DocketNumber: Docket Nos. 5348-70, 5349-70, 5350-70
Filed Date: 3/11/1974
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 11/21/2020
*258 Pursuant to an agreement with his corporate employer petitioner was reimbursed for 60 percent of his expenses for depreciation and maintenance of his personal residence by reason of his entertainment of clients of his employer. Petitioner was an officer but not a shareholder, and the agreement was reached in an arm's-length negotiation. Fact of some entertainment stipulated. Petitioner filed an accounting annually with his employer. Held: Since petitioner adequately accounted to his employer he is entitled to deduct his expenses under
MEMORANDUM FINDINGS OF FACT AND OPINION
STERRETT, Judge: The Commissioner determined deficiencies in the petitioners' Federal income taxes as follows:
Docket No. | Year | Amount |
5348-70 | 1963 | $ 7,803.05 |
1964 | 8,970.97 | |
1965 | 9,220.46 | |
1967 | 14,007.42 | |
5349-70 | 1966 | 5,865.60 |
5350-70 | 1966 | 5,865.60 |
The issue we must decide is whether petitioner, Milton Lewis, is entitled to deduct under the provisions of
Some of the facts have been stipulated and are so found. The stipulation of facts and attached exhibits are incorporated herein by this reference.
The residence serves the dual purpose of accommodating the petitioners as their personal home and serving as an entertainment facility for Company entertaining.
Petitioner and his secretary each maintained a current calendar for the years 1963 through 1967. These calendars recorded the dates petitioner was out-of-town on business as well as the dates when he entertained in his home. In addition, the calendars indicated either the companies whose employees were being entertained or the names of those persons themselves who were being entertained. These calendars were not complete.
According to these calendars petitioner was away from home on business as follows:
Year | Days |
1963 | 107 |
1964 | 114 |
1965 | 97 |
1966 | 91 |
1967 | 99 |
During the years in issue, 231 individuals were entertained 962 different (though often simultaneously) times for business purposes. Eight-six (86) persons were entertained 72 different times for nonbusiness reasons. On any particular occasion petitioner*270 would entertain both business and personal friends.The actual number of occasions when one or more persons were entertained at dinner at petitioners' house were as follows:
Year | Number of Occasions |
1963 | 27 |
1964 | 34 |
1965 | 24 |
1966 | 34 |
1967 | 35 |
Company entertaining at petitioner's home consisted of having cocktails and dinner. At that time business is often the topic of conversation. If dinner is not served at home, guests are frequently taken out to dinner. Petitioner occasionally made his guestroom available to out-of-town guests. The house was also the site of two annual Company parties given for the executives and the chief engineers, where well over 100 guests attend. The house has also been the scene of several birthday parties given in honor of the petitioner which are attended by Company officers and their wives.
The house was available to other Company executives for entertaining business clients. Fourteen of the Company's officers are known to have used petitioner's home in such a capacity. Use by other officers was never refused.
By letter dated August 27, 1967 to the American Stock Exchange, in response to an inquiry, from Harry J. Burton*271 (hereinafter Burton), the executive vice-president and treasurer of the Company, the following was stated with respect to the use of petitioner's residence by the Company:
* * * The problem for the Company is how to open the doors. One of the techniques used is the case in point, namely, the extensive use of a fine personal residence for meeting with the customers' senior people. The importance of being able to open doors to top executives is directly related to the construction and engineering business done by the Company. Any engineering company with sufficient financial resources can bid anywhere in the world on projects open to it. It is another matter, however, to bring a proposal for a newly conceived construction and engineering project to the attention of the Board of Directors of one of the large international corporations, or to the attention of a foreign government, and to sell them on such a project.
As mentioned above, the responsibility for business development rests on the shoulders of the top management of the Company.It is these individuals who must actively check new jobs out and develop the work, not sit back passively and accept orders or even bid on jobs*272 developed by prospective customers. Parsons is not selling a unique product. It is selling a service. The Company offers the ability and imagination of its personnel and must constantly convince customers and prospective customers that these personnel are of the highest caliber. Mr. Lewis has used his home in promoting the business of the Company by bringing Parsons to the attention of top echelon business executives and establishing and maintaining these executives as business friends.
In summary, since the nature of this Company's business is such that securing a major contract depends significantly on the personal relationship of the senior officers, particularly Mr. Lewis, with customers' key personnel, the development of this relationship has been pursued carefully by Mr. Lewis and the other senior officers and it has been found extremely beneficial to the best interests of the Company for Mr. Lewis to have a home in which he can develop these relationships with reasonable reimbursement to him therefor.
Each year petitioner receives from his accountant a report of what expenditures, based on records, checks and bank statements, should be included on his expense statement*273 to the Company. Petitioner turns this report over to his secretary who prepares the expense statement to be submitted to Burton. The statement itself lists a dollar amount under miscellaneous expenses. Under remarks the statement states "depreciated allowance for entertainment and other business requirements for use of home." Burton reviews the statement to ascertain whether it has been prepared within the framework of the reimbursement agreement. He compares the statement to the report to petitioner from his accountant and then discusses the amount of the reimbursement with Parsons, and secures his approval.
During the years in issue, petitioner deducted on his Federal income tax returns the following amounts, which represent 60 percent of the depreciation on his home and furniture, rent, utilities, general maintenance, and servants, which expenses were disallowed by respondent:
Year | Amount |
1963 | $ 11,534.62 |
1964 | 13,105.46 |
1965 | 13,557.20 |
1966 | 15,288.75 |
1967 | 22,118.75 |
Respondent did not contest the deductibility of expenses incurred directly for entertaining such as food, liquor, catering, etc., which were also reimbursed by the Company.
OPINION
*274 Petitioner received a reimbursement from his employer, the Company, for 60 percent of the costs incurred in maintaining his personal residence which was made available and used for business entertaining. The sole issue for our decision is whether petitioner is entitled to deduct under the provisions of
Petitioner deducted the 60 percent of his home maintenance costs, including depreciation, on the basis that his home was made available for business entertaining of the Company's clients. Further, at least with respect to 1967, petitioner purchased a larger home than he required because of his corporate obligations. In fact his home was used on many occasions for entertaining business clients of the Company. The respondent argues that the actual business use of the home was quite limited and as a result petitioner is entitled to deduct a very small amount of his maintenance expenses based on actual business use.
For purposes of
The reimbursement figure has been in effect since 1955.
We hold that petitioner, having adequately accounted to his employer, is relieved by the regulation promulgated*277 with respect to section 274(d) from making a comparable section 274(d) substantiation to the respondent. It follows that it is our conclusion that, under the essentially atypical facts of this case, petitioner is entitled to deduct against the reimbursement the expenses in issue relating to the maintenance of his residence.
Decisions will be entered under Rule 155.
1. All statutory references are to the Internal Revenue Code of 1954 unless otherwise indicated. ↩
2. Petitioners filed joint Federal income tax returns for the years 1963, 1964, 1965 and 1967. They filed separately for 1966. ↩
3.
Section 274 provides for the disallowance of "Certain Entertainment, Etc., Expenses" of a rather specified nature and under rather specified circumstances. Subsection (e) (4) of section 274 excludes from the general definitional provisions of subsection (a) expenses incurred by a taxpayer with respect to certain activities and facilities, where said expenses are incurred under a "reimbursement arrangement" with a person for whom services are performed.
Both parties agree that the reimbursement arrangement here involved makes section 274(a) inapplicable to the facts of this case. Instead they focus their disagreement (largely) on the applicability of the substantiation requirements of subsection (d) of section 274. The respective positions of the parties are predictable. Subsection (d) provides in pertinent part:
(d) Substantiation Required. - No deduction shall be allowed -
(1) under
(2) for any item with respect to an activity which is of a type generally considered to constitute entertainment, amusement, or recreation, or with respect to a facility used in connection with such an activity, * * *
* * *
unless the taxpayer substantiates by adequate records or by sufficient evidence corroborating his own statement (A) the amount of such expense or other item, (B) the time and place of the * * * entertainment, amusement, recreation, or use of the facility, * * * (C) the business purpose of the expense or other item and, (D) the business relationship to the taxpayer of persons entertained, using the facility, * * *.
The amplifying regulation on the above subsection is denominated section 1.274-5 and is entitled "Substantiation requirements." Subparagraph (e) (5) of this regulation reads as follows:
(5) Substantiation of expenditures by certain employees. An employee who makes an adequate accounting to his employer within the meaning of this paragraph will not again be required to substantiate such expense account information except in the following cases:
* * *
(iii) Employees in cases where it is determined that the accounting procedures used by the employer for the reporting and substantiation of expenses by such employees are not adequate, or where it cannot be determined that such procedures are adequate. * * *
Section 1.274-5(e) (4) defines the term "adequate accounting to his employer" as follows:
(4) Definition of an "adequate accounting" to the employer. For purposes of this paragraph an adequate accounting means the submission to the employer of an account book, diary, statement of expense, or similar record maintained by the employee in which the information as to each element of an expenditure (described in paragraph (b) of this section) is recorded at or near the time of the expenditure, together with supporting documentary evidence, in a manner which conforms to all the "adequate records" requirements of paragraph (c) (2) of this section. * * *
Paragraph (b) of the regulations cited in the above quotation refers us to the substantiation requirements of section 274(d) and states the pertinent elements of an expenditure as follows:
(b) Elements of an expenditure - (1) In general. Section 274(d) and this section contemplate that no deduction shall be allowed for any expenditure for * * * entertainment * * * unless the taxpayer substantiates the following elements for each such expenditure:
(i) Amount;
(ii) Time and place of * * * entertainment (or use of a facility with respect to entertainment), * * *
(iii) Business purpose; and
(iv) Business relationship to the taxpayer of each person entertained, using an entertainment facility * * *.
While petitioner's method of accounting is not likely to be cited as a classic, we hold it is in substantial compliance with the statute and the underlying regulations. Cf.
We think respondent has a point in calling the business use minimal compared to the 60 percent reimbursement formula. It may well be that the Company made a bad bargain. But cf.
5. Respondent may be second-guessing himself on the figure. See