This is an income tax case for the refund of taxes paid in 1964, and concerns the carryback of losses incurred in 1966 on the worthlessness of corporate stock and in 1967 on the worthlessness of corporate notes. The issues arе the applicability of the statute of limitations to the corporate stock loss claim and the determination of the deductibility of the note loss as an ordinary business loss rather than a capital loss. The district court gave the plaintiff taxpayer judgment for $135,476.65 against the United States. We reverse.
Plaintiff-appellee A. H. Kelson, whose wife Nyla is a party only because of a joint return, incurred capital gains through the liquidation of corporate stoсk in 1964 and paid a federal income tax for that year of $135,476.65. In 1963 taxpayer formed Bonneville Capital Corporation and was its president and a director in 1964-1967. During the same period he was, and still is, chairman of the board of the Bank of Salt Lake and a director of Continental Thrift and Loan Company, both of which were subsidiaries of Bonneville. By 1965 taxpayer had acquired about % of the Bonneville stock and had an adjusted base therefor of $366,119.65. Between 1964 and 1966 taxpayer loaned to Bonneville $199,440 and held its notes in that amount.
In 1966 the Bonneville stock became worthless and in his return for that year taxpayer claimed as an ordinary business loss $366,119.65, his adjusted base for the stock. During the 1967 liquidation of Bonneville taxpayer received, in exchange for his notes, stock of the two mentioned Bonneville subsidiaries. The court found that he had a $166,288.42 loss on the notes. The government does not question this amount. In his 1967 return he claimed the loss on the notes аs an ordinary business loss.
On April 14, 1967, taxpayer filed a claim for refund of the 1964 tax. The reason given for the claim was “Carry-back of 1966 operating loss.” The loss for that year arose out of the worthlessness of the Bonneville stock. On March 21, 1968, taxpayer filed a second claim for refund of the 1964 tax. The reason given for this claim was “Claim amended to include carryback of 1967 operating loss. Original claim filed to carry-back 1966 net operating loss.” The 1967 loss arose out оf the Bonneville notes. The first refund claim was disallowed on May 7, 1968, and the second was disallowed on December 31, 1969. The instant suit was filed on December 15, 1971.
So far as applicable, 26 U.S.C. § 6532(a)(1) provides:
“No suit or proceeding under section 7422(a) for the recovery of any internal revеnue tax * * * shall be begun * * * after the expiration of 2 years from the date of mailing by certified mail or registered mail by the Secretary or his delegate to the taxpayer of a notice of the dis-allowance of the part of the claim to which the suit or proceeding relates.” The instant suit is brought under §
7422(a) for recovery of a tax refund. Notice of disallowance of the first claim based on the stock loss was properly mailed on May 7, 1968, more than two yеars before the filing of suit on December 15, 1971. The government contends that the statute bars consideration of the stock loss claim.
Taxpayer’s reliance on § 6511 is misplaced. That section relates to the filing of refund claims. The gоvernment concedes that each claim was filed within time. The question is whether the two-year limitation bars suit on the stock loss claim. It does unless the second claim extends the period within which suit may be brought.
The argument that the second rеfund claim amends the first and hence protects it from the bar of the statute is not persuasive. The second claim asserts an additional ground for relief based on the note loss. It states no facts or legal theories amplifying the first claim. In Charlson Realty Company v. United States,
The fact that IRS acted on the second claim is of no moment. It had to so far as the claim was based on the note loss. The record shows no reconsideration of the first claim but, even if there was, reconsideration does not extend the period. 26 U.S.C. § 6532(a)(4). The decision of the district court would permit the indefinite extension of the statute by the filing of repetitive claims and defeat the purpose of the statute. The claim based on the 1966 stock loss is barred by § 6532(a)(1) and recovery on that claim cannot be had in the instant suit. See Real Estate-Lаnd Title & Trust Co. v. United States,
The suit is timely in so far as the note loss is concerned. Section 166 of the Code allows a deduction for any business debt which becomes worthless during the taxable year. Such debts are subject to the net operating loss carry-back provisions of § 172. Losses from nonbusiness debts are considered as capital losses, § 166(d)(1), and subject to §§ 1211 and 1212. A nonbusiness debt is a debt other than one created “in connection with” taxpayer’s trade or business. § 166(d)(2). The regulations define a nonbusiness debt as a debt other than one created “in the course of” taxpayer’s trade or business, or a debt, the loss from which is not proximately related to the conduct of taxpayer’s trade or business. 26 C.F.R. § 1.166-5(b).
The loans were made to Bonneville in 1964-1966 and the loss occurred in 1967. In 1964, 1965, and 1966 taxpayer received compensation from Bonneville in the amounts of $1,750, $6,000, and $6,000 respectively, and in the same years from the Bank of Salt Lake in the amounts of $3,355, $9,223, and $12,320 respectivеly. He devoted (4 of his time to Bonneville and the remainder to the Bank of Salt Lake, a Bonneville subsidiary. The total of the loans to Bonneville was $199,440.
In United States v. Generes,
The business of the corporation to which a loan is made must be distinguished from the business of the lender. In Whipple v. Commissionеr of Internal Revenue,
Trent v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 2 Cir.,
In Hogue v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 10 Cir.,
In the instant case the court found that the dominant purpose of taxpayer “was to obtain and secure for himself an executive position with the Corporation and its subsidiaries so as to enable him to obtain compensation for his personal services.” Taxpayer did not testify as to his intent in making the loans. He said that the dominant purpose in acquiring Bonneville stock was “to create a position, a job, and give me a chance to build sort of empire.” We are concerned with the loans, not with the stock acquisition. The only bit of the record which pеrtains to the loans is taxpayer’s answer to a written interrogatory in which he said that his trade or business was that of an employee and that the loans to Bonneville were made to obtain and secure “a position of employment with the borrower and/or its affil-liated (sic) corporations.”
We have no question of credibility. The question is whether the self-serving answer to a written interrogatory suffices to establish the dominant purpose which under Generes entitles the taxpayer to prevail. Generes says that objective facts rather than subjective intent control.
In his 1964 tax return, taxpayer gave his occupation as “banker,” and in 1967 as “executive.” Nothing shows that he wаs in the business of making loans. He spent only 14 of his time with Bonneville. The relationship between his stated occupations and the business of Bonneville is, at the most, speculative.
The disparity between salary and loans is some evidencе that the loans were made to protect taxpayer’s investment, and only incidently to protect his salary. See Gross v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 9 Cir.,
At the conclusion of the hearing the trial court said that judgment would be for the taxpayer and against the United States, and that counsel should “prepare the papers.” Two days later the court signed findings of fact and conclusions of law which show on their face that they were prepared by the attorney for the taxpayer. This practice of the same trial judge was condemned over ten years ago by the Supreme Court in United States v. El Paso Natural Gas Co.,
Reversed and remanded with directions to enter judgment for the United States.
