DocketNumber: Docket Nos. 213-86, 22654-86, 22228-89
Judges: DAWSON
Filed Date: 4/21/1992
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 11/20/2020
1992 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 247">*247 Orders will be issued restoring these cases to the general docket for disposition of remaining issues.
MEMORANDUM FINDINGS OF FACT AND OPINION
DAWSON,
OPINION OF THE SPECIAL TRIAL JUDGE
PAJAK, For 1986, respondent also determined that petitioners are liable for increased interest under For 1979 and 1982, respondent also determined that petitioners are liable for increased interest under 1992 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 247">*249 In her FINDINGS OF FACT Some of the facts have been stipulated and are so found. The stipulation of facts and the attached exhibits are incorporated herein by this reference. Petitioners Tanner resided in Bakersfield, California, when their petitions were filed. Petitioners Hodges resided in San Clemente, California, when their petition was filed. Mr. Gordon Tanner is a Certified Public Accountant in the State of California, who has practiced since 1965. He previously had worked1992 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 247">*251 as an accountant for an oil company. Mr. Tanner has many clients in energy-related companies. He has investment experience in real estate and oil properties. Mr. James B. Hodges is a real estate broker, property developer, and investor. He has a marine engineering license from the California Maritime Academy and a business degree from the University of Southern California. In 1982, Mr. Tanner and Mr. Hodges separately invested in wind turbine generators (wind turbine) sold by Oak Creek Energy Systems, Inc. (Oak Creek). Oak Creek was part of the Oak Creek Energy Group. Oak Creek offered and sold investments in wind turbines located on the wind farm. Dean Beckett was president, Dale Soule, Jr. was vice president, and Steve Cummings was treasurer of Oak Creek. The Oak Creek Energy Group was comprised of a partnership that owned the wind farm land, and four California corporations formed by the partners for purposes of a wind farm business. The four corporations were Oak Creek, Wind Maintenance, Inc., Wind Installation, Inc., and Willow Springs Wind Farm, Inc. Dean Beckett, Steve Cummings, and others were partners in the partnership. Wind Installation, Inc., installed wind1992 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 247">*252 turbines purchased by investors. Wind Maintenance, Inc., performed maintenance on wind turbines. The sole purpose of Willow Springs Wind Farm, Inc., was to sell a type of turbine which is not in issue in this case. These three corporations were merged into Oak Creek on October 1, 1983. The wind farm was located southeast of Bakersfield, California, in the Tehachapi Mountains. This area is one of several areas in the State that the California Energy Commission in reports dated March and April 1981, after a number of government-funded surveys, designated as having excellent wind resource potential. Prior to the sale of any wind turbines to petitioners in this case, Beckett/Cummings commissioned a detailed, half-year study of the wind farm (AeroVironment report). AeroVironment, Inc. (AeroVironment), the company that conducted the study, estimated that the average annual wind speed on the wind farm ranged from 12 to 15 miles per hour. The average annual wind speed in the better areas was about 14.5 miles per hour. AeroVironment used both stationary pole-mounted and moveable kite-mounted anemometers to evaluate the wind flow patterns at different parts of the wind farm. Based1992 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 247">*253 upon this study, areas were selected for installation of wind turbines in arrays. The final cost to Oak Creek of any wind turbine is comprised of a number of elements. The first is the initial cost of the turbine itself, including blades and generators. These must be shipped from the place of manufacture or port of entry. A wind turbine must be mounted on a pole or tower (tower). The tower stands on a concrete foundation which requires excavation and grading. The tower and turbine must be raised and installed on the foundation, and the erected wind turbine must be connected to a meter, other electrical equipment, and the utility transmission lines (power grid). Two types of wind turbines that Oak Creek sold to investors are relevant to the present case: the Jay Carter JCE-25 model (Carter wind turbine), and the Vestas 65 kW model (Vestas wind turbine). The Carter wind turbine is an American turbine made in Texas. It has two blades, each about 16 feet long, and a nameplate rating of 25 kilowatts (kW). Its cost was $ 29,000. The cost of shipping a Carter wind turbine from Texas to Oak Creek was $ 3,000. The 80-foot high tower cost $ 1,200. 1992 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 247">*254 The installation cost was $ 5,000. These and other direct expenses totaled approximately $ 39,000. The Vestas wind turbine is a Danish turbine. It has three blades which are each about 24 feet long, and a nameplate rating of 65 kW. Its cost was $ 52,000 c.i.f. Los Angeles. Customs duty and processing fees were about $ 4,000. The cost of shipping a Vestas wind turbine from Los Angeles to Oak Creek was about $ 400. The foundation cost about $ 15,500. An installation charge by the manufacturer was $ 1,500. These and other direct expenses of obtaining and installing a Vestas wind turbine at Oak Creek totaled approximately $ 80,000. The nameplate rating is the amount of electricity the wind turbine can produce per hour in wind of a certain speed used by the manufacturer to rate the turbine's performance. It is not necessarily the maximum output, nor are the ratings necessarily comparable, because various manufacturers rate their wind turbines at different wind speeds. More indicative of a wind turbine's performance is its "power curve," a graph describing the wind turbine's output over a range of wind speeds. The wind turbines involved in this case were located in the areas1992 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 247">*255 of the farm with the higher wind speeds. AeroVironment's projected annual output of the Carter wind turbines in these areas was 59,100 to 67,000 kilowatt hours (kWh). Oak Creek's projected annual output of the Vestas wind turbine was 180,000 kWh. The income a wind turbine produces is dependent upon the electrical output of the turbine and the price at which the electricity is sold. Oak Creek sold the electricity generated by the wind turbines on its wind farm to Southern California Edison (SCE), a utility company. Normally, a utility company would use its least expensive source or most efficient means of generating electricity before it used any other means. The Public Utility Regulatory Policies Act of 1978 (PURPA), Pub. L. 95-617, sec. 210, 92 Stat. 3144, 1992 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 247">*256 On March 3, 1982, Oak Creek entered into a Wind Park Power Purchase and Sales Agreement (power agreement) with SCE for the sale of electricity to the utility. The power agreement provided that SCE would pay Oak Creek for power delivered to SCE according to a graduated schedule, with fixed prices increased approximately 15 percent between 1983 and 1985, and thereafter as a fraction of the then-determined avoided cost as filed with the California Public Utilities Commission. The following price schedule was to be in effect if the Oak Creek farm had a 5,000 kW nameplate rating: If Oak Creek expanded to a 20,000 kW nameplate rating, the price schedule was as follows: Oak Creek paid an investor these stated prices for kWhs attributed to a wind turbine at its meter at the base of its tower. Oak Creek absorbed any loss differential in transmission between the wind turbine1992 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 247">*257 and SCE's power substation. The investment prospectus for each wind turbine generally described Oak Creek and its principals, and presented pictures of equipment and installation work being done. The prospectuses also provided background information on wind power as a new alternate energy source and described Federal and State incentives, including tax credits, designed to induce industry growth. Oak Creek's Carter prospectus offered to finance $ 25,000 of the $ 84,800 purchase price through Oak Creek with the "Finance payment paid from power produced." Specifically, two financing projections were presented in the Carter prospectus: One where the investor financed the entire purchase price, $ 25,000 through Oak Creek and $ 59,800 through an outside lender; and another where the investor paid $ 59,800 of the purchase price with cash and financed $ 25,000 through Oak Creek. The Vestas prospectus showed a financing projection whereby an investor made a $ 19,240 cash downpayment, and the investor financed $ 48,580 through Oak Creek and $ 70,000 through an outside bank. The Vestas prospectus did not contain the statement that the Oak Creek financing 1992 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 247">*258 was paid from power produced. Oak Creek provided "performance insurance", a guarantee of up to 100 percent of generated revenue if the wind turbine malfunctioned or was damaged and did not operate for a prolonged period, as well as the manufacturer's warranty, as features of the investment. Nothing in the trial record explained the exact terms of the guarantee or warranty, nor was a separate fee charged for these items. In the 1982 prospectus for the Carter wind turbines (Carter prospectus), the stated price was $ 84,800. Oak Creek assumed an annual output of 76,000 kWh and wind speeds of 15 to 17 miles per hour, which were above the estimates in the AeroVironment report. The following is an excerpt from the financial projections chart of the Carter prospectus, which contained projections through the year 2001: OAK CREEK ENERGY SYSTEMS, INC. FINANCIAL PROJECTIONS STATEMENT OF OPERATIONS AND CASH FLOW * * * According to the1992 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 247">*259 prospectus for the Vestas wind turbine (Vestas prospectus), performance insurance was also part of this wind turbine investment. Oak Creek projected operations and cash flow starting in 1983, based upon wind speeds of 16 miles per hour. The Vestas prospectus used the same assumptions as the Carter prospectus but mistakenly postponed the price increases and percentage expenses by one year for each year after 1983, as shown on this excerpt from the prospectus: OAK CREEK ENERGY SYSTEMS, INC. PURCHASE OF WIND TURBINE ($ 137,800 INCLUDING SALES TAX) FINANCIAL PROJECTIONS STATEMENT OF OPERATIONS AND CASH FLOW * * * The financial projections for each type of wind turbine included other expenses so that profit or loss was shown. The following table shows how expenses of each wind turbine were determined: These expenses were given in their projected numerical values. The expenses, which were based on a percentage of gross revenue for the Vestas wind turbine, were misstated in the same manner that the stated power price on the Vestas prospectus differed by 1 year from the power agreement and the Carter prospectus. The Vestas prospectus was not free from other minor errors. A comparison of the two prospectuses and their underlying assumptions revealed that these Vestas' expense figures were transposed en masse by 1 year, resulting in computational errors in the parts of the chart dependent upon prior years' figures. Oak Creek incorporated assumed tax benefits in its financial projections of profitability, which were computed by an accounting firm based upon many assumptions. The projections showed before-tax cash profits beginning at various times between the first and sixth years of operation, depending upon the financing option chosen by an investor. These projected profits increased to substantial1992 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 247">*261 amounts as years passed. Oak Creek disclaimed any responsibility as to the accuracy or reliability of the assumptions, and advised prospective investors to consult with professional advisors as to any investment. The Wind Turbine Sales and Management Agreement with addenda (sales contract) for each wind turbine provided that Oak Creek would install, connect, manage, and maintain the wind turbine. The sales contract required the purchaser/investor to lease the site from Oak Creek for 20 years. Oak Creek agreed to indemnify and hold the investor harmless from any claims resulting from the lease of the site or performance of the services even though the investor was required to maintain public liability insurance coverage. The investor agreed to pay Oak Creek for management and maintenance services, and the other expenses set out above. (The various divisions of Oak Creek or its related corporations performed the services called for under the contract.) Oak Creek agreed to operate and repair the wind turbines, collect revenues, apply them to expenses, remit any balance to the investor, and provide a quarterly accounting to the investor. The final1992 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 247">*262 price of a wind turbine investment included the direct acquisition and installation costs described above, administrative and overhead expenses, and Oak Creek's profit. During 1982, Mr. Tanner received prospectuses for various wind turbine investments, including those from Oak Creek. Mr. Tanner verified the existence and rates of the power agreement, as well as the existence of a connection to the power grid of SCE. Mr. Tanner understood the effect of oil prices on the price of electricity. He consulted with Lytton Ivanhoe, a petroleum exploration consultant, on future energy prices. Oil prices had increased steadily until 1982. Mr. Tanner believed such increases would continue. Mr. Tanner contacted the California Energy Commission (CEC). He received information concerning the State's promotion of wind energy and other information to compare with Oak Creek's prospectus. This included CEC documents such as "Wind Energy Assessment of California," a March 1981 staff report; "Wind Energy - Investing in Our Energy Future," an April 1981 report, which included a discussion of Federal and State tax incentives; and "Wind Energy Program Progress Report," a January1992 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 247">*263 1982 report. Mr. Tanner also obtained a copy of the AeroVironment report. Mr. Tanner researched provisions of the Internal Revenue Code which related to his investments. He performed his own investment analyses without the benefit of third-party appraisals. Mr. Tanner, Lytton and Helen Ivanhoe (the Ivanhoes) purchased a Carter wind turbine from Oak Creek on November 20, 1982. The price was $ 80,000 plus $ 4,800 California sales tax. Mr. Tanner owned 25 percent of the Carter wind turbine, and the Ivanhoes owned 75 percent. Their wind turbine was insured against damage and business interruption. Mr. Tanner, Kevin Sluga, and Walter Heisey purchased a Vestas wind turbine from Oak Creek on December 29, 1982. The price was $ 130,000 plus $ 7,800 California sales tax. Mr. Tanner owned 30 percent of the Vestas wind turbine, Mr. Sluga owned 20 percent, and Mr. Heisey owned 50 percent. Thus, Mr. Tanner's share of the sales price of both wind turbines was $ 62,540. The Vestas wind turbine was insured against damage and business interruption. Mr. Tanner also became involved in the sale of wind turbine investments at Oak Creek in 1982. He earned a commission of 10 percent of the 1992 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 247">*264 price of a wind turbine sold by his referral. After 1982, he engaged in a related activity through Wind Energy Investments, Inc. Mr. Sluga organized this company, and Mr. Tanner was secretary of the company. Mr. Tanner earned substantial amounts promoting wind turbine investments. Mr. Hodges became aware of the Oak Creek wind turbine investment through a friend. He discussed the investment and the sale of electricity with his accountant and performed the investment analysis himself. Mr. Hodges was aware that SCE was required to purchase power from small producers, but he was not sure whether he saw the power agreement. Mr. Hodges relied upon a government report and Oak Creek projections on the wind-related information. During 1982, he visited the farm and observed the assembly and installation of wind turbines. While at the farm, he spoke with a mechanic as well as a representative of the manufacturer of the Carter wind turbine. Mr. Hodges was shown five wind turbines available at the time. He compared the electrical meters to determine which wind turbine had the highest power output. He selected the Carter wind turbine available at the time with the highest output, and1992 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 247">*265 purchased it from Oak Creek on or about August 26, 1982. Financing Mr. Tanner and the Ivanhoes paid Oak Creek $ 59,800 and executed a nonrecourse $ 25,000 collateral promissory note (Tanner's Carter note), with principal and interest of $ 934.75, payable quarterly for 20 years at 14 percent, to purchase their Carter wind turbine. The $ 59,800 cash payment included $ 50,000 in financing from the San Joaquin Bank and $ 9,800 from a money market account. Mr. Tanner and the Ivanhoes contributed $ 5,000 and $ 15,000, respectively, and opened the money market account to invest in the Carter wind turbine. The Ivanhoes obtained the $ 50,000 loan (Ivanhoe loan) from the San Joaquin Bank. The Ivanhoe loan was for 1 year, renewable annually, 1992 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 247">*266 and was with recourse. It had principal payments of $ 850 per month, interest at three percent above the bank's prime interest rate, and was secured by the Carter wind turbine. Mr. Tanner and the Ivanhoes executed an agreement to make Mr. Tanner liable for 25 percent of the Ivanhoe loan and to apportion the earnings, expenses, tax benefits, liabilities, and residual value relating to the Carter wind turbine accordingly. The San Joaquin Bank filed a Uniform Commercial Code (UCC) financing statement to protect its security interest. Mr. Tanner and Messrs. Sluga and Heisey paid Oak Creek $ 89,240 and executed a nonrecourse $ 48,560 collateral promissory note to Oak Creek (Tanner's Vestas note), with principal and interest of $ 1,815.17, payable quarterly for 20 years at 14 percent, to purchase their Vestas wind turbine. The $ 89,240 cash payment included $ 19,240 in checks and $ 70,000 in financing from Union Bank. Mr. Tanner obtained the $ 70,000 loan (Tanner loan) from Union Bank to purchase the Vestas wind turbine, with principal payments of $ 1,166.67 per month for 5 years, and interest at three percent above the bank's prime interest rate. The note was with recourse and was1992 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 247">*267 secured by the Vestas wind turbine. Mr. Tanner and Mr. Heisey executed a note to make Mr. Heisey liable for an amount equal to 50 percent of the Tanner loan. Union Bank filed a UCC financing statement to protect its security interest. Mr. Hodges initially paid $ 59,800 and executed a nonrecourse $ 25,000 collateral promissory note to Oak Creek (Hodges' Carter note), with principal and interest of $ 934.75, payable quarterly for 20 years at 14 percent, to purchase his Carter wind turbine investment. He financed the $ 59,800 with a recourse loan from the Bank of America (Hodges loan). The Hodges' loan was for a 7-year term, with principal payments of $ 711.90 per month and interest at 2.5 percent above the bank's prime interest rate. Oak Creek never filed a security agreement or a financing statement notifying interested parties of its continuing interest in petitioners' wind turbines which served as collateral for the nonrecourse loans. Mr. Tanner and the Ivanhoes renewed the Ivanhoe loan at the San Joaquin Bank, and then repaid the balance of the Ivanhoe loan in 1984 with their own funds from the money market account. Mr. 1992 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 247">*268 Tanner and his coinvestors made payments on the Tanner loan at the Union Bank. Mr. Hodges repaid the Hodges loan from the Bank of America by December 12, 1987. Payments on Mr. Tanner's Carter note, Vestas note, and Mr. Hodges' Carter note were made out of production. According to the relevant prospectus, management agreement, and/or practice of the parties, income from the sale of electricity was collected and applied against wind turbine expenses including interest and principal due on the nonrecourse notes held by Oak Creek. Net cash was distributed to Oak Creek investors. Any negative balances were shown on the quarterly account statement and carried forward into the next quarter to be applied against future production. Petitioners were not required to make direct payments with respect to these deficits to Oak Creek, and such deficits were not recorded as an asset on the books of Oak Creek. An accounting firm, Haws, Theobold, & Auman (the accountants), apparently collected the revenues, paid Oak Creek expenses, and performed the accounting functions. Many of the quarterly statements included the statement that " We are not independent with respect to Oak Creek." We consider1992 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 247">*269 the accountants' activity to be that of Oak Creek. Mr. Tanner's Carter wind turbine was placed in service before the end of 1982. Maintenance charges for the first quarter of 1983 were waived because retrofitting was not completed on all machines until January 31, 1983. The four 1983 quarterly statements state that the wind turbine produced 48,782 kWh from December 1, 1982, through December 31, 1983. Oak Creek waived $ 467.44 of the first payment on the Carter note, for the approximately four-month period ending March 31, 1983, while distributing $ 12.22 to Mr. Tanner at a time when production would have otherwise been insufficient to cover 100 percent of the expenses attributable to petitioner's turbine. Thereafter, the accountants applied $ 934.63 (not the $ 934.75 set forth in the note), as the combined principal and interest payments on the Carter note, each quarter against gross production proceeds. Oak Creek remitted net proceeds after expenses to Mr. Tanner and the Ivanhoes, and carried negative balances forward to be applied against future production. The accrual of unpaid interest and principal due on Mr. Tanner's Carter note can be summarized as follows: 1992 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 247">*270 Mr. Tanner's Carter wind turbine was also inoperable during portions of 1984 while parts from the manufacturer were on order. Oak Creek did not charge Mr. Tanner for maintenance and certain expenses while the wind turbine was not working. Oak Creek credited Mr. Tanner's account with actual kWh production, as well as the average production amount of other wind turbines for the periods during which his wind turbine was inoperable. The total amount produced and credited during 1984 was 53,776 kWh. The intensity of wind turbulence on the farm was not anticipated. Mr. Tanner's Carter wind turbine continued to have problems, and it did not actually produce any power in 1985 or the first six months of 1986. In the last six months of 1986, it produced 2,849 kWhs. In the first six months of 1987, it produced 10,508 kWhs. No power was produced in the last six months of 1987. As before, Oak Creek credited production allotments against the wind turbine's expenses. The parties presented no evidence as to production after 1987. In addition to the amounts credited to the account during periods of operation and nonoperation, $ 2,460 of the sales tax originally paid on the wind turbine1992 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 247">*271 was credited against its expenses in 1986 after the State of California changed the method of taxing the wind turbines at Oak Creek. All the credits to the account did not consistently exceed expenses of the wind turbine. Neither Mr. Tanner nor the Ivanhoes made payments to eliminate the deficits for the Carter wind turbine. Mr. Tanner claims he was owed an amount equal to, or in excess of, any liability to Oak Creek because of a purported insurance settlement payment which was received and retained by Oak Creek when it went bankrupt. He had no documentary evidence of any such claims being made against Oak Creek. Mr. Tanner's Vestas wind turbine was placed in service before the end of 1982. In the beginning of 1983, due to "factory start-up and adjustments", the wind turbine's output was low. The four 1983 quarterly statements show that the Vestas wind turbine produced 126,756 kWh. The four 1984 quarterly statements show that production was 160,249 kWh. Oak Creek applied $ 1,815.41, the combined principal and interest payments on the Vestas note, against earnings each month. Oak Creek remitted net proceeds after expenses to Mr. Tanner and his coinvestors and applied negative1992 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 247">*272 balances for the wind turbine against future production. In addition to the amounts credited to the account for the Vestas wind turbine from operation, $ 3,000 of the sales tax originally paid on the wind turbine was credited against its expenses in 1986 after the State of California changed the method of taxing the wind turbines at Oak Creek. The credits to the account did not consistently exceed expenses of the wind turbine so that the account fluctuated between positive and negative balances. The positive balances were eliminated by payment to Tanner and his coinvestors. Neither Mr. Tanner nor his coinvestors made payments to eliminate any deficits for the Vestas wind turbine. The accrual of unpaid interest and principal due on Mr. Tanner's Vestas note can be summarized as follows: 1992 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 247">*273 Furthermore, the initial negative balance on the Vestas note of $ 831.89 would have been approximately $ 450 higher had Oak Creek not waived the contract charges applicable to the first quarter ending March 31, 1983. Based on the fact that he had purchased a new wind turbine, Mr. Hodges was credited with the production of his Carter wind turbine from the initial date of operation even though it was in operation 2 months before he purchased it. The wind turbine produced 22,853 kWh during the part of 1982 that it was in operation. Oak Creek subtracted $ 934.63, as the combined principal and interest payments on the Carter note, each quarter from earnings. Oak Creek applied negative balances for the wind turbine against future production. Mr. Hodges' wind turbine was inoperable during the part of 1983 after the wind turbine and tower fell, and the wind turbine was destroyed. The wind turbine was replaced in 1983. Oak Creek credited the account for Mr. Hodges' wind turbine with actual kWh production before the accident, as well as the average production amount of other wind turbines for the periods during which the wind turbine was inoperable in 1983 and 1984. The total amount1992 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 247">*274 of kilowatts produced and credited during 1983 and 1984 was 53,102 kWh and 64,850 kWh, respectively. Mr. Hodges' Carter wind turbine account was also credited 55,020 kWh for periods of operation and nonoperation in 1985. Mr. Hodges' wind turbine did not produce any power after 1985. In addition to the amounts credited to the account during periods of operation and nonoperation, $ 2,460 of the sales tax originally paid on Mr. Hodges' wind turbine was credited against its expenses in 1986 after the State of California changed the method of taxing the wind turbines at Oak Creek. The credits to the account did not consistently exceed expenses of Mr. Hodges' wind turbine so that the account fluctuated between positive and negative balances. After 1985, a deficit balance grew. Mr. Hodges made a $ 1,428.65 payment in December 1986 to eliminate the deficit at that time. Oak Creek had pledged Mr. Hodges' Carter note to the United Bank of Arizona on June 18, 1984. The record is not clear when, but the note was transferred to H. Arthur Nottingham, Curtis J. Henderson, and John A. Ditz, a group of investors (Nottingham Group). The Nottingham Group notified Mr. Hodges in 1987 that he 1992 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 247">*275 was in default on the payments due under the nonrecourse note owed to Oak Creek, and that if such payments were not made, foreclosure proceedings would commence. On May 26, 1988, Mr. Hodges executed a deed in lieu of foreclosure for his Carter wind turbine and transferred the wind turbine to the Nottingham Group in full satisfaction of all obligations with respect to the Hodges' Carter note. On their 1986 return, petitioners Tanner reported $ 3,626 of income from their wind turbine investments and claimed $ 13,133 of depreciation, $ 2,591 of interest, as well as other miscellaneous expenses, for total deductions of $ 16,994, resulting in a net loss of $ 13,368. They also claimed a general business credit carryover of $ 1,331 on their 1986 return. In a notice of deficiency to petitioners Tanner, respondent disallowed $ 9,596 of depreciation and interest expenses taken for 1982, $ 8,476 of the $ 10,193 in investment tax credits used for 1982, and the $ 2,589 credit carryback for 1980. In a separate notice of deficiency to petitioners Tanner, respondent disallowed $ 13,368 of the $ 16,994 in depreciation and other expenses (to the extent these expenses exceeded income) taken for 1986, and the $ 1,331 energy credit carryover used for 1986 with respect to their wind turbine investments. On their 1982 return, petitioners Hodges claimed1992 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 247">*277 $ 11,727 of the tentative investment credit for 1982, attributable in part to their wind turbine investment. They claimed $ 12,720 as a business energy credit from their wind turbines but used none of it for 1982. On their 1982 return, they reported $ 1,323 of income from their wind turbine and deducted $ 12,720 in depreciation, $ 2,577 in interest, as well as other miscellaneous expenses, totalling $ 15,961, for a net loss of $ 14,638. An application for refund for petitioners Hodges' 1979 tax year is not in the record. The record is not clear as to the amount of carrybacks to petitioners Hodges' 1979 tax year. In a notice of deficiency to petitioners Hodges, respondent disallowed $ 14,638 of the $ 15,961 expenses (to the extent these expenses exceeded income) taken for 1982 attributable to their wind turbine investment. Respondent disallowed $ 8,480 of the unused investment credit, attributable in part to the Hodges' wind turbine investment. Respondent also disallowed the $ 12,720 of unused business energy credit attributable to petitioners Hodges' wind turbine investment. Respondent determined a deficiency and additions to tax for 1979 as previously detailed. OPINION 1992 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 247">*278 In the notices of deficiency, respondent disallowed petitioners' credits and deductions with respect to their investments in the wind turbines because the transactions did not have any economic substance or were not entered into for profit. Respondent has admitted that petitioners' investments qualify for investment and energy credits. The recourse indebtedness of petitioners with respect to their wind turbine loans is not at issue because respondent has conceded that petitioners had a profit objective, that the investments had economic substance, and that petitioners properly took deductions and credits except as noted below. Respondent disputes the deductions and credits attributable to Mr. Tanner's Carter note and Vestas Note, and Mr. Hodges' Carter note, claiming these notes have no economic substance and are not bona fide debt. Respondent claims these notes comprise the portion of the purchase price that exceeds the value of their respective wind turbines due to "peculiar circumstances", and therefore, should not be includable in basis for purposes of claiming depreciation and/or interest expense deductions. Before we can decide whether or not the1992 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 247">*279 debt is bona fide, we must first determine: (1) Whether "peculiar circumstances" existed to cause petitioners to overpay for their wind turbine investments; (2) whether the purchase prices paid for the wind turbines were in excess of their respective fair market values; and (3) whether the payments on the nonrecourse notes were so contingent that the debt should not be given economic effect. As a general rule, the basis of property for tax purposes is its cost. In general, business transactions are given effect consistent with the substance and form of the transactions. When examining a transaction, the reality that the tax laws affect the shape of most business transactions cannot be ignored. 1992 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 247">*280 In previous cases, we have recognized transactions which are likely to be motivated by tax reasons, but are nevertheless sanctioned under the tax laws. Examples of such transactions are the purchase of tax-exempt securities; the purchase of property motivated by the availability of1992 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 247">*281 accelerated depreciation, the investment credit, and the deductibility of interest; safe-harbor leasing; renovation of historic structures; location of subsidiaries in Puerto Rico because of tax credits; acquiring interests in low-income housing partnerships; and many others. During the 1982 year in issue, the relevant Federal tax credits consisted of a 10-percent regular investment credit and a 15-percent energy investment credit. By enacting the energy investment credit, it is clear that Congress was inducing investment into alternative energy resources by effectively lowering the cost of alternate energy investments in order to curtail the United States' dependence upon imported oil. Thus, the favorable tax incentives petitioners expected to receive from their wind turbine investments should not be considered "peculiar circumstances" so as to reduce petitioners' bases, provided that these tax incentives did not cause petitioners to pay inflated purchase prices. See Fair market value has been defined as the price at which a willing buyer will purchase property from a willing seller, when neither party is acting under compulsion and both 1992 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 247">*283 parties are fully informed of all relevant facts and circumstances. Petitioners and respondent presented expert testimony with respect to what the fair market value of the wind turbines was in 1982. We are not bound by the opinions of expert witnesses when those opinions are contrary to our own judgment. We found neither petitioners' nor respondent's expert witnesses to be credible. As previously stated, fair market value is the price at which a willing buyer and willing seller will purchase and/or sell property, when neither party is acting under compulsion. Some Oak Creek investors paid for their turbines without the use of nonrecourse1992 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 247">*284 financing. In addition, the sum of Oak Creek's direct and indirect costs, including a reasonable profit, approximated the turbines' fair market value as well as the purchase price paid by petitioners. Accordingly, on this record, we conclude that petitioners did not pay in excess of fair market value for their wind turbines. Therefore, petitioners are entitled to the depreciation and interest expense deductions attributable to such nonrecourse debt, but subject to the limitations set forth below. Mr. Tanner asserts that to the extent he held claims against the manufacturer of the wind turbines, the insurer of the wind turbines, and Oak Creek in bankruptcy, such claims should be considered "other property" for purposes of increasing his amount at risk under Because petitioners are subject to the loss limitations of A level payment1992 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 247">*287 loan is defined in Our determination with respect to whether or not the nonrecourse debt in issue is a level payment loan must be founded on substance and not form. Mr. Hodges, on the other hand, failed to submit sufficient documentation at trial, by quarter, regarding the accrual of unpaid interest and principal due on his Carter note. The rule is well established that the failure of a party to introduce evidence within his possession which, if true, would be favorable to him, gives rise to the presumption that if produced it would be unfavorable. On this record, we conclude that Oak Creek's nonrecourse financing was inextricably tied to erratic production and therefore did not meet the level payment loan criteria mandated by Petitioners bear the burden of showing reasonable cause. 1992 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 247">*293 The final issue for decision is whether petitioners are liable for the increased rate of interest under 1. The case of petitioners James B. Hodges and Dorothy B. Hodges, docket No. 22654-86 was consolidated with the cases of petitioners Gordon Tanner and Joan Tanner, docket Nos. 213-86 and 22228-89, for trial and opinion. These cases were consolidated solely for the purpose of deciding issues relating to petitioners' investments in turbines used to generate electricity from wind power. In each case, the notice of deficiency covered issues other than those to be decided here.↩ 2. These cases are part of a large group of cases which involve issues relating to Oak Creek Energy Wind Turbines. The parties in a number of these cases have agreed to be bound by the outcome of those issues in Gordon Tanner and Joan Tanner, docket No. 213-86, or in that docket number and its related docket No. 22228-89.↩ 1. 50 percent of the interest due on the underpayment attributable to negligence.↩ 1. 50 percent of the interest due on the underpayment attributable to negligence.↩ 3. Although the petition in 4. See tit. *. Beginning in 1983↩ 5. The record does not contain a Sales and Management Agreement between Mr. Hodges and Oak Creek. However, it was stipulated that the agreement was identical to the agreement used in all other Carter wind turbine purchases.↩ 6. The deficiencies were based on many items. However, except as otherwise noted, we redetermine the deficiencies only to the extent related to petitioners' investments in wind turbines.↩ 7. Respondent asserted the negligence additions in Knetsch v. United States ( 1960 ) United States v. Cartwright ( 1973 ) Robert Demartino, Appellant-Cross-Appellee v. Commissioner ... ( 1988 ) foy-bryant-and-kathryn-bryant-v-commissioner-of-internal-revenue-harvey ( 1986 ) Helvering v. National Grocery Co. ( 1938 )Petitioners Gordon Tanner and Joan Tanner - Docket No. 213-86 Year Deficiency Addition to Tax Sec. 6651(a)(1) 1980 $ 12,494 $ 2,438 1982 14,479 -- Petitioners Gordon Tanner and Joan Tanner - Docket No. 22228-89 Additions to Tax Year Deficiency Sec. 6653(a)(1)(A) Sec.6653(a)(1)(B) 1986 $ 7,458 $ 373 1992 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 247">*248 Petitioners James B. Hodges and Dorothy B. Hodges - Docket No. 22654-86 Additions to Tax Sec. Sec. Sec. Sec. Year Deficiency 6653(a) 6653(a)(1) 6653(a)(2) 6661 1979 $ 22,098 $ 1,105 -- -- -- 1982 30,039 -- $ 1,502 $ 2,620 Price per kWh Through 1983 1984 1985 1986-1989 1990-2002 8 cents 9 cents 10 cents 85% of 75% of avoided cost avoided cost Price per kWh Through 1983 1984 1985 1986-1989 1990-2002 8 cents 9 cents 10 cents 90% of 75% of avoided cost avoided cost 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 Price of Power (per kilowatt) $ .080 .080 .090 .100 .126 .145 Power Produced (kilowatts) 38,000 76,000 76,000 76,000 76,000 76,000 TOTAL REVENUE $ 3,040 6,080 6,840 7,600 9,576 11,020 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 Price of Power (per kilowatt) $ .080 .080 .090 .100 .126 Power Produced (kilowatts) 180,000 180,000 180,000 180,000 180,000 TOTAL REVENUE $ 14,400 14,400 16,200 18,000 22,680
1992 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 247">*260 Carter Wind Turbine Vestas Wind Turbine Maintenance 10% or less of gross 10% of gross revenue revenue Management 2 1/2% of gross revenue 4% for 5 years, then 10% of gross revenue Accounting part of management fee 2% of gross revenue Tax & Insurance estimated $ 650 per year estimated $ 1,400 per year Land Lease 7 1/2% of gross revenue 10% of gross revenue Interest depended upon loans depended upon loans Date Negative Balances March 1983 --- June 1983 --- September 1983 273.24 December 1983 775.50 March 1984 638.36 June 1984 196.49 September 1984 537.24 December 1984 808.17 March 1985 1,005.30 June 1985 1,302.43 September 1985 1,599.56 December 1985 1,599.69 March 1986 2,796.82 June 1986 1,533.95 September 1986 2,700.61 December 1986 3,858.76 March 1987 3,953.24 June 1987 3,903.48 September 1987 3,355.31 December 1987 3,477.81 Date Negative Balances March 1983 $ 831.89 June 1983 464.33 September 1983 533.97 December 1983 580.63 March 1984 547.46 June 1984 --- September 1984 326.05 December 1984 117.60 March 1985 500.57 June 1985 --- September 1985 --- December 1985 255.86 March 1986 1,706.86 June 1986 --- September 1986 970.46 December 1986 2,833.69 March 1987 2,682.50 June 1987 1,470.81 September 1987 1,198.05 Footnotes
Authorities (7)