DocketNumber: Docket No. 2493-88
Judges: Williams
Filed Date: 5/8/1989
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/14/2024
1989 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 61">*61
The city of Bloomington, Indiana, issued municipal bonds, the proceeds of which were to be used by P, a tax-exempt private foundation, to build retirement community facilities. During construction, P earned dividends and interest of $ 1,125,278 in 1982 and $ 226,505 in 1983 by investing the proceeds. P also earned capital gains of $ 18,200 in 1983. In 1982 and 1983, P paid the interest due and payable on the debt underlying the bonds in the amounts of $ 1,348,447 for 1982 and $ 1,634,530 for 1983.
92 T.C. 891">*891 OPINION
The Commissioner determined deficiencies in petitioner's excise tax pursuant to
All of the facts in this case have been stipulated pursuant to
The tax exempt purpose of petitioner is to build and operate a retirement community. The completed facilities include a 4-section continuous apartment building with 92 dwelling units, 17 garden apartment clusters comprising an additional 92 dwelling units, 14 assisted living units and a 25-bed skilled nursing center. Construction on a number of the cluster apartments was completed in 1982 and operations1989 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 61">*63 of the facility began on a limited basis in that year. To build the retirement community facilities, the city of Bloomington, Indiana, issued Economic Development First Mortgage Bonds (bonds) in the total amount of $ 16,000,000 as follows:
Series A at 12% interest | $ 10,000,000 |
Series B at 12.5% interest | 6,000,000 |
Total | 16,000,000 |
Petitioner paid interest in the amount of $ 1,348,447 and $ 1,634,530 in 1982 and 1983, respectively, on the debt underlying these bonds.
Petitioner invested the funds raised by the bond issue and earned dividends and interest totaling $ 1,125,278 in 1982 and $ 226,505 in 1983. In addition, petitioner earned capital gains of $ 18,200 in 1983.
The prospectus for the bond issue states:
Proceeds from the Series A Bonds and the Series B Bonds (proposed to be issued in a principal amount of $ 6,000,000), together with approximately $ 8,749,000 of anticipated Residency Fees and interest earned on funds invested during the Construction Period, will be used (i) to pay the 92 T.C. 891">*893 costs of developing, constructing and equipping the Project, (ii) to fund interest on the Series A Bonds and the Series B Bonds during construction, (iii) to establish1989 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 61">*64 a Debt Service Reserve Fund, (iv) to establish a Residency Fees Reserve Fund, (v) to pay costs of issuance of the Series A Bonds and the Series B Bonds, (vi) to pay the Underwriter's discount and (vii) to provide operating reserves. * * *
Moreover, failure to pay any due and payable installment of interest on the loans is an "event of default," and if a default occurred, the trustee under the bond indenture could require immediate payment of the entire loan principal and interest. In 1982 all of the invested funds came from the proceeds of the bond issue. In 1983 it is estimated that at least 95 percent of the funds invested came from the proceeds of the bond issues. The remaining 5 percent invested came from entrance and membership fees from the retirement community.
Petitioner charges entrance fees and membership fees as a condition of residency in the retirement facility. The entrance fees are refundable up to the date of admission. Thereafter, they are refundable at rates dependent upon the reasons for the termination of the residency and the length of the occupancy. Membership fees are normally refundable only in the event of death and are applied to the entrance fee1989 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 61">*65 at the time of residency. As of December 31, 1982, substantially all deferred entrance fees and membership fees were contractually refundable. Entrance fees and membership fees are deferred as income until admission at which time such fees are recognized as income over 13 years.
The cost of residency depends upon the type of unit which is purchased. As of January 1982, the various apartment units and garden units ranged in price from $ 22,000 through $ 83,675. In addition to the entrance fees and membership fees, the residents paid a monthly service fee.
For the taxable year ended December 31, 1982, petitioner reported that it had no net investment income on line 25(b) of the Form 990-PF, Return of Private Foundation, which it filed for that year and which showed the computation of net investment income as follows: 92 T.C. 891">*894
Dividends and interest from securities | $ 1,125,278 |
Less: | |
Interest | 1,348,447 |
Other expenses | 21,891 |
Total expenses | 1,370,338 |
Net investment income (not less than -0-) | -0- |
Petitioner's interest expense was incurred on the debt underlying the city of Bloomington, Indiana, Economic Development First Mortgage Bonds. Other expenses 1989 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 61">*66 in the amount of $ 21,891 comprised bank charges of $ 7,287 and amortization of debt issuance cost in the amount of $ 14,604.
For the taxable year ended December 31, 1983, petitioner reported that it had no net investment income and showed the computation of net investment income as follows:
Dividends and interest from securities | $ 226,505 |
Capital gain net income | 18,200 |
Total revenue | 244,705 |
Less: | |
Interest | 1,634,530 |
Other expenses | 112,600 |
Total expenses | 1,747,130 |
Net investment income (not less than -0-) | -0- |
Petitioner's interest expense was incurred on the debt underlying the bonds. The other expenses claimed for 1983 comprised bank charges totaling $ 9,436 and amortization of debt issuance cost in the amount of $ 103,164.
Respondent disallowed the deduction of interest expense from petitioner's gross investment income and thus determined deficiencies in petitioner's 1982 and 1983 excise tax. The issue we must decide is whether the interest paid in 1982 and 1983 by petitioner in the amounts of $ 1,348,447 and $ 1,634,530, respectively, is deductible in determining "net investment income" pursuant to
(1) In General. -- For purposes of subsection (a), the net investment income is the amount by which (A) the sum of the gross investment income and the capital gain net income exceeds (B) the deductions allowed by paragraph (3). Except to the extent inconsistent with the 92 T.C. 891">*895 provisions of this section, net investment income shall be determined under the principles of subtitle A.
For purposes of determining net investment income, "gross investment income" means "the gross amount of income from interest, dividends, rents, payments with respect to securities loans (as defined in section 512(a)(5)), and royalties * * *."
Petitioner contends that the interest it paid on the Series A and Series B bonds in 1982 and 1983 in the amounts of $ 1,348,447 and $ 1,634,530, respectively, is deductible as an ordinary and necessary expense within the meaning of
The interest expense paid on the debt underlying the bonds was incurred solely by petitioner and was not the expense of any other entity. Nevertheless, to be deductible from gross investment income pursuant to
In this case, the central fact is that petitioner would have had no investment income in 1982 and less than 5 percent of its investment income in 1983 except for its return on investment of the bond proceeds. Petitioner generated gross investment income by investing the bond proceeds, and, as the bond prospectus states, petitioner's intent to invest temporarily the bond proceeds was explicitly for the purpose of obtaining investment income which would be used in the project. Further, petitioner would have had no funds to invest but for the issuance of the bonds. In the absence of the interest payments, the debt underlying the bonds would have been in default, and petitioner could have lost the use of the bond proceeds. Consequently, the interest expense on the bonds and the gross investment income from petitioner's investment of the bond proceeds arose out of the same transaction and were inextricably connected. Because of this direct nexus and integral relationship, we hold that petitioner's interest expense is an ordinary and necessary expense paid or incurred for the production or collection of gross investment income.
Respondent relies on
Respondent has misapplied the
Respondent argues that
In
We hold, therefore, that petitioner's interest expense incurred on the debt underlying the bond issue while the bond proceeds were temporarily invested is an ordinary and necessary expense allowable pursuant to
1. All section references are to the Internal Revenue Code of 1954 as in effect for the years in issue, unless otherwise indicated.↩
2. As discussed in