DocketNumber: No. 2550-97
Judges: GERBER
Filed Date: 2/10/1999
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 4/18/2021
*43 Decision will be entered for respondent.
MEMORANDUM FINDINGS OF FACT AND OPINION
[1] GERBER, JUDGE: Respondent determined a deficiency in petitioners' *44 1992 Federal income tax in the amount of $ 24,993. The issue for our consideration is whether petitioners are entitled to take an ordinary loss deduction for a business bad debt as allowed by [4] During the tax year in question, *45 petitioner owned one- third of the stock in PLG Enterprises, Inc., d.b.a. Eagle Jet Charter, Inc. (PLG), and all of the stock in Lang Aire, Inc. (Lang), as well as interests in other aviation-related companies. [5] In May 1992, petitioner borrowed $ 255,000 from Clark County Credit Union (CCCU) against funds held in his personal accounts at CCCU. The CCCU loan agreement specified a 5.75-percent interest rate with a single balloon payment due in June 1993. Petitioner instructed the credit union to wire the funds directly to AIG Aviation Insurance Services, Inc. (AIG), on behalf of PLG as payment for its successful bid to buy a salvaged Lear jet held by AIG. The plane, formerly owned by the singer Paul Anka, had suffered extensive damage after running off a runway and was no longer certifiable for flight. PLG took possession of the salvaged plane, planning to remove the plane's undamaged engines to sell to Lang, which owned a plane in need of engines before it could be sold. Petitioner did not take the plane or any other asset of PLG as collateral for the funds he advanced on PLG's behalf, failing to file a notice of lien or make a UCC filing in order to secure his position as a creditor. *46 Petitioner also failed to keep any documentation on the alleged loan in his personal records and was unable to produce documentation evidencing a loan between petitioner and PLG for the funds advanced, though he claimed the note was held by another PLG shareholder, Craig Orrock. No shareholder loans were reported on PLG's 1992 tax return. [6] Lang purchased the engines in 1992 from PLG for $ 163,074.42, which was sent directly to CCCU in partial repayment of petitioner's personal note. One hundred fifty-five thousand dollars was applied to principal and $ 8,074.42 was applied to interest on the CCCU note. Thereafter PLG made no payments to petitioner or on the CCCU note. Petitioner never made any attempt to collect those funds he claimed were still owed to him by PLG. Subsequently, petitioner paid off the remaining $ 100,000 CCCU loan balance. [7] In the fall of 1992, petitioner entered into negotiations with Yamagada Enterprises d.b.a. Eagle International Group (Eagle Group) for the purchase of petitioner's aviation-related businesses as well as various assets held by petitioner, petitioner's wife, petitioner's companies, and the two other PLG shareholders, Craig Orrock and William*47 Acor, a close friend of petitioner's. Petitioner and Mr. Acor retained interests in the new company, Eagle Group, once the sale was completed. Included in the businesses bought by Eagle Group were Lang and PLG. The sale was negotiated for approximately $ 5 million. Petitioner was to receive $ 2,410,050, paid in cash and in installments from Eagle Group with additional periodic payments to petitioner and Mr. Acor totaling more than $ 500,000. Eagle Group also agreed to assume $ 637,929.98 in liabilities held by the various companies sold in the deal. This did not include the remaining $ 100,000 petitioner claims PLG owed him. [8] Out of the total purchase price, petitioner allotted $ 177,500 for the sale of PLG. The sum was divided so that $ 176,500 was for goodwill, and the remaining $ 1,000 was for the assets of PLG, including the rest of the salvaged plane. Those assets were sold for below fair market value. PLG never received the funds; instead, petitioner accepted the payment directly. Though Eagle Group agreed to assume the notes held by other businesses sold in the deal, petitioner did not try to convince Eagle Group to assume the alleged liability owed to petitioner by PLG*48 for the outstanding $ 100,000 balance, nor did he structure the disbursement among his companies so that PLG had enough money to pay off its creditors, including petitioner. The liabilities owed to PLG's outside creditors were paid in full, but no funds were made available to repay petitioner. [9] Petitioner claimed that PLG's failure to pay him the remaining money resulted in a bad business debt. On his 1992 tax return, he claimed a deduction of $ 78,271. He later claimed that this amount should have been $ 100,000. He had claimed the lower amount on the advice of his tax preparer. Respondent determined a $ 24,993 deficiency by disallowing petitioner's claimed ordinary loss for a bad business debt under OPINION [10] We must decide whether petitioner is entitled to a business bad debt deduction for the advances made on PLG's behalf. Respondent argues that petitioner is not entitled to the deduction because the advance did not constitute a business loan. On brief, respondent also argued that the advance was not a bona fide loan and that it did not become worthless *49 as petitioner claimed. However, in the notice of deficiency, respondent already conceded that the advance was a nonbusiness bad debt, which petitioner could deduct as a short-term capital loss rather than as the ordinary loss claimed for 1992, and calculated petitioner's tax deficiency accordingly. [11] In order to maintain an ordinary loss, petitioner must demonstrate that the loan qualifies for [12] Whether a debt is a business debt or a nonbusiness debt is a question of fact in each particular case. [13] A taxpayer may claim a business loss in situations in which the taxpayer's activities in making loans have been regarded as so extensive and continuous as to elevate that activity to the status of a separate business. [14] Having considered the record herein in light of the above criteria, we conclude that petitioner did not make the advance to PLG in furtherance of his trade or business; he was not in the business of lending money, nor did he make the advance in order to preserve a salary from PLG. Petitioner is not*52 entitled to a business bad debt deduction under [15] In light of the foregoing, [16] Decision will be entered for respondent.
1. Unless otherwise stated, all section references are to the Internal Revenue Code in effect for the taxable year in issue, and all Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure.↩