DocketNumber: Docket Nos. 7888-80, 9149-80
Judges: Fay
Filed Date: 5/18/1983
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
*78 Petitioner Mohammad Shafi a cash basis taxpayer, is a doctor practicing medicine in Wisconsin. In 1977, petitioner entered into a tax shelter promoted by the International Monetary Exchange (IME), a Panamanian corporation, wherein he purported to provide dredging services in Panama. Petitioner paid $ 40,000 to a local subcontractor to do the actual work. IME allegedly advanced $ 30,000 on behalf of petitioner to the subcontractor. Thus, petitioner paid $ 10,000 in cash and issued a $ 30,000 promissory note to IME. The note was payable only out of profits from the sale of oceanfront lots created by the dredging operation.
*945 OPINION
Respondent determined the following deficiencies in petitioners' 1977 Federal income tax:
Docket No. | Deficiency |
7888-80 | $ 33,841.00 |
9149-80 | 20,771.22 |
These cases are consolidated for purposes of trial, briefing, *80 and opinion. Petitioners in docket No. 9149-80 are presently before the Court on respondent's motion for partial summary judgment under Rule 121. *81 purpose of developing oceanfront lots. Petitioner then subcontracts with a local Panamanian firm, "Dredgeco," to do the actual work. The cost of dredging is $ 40,000. The promoter, IME, finances 75 percent of this cost. Thus, petitioner pays $ 10,000 cash and delivers a $ 30,000 note to IME wherein IME then pays "Dredgeco" the entire $ 40,000 which is due before the actual dredging begins. Interest on the $ 30,000 note accrues at the rate of 10 percent per annum beginning January 1, 1978.
Upon completion, DISA is to pay petitioner $ 50,000 for his services. Any unpaid balance is to be assessed interest at 6 *946 percent per annum. However, the $ 50,000 amount due petitioner is payable only out of one-half the profits generated by the sale of oceanfront lots created by the dredging services. In turn, and crucial to this case, petitioner is obligated to make payments on his note only out of 75 percent of his share of such profits.
In 1977, petitioner sent a $ 10,000 check and delivered his $ 30,000 promissory note to IME. On their 1977 Federal income tax return, petitioners claimed a $ 40,000 deduction. In his notice of deficiency, respondent disallowed the deduction *82 in its entirety.
This case is but one of numerous similar tax shelter cases promoted by IME which are docketed in this Court. In his motion for partial summary judgment, respondent asks us to rule as a matter of law that petitioners are entitled to no deductions with respect to their payment by giving the $ 30,000 note.
For purposes of this motion, respondent accepts as true the facts in favor of petitioner. For example, respondent is willing to assume that $ 40,000 was in fact paid to "Dredgeco" for dredging services and that, to the extent otherwise allowable, this payment constitutes a deductible, as opposed to a capital, expense. Respondent's position is that, notwithstanding the truth of these assumptions, petitioners still are entitled to no deduction with respect to the $ 30,000 note.
It is well-established that a party moving for summary judgment has the burden of demonstrating that no genuine issue as to any material fact exists, and that he is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
At first blush, it would appear conclusive that petitioners, as *947 cash basis taxpayers, would be entitled to no deduction with respect to their payment by note. It is well settled that the payment of an expense by a note does not give rise to a deduction for a cash basis taxpayer.
In
Similarly, the loan herein is utterly and inherently so contingent and speculative that its repayment cannot be predicted with any degree of accuracy. Payable solely out of profits, it is wholly contingent upon the success or failure of the foreign dredging operation. Thus, not only do oceanfront lots first have to be produced, but those lots have to be sold at a profit before any payments on the loan are required. And then, only 50 percent of those *87 profits are subject to payment on the note. Given the terms of this agreement and given the clearly abusive tax shelter out of which this case arises, we find petitioner's obligation is so contingent that it cannot be treated as a loan for tax purposes. *88 We do not imply that a loan will not be recognized for tax purposes simply because it is payable solely out of profits. By its nature, however, such a loan necessarily takes on the flavor of an investment.
Petitioners contend that cases which deal with the computation of cost basis are irrelevant to the consideration of the deduction of a current expense. *89 of an expense paid by a cash basis taxpayer does not depend on the source of the funds expended but, instead, depends solely on how payment is made. Petitioners argue respondent is attempting to apply rules of an accrual basis taxpayer to a cash basis taxpayer. Petitioners reason that since the expense was paid, they are entitled to the deduction. Thus, petitioners argue the treatment of the note herein is irrelevant. We disagree.
We see no reason why a taxpayer is in any*90 better position simply because he claims a current deduction as compared to an increased cost basis. The only difference lies in the nature of the expense, generally speaking, whether the expense creates an asset with a useful life greater than 1 year. Thus, those cases which do not recognize a note or an obligation for purposes of computing the basis of an asset are equally applicable when the taxpayer is claiming a current expense. An expenditure funded with the proceeds of a contingent obligation represents neither a payment by, or cost to, a taxpayer for tax purposes. *91 *950 We find considerable support for our conclusion in three recent Courts of Appeals' decisions which disallowed current deductions for intangible drilling costs paid with a nonrecourse note.
Moreover, recognizing there is a danger in treating all nonrecourse loans as the equivalent of true loans for tax purposes, the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals stated:
the transaction may be so lacking in the essential characteristics, economic realities, and financial expectations of a true lending transaction as to call for reclassification of the transaction as one other than a loan and ascribing to it consequences for tax purposes other than those growing out of a true loan. [
The Court noted that in a true lending transaction, there exists the reasonable likelihood the lender will be repaid, and further quoting Fielder,
*94 In the instant case, the lender will not be paid until, and unless, profits from the venture are realized, and repayment is totally contingent on the success or failure of the enterprise. This is wholly inconsistent with a true lending transaction where the lender does not undertake to assume the entrepreneurial risks of the business.
Petitioners attempt to distinguish
The single most important factor dictating our conclusion that the transaction * * * was not a true loan is the fact that the total combined assets of both joint venturers were not sufficient to pay the note on or before the maturity date, even if [the debtors were] so inclined, absent production from any of the leases. [
We are, *95 however, unwilling to ascribe any importance to petitioners' net worth in this case. The fact remains the obligation is payable only out of the profits of this foreign dredging operation. Such a loan must be evaluated only on the basis of the probability of any such profits. Certainly, the funds were not advanced on the basis of petitioners' net worth, *952 and absent the existence of profits, the lender could not reach petitioners' personal assets.
*96 Cases supporting the proposition that a deduction be allowed for expenses paid with money borrowed from a third party are clearly distinguishable. See
The recent United States Supreme Court opinion in
We read
The facts and the situation presented herein simply do not come within the context of
We find no genuine issue as to any material fact. The terms of the agreements and the exhibits attached to respondent's motion accurately reflect the transaction and the undertakings of the principals herein, and substantive legal principles warrant an opinion in respondent's favor. *99 We have no trouble concluding that, by its very terms, petitioner's obligation is too contingent and speculative to give rise to a current deduction. *100
*101 Petitioners' final attack on respondent's motion is strictly on procedural grounds. On March 2, 1981, these two dockets were consolidated for purposes of trial, briefing, and opinion. However, respondent's motion for partial summary judgment is directed only to petitioners in docket No. 9149-80. Petitioners urge this Court to decide the two cases together, rather than allow respondent to concede certain facts in one docket and, if he loses his motion, attempt to adjudicate those facts in the other docket. We decline petitioners' request.
As we have already noted, motion for summary judgment is appropriate where further expensive and time-consuming litigation can be prevented. Moreover, respondent has conceded facts only for purposes of this motion. If he lost, he certainly did not preclude himself from litigating those facts. We see no merit to petitioners' contention that respondent has garnered some form of unfair advantage by this maneuver.
Whether such a motion should be entertained is entirely within the discretion of the Court. We see no prejudice to petitioners in either docket, and the benefits are obvious. Accordingly, even though respondent's motion is directed *102 to *955 petitioners in one of two consolidated dockets, the Court deems it proper to entertain such motion. An appropriate order will be entered.
1. All Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure.↩
2. Any reference in this opinion to "loan" or "lender" is for purposes of discussion only and is meant to carry no legal significance.↩
3. The subsequent performance of the venture does nothing but confirm the highly contingent and speculative nature of petitioner's obligation. Petitioner received no payments for dredging fees in 1977, 1978, and 1979, and the record discloses no profits from land sales at any time prior to trial. By letter dated Aug. 22, 1979, petitioner was informed by IME that shallow salt water lakes had been formed by the dredging services and that DISA had agreed to pay 25 percent of its gross sales from shrimp which were being harvested in these salt water lakes. Petitioner's exhibits include a canceled check dated June 30, 1980, and a letter from IME dated July 14, 1980, indicating petitioner's share of shrimp proceeds for 1980 was $ 7.18, such amount being used to reduce the amount owed IME.↩
4. See
5. See also
6. Petitioner's affidavit states, "It * * * is my understanding that the loan * * * was to be paid from the proceeds of the sale of dredged lots in Panama." Petitioners admit that if an obligation is contingent, it is not to be treated as debt for purposes of generating a current deduction. They argue, however, the obligation herein is not contingent. Conceding payment of this obligation is contingent, petitioners draw a distinction between contingency of payment and contingency of obligation, claiming only the latter affects the status of debt for tax purposes. Since the obligation herein is not subject to reduction, petitioners argue the obligation, itself, is not contingent. We find no merit in petitioners' contention.
We fail to see how an obligation is any less contingent simply because it remains a fixed dollar amount and is not subject to reduction. Simply put, if the obligation to pay never arises, the obligation itself is meaningless. For the same reasoning, see
7. In
"Leaving aside for the moment the provisions of section 636, we would consider it highly doubtful that a pre-drilling production payment on an exploratory or so-called wildcat well, even when cross-collateralized with other wildcat wells, or any similar nonrecourse, highly contingent obligation would be a 'liability' for purposes of section 752(a). [
We note that our citations and discussions of the opinions of the Circuit Courts of Appeal in
8. We accept petitioners' contention that the note herein was not nonrecourse in the sense that personal assets could be reached once profits were realized and an obligation to pay therein arose.↩
9. We do not suggest the absence of personal liability means the debt cannot be recognized for tax purposes. See
10. Petitioners make no argument, and there is no basis for such an argument, that IME advanced the funds as the agent for petitioner.↩
11. We are not herein concerned with the situation where the lender has made a clearly identifiable transfer of funds in a loan transaction entirely separate and distinct from payment of the expense. See
See also
12. Our determination with respect to the $ 30,000 note is based on the terms of the agreement. Petitioner's purpose for entering this tax shelter is largely irrelevant for this determination. However, we are not oblivious to the fact that, as structured, petitioners are in a "no lose" situation. Petitioner has expended $ 10,000 to generate $ 40,000 in deductions which, in his tax bracket (he reported taxable income of $ 136,311 on his 1977 return) guarantees tax savings greater than his cash outlay. Moreover, petitioner is guaranteed never to have to "pony up" any amount in excess of his $ 10,000 outlay. Whether petitioners are entitled to a deduction with respect to the $ 10,000 out-of-pocket-expense on the basis of any legitimacy to this venture or whether no deduction is allowable since there was absolutely no substance to the transaction and it was entered into solely for the purpose of avoiding taxes is a question that must be answered in another proceeding. See
13. See Rules 141(b) and 61 (b) where the Court may, in its discretion, order a separate trial of a group of consolidated cases and may limit the trial to the claim or claims of one party.↩
Don E. Williams Co. v. Commissioner ( 1977 )
Hart v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue ( 1932 )
Albany Car Wheel Company, Inc. v. Commissioner of Internal ... ( 1964 )
Crc Corporation v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue. Crc ... ( 1982 )
Martha Lyons v. Board of Education of Charleston ... ( 1975 )
Douglas J. And Marguerite H. Lemery, and Raymond J. And ... ( 1971 )
Estate of Charles T. Franklin, Deceased v. Commissioner of ... ( 1976 )
Gibson Products Co. Kell Blvd. v. United States ( 1981 )
Carl G. Ortmayer and Hilda B. Ortmayer, Husband and Wife v. ... ( 1959 )
Paul P. Brountas v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, Paul ... ( 1982 )
W. Larry Harlan and Mary Jane Harlan v. United States ( 1969 )
Columbus and Greenville Railway Company v. Commissioner of ... ( 1966 )