 of each succeeding year until fully paid. The note also incorporated by reference all the terms and conditions of the Agreement. In addition to the payment terms, the Agreement provided in pertinent part as follows:
5. In the event CONNELL and MYRICK default in the performance of any of the conditions of this Agreement, including the payment of all monies due on or before the due dates, the Assignment *374 as contemplated herein shall become null and void and of no further force or effect and DEEN shall have the sole right to perform the Contract for Sale and Purchase free and clear of all rights of CONNELL and MYRICK. In this event or in the event CONNELL and MYRICK fail to perform the Contract for Sale and Purchase for any reason, other than one caused by DEEN, it is expressly agreed that the total consideration of $ 500,000.00 is to be paid according to the required terms and there shall be no reduction in the said required $ 500,000.00 payment due to the fact that DEEN may perform the Contract for Sale and Purchase or the fact that CONNELL and MYRICK may fail to perform the Contract for Sale and Purchase.
7. CONNELL and MYRICK hereby waive any and all objections to the terms and conditions of the Contract for Sale and Purchase and any all [
10. In the event CONNELL and MYRICK close the transaction as contemplated by the Contract for Sale and Purchase, at the closing of the said sale, CONNELL and MYRICK hereby agree to execute a mortgage to DEEN for the purpose of securing the prompt and full payment of the said $ 400,000.00 promissory note. The mortgage shall be a lien upon all of the property purchased by CONNELL and MYRICK * * *.
11. In the event CONNELL and MYRICK sell any portion of the property as contemplated by the Contract for Sale and Purchase, including all property under option and including all property released by DEEN, or, in the event CONNELL and MYRICK assign any options contained in the said Contract for Sale and Purchase, *376 it is agreed that all monies received by CONNELL and MYRICK shall be applied in the following order of priority:
A. First to the reasonable costs of sale, including a real estate commission,
B. Second to the reimbursement to CONNELL and MYRICK of the principal amount of all payments made to the seller and to DEEN,
D. After said promissory note is paid in full, all remaining payments shall be the property of CONNELL and MYRICK.
Any purchase money mortgages received by CONNELL and MYRICK from the purchaser as security for the unpaid balance shall be assigned to DEEN as collateral security for the payment of the said $ 400,000.00 promissory note.
Several months after the above assignment was executed, Deen approached petitioner in the hopes of purchasing the Prairie View Mobile Home Village (Prairie View), then owned by petitioner (51 percent) and John B. Morgan (49 percent). As the due date of the first payment on the note from petitioner and Myrick to Deen approached and the management of Prairie View became more difficult, *377 13, 1974 petitioner and Morgan individually sold their interests in Prairie View to Deen and John C. Morris for a total purchase price of $ 1,097,946.95. Petitioner's share of the purchase price was $ 604,452.94, consisting of $ 95,000 in cash received at the closing, a promissory note executed by Deen in the amount of $ 230,000 and the assumption by the purchaser of petitioner's $ 279,452.94 share of a mortgage to the First Federal Savings and Loan Association with an outstanding balance of $ 547,946.95. The unsecured promissory note in the principal amount of $ 230,000 was payable in eight equal annual installments of $ 28,750 plus accrued interest at 8 1/4 percent per annum, commencing on March 13, 1975 and continuing on March 13 of each succeeding year until fully paid. This note had the following typewritten legend on its reverse side:
TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN:
You will take notice that I have irrevocably pledged any and all payments that are due to me or any of my legal successors or assigns, as owner of the foregoing Note, as an additional source of payment of the *378 amounts owed by me under my Promissory Note dated June 4, 1973, in the original amount of $ 200,000.00, and any person, firm or corporation acquiring this Note by Assignment or operation of law, will do so with full knowledge of this Pledge of the receipts from the Note on the reverse side to full payment of said $ 200,000.00 insofar as the monies due thereunder will suffice.
Dated: 13th day of March, 1974.
/s/ John L. Connell / JOHN L. CONNELL
The basis of petitioner's interest in Prairie View was $ 240,065.86. Consequently, the excess of the mortgage assumed over such basis, includable as a payment in the year of sale, was $ 39,387.08.
On June 3, 1974, the $ 400,000 note payable to Deen and jointly executed by petitioner and Myrick was cancelled and replaced by two individual notes in the face amount of $ 200,000 each which were executed separately by petitioner any Myrick. The primary reason for this division was to improve the appearance of petitioner's and Myrick's financial statements and thereby more readily enable each to obtain or maintain outside financing for their separate businesses. *379
The new note executed by petitioner provided that it was executed as a modification and clarification of the $ 400,000 note. Further, petitioner's note bore the date June 4, 1974, called for accrued interest to be paid through March 13, 1974 and was thereafter payable in eight equal annual installments of $ 25,000 plus accrued interest at 8 percent per annum, commencing on March 13, 1975 and continuing on March 13 of each succeeding year until fully paid. This note also had the following typewritten legend on the reverse side of the note:
TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN:
You will take notice that I have irrevocably pledged any and all payments that are due to me or any of my legal successors or assigns as owner of the foregoing Note, as an additional *380 source of payment of the amounts owed by me under my Promissory Note dated March 13, 1974, in the original amount of $ 230,000.00, and any person, firm, or corporation acquiring this Note by Assignment or operation of law, will do so with full knowledge of this Pledge of the receipts from the Note on the reverse side to full payment of said $ 230,000.00 insofar as the monies due thereunder will suffice.
Dated: 13th day of March, 1974.
/s/ John David Deen / JOHN DAVID DEEN
The notice on the note from Deen to petitioner was placed there on the closing date of the Prairie View sale pursuant to the advice of counsel, *381 in order to destroy its negotiability and to prevent anyone from acquiring the note as a bona fide purchaser for value. The notice on the note from petitioner to Deen was placed there at the request of petitioner after he executed a similar pledge of the payments due under the note from Deen to petitioner. While the parties agreed to execute these pledges for the aforementioned reasons, they never discussed the possibility of structuring the transaction in a manner that would cancel or offset these notes.
On March 13, 1975, the due date for the first payment on both notes, petitioner went to Deen's house ready and willing to tender payment according to the terms of his instrument. However, Deen suggested that only one check from Deen to petitioner was necessary. Accordingly, on that date, Deen made a payment to petitioner of $ 3,750, which represented the difference between Deen's principal payment of $ 28,750 and petitioner's principal payment of $ 25,000. In addition, the parties gave each other a credit for a principal payment of $ 25,000 and for interest due under the notes. *382 by Deen. In addition, petitioner's claim asserted a vendor's lien on the Prairie View property, which lien was established on December 1, 1975 by order of the Circuit Court of Florida, Eighth Judicial Circuit, in and for Alachua County, Florida. On December 3, 1975, petitioner agreed to release his lien on the Prairie View property in exchange for an advance principal payment from the estate of $ 20,000 plus accrued interest.
In March 1976, pursuant to a court order reflecting an agreement between petitioner and Deen's executor, the claim of petitioner against the estate and the claim of the estate against petitioner regarding the $ 200,000 promissory note were compromised by way of offset. The offset resulted in petitioner making a payment to the estate in the amount of $ 3,907.28, representing the amount of principal and accrued interest owed the estate in excess of the principal and interest owed petitioner by the estate.
On his Federal income tax return for his 1974 taxable year petitioner made a timely election to report the sale of his interest in Prairie View on the installment method of accounting prescribed by
OPINION
As a general rule, gain from the sale or other disposition of property is the excess of the amount realized over the adjusted basis of the property.
With respect to the 30 percent limitation, the amount considered received by a taxpayer in the year of the installment sale is computed by taking into account *386 payments constructively as well as actually received.
It has long been settled that secured notes stand on the same plane as unsecured notes for purposes of the installment sale limitation on year-of-sale payments.
On the other hand, cancellation or reduction of a seller's indebtedness to a purchaser as partial *387 consideration in an installment sale is included in determining year-of-sale payments.
The incidence of taxation depends upon the substance of the transaction. * * * To permit the true nature of a transaction to be disguised by mere formalisms, which exist solely to alter tax liabilities, would seriously impair the effective administration *388 of the tax policies of Congress.
It follows, as this and other courts have recognized, that substance, and not form, will determine whether a transaction qualifies for installment sale treatment; an arrangement lacking reality will not be given effect.
For the most part, the facts in the instant case are undisputed. Prior to the transaction involved herein, petitioner was jointly liable with another individual on a $ 400,000 note payable to Deen. The transaction *389 upon which this case is based involved the March 13, 1974 sale of Prairie View, owned jointly by petitioner and Morgan, to Deen and Morris. In part payment of the purchase price, Deen individually executed a note payable to petitioner in the amount of $ 230,000 with interest at 8 1/4 percent per annum. That note was payable in eight equal annual installments of $ 28,750 plus accrued interest, such payments commencing on March 13, 1975 and continuing on March 13 of each succeeding year until fully paid. In order to destroy its negotiability, the note contained on its back a pledge by petitioner of payments due under that note as an "additional source of payment" for amounts owed by petitioner to Deen under a second note.
Contemporaneous with the closing of the transaction in question, the $ 400,000 note was cancelled and replaced by two individual notes in the face amount of $ 200,000 each, one executed by petitioner and one executed by the other party to the original note. Petitioner's note was payable in equal annual installments of $ 25,000 plus accrued interest at 8 percent per annum, payments commencing on March 13, 1975 and continuing on March 13 of each succeeding year until *390 fully paid. At the request of petitioner, that note contained on its back a pledge by Deen of the payments due under that note as an "additional source of payment" for amounts owed by Deen to petitioner under the $ 230,000 note.
In his notice of deficiency, respondent determined that--
the mutual pledging of payments on notes receivable in the amounts of $ 230,000.00 and $ 200,000.00 by you and John D. Deen, respectively, constitutes a cancellation and payment of your debt to John D. Deen to the extent of $ 200,000.00, which disqualifies the installment sale of Prairie View Mobile Village reported by you on your 1974 return, since payments in the year of sale are in excess of 30% of selling price pursuant to
On brief, respondent theorizes that the doctrines of constructive receipt and substance over form dictate such a result. the gist of his theory is that petitioner, in substance, was relieved of his debt obligation to Deen by virtue of the transaction in question and therefore petitioner constructively received payments in the year of sale in excess of 30 percent of the selling price.
Petitioner counters that the pledges did not *391 amount to a cancellation of the debts. Instead, claims petitioner, each pledge was intended merely as security for payment of the other note. Reasoning that the giving of security is not a year-of-sale payment for purposes of
Our decision turns on the intent or motive of the parties; that is, whether the cross pledges were intended as a security arrangement or were intended effectively to cancel mutual indebtedness. See
Evidence of the negotiations between the parties to the notes demonstrates that the pledges were not intended to affect an offset or cancellation of mutual debts. Rather, the idea of a pledge was introduced into the transaction solely on the initiative of Mr. Paul Carmichael, *392 Deen's attorney. Carmichael's expressed purpose for the pledge executed by petitioner was to destroy the negotiability of the subject note and to eliminate the possibility of a bona fide purchaser for value. The corresponding pledge by Deen first was requested by petitioner only after petitioner had executed his pledge. Further, the testimonies of petitioner and Carmichael indicate that the possibility of cross pledges and the debt relief that, in substance, might be construed to result therefrom were never discussed by the parties to the transaction; nor was there such an understanding between petitioner and Deen. In fact, a fair inference can be drawn that these pledges would not have seen the light of day absent Carmichael's last minute initiative. Truly, mutual pledges were not bargained for, but were the consequence of spur-of-the-moment thought. Therefore, we do not believe that the parties intended to cancel their mutual debts but instead intended to secure repayment by virtue of pledges.
Respondent, however, argues that the Fifth Circuit's decision in
Under its terms the company purchased the employment contract for $ 228,360 payable in equal installments of $ 22,836 on February 1st of the ten next succeeding years and, in turn, taxpayer agreed to pay off his outstanding indebtedness to the company of $ 228,360 in equal installments of $ 22,836 on February 1st of the ten next succeeding years * * * the only security for the new note being taxpayer's promise to pay and the following provision: "[Taxpayer] * * * further agrees that so long as any part of said indebtedness or any interest thereon *394 remains unpaid, the company may make the payments hereinabove agreed to be paid to him by currently crediting said indebtedness with such payments as they accrue." [
Based on this contract, the court found that, in substance, the disputed employment contract claim was compromised by way of a forgiveness of indebtedness. The taxpayer was held to be in receipt of income equal to the discharged indebtedness in the year of compromise. The court recognized that mutual debts do not automatically cancel each other. However, the court went on to state that, under the circumstances presented,
the formality of pleading the set-off would be the only barrier to cancellation of mutual debts contracted on the credit of each other. The agreement here eliminates even the formality of having to plead the set-off since by contract the parties agree that if the taxpayer fails to pay the company the company is authorized to effect a private setoff by making the bookkeeping entry mentioned above. The agreement speaks for itself and makes clear that the taxpayer had to perform no additional act for the debt to be discharged. A simple bookkeeping entry by the company each February 1st *395 was all that was necessary. The exchange of checks by the company and the taxpayer was thus an empty ritual acted out for the benefit of the Commissioner and, in reality, the taxpayer was discharged from his indebtedness * * *. [
In analogizing the
While we consider the legal and factual analysis in
Beyond these differences, the key factor distinguishing the cases relates to the independence of the debts. In
The original $ 400,000 note to Deen evidenced a portion of the Agreement whereby Deen assigned a contract right to petitioner and Myrick. The new $ 200,000 note, being an outgrowth of the original note, remained subject to the terms of the Agreement.For example, under Article 5, petitioner's failure to pay moneys when due would be a default in the performance of his obligations under the Agreement. In addition, petitioner and Myrick: (1) were obligated to execute a mortgage in Deen's favor upon purchasing certain property pursuant to contract rights assigned from Deen (Article 10) and (2) were required under certain circumstances to transfer funds to Deen in satisfaction of their debt in the event the aforementioned property was sold (Article 11). Furthermore, in the *399 event of a defect in title to such property arising after December 22, 1971, petitioner and Myrick had the option of cancelling all rights and obligations under the Agreement (Article 7). Moreover, the new $ 200,000 note was not specifically created in preparation for the installment sale and the resulting cross pledges. Rather, the primary motive for subdividing the $ 400,000 note was to improve the appearances of petitioner's and Myrick's financial statements for credit purposes.
The $ 230,000 note from Deen to petitioner was not subject to similar terms and was the creature of a separate sale.Based on the foregoing, we find that these mutual notes between petitioner and Deen were independent and should not be deemed to set off one another for Federal income tax purposes. Therefore, we hold that petitioner has not received payments, in the year of sale, in excess of 30 percent of the selling price of his interest in Prairie View and is entitled to report his gain on that sale on the installment method under
1. Prairie View was a mobile home park catering to a rental contingent consisting mostly of college students.↩
2. Mr. Paul Carmichael, the attorney who represented Deen, testified that petitioner, Myrick and Deen each operated his own business, each of which to a large extent depended on credit. Obtaining and maintaining credit necessarily required the submission of individual financial statements to financial institutions. It was his understanding that the note was individualized into $ 200,000 subnotes so that "when they made the financial statement they wouldn't have to say they were jointly liable of [
3. Mr. Carmichael testified that the notice was placed on this note at his direction and on his own initiative. In addition, he stated that the terminology used in the notice "was my language."
4. Although the record is not totally clear on this point, it appears that no adjustment was made for the difference in the interest due under the respective notes for the one-year period ending on March 13, 1975 (the payment date).↩
5.
(a) Computation of Gain or Loss.--The gain from the sale or other disposition of property shall be the excess of the amount realized therefrom over the adjusted basis * * *. ↩
6.
(a) General Rule.--Taxable income shall be computed under the method of accounting on the basis of which the taxpayer regularly computes his income in keeping his books. ↩
7.
(a) Dealers in Personal Property.--
(1) In general.-- * * * a person who regularly sells or otherwise disposes of personal property on the installment plan may return as income therefrom in any taxable year that proportion of the installment payments actually received in that year which the gross profit, realized or to be realized when payment is completed, bears to the total contract price.
(2) Total contract price.--For purposes of paragraph (1), the total contract price of all sales of personal property on the installment plan includes the amount of carrying charges or interest which is determined with respect to such sales and is added on the books of account of the seller to the established cash selling price of such property. * * *
(b) Sales of Realty and Casual Sales of Personalty.--
(1) General rule.--Income from--
(A) a sale or other disposition of real property, or
(B) a casual sale or other casual disposition of personal property * * * for a price exceeding $ 1,000, may (under regulations prescribed by the Secretary or his delegate) be returned on the basis and in the manner prescribed in subsection (a).
(2) Limitation.--Paragraph (1) shall apply--
(A) * * * only if in the taxable year of the sale or other disposition--
(i) there are no payments, or
(ii) the payments (exclusive of evidences of indebtedness of the purchaser) do not exceed 30 percent of the selling price.↩
8. Similarly, in
Commissioner v. Court Holding Co. , 65 S. Ct. 707 ( 1945 )
Don E. Williams Co. v. Commissioner , 97 S. Ct. 850 ( 1977 )
The Cappel House Furnishing Company v. United States , 244 F.2d 525 ( 1957 )
Robert B. Riss and Georgina Riss v. Commissioner of ... , 368 F.2d 965 ( 1966 )
Bailey v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue , 103 F.2d 448 ( 1939 )
Griffiths v. Commissioner , 60 S. Ct. 277 ( 1939 )
United States v. Robert I. Ingalls, Jr. And Mrs. Jane S. ... , 399 F.2d 143 ( 1968 )
Morris Newmark and Julia Newmark v. Commissioner of ... , 311 F.2d 913 ( 1962 )
H. O. Williams and Mrs. Ada L. Williams v. United States , 219 F.2d 523 ( 1955 )
R. Paul Sprague and Mary G. Sprague v. United States , 627 F.2d 1044 ( 1980 )
McInerney v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue , 82 F.2d 665 ( 1936 )
Welch v. Helvering , 54 S. Ct. 8 ( 1933 )
Commissioner v. South Texas Lumber Co. , 68 S. Ct. 695 ( 1948 )