1998 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 449 | Tax Ct. | 1998
Decision will be entered under Rule 155.
MEMORANDUM FINDINGS OF FACT AND OPINION
GALE, JUDGE: Respondent determined deficiencies and accuracy-related penalties in petitioner's Federal income taxes as follows:
Accuracy-Related Penalty | ||
Year | Deficiency | 1 Sec. 6662(a) |
1990 | $ 9,743 | $ 1,949 |
1991 | 7,289 | 808 |
1992 | 26,951 | 5,390 |
The issues for decision are: (1) Whether petitioner's S corporation is entitled to deduct lease payments for the use of petitioner's boats; (2) if the answer to the foregoing is in the negative, whether the petitioner may exclude a portion of those lease payments from income; and (3) whether petitioner is subject to the accuracy-related penalties for negligence.
FINDINGS OF FACT 2
Petitioner resided in San Francisco, California, at the time the petition herein was filed. 1998 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 449" label="1998 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 449" no-link"="" number="2" pagescheme="<span class=">1998 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 449">*450 For the years in issue, petitioner was the sole shareholder of an S corporation named Patrick E. Catalano, a Professional Law Corporation.
Petitioner's corporation maintained law offices both in San Francisco and in San Diego, California. Petitioner's clients were primarily from San Francisco, the adjacent Marin County area, or the San Diego area.
Petitioner, as an individual, owned three motorboats which he leased to his corporation for various periods during the years at issue pursuant to written lease agreements executed by petitioner in his individual capacity as lessor and on behalf of his corporation as lessee. From February 25, 1985, through June 30, 1991, petitioner leased a 40-foot Mainship cabin cruiser to the corporation. The Mainship had a galley and bedroom and was equipped with a large television, a stereo, and a radio. Petitioner berthed the Mainship in Sausalito, California (located north of San Francisco in Marin County). From June 25, 1991 through 1992 petitioner leased to his corporation two Donzi powerboats, which petitioner described as "pleasure boats". Petitioner berthed one of the Donzi powerboats in Sausalito and the other in San Diego.
The boats were used mostly 1998 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 449" label="1998 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 449" no-link"="" number="3" pagescheme="<span class=">1998 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 449">*451 on weekends. Petitioner invited clients of his legal practice and potential clients aboard his boats. Business discussions took place on board. Occasionally, the clients were accompanied by their spouses. Petitioner watched television on the Mainship with his guests, and he used the stereo whenever he was on board. He kept three sets of binoculars on board which his guests could use. Occasionally, he served food and beverages to his guests while they were on board. After meeting on the boat, petitioner would take his clients or other business contacts for a ride out on San Francisco Bay. He taught one client, a Mr. Labruzzo, how to operate one of the boats.
Petitioner reported his corporation's lease payments for the boats as rental income on Schedule E of his individual Federal income tax returns, against which he deducted expenses relating to the boats, including repairs, maintenance, insurance, interest, taxes, docking fees, and depreciation. Petitioner's corporation deducted the boat lease payments on its Federal corporate income tax returns. For its fiscal years, which ended May 31, the corporation reported boat lease expenses in 1990 of $ 57,995, in 1991 of $ 15,816, and in 1992 1998 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 449" label="1998 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 449" no-link"="" number="4" pagescheme="<span class=">1998 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 449">*452 of $ 110,714 and deducted 80 percent of these amounts, pursuant to
Respondent accepted petitioner's treatment of the boat lease payments and related expenses on Schedule E of his individual returns, but disallowed the corporation's deductions of the lease payments for the years in issue. The disallowances increased the corporation's income, or decreased its losses, by the amounts disallowed. Because an S corporation's income and losses are passed through to its shareholders, the effect of the disallowances was to increase the income, or decrease the loss, that petitioner was required to report on his individual Federal income tax returns for the years in issue. 3
OPINION
In general,
The test of whether an activity is an activity which "is of a type generally considered to constitute entertainment, amusement, or recreation" for purposes of the statute is an objective one.
An objective test shall be used to determine whether an activity is of a type generally considered to constitute entertainment. Thus, if an activity is generally considered to be entertainment, it will constitute entertainment for 1998 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 449" label="1998 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 449" no-link"="" number="6" pagescheme="<span class=">1998 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 449">*454 purposes of * * *
There can be no dispute that, objectively, petitioner's boats, a cabin cruiser and two other "pleasure boats", as he termed them, constitute entertainment facilities. See
We conclude that, because the boats meet the objective criteria for entertainment facilities under
Petitioner has testified that the boats were used for substantial business purposes in that he conducted meetings with clients or potential clients. He maintains that the boats were, in effect, second offices, the location of which was more convenient for some clients. Such testimony is unavailing. The 1978 amendment of
Petitioner alternatively contends that, if the corporation is not allowed to deduct the boat lease payments, we should accord him some relief because, as a result of the disallowance, he is being taxed twice on the same income. He points out that the disallowance of his corporation's boat lease deductions increases the passthrough income he is required to report on his individual returns by the amount of the deductions. Because the corporation is an S corporation, he, and not the corporation, is liable for payment of income taxes on the resulting additional income. See
We note at the outset that petitioner is selective in his objection to double taxation. On the returns as filed for the years at issue, petitioner took positions with respect to the boat lease transactions that subjected him to the same kind of double taxation that is the basis for his complaint herein. On such returns, petitioner's corporation deducted only 80 percent of the lease payments it made to him (as required by
We believe petitioner's argument fails to take into account two basic principles. First, the separate existence of corporations is firmly established under the tax law.
to treat income earned by a corporation through its trade or business as though it were earned directly by its shareholders, even when, as here, the shareholders' services helped to produce that income. An S corporation's income passes through to its shareholders not because they helped to create that income, but because they are shareholders.
Here petitioner had accession 1998 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 449" label="1998 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 449" no-link"="" number="14" pagescheme="<span class=">1998 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 449">*462 to taxable income from two separate sources -- one, as passthrough income from his S corporation, and the other as rental income from his individual activity of leasing boats to his corporation. The impact on petitioner, as a shareholder, of the disallowance of his S corporation's deductions for the boat lease payments under
The taxable incomes of a shareholder and his S corporation are computed separately, even though the corporation's taxable income is passed through to, and the tax thereon imposed upon, 1998 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 449" label="1998 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 449" no-link"="" number="15" pagescheme="<span class=">1998 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 449">*463 the shareholder. See
Petitioner contends that the "tax benefit rule" provides the relief he seeks -- that is, the exclusion of the boat lease income from his individual income. He claims that the disallowance of the corporation's boat lease deductions entitles him to exclude the boat lease income from the income reported on his individual return.
Petitioner misreads the scope of the tax benefit rule. The tax benefit rule permits a taxpayer to exclude from taxable income the amount received as a recovery of an amount deducted in an earlier year, but only to the extent that the deducted amount did not give rise to a tax benefit in that earlier year.
Changes on audit reflect the proper tax treatment of items under the facts as they were known at the end of the taxable year. The tax benefit rule is addressed to a different problem -- that of events that occur AFTER the close of the taxable year.
In his reply brief, petitioner further invokes the doctrine of equitable recoupment as a basis for the relief he seeks. The doctrine of equitable recoupment applies if "'a single transaction constitutes the taxable event claimed upon and the one considered in recoupment.' The single transaction must also be subject to two taxes based on inconsistent legal theories."
Assuming, without deciding, that we have jurisdiction to apply the doctrine and 1998 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 449" label="1998 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 449" no-link"="" number="18" pagescheme="<span class=">1998 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 449">*466 that it was properly raised by petitioner, petitioner's situation fails to qualify for equitable recoupment. Although a "single transaction" -- the lease of boats -- is involved, petitioner participates in that transaction in two capacities: as lessor/payee and as sole shareholder of the lessee/payor, due to the separate recognition of the corporate entity. The taxes he pays in each capacity are not based on "inconsistent theories". The disallowance to the payor of a deduction is not inconsistent with the payee's receipt of income in respect of the same payment.
In the final analysis, there is no reason to reduce petitioner's income by the amount he reported from leasing his boats to his corporation. The fact that petitioner misconstrued the tax effects of doing business both individually and through a corporation does not provide a basis to ignore the tax consequences of doing so. Petitioner chose to employ the corporate form, and "having elected to do some business as a corporation, he must accept the tax disadvantages."
while a taxpayer is free to organize his affairs as he chooses, nevertheless, once having done so, he must accept the tax consequences of his choice, whether contemplated or not and may not enjoy the benefit of some other route he might have chosen to follow but did not. * * *
We hold that petitioner is liable for the deficiencies determined by respondent 7 and cannot exclude the boat lease income from his individual returns.
We must additionally decide whether petitioner is liable for accuracy-related penalties under
Petitioner bears the burden of proving that respondent's determination as to the accuracy-related penalties is in error.
In this case, petitioner, an attorney, repeatedly caused his wholly owned S corporation to deduct expenses relating to entertainment facilities without regard to the explicit prohibition of such deductions in the Internal Revenue Code. Petitioner's attempt to treat the rent for two Donzi powerboats and a cabin cruiser as business expenses of his law practice strikes us as the kind of abuse that Congress sought to curb in enacting the absolute prohibition on entertainment facilities 1998 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 449" label="1998 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 449" no-link"="" number="21" pagescheme="<span class=">1998 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 449">*469 deductions contained in
Petitioner urges that he conferred with his accountant concerning the boat leasing activities. We are not persuaded that this action suffices to avoid the negligence penalties. Reliance upon disinterested expert advice may satisfy the prudent person standard, but only when the taxpayer has shown that he provided correct and complete information to an adviser who has expertise regarding the tax ramifications of the transactions involved. See
In view of the foregoing,
Decision will be entered under Rule 155.
Footnotes
1. Unless otherwise indicated, all section references are to the Internal Revenue Code in effect for the years in issue, and all Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure.↩
2. Some of the facts have been stipulated and are so found. The stipulation of facts and attached exhibits are incorporated herein by this reference.↩
3. By operation of a statutory formula, the increase in the amount of petitioner's income also caused a decrease in the amount of allowable itemized deductions for 1991 and 1992.↩
4. Petitioner argued at trial and on brief that his substantiation of the business use of the boats met the requirements of
sec. 274(d) . We disagree.Sec. 274(d) requires a taxpayer to demonstrate the amount, the time and place, and the business purposes which give rise to his claimed business entertainment expenses "by adequate records or by sufficient evidence corroborating * * * his own statement". At trial petitioner attempted to present summaries gleaned from office records and prepared by someone on his staff. These summaries failed to meet the requirements for admissibility underFed. R. Evid. 1006 . Moreover, they failed to include information with respect to the business purpose of the boat utilizations. See S. Rept. 1881, 87th Cong., 2d Sess. (1962),1962-3 C.B. 707, 741 :The requirement that the taxpayer's statements be corroborated will insure that no deduction is allowed solely on the basis of his own unsupported, self-serving testimony. * * *
Generally, the substantiation requirements of the bill contemplate more detailed recordkeeping than is common today in business expense diaries. * * *
Thus, the boat lease deductions run afoul of both the substantiation requirements of
sec. 274(d) and the prohibition ofsec. 274(a)(1)(B)↩ .5. We note that the additional income of petitioner's S corporation resulting from the disallowance of the boat lease deductions does not equal the boat lease net income reported by petitioner in his individual capacity, because petitioner took deductions for repairs, maintenance, insurance, interest, taxes, docking fees, and depreciation against the boat lease income reported on his individual returns.↩
6. At trial petitioner submitted amended returns for the years at issue, apparently reflecting the removal of net boat lease income (after deductions previously taken for interest, maintenance, depreciation, etc.) from his individual returns. We treated these submissions as petitioner's motion for leave to amend petition, which we granted to permit consideration of petitioner's claim that his income should be reduced by the amount reported as net boat lease income.
7. It appears, however, that respondent may have disallowed a greater amount than was actually deducted as boat rental expense on the corporation's return for its taxable year ended May 31, 1992. We expect the parties to address this matter in their Rule 155 computations.↩