DocketNumber: Docket No. 18684-90
Judges: SHIELDS
Filed Date: 4/28/1994
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 11/20/2020
*185 Decision will be entered under Rule 155.
MEMORANDUM FINDINGS OF FACT AND OPINION
SHIELDS,
Additions to tax | |||||
Sec. | Sec. | Sec. | Sec. | ||
Year | Deficiency | 6651 | 6653(a)(1) | 6653(a)(1)(A) | 6653(a)(1)(B) |
1985 | $ 1,978,101 | $ 485,304 | $ 98,905 | -- | -- |
1986 | 547,101 | -- | -- | $ 27,355 | |
Additions to tax | |||||
Sec. | Sec. | ||||
Year | 6653(a)(2) | 6661 | |||
1985 | $ 31,832 | ||||
1986 | -- | 4,869 |
After substantial concessions by both parties,
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 reference.
*187 Petitioner, Universal Insurance Services, Inc., is an Arizona corporation with its principal place of business in Phoenix. During the years at issue all of petitioner's outstanding stock was owned by Services Holding Co., and in turn all of the outstanding stock of Services Holding Co. was owned by Shane Powell (54 percent), Richard Cerkoney (23 percent), and Michael Chernek (23 percent). These individuals were also the only directors and officers of petitioner. Michael Chernek was petitioner's president. Shane Powell was petitioner's vice president and secretary-treasurer. Shane Powell's father, Ernie Powell, was petitioner's general manager, but was not an officer or director of petitioner.
Petitioner maintains its books and records and prepares its Federal income tax returns using the accrual method of accounting. During 1985 and 1986 petitioner's business consisted of acting as a managing general agent for various insurance companies by serving as a middleman between the insurance companies and their agents, and in some cases between the insurance companies and their insureds. It performed all of the functions of an insurance company, including the rating, underwriting, *188 marketing, and issuing of policies, as well as the billing of clients.
Petitioner specializes in insurance for the tow truck industry and sanitation truck business. During the years at issue, it was licensed to sell insurance in Arizona and approximately 40 other States. Petitioner reported gross receipts of $ 9,541,923 in 1985 and approximately $ 9 million in 1986.
Tow truck insurance is a specialty market, and for several years prior to 1985, petitioner obtained its speciality insurance through Chicago Insurance Co. (Chicago). However, at the end of 1984, Chicago canceled its specialty coverage nationwide. This cancellation left petitioner without a specialty carrier. When dealing with a specialty market, it is usually difficult for a managing agent to find an insurance company to provide the necessary coverage. Therefore, upon being unable to find a specialty provider, on January 11, 1985, petitioner, as a general agent, entered into a general agency agreement (agency agreement) with Allied Fidelity Corp. (Allied), for itself and as manager for Allied Fidelity Insurance Co. (Allied Fidelity), Texas Fire & Casualty Co. (Texas Fire & Casualty), and other nonaffiliated insurers*189 (all of which are hereinafter sometimes referred to as the insurance companies).
Under the agency agreement, petitioner was appointed general agent for the insurance companies "for the purpose of producing commercial automobile, general liability, property, auto physical damage, and inland marine coverages for towing and recovery operators." The agency agreement further provided that petitioner was to collect the gross premiums from its insureds, keep 24.5 percent of the gross premiums as its commission, and remit the balance of 75.5 percent to Allied. The agency agreement also provided that petitioner was entitled to a bonus commission if the policies it sold were profitable and had less than a specified loss ratio.
For the first several months of 1985, premiums on insurance policies sold by petitioner under its agency agreement with Allied were financed under an agreement with Premium Finance Specialists (Premium Finance). The financing agreement provided that, upon the sale of a policy by petitioner, the insured would make a downpayment to petitioner of 24.5 percent of the insurance premium and Premium Finance would pay the remaining 75.5 percent, less a financing fee to Allied. *190 Premium Finance would then collect the 75.5 percent from the insured. However, before the end of 1985, Premium Finance became concerned with Allied's financial condition and terminated the financing agreement.
After an unproductive search to replace Premium Finance, petitioner and Allied entered into an agreement under which petitioner agreed to assume control over the billing of Allied's premiums. Under this agreement, when a policy was sold, petitioner was required to remit to Allied 75.5 percent of the gross premium, whether or not petitioner was able to collect the balance of the premium from the insured.
Under the agreement Allied was to provide petitioner with insurance in all the States in which petitioner did business. When petitioner wished to write insurance in a State in which neither Allied Fidelity nor Texas Fire & Casualty was licensed to do business, Allied was required under the agreement with petitioner to contract with a company licensed to do business in that State in order to supply petitioner with an entry into that State's market. Pursuant to this agreement between Allied and petitioner, Allied contracted in 1985 with American Excel Insurance Co. (American*191 Excel) to provide insurance to petitioner in some of the States where neither Allied Fidelity nor Texas Fire & Casualty was licensed.
Upon billing an insurance premium, petitioner recorded the premium on its books as an income receivable and simultaneously recorded 75.5 percent of the premium as a cost payable to the insurance carrier. The inclusion of the premium in petitioner's income was dependent only upon petitioner's billing the insured. It was not dependent upon payment of the premium by the insured. By the same token, petitioner recorded the portion of the premium owed to the insurance company (75.5 percent of the gross premium) as a liability to the insurance company when the insured was billed for the premium, without reference to when or whether the premium was paid. The unpaid portion of premiums due to its insurance companies was carried in an "account current" on petitioner's books. The total of this account represented petitioner's liability to its insurance carriers for policies in force at any given date. For the taxable years at issue, the account-current balance at the end of petitioner's year reflected the net premiums due by petitioner to its insurance *192 carriers for policies in effect.
In early 1986 Allied Fidelity was experiencing financial difficulties, and as a result, on March 5, 1986, the Marion Circuit Court in Indianapolis, Indiana, entered an order which placed Allied Fidelity in rehabilitation and appointed a rehabilitator for the company. On July 15, 1986, the Marion Circuit Court entered an order placing Allied Fidelity in liquidation and appointing a liquidator for it.
During 1986, Allied was also having financial difficulties and, on November 24, 1986, filed a petition for relief under chapter 7 of the Bankruptcy Code (
The $ 698,085.82 deposited in the trust*193 account was computed in the following manner: Petitioner concluded that the gross amount of the premiums due to it on policies it had sold for Allied Fidelity, Texas Fire & Casualty, and American Excel during the months of April 1985 through March 1986 was $ 9,924,032.87. From this amount, petitioner subtracted $ 6,425,845.08, which petitioner computed to be the total amount previously paid by it to these three companies on premiums. Petitioner then subtracted $ 1,917,758.98, which represented amounts which it computed to be due petitioner from Allied and Allied Fidelity. Finally, petitioner subtracted $ 423,223, the balance in its March 1986 account current, and $ 459,119.99, which represented petitioner's computation of the balance due petitioner on the Western World Propacks account sent by petitioner to Allied Fidelity and Texas Fire & Casualty. The balance of $ 698,085.82 was the net deposit in the trust account.
While the application of certain items involved in petitioner's computation of the net deposit was disputed by Allied Fidelity, Texas Fire & Casualty, and/or American Excel, the total amount due by petitioner of $ 9,924,032.87 was not contested by any of them. *194 Furthermore, the payments totaling $ 6,425,845.08, which petitioner claimed had been paid on premiums due by petitioner to Allied, Allied Fidelity, and Texas Fire & Casualty, were admitted by the payees, but the application of such payments by petitioner was in dispute. In other words, Allied, Allied Fidelity, and Texas Fire & Casualty did not deny that such payments were made by petitioner. Their contention was that at least some part of such payments by petitioner constituted payment on a stock subscription agreement which petitioner had entered into with Allied Fidelity and was not applicable to premiums due from petitioner. In addition to the controversy over the application of these payments; i.e., whether to insurance premiums or amounts due on the subscription agreement, petitioner withheld approximately $ 1 million from the interpleader fund because petitioner concluded that it had fulfilled certain contingencies set forth in the agreement with Allied.
On November 24, 1986, petitioner contributed another $ 1,021,809.48 to the interpleader fund. This additional contribution represented the net amount petitioner concluded it owed to the insurance companies for premiums totaling*195 $ 2,067,189.11 on insurance policies sold by petitioner during the months of April 1986 through September 1986, after deducting $ 1,045,379.63 which petitioner contended constituted offsets owed to petitioner by the insurance companies. The offsets totaling $ 1,045,379.63 were contested by the insurance companies in the interpleader action.
In each of the above instances, as well as in certain other instances where relatively smaller amounts were in dispute, petitioner did not place in the interpleader fund the gross amounts claimed by the insurance companies. These amounts were not deposited in the interpleader fund by petitioner upon the advice of petitioner's counsel, who feared that any overpayment by petitioner of a disputed amount might ultimately result in the overpayment by petitioner becoming uncollectible as a general unsecured claim against the insurance companies. On its income tax returns for 1985 and 1986, petitioner claimed deductions for the gross amounts of $ 9,924,032.87 and $ 2,067,189.11, respectively, in insurance premiums it concluded were due the insurance companies.
During 1985 and 1986 Ernie Powell, without petitioner's knowledge and approval, supplied*196 insurance to American Lenders. All of petitioner's transactions with American Lenders were handled by Ernie Powell, who was petitioner's general manager, but not an officer or a director of petitioner. Petitioner concedes that it omitted gross income in the amounts of $ 196,612.74 for 1985 and $ 262,352 for 1986. These were receipts from American Lenders, which was in the business of repossessing automobiles. Because of its highly variable volume of business, American Lenders was not billed like the rest of petitioner's clients. Instead, American Lenders would report the number of its repossessions, assess itself an insurance premium for each one, and concurrently pay its premiums to petitioner. There was usually a 2-month lag between the time when American Lenders would repossess a vehicle and when it would report to petitioner and pay the related premium. Because of this anomalous method of payment, receivables from American Lenders were not entered into petitioner's general ledger and did not show up in its income unless they were specially entered.
Without petitioner's knowledge or approval, all of the checks issued by American Lenders during 1985 were deposited by Ernie*197 Powell in an account which he opened on or about October 9, 1985, in the name of petitioner with Great Western Bank. The checks issued by American Lenders during 1986 were not negotiated by Ernie Powell or turned over to petitioner. Because of Ernie Powell's misconduct, petitioner had no knowledge of the omitted income.
Shane Powell, the son of Ernie Powell, and petitioner's principal stockholder, vice president, and treasurer, was a signatory on the Great Western Bank account opened by Ernie Powell. The account was not authorized by petitioner's board of directors. Shane Powell did not testify at the trial of this matter, but petitioner's bookkeeper testified that she was not aware of the Great Western Bank account or of the checks issued to petitioner by American Lenders; and consequently, the checks were not recorded on petitioner's records or included in petitioner's income tax returns for 1985 and 1986. Petitioner's accountants were unaware of the existence of this account. In 1987, petitioner arranged for its files to be audited to determine the precise amount of its payables. The American Lenders file could not be found at this time. In August 1987, Ernie*198 Powell died suddenly of a heart attack in the airport on the way to a meeting with American Lenders.
Petitioner's income tax returns for 1985 and 1986 were prepared by Walker & Armstrong, an independent firm of certified public accountants. When the returns were prepared, the accounting firm was aware of the interpleader action in which petitioner was involved. However, the firm concluded that the cost of the insurance premiums in question was properly accruable by petitioner and prepared petitioner's returns accordingly. Steven Tait, a certified public accountant with Walker & Armstrong, testified that in his opinion the interpleader action filed by petitioner had no effect on the accrual of such costs.
OPINION
Petitioner contends that as an accrual method taxpayer it is entitled to deduct the gross liability it owed at the end of taxable years 1985 and 1986 under its agreement with the insurance companies. Respondent, however, determined, and contends herein, that such deductions are prohibited by the fact that its liability under the agreement was being contested by petitioner. Petitioner*199 has the burden of proof on the issue. Rule 142(a);
Petitioner has elected to compute its taxable income under the accrual method of accounting authorized by section 446(c)(2). Under this method, petitioner may deduct expenses in the year in which they are "incurred",
Respondent first contends that, had petitioner actually paid the gross amount of the liability into the interpleader fund, the issue of deductibility would never have arisen. This contention is true, but not applicable to the case before us because, under the accrual method of accounting used by petitioner, the date of payment is not relevant in determining when an expense is deductible.
Respondent next contends that petitioner is not entitled to the deductions claimed for the gross amounts used by petitioner to determine petitioner's deposits to the interpleader account because such gross amounts were being contested*201 by petitioner during the tax years involved. It is well established that a liability may not be accrued as long as it is contingent.
Petitioner contends that it never disputed the gross amount of its liability to the insurance companies, that even the insurance companies contested only the offsets claimed by petitioner to the gross liability and not the gross liability itself, and that the interpleader action was not filed by petitioner to contest the amount of the gross liability, but to avoid the possible duplication*202 of payments to the interpled parties and in order to avoid the possibility of overpaying the amounts due the insurance companies and being unable to recover the overpayment.
We agree with petitioner that it has met the first prong of the all events test; i.e., that during the years in dispute (1985 and 1986) all the events had occurred which determined the fact of petitioner's liability for the gross amount. Therefore, we turn to a consideration of whether petitioner has met the second prong of the test; i.e., whether the amount of petitioner's liability was substantially determined in such years with reasonable accuracy.
The agency agreement which petitioner entered into with Allied on January 11, 1985, as manager for the insurance companies, contains a formula for determining the amount of the commissions to which each insurance company was entitled. Thus, the record contains the method of computing the amount of the gross premium liability owed by petitioner to the insurance companies. Furthermore, the record before us contains no evidence that petitioner ever contested the amount of its gross liability. In fact, petitioner's own records reflect the same gross liability as*203 that asserted by the insurance companies; and in its computation of the net amount to be placed in the interpleader fund, petitioner used the correct gross liability as its starting point. At trial petitioner's witnesses testified that the amount of petitioner's gross liability was not contested; and in documents filed with the Maricopa County Superior Court, the insurance companies admitted that the gross liability of petitioner was not in dispute. We conclude, therefore, that during the years at issue the gross liability of petitioner to the insurance companies was substantially determined with reasonable accuracy. This conclusion is supported by the fact that subsequently on February 1, 1991, petitioner and Allied Fidelity entered into a stipulation that the correct gross amount of the premiums owed by petitioner to the insurance companies for 1985 and 1986 was $ 11,161,670. This stipulated amount is more than 93 percent of the gross amount of the premiums which petitioner admitted it owed to the insurance companies for such years; i.e., $ 11,991,221.98, consisting of the $ 9,924,032.87 for the months of April 1985 through March 1986, used by petitioner in the computation of*204 its original interpleader deposit of $ 698,085.22, plus the $ 2,067,189.11 for the months of April 1986 through September 1986, used by petitioner in its computation of the additional interpleader deposit of $ 1,021,809.48 made by petitioner on November 24, 1986.
Furthermore, in the case before us, respondent has also stipulated that petitioner is entitled to a substantial portion of the offsets claimed by petitioner in arriving at its interpleader deposits. Therefore, from the record as a whole, we are satisfied and so find that the offsets claimed by petitioner were made in good faith, and not as a surreptitious attempt by petitioner to contest its gross liability.
*205 Finally respondent contends that, under
If --
(1) the taxpayer contests an asserted liability,
(2) the taxpayer transfers money or other property to provide for the satisfaction of the asserted liability,
(3) the contest with respect to the asserted liability exists after the time of the transfer, and
(4) but for the fact that the asserted liability is contested, a deduction would be allowed for the taxable year of the transfer (or for an earlier taxable year) determined after application of subsection (h),
then the deduction shall be allowed for the taxable year of the transfer.
It is noted that
Negligence as used in
Respondent determined that petitioner failed to report income in the amounts of $ 196,612.74 for 1985 and $ 348,050.50 for 1986. Petitioner stipulated that it failed to report $ 196,612.74 for 1985 and $ 262,352 for 1986. These amounts represent the checks from American Lenders which were diverted by Ernie Powell to the unauthorized account or uncashed. For 1986, the difference, in the amount of*208 $ 85,698.50, between the amount determined by respondent and the amount conceded by petitioner is unexplained.
Failure to fully report income may also constitute negligence.
The final issue for our decision is whether petitioner is liable for the addition to tax under
In making a determination regarding waiver of the penalty under
Respondent's waiver of the
The most important factor in determining whether the addition to tax applies is "the extent of the taxpayer's effort to assess the taxpayer's proper tax liability under the law."
We find that petitioners have met this standard and that respondent abused her discretion in failing to waive the
1. 50 percent of interest due on $ 547,101.↩
2. 50 percent of interest due on $ 1,978,101.↩
1. Respondent concedes that the decrease determined in petitioner's cost of sales for 1985 in the amount of $ 3,979,398 should be reduced to $ 1,463,398. Petitioner concedes that it omitted gross income in the amount of $ 196,612.74 for 1985 and $ 262,352 for 1986 and that for 1985 it is liable for an addition to tax under
2. Unless otherwise indicated, all section references are to the Internal Revenue Code for the years in issue, and all Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure.↩
3. Neither party claims that the "economic performance" rule of
4. Having found that the gross liability in the case before us is substantially fixed, we also conclude that other uncertainties not related to such liability do not destroy the deduction. See
United States v. Hughes Properties, Inc. ( 1986 )
The Washington Post Company v. The United States ( 1969 )
Jack E. Golsen and Sylvia H. Golsen v. Commissioner of ... ( 1971 )
Security Flour Mills Co. v. Commissioner ( 1944 )
Diana T. Vorsheck John P. Vorsheck v. Commissioner of ... ( 1991 )
Gary M. Emmons and Martha C. Emmons v. Commissioner of ... ( 1990 )
Burnham Corporation v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue ( 1989 )
Dixie Pine Products Co. v. Commissioner ( 1944 )