Lead Opinion
OPINION
Respondent determined deficiencies in petitioners’ Federal income tax as follows:
Docket No. Tax year ended-Deficiency
32041-84 Dec. 31, 1979 $4,767.77
Dec. 31, 1980 1,577.06
36453-84 Dec. 31, 1979 3,031.29
Dec. 31, 1980 16,472.46
Dec. 31, 1981 13,919.88
36454-84 June 30, 1980 901.00
June 30, 1981 1,041.00
June 30, 1982 1,252.00
36455-84 Dec. 31, 1979 1,320.98
Dec. 31, 1980 1,495.88
Dec. 31, 1981 2,298.86
These cases were consolidated for trial, briefing, and opinion pursuant to Rule 141(a).
All the facts have been stipulated. The stipulations of fact and attached exhibits are incorporated herein by this reference.
At the time the petitions in these cases were filed, Charles D. Fox III, Anthony D. Cuzzocrea, and Marjorie F. Cuzzocrea resided in Roanoke, Virginia.
VAFLA Corp. (hereinafter referred to as the corporation), was an electing small business corporation under subchapter S during the years in issue and was incorporated in February 1979, to acquire and operate the Six-Gun Territory Amusement Park near Tampa, Florida. The initial issue of the corporation’s capital stock took place in March 1979, and consisted of 100,000 shares. Daniel Leavitt and Anthony D. Cuzzocrea each paid $10,000 cash for their shares on or before September 30, 1979.
The first taxable year of the corporation consisted of 7 months and ended on September 30, 1979. As of September 30, 1979, the corporation had suffered a net operating loss of $265,566.47 and had a retained earnings deficit of $345,370.20. During its second taxable year ending September 30, 1980, the corporation suffered a net operating loss of $482,181.22 and had a retained earnings deficit of $1,093,383.56. During its third taxable year ending September 30, 1981, the corporation suffered a net operating loss of $475,175.70 and had a retained earnings deficit of $1,908,680.22.
From August 2, 1979, through August 27, 1979, Anthony D. Cuzzocrea and Daniel Leavitt, as well as other shareholders,
The corporation borrowed $300,000 from the Bank of Virginia for which it issued a promissory note to the bank dated September 12, 1979. The purpose of the loan was to fund VAFLA’s existing and anticipated operating deficits.
At the time the loan was made, the corporation’s HabiHties exceeded its assets, and the corporation had so Httle available cash that it could not meet its cash-flow requirements. VirtuaUy all of the corporation’s assets were encumbered as coUateral for a purchase money indebtedness of approximately $1 milHon to National Service Industries, Inc. In processing the loan, the Bank of Virginia was provided a statement of income for the corporation for its first 3 months of operation during which the corporation experienced a loss of $142,410.16, resulting in a negative net worth of $82,410.16 as of May 31, 1979.
Seven of the corporation’s shareholders agreed to guarantee the $300,000 loan personaUy. According to the financial statements submitted to the bank, these shareholders had an aggregate net worth of $3,407,286 and immediate Hquidity (cash and securities) of $382,542. The loan was approved only because of the financial strength of the guarantors.
The Bank of Virginia loan was consistently shown on the corporation’s financial statements and tax returns for its fiscal years ending 1979, 1980, and 1981, as a loan from shareholders. However, during those years, the corporation made the following principal payments to the Bank of Virginia:
Dec. 26, 1979 .$10,000
July 15, 1980 . 10,000
Jan. 6, 1981. 10,000
All interest payments were also made by the corporation. None of the payments by the corporation on the principal or the interest of the loan were reported by the corporation or petitioners as constructive dividends.
Respondent takes the position that shareholders Daniel Leavitt and Anthony D. Cuzzocrea may not deduct losses attributable to the corporation in excess of their initial basis in their shares of the corporation. Petitioners maintain that their guarantees of the $300,000 loan to the corporation from the Bank of Virginia increased their basis in their stock sufficiently to allow deductions for their proportionate shares of losses attributable to the corporation during the years in issue.
Former section 1374,
The corporation sustained losses for the taxable years 1979, 1980, and 1981. Before the guarantee transaction, petitioners Daniel Leavitt and Anthony D. Cuzzocrea each had an adjusted basis in their stock in the corporation of $10,000. We must determine whether petitioners’ guarantee of the $300,000 loan from the Bank of Virginia to the corporation increased the basis in petitioners’ stock in the corporation.
It is well settled that:
the fact that shareholders may be primarily liable on indebtedness of a corporation to a third party does not mean that this indebtedness is “indebtedness of the corporation to the shareholder” within the meaning of section 1374(c)(2)(B). No form of indirect borrowing, be it guaranty, surety, accommodation, comaking or otherwise, gives rise to indebtedness from the corporation to the shareholders until and unless the shareholders pay part or all of the obligation. * * * [Raynor v. Commissioner,50 T.C. 762 , 770-771 (1968).]
See also Putnam v. Commissioner,
Nevertheless, petitioners ask us to view the guarantee transactions as constructive loans from the banks to petitioners and, in turn, contributions of those same funds by petitioners to the capital of the corporation. In other words, petitioners contend that their guarantees of the $300,000 loan from the Bank of Virginia to the corporation should increase their basis in the stock of the corporation. We disagree.
Under former section 1374(c)(2) corporate debts to third parties guaranteed by the shareholder, whether collateral-ized or not, do not lead to an increase in the shareholder’s basis in his subchapter S corporation stock. To increase the basis in the stock of a subchapter S corporation, there must be an economic outlay or a realization of income on the part of the shareholder. Brown v. Commissioner,
The term “basis,” for purposes of section 1374(c), is defined in section 1012.
In Borg v. Commissioner, supra, an electing small business corporation owed one of its shareholders unpaid salary for his performance of services as evidenced by notes from the corporation to the shareholder. The shareholder did not report any part of the unpaid salary as income in his returns. The shareholder in Borg argued that the notes for
cost for the purposes of the Code ordinarily means cost to the taxpayer. Detroit Edison Co. v. Commissioner,319 U.S. 98 (1943). Where a taxpayer has not previously reported, recognized, or even realized income, it cannot be said that he has a basis for a note evidencing his right to receive such income at some time in the future. That petitioner Joe E. Borg performed valuable services for Borg Steel is undeniable; however, the performance of services, involving neither the realization of taxable income nor a capital outlay, is not the kind of cost that would be shown in a cash receipts and disbursements system of income accounting. See, e.g., Pounds v. United States,372 F.2d 342 , 351-352 (C.A. 5, 1967); Alsop v. Commissioner,290 F.2d 726 (C.A. 2, 1961), affirming on other grounds34 T.C. 606 (1960); Ernest W. Brown, Inc.,28 T.C. 682 (1957), affirmed per curiam258 F.2d 829 (C.A. 2, 1958). Since the services performed by petitioner Joe E. Borg had no cost within the meaning of section 1012, his notes for unpaid salary had a basis of zero and, therefore, added nothing to the adjusted basis for indebtedness for the purpose of computing the section 1374(c)(2) limitation on net operating loss deductions. [Borg v. Commissioner,50 T.C. at 263 ; emphasis in original.]
In this case, petitioners’ guarantees did not require any capital outlay on their part during the years in issue. Without capital outlay or a realization of income, as required by Borg, petitioners cannot increase their adjusted basis in their stock in the corporation. Nor can it of course be said that the guarantees in question were corporate debt obligations to petitioners which acquired a basis resulting from any capital outlays by petitioners. Petitioners ask, however, that we ignore the form of the transaction, i.e., a loan from the Bank of Virginia to the corporation that was guaranteed by its shareholders, and find that the bank actually loaned the money to the shareholder-guarantors who then advanced the proceeds of the loan as a contribution to the capital of the corporation. We decline to adopt petitioners’ view of the transaction.
The Bank of Virginia loaned the money to the corporation and not to petitioners. The proceeds of the loan were to be used in the operation of the corporation’s business. Petitioners submitted no evidence that they were free to dispose of
Nevertheless, petitioners ask that we apply traditional debt-equity principles
Petitioners’ reliance on Blum v. Commissioner,
Petitioners’ reliance on In re Breit,
The Selfe opinion was based primarily on Plantation Patterns, Inc. v. Commissioner,
However, the corporation in Plantation Patterns was a subchapter C corporation. We decline to apply the debt-equity analysis used in Plantation Patterns to the guarantee of a loan to a subchapter S corporation. Congress has promulgated a set of rules designed to limit the amount of deductions allowable to a shareholder of a subchapter S corporation to the amount he has actually invested in the corporation and the amounts of income from the corporation included in the shareholder’s gross income. See former secs. 1374(c) and 1376.
The amount of the net operating loss apportioned to any shareholder pursuant to the above rule is limited under section 1374(c)(2) to the adjusted basis of the shareholder’s investment in the corporation; that is, to the adjusted basis of the stock in the corporation owned by the shareholder and the adjusted basis of any indebtedness of the corporation to the shareholder. * * * [S. Rept. 1983, 85th Cong., 2d Sess. (1958), 1958-3 C.B. 1141 . Emphasis added.]
As we construed this language in Perry v. Commissioner,
In Selfe, the court also relied on In re Lane,
Petitioners’ reliance on section 1.385-9, Proposed Income Tax Regs., is also misplaced. The proposed regulation was withdrawn in 1983. T.D. 7920, 1983-
To reflect the foregoing,
Decisions will be entered under Rule 155.
Reviewed by the Court.
Notes
Unless otherwise indicated, all Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure. All section references are to the Internal Revenue Code of 1954 as in effect during the years in issue.
The parties stipulated that this Court’s resolution of the issues presented in Estate of Anthony Gacek, Deceased, Charles D. Fox, III, Executor, et al. v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, docket Nos. 17890-81, 17891-81, 17892-81, 17893-81, 10059-82, 10060-82, 10061-82, 10062-82, and 458-84, will control several of the issues in these consolidated cases. Since the time of the parties’ agreement, those issues have been decided. See Estate of Gacek v. Commissioner,
At the time the petitions in docket Nos. 36454-84 and 36455-84 were filed, Verla J. Wirth resided in Salem, Virginia, and Valley Pathology Associates, Inc., and Dominion Trust Co. had their principal offices in Roanoke, Virginia. However, no issues remain for consideration in docket Nos. 36454-84 and 36455-84. See note 3 supra,
Evelyn M. Leavitt, on behalf of herself and her deceased husband, filed a joint Federal income tax return for 1980. However, no issues relating to this return are before the Court. See note 3 supra.
Former sec. 1374 as in effect during the years in issue provided:
SEC. 1374. CORPORATION NET OPERATING LOSS ALLOWED TO SHAREHOLDERS.
(a) General Rule. — A net operating loss of an electing small business corporation for any taxable year shall be allowed as a deduction from gross income of the shareholders of such corporation in the manner and to the extent set forth in this section.
(b) Allowance of Deduction. — Each person who is a shareholder of an electing small business corporation at any time during a taxable year of the corporation in which it has a net operating loss shall be allowed as a deduction from gross income, for his taxable year in which or with which the taxable year of the corporation ends (or for the final taxable year of a shareholder who dies before the end of the corporation’s taxable year), an amount equal to his portion of the corporation’s net operating loss (as determined under subsection (c)). The deduction allowed by this subsection shall, for purposes of this chapter, be considered as a deduction attributable to a trade or business carried on by the shareholder.
(c) Determination of Shareholder's Portion.—
(1) In general. — For purposes of this section, a shareholder’s portion of the net operating loss of an electing small business corporation is his pro rata share of the corporation’s net operating loss (computed as provided in section 172(c), except that the deductions provided in part VIII (except section 248) of subchapter B shall not be allowed) for his taxable year in which or with which the taxable year of the corporation ends. For purposes of this paragraph, a shareholder’s pro rata share of the corporation’s net operating loss is the sum of the portions of the corporation’s daily net operating loss attributable on a pro rata basis to the shares held by him on each day of the taxable year. For purposes of the preceding sentence, the corporation’s daily net operating loss is the corporation’s net operating loss divided by the number of days in the taxable year.
(2) Limitation. — A shareholder’s portion of the net operating loss of an electing small business corporation for any taxable year shall not exceed the sum of—
(A) the adjusted basis (determined without regard to any adjustment under section 1376 for the taxable year) of the shareholder’s stock in the electing small business corporation, determined as of the close of the taxable year of the corporation (or, in respect of stock sold or otherwise disposed of during such taxable year, as of the day before the day of such sale or other disposition), and
(B) the adjusted basis (determined without regard to any adjustment under section 1376 for the taxable year) of any indebtedness of the corporation to the shareholder, determined as of the close of the taxable year of the corporation (or, if the shareholder is not a shareholder as of the close of such taxable year, as of the close of the last day in such taxable year on which the shareholder was a shareholder in the corporation).
In 1982, Congress revised the rules pertaining to subch. S corporations in the Subchapter S Revision Act of 1982, Pub. L. 97-354, 96 Stat. 1669. The revisions in the 1982 Act do not apply in this case, however, because they apply only to taxable years beginning after Dec. 31, 1982. Sec. 6(a), Subchapter S Revision Act of 1982, Pub. L..97-354, 96 Stat. 1669, 1697 (1982). The taxable years in this case are 1979, 1980, and 1981.
We note, however, that the limitations provided in former sec. 1374(c)(2) were reenacted by sec. 2 of the Subchapter S Revision Act of 1982 in sec. 1366(d)(1). Sec. 1366(d)(1) is currently in effect.
Sec. 1012 provides:
The basis of property shall be the cost of such property, except as otherwise provided in this subchapter and subchapters C (relating to corporate distributions and adjustments), K (relating to partners and partnerships), and P (relating to capital gains and losses). The cost of real property shall not include any amount in respect of real property taxes which are treated under section 164(d) as imposed on the taxpayer.
The debt-equity analysis usually is applied to guaránteed debts in cases involving subch. C corporations in which respondent argues that advances made in the form of a guaranteed debt are in substance capital contributions. See, e.g., John Kelly Co. v. Commissioner,
“(1) The names given to the certificates evidencing the indebtedness; (2) the presence or absence of a maturity date; (3) the source of the payments; (4) the right to enforce the payment of principal and interest; (5) participation in management; (6) a status equal to or inferior to that of regular corporate creditors; (7) the intent of the parties; (8) ‘thin’ or adequate capitalization; (9) identity of interest between creditor and stockholder; (10) payment of interest only out of ‘dividend’ money; (11) the ability of the corporation to obtain loans from outside lending institutions. [Plantation Patterns, Inc. v. Commissioner,
O.H. Kruse Grain & Milling v. Commissioner,
In addition, courts take into consideration factors such as the extent to which the advance was used to acquire capital assets and the failure of the debtor to repay on the due date or to seek a postponement. In re Lane,
See also sec. 385, which provides as follows:
SEC. 385. TREATMENT OF CERTAIN INTERESTS IN CORPORATIONS AS STOCK OR INDEBTEDNESS.
(a) Authority To Prescribe Regulations. — The Secretary is authorized to prescribe such regulations as may be necessary or appropriate to determine whether an interest in a corporation is to be treated for purposes of this title as stock or indebtedness.
(b) Factors. — The regulations prescribed under this section shall set forth factors which are to be taken into account in determining with respect to a particular factual situation whether a debtor-creditor relationship exists or a corporation-shareholder relationship exists. The factors so set forth in the regulations may include among other factors:
(1) whether there is a written unconditional promise to pay on demand or on a specified date a sum certain in money in return for an adequate consideration in money or money’s worth, and to pay a fixed rate of interest,
(2) whether there is subordination to or preference over any indebtedness of the corporation,
(3) the ratio of debt to equity of the corporation,
(4) whether there is convertibility into the stock of the corporation, and
(5) the relationship between holdings of stock in the corporation and holdings of the interest in question.
Congress enacted sec. 385 in the Tax Reform Act of 1969, Pub. L. 91-172, 83 Stat. 487, 613. Proposed regulations under this section had been issued but were withdrawn in 1983. T.D. 7920, 1983-
In making the debt-equity determination, the Court must decide each case on its own facts, and no one standard is controlling. Plantation Patterns, Inc. v. Commissioner, supra; Santa Anita Consolidated, Inc. v. Commissioner, supra
Former sec. 1376, as in effect during the years in issue, provided:
SEC. 1376. ADJUSTMENTS TO BASIS OF STOCK OF, AND INDEBTEDNESS OWING, SHAREHOLDERS.
(a) Increase in Basis of Stock for Amounts Treated as Dividends. — The basis of a shareholder’s stock in an electing small business corporation shall be increased by the amount required to be included in the gross income of such shareholder under section 1373(b), but only to the extent to which such amount is included in his gross income in his return, increased or decreased by any adjustment of such amount in any redetermination of the shareholder’s tax liability.
(b) Reduction in Basis of Stock and Indebtedness for Shareholder’s Portion of Corporation Net Operating Loss —
(1) Reduction in Basis of Stock. — The basis of a shareholder’s stock in an electing small business corporation shall be reduced (but not below zero) by an amount equal to the amount of his portion of the corporation’s net operating loss for any taxable year attributable to such stock (as determined under section 1374(c)).
(2) Reduction in basis of indebtedness. — The basis of any indebtedness of an electing small business corporation to a shareholder of such corporation shall be reduced (but not below zero) by an amount equal to the amount of the shareholder’s portion of the corporation’s net operating loss for any taxable year (as determined under section 1374(c)), but only to the extent that such amount exceeds the adjusted basis of the stock of such corporation held by the shareholder.
In 1982, Congress revised the rules pertaining to subch. S corporations in the Subchapter S Revision Act of 1982, Pub. L. 97-354, 96 Stat. 1669. The provisions of the revising act apply to the taxable years beginning after Dec. 31, 1982, and therefore do not apply in this case. See note 6 supra.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring: I agree with the result of the majority opinion and concur that petitioners should be stuck with the form of the transaction they chose. The majority opinion, however, unnecessarily rejects the reasoning of Selfe v. United States,
Unlike Selfe, this case involves a guarantee by multiple shareholders. In the case of the sole shareholder’s guarantee of a loan to his financially strapped corporation, no doubt
I beheve there are circumstances, limited to cases involving the sole shareholder, where the Selfe rationale can be correctly apphed. We do not need to reject Selfe in this case, and I view the majority’s attempt to do so as dicta;
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting: The majority opinion holds that petitioners’ guarantees do not increase the amount of their section 1374(c)(2) limitations. The majority opinion errs by not recognizing the applicability of traditional debt-equity principles in determining the Federal tax effect of petitioners’ guarantees and by not recognizing the existence and presence of the type of economic outlay proven by petitioners. Before addressing these errors, I will first discuss the distinctions between section 1374(c)(2)(A) and section 1374(c)(2)(B), distinctions which the majority does not fully address.
The portion of the net operating loss of an electing small business corporation which may be deducted by a shareholder is limited to the sum of the amount determined in
Though petitioners clearly and specifically argue that section 1374(c)(2)(B) is not applicable here, the majority opinion begins its legal analysis by quoting from Raynor v. Commissioner,
No form of indirect borrowing, be it guaranty, surety, accommodation, comaking or otherwise, gives rise to indebtedness from the corporation to the shareholders until and unless the shareholders pay part or all of the obligation. [50 T.C. at 770 -771. Emphasis added.]
Majority opinion at p. 211. I fully agree with this settled statement of the law, but view it as irrelevant to the issue presented. Petitioners are not arguing that their guarantees increased the amount of “any indebtedness of the corporation to the shareholder,” as used in section 1374(c)(2)(B) and interpreted in Raynor v. Commissioner, supra. Rather, petitioners contend that since the Bank of Virginia looked primarily to petitioners and the other shareholder/guarantors, not VAFLA, for repayment of the $300,000, in substance petitioners and the other shareholder/guarantors borrowed the $300,000 from the Bank of Virginia and made a capital contribution of such amount to VAFLA. Accordingly, petitioners are arguing that they are entitled to an increase in their “adjusted basis * * * of the shareholder’s stock in the electing small business corporation” as used in section 1374(c)(2)(A).
That the majority did not recognize the distinctions between section 1374(c)(2)(A) and section 1374(c)(2)(B) is illustrated by the majority’s quote from Borg v. Commissioner,
Since the services performed by petitioner Joe E. Borg had no cost within the meaning of section 1012, his notes for unpaid salary had a basis of zero and, therefore, added nothing to the adjusted basis for indebtedness for the purpose of computing the section 1374(c)(2) limitation on net operating loss deductions, [50 T.C. at 263 . Emphasis added.]
Without capital outlay or a realization of income, as required by Borg, petitioners cannot increase their adjusted basis in their stock in the corporation. [Majority opinion at p. 213. Emphasis added.]
The majority, by not recognizing the distinctions between section 1374(c)(2)(A) and section 1374(c)(2)(B), was prevented from weeding out irrelevant cases and properly focusing on the issue presented. Further, petitioners herein have recognized, as has this Court, that shareholder-guaranteed corporate debt cannot be characterized as an indebtedness of the corporation to the shareholder.
I. Debt-equity principles are applicable in determining whether a shareholder-guaranteed corporate debt should be characterized as a capital contribution.
That a shareholder-guaranteed corporate debt can be characterized for Federal tax purposes as a capital contribution is hardly a novel legal theory. This legal theory has been considered in at least 20 opinions.
The majority opinion states that in Blum—
[the Tax Court] declined to decide the issue as to the applicability of debt-equity principles because the taxpayer had failed his burden of proving that the bank in substance had loaned the funds to the taxpayer and not to the corporation. Blum v. Commissioner,69 T.C. at 439 , n. 4. [Majority opinion at p. 216.]
The majority opinion misstates the holding in Blum wherein the Court stated:
As we stated in Santa Anita Consolidated, Inc. [v. Commissioner,50 T.C. 536 , 550 (1968)], “Whether such debt [guaranteed debt] is to be treated as an indirect capital contribution must be resolved by an investigation of the facts in light of traditional debt-equity principles.” In the present fully stipulated case, after applying many of those traditional principles, we find that petitioner simply has not carried his burden of proof and has not convinced this Court that the guaranteed loans should properly be characterized as equity investments. [Blum v. Commissioner, supra at 439-440. Bracketed phrase, “guaranteed debt,” in original.]
Contrary to the majority opinion, the Tax Court did not decline to apply traditional debt-equity principles because the taxpayer failed in his burden of proof, but rather applied traditional debt-equity principles to determine that the taxpayer failed in his burden of proof. The distinction is more than merely semantical. As will be seen below, petitioners herein have carried their burden of proof. Accordingly, a proper interpretation of Blum and a proper application of traditional debt-equity principles, as mandated
In Selfe v. United States, supra, the 11th Circuit held that traditional debt-equity principles are applicable in determining whether a shareholder-guaranteed subchapter-S corporate debt should be recharacterized as a capital contribution.
Plantation Patterns held that corporate deductions for interest paid on shareholder-guaranteed corporate debts were improper and the principal payments
the corporation in Plantation Patterns was a subchapter C corporation. We decline to apply the debt-equity analysis used in Plantation Patterns to the guarantee of a loan to a subchapter S corporation. [Majority opinion at p. 216.]
This determination by the majority opinion not to apply subchapter C precedent to subchapter S corporations evinces a lack of understanding as to the purpose of applying traditional debt-equity principles to a given situation. Traditional debt-equity principles are applied to determine the substance of a transaction. After making such
The majority attempts to gain support by quoting the following passage from a Senate Finance Committee report:
The amount of the net operating loss apportioned to any shareholder * * * is limited under section 1374(c)(2) to the adjusted basis of the shareholder’s investment in the corporation; that is, to the adjusted basis of the stock in the corporation owned by the shareholder and the adjusted basis of any indebtedness of the corporation to the shareholder. [S. Rept. 1983, 85th Cong., 2d Sess. 220 (1958), 1958-3 C.B. 922 , 1141. Emphasis added.]
See majority opinion at p. 217. Where the guaranteed loan is treated in substance as a capital contribution, the guaranteeing shareholder’s adjusted basis in the stock of the corporation will be increased,
Whatever sin was committed by the 11th Circuit in relying on subchapter C precedent in a subchapter S case, this Court has committed on innumerable occasions.
regardless of the context in which a debt-equity determination arises, we can see no distinction in principle between the case before us [relating to a subchapter S corporation] and the numerous cases in the area which serve as judicial guideposts [relating to subchapter C corporations]. [Citation and fn. ref. omitted.]
Further, respondent is not here arguing that subchapter C precedent is inapplicable to subchapter S cases. It is unnecessary for the majority opinion to reach this issue, criticize the 11th Circuit for relying on subchapter C precedent in a subchapter S case, while ignoring the innumerable occasions in which this Court has done the same, and directly contradict language in our opinion in Blum, where neither party is asking the Court to do so. The 11th Circuit’s reliance on Plantation Patterns is not an appropriate basis for the majority to decline to follow Selfe.
The majority opinion also attempts to impugn Selfe for its reliance on In re Lane, supra. In that case, the taxpayer claimed a bad debt deduction for payments made pursuant to his guarantee of a loan made to a corporation in which he was a shareholder.
The majority states,
In Lane, the shareholder had actually paid the amounts he had guaranteed and, therefore, the amounts he paid could be considered a capital contribution. [Majority opinion at p. 217. Emphasis added.]
It is true that the taxpayer in In re Lane had made payments pursuant to the guarantee. However, the holding in In re Lane, which was the basis of Selfe’s reliance on In re Lane, was that a shareholder-guaranteed corporate debt can, depending on an analysis of traditional debt-equity principles, be characterized as a capital contribution, and the analysis of whether the shareholder-guaranteed debt is to be so characterized is made as of the time of the guarantee, not at some later date, e.g., when payment is made pursuant to the guarantee. Accordingly, In re Lane was properly relied upon in Selfe.
The reasons advanced in the majority opinion for not following Selfe are not convincing. Selfe is on all fours, and its holding that traditional debt-equity principles are applicable in determining whether a shareholder-guaranteed corporate debt is in substance a capital contribution should be followed.
In Santa Anita Consolidated, Inc. v. Commissioner,
Whether [guaranteed] debt is to be treated as an indirect capital contribution must be resolved by an investigation of the facts in light of traditional debt-equity principles.
In Casco Bank & Trust Co. v. United States,
It is appropriate to consider traditional debt-equity factors in determining whether a shareholder-guaranteed corporate debt is in substance a capital contribution because such factors facilitate a determination of whether the funds advanced to a corporation were placed at the risk of the corporation’s business. In re Lane, supra at 1314. Funds placed at the risk of the corporation’s business represent equity, not debt. Slappey Drive Ind. Park v. United States,
II. Two types of economic outlay exist.
The majority opinion, citing Brown v. Commissioner,
The economic outlay requirement was born of the Supreme Court’s opinion in Putman v. Commissioner,
The relevance of the Putnam opinion to the issue at hand is that, where a shareholder guarantees a loan to his corporation, the loan is not treated as indebtedness of the corporation to the shareholder until the shareholder pays the loan pursuant to the guarantee. Upon payment of the loan, the debt of the corporation to the third-party creditor instantly becomes a debt of the corporation to the shareholder. As such, the debt becomes an “indebtedness of the corporation to the shareholder” within the meaning of section 1374(c)(2)(B), and the amount of the shareholder’s
The applicability of Putnam extends only so far as the debt is initially the debt of the corporation. See In re Lane, supra at 1319; Casco Bank & Trust Co. v. United States,
That is not to say that there can be no economic outlay, where the debt is initially treated as the shareholder/guarantor’s debt. In such a situation, the shareholder/guarantor’s deemed transfer of the loan proceeds to the corporation is the economic outlay. Selfe v. United States, supra. The economic outlay occurs upon the third-party creditor’s disbursement of the loan proceeds, which are deemed transferred from the third-party creditor to the shareholder/ guarantor to the corporation. Selfe v. United States, supra; In re Lane, supra. Thus, there are two types of economic outlay: the economic outlay, a la Putnam, where the debt is initially treated as a corporate debt, and the shareholder/ guarantor pays the debt pursuant to the guarantee; and the economic outlay, a la In re Lane, where the debt is initially treated as the shareholder’s debt, and the loan proceeds are deemed transferred from the third-party creditor to the shareholder to the corporation.
III. Application of traditional debt-equity principles in the present case indicates that petitioners’ guarantee should be considered a capital contribution.
The traditional debt-equity factors include the following: (I) The label given the instrument; (2) the presence or absence of a fixed maturity date; (3) the source of payments thereon; (4) the right to enforce payment of principal and interest; (5) participation in management flowing as a result; (6) the status of the contribution in relation to other creditors; (7) the intent of the parties; (8) “thin” or inadequate capitalization; (9) identity of interest between creditors and stockholders; (10) source of interest payments; (II) the ability of the corporation to obtain loans from outside lending institutions; (12) the extent to which the advance was used to acquire capital assets, and (13) the failure of the debtor to repay on the due date or to seek a postponement. In re Lane, supra; Texas Farm Bureau v. United States,
Although the Bank of Virginia was nominally to look to VAFLA for repayment of the $300,000 loan, it is apparent that the Bank of Virginia looked solely to the shareholder/guarantors for repayment.
VAFLA’s financial condition at the time the loan was made illustrates why the Bank of Virginia based its approval solely on the guarantees of the shareholder/guarantors. VAFLA’s liabilities exceeded the value of its assets by $82,410.16. During its first 3 months of operations, it had lost $142,410.16. Its principal asset, and essentially its only asset, Six-Gun Park, was mortgaged to the previous owner of Six-Gun Park. The Bank of Virginia did not obtain a security interest in any of VAFLA’s assets nor did it obtain a pledge of VAFLA’s accounts receivable. The Bank of Virginia apparently viewed VAFLA’s financial condition and the preexisting mortgage as making such courses of action futile.
VAFLA’s financial statements as of September 30, 1979, less than 1 month after the Bank of Virginia advanced the $300,000, paint an even bleaker picture of VAFLA’s financial condition. During its first taxable year, a short year, VAFLA lost $345,370.20. It then had a negative net worth of $185,370.20. Its debt-to-equity ratio was over 10 to 1. Its current assets of $42,041.10 were greatly overshadowed by its current liabilities of $294,321.65. VAFLA was a thinly capitalized corporation. See Plantation Patterns, Inc. v. Commissioner, supra at 722.
During the years in issue, VAFLA made principal payments on the $300,000 loan and all of the interest payments. The shareholder/guarantors made no payments of principal or interest on the $300,000 loan. I do not consider this factor to be indicative of a true debt transaction. “The transaction must be judged on the conditions that existed when the deal was consummated, and not on conditions as they developed with the passage of time.” Plantation
Not all of VAFLA’s shareholders guaranteed the $300,000 loan. However, shareholders other than petitioners, both guarantors of the $300,000 loan, advanced $800,000 to VAFLA as loans and capital contributions.
The Bank of Virginia’s approval of the $300,000 loan was based solely on the guarantees of the shareholder/guarantors. The financial health of the shareholder/guarantors, vigorous, and VAFLA, feeble, indicates that the Bank of Virginia prudently and appropriately looked solely to the shareholder/guarantors for repayment. “Under the principles of Plantation Patterns, a shareholder guarantee of a loan may be treated for tax purposes as an equity investment in the corporation where the lender looks to the shareholder as the primary obligor. Essential to the Plantation Patterns court’s analysis was that the notes guaranteed by the shareholder were issued by a thinly capitalized corporation and had more equity characteristics than debt.” Selfe v. United States, supra at 774. VAFLA was thinly capitalized. More than half of the $300,000 was used to acquire capital assets or to reduce the outstanding balance of indebtedness used to acquire capital assets. VAFLA could not have borrowed money from a third-party creditor such as the Bank of Virginia without outside support, such as guarantors. Payments on the $300,000 loan were made from funds provided by shareholders. I would hold that the Bank of Virginia in substance lent the $300,000 to the shareholder/guarantors who made a capital contribution thereof to VAFLA.
To determine the amount of the section 1374(c)(2) limitation each petitioner is entitled to, I would look to State law to determine what each petitioner’s legal rights and obligations are as a result of their guaranty of the $300,000 loan. See Burnet v. Harmel,
Each of the shareholder/guarantors bound themselves to jointly and severally guarantee the $300,000 indebtedness of VAFLA to the Bank of Virginia. Although the shareholder/ guarantors may have owned various percentages of VAFLA, their obligations arising from their guarantees were identical.
Although the shareholder/guarantors were each obligated to pay the full amount of VAFLA’s indebtedness to the Bank of Virginia, I would conclude in light of their rights to contribution that the shareholder/guarantors were each effectively obligated to pay only their aliquot portion of the indebtedness.
A collateral issue presented by the manner in which I would decide this case is the proper treatment of principal and interest payments made by VAFLA. Since the $300,000 received by VAFLA would be treated as a capital contribution, the payments of principal and interest made by VAFLA would have to be treated as cash distributions by VAFLA to the shareholder/guarantors, one-seventh each, and as payments of principal and interest by the shareholder/guarantors, one-seventh each, to the Bank of Virginia.
IV. Conclusion.
The majority opinion has reached an incorrect result because (1) it did not recognize the distinctions between section 1374(c)(2)(A) and section 1374(c)(2)(B), (2) it incorrectly stated the Blum opinion, (3) it unsoundly refused to follow Selfe, (4) it erroneously believed subchapter C precedent is not applicable to a subchapter S corporation, (5) it unsoundly refused to apply traditional debt-equity principles to determine the substance of the transaction at issue, (6) it refused to follow, without discussion, numerous opinions of this and other courts, and (7) it refused to recognize the existence and presence of economic outlay, a la In re Lane. This Court has dangled an elusive carrot before taxpayers’ eyes for more than 15 years stating that on the proper showing, a shareholder-guaranteed corporate debt can be characterized as a capital contribution.
For the foregoing reasons, I respectfully dissent.
As will be seen below, whether a shareholder-guaranteed corporate debt is in substance a shareholder debt turns on whether an analysis of traditional debt-equity factors reveals the presence of more equity than debt factors. Where more equity factors are present, the shareholder-guaranteed corporate debt is characterized as shareholder debt. The deemed advance of the loan proceeds from the shareholder to the corporation must, of course, be characterized as a capital contribution, rather than a loan, because more equity than debt factors are present. As a capital contribution, the shareholder receives an increase in the basis of stock (see sec. 1374(c)(2)(A)), and not an increase in any indebtedness of the corporation to the shareholder (see sec. 1374(c)(2)(B)). See also Bader v. Commissioner,
See Blum v. Commissioner,
See Blum v. Commissioner, supra; Smyers v. Commissioner, supra; Santa Anita Consolidated, Inc. v. Commissioner, supra; La Staiti v. Commissioner, supra; Selfe v. United States, supra; In re Lane, supra; Casco Bank & Trust Co. v. United States, supra; Plantation Patterns, Inc. v. Commissioner, supra; Murphy Logging Co. v. United States, supra; Kavich v. United States, supra; In re Breit, supra; Ackerson v. United States, supra; and Fors Farms, Inc. v. Commissioner, supra
The majority opinion attempts to draw undue weight from note 4 in Blum v. Commissioner, supra at 439, which provides:
“The respondent has argued that the entire equity-contribution argument espoused by petitioner is inimical to the subch. S area. Because of our holding that the facts do not warrant the applicability of this doctrine to the present case we will not consider this rather fascinating question.”
It is clear that “doctrine” as used in the note does not mean “the applicability of debt-equity principles to determine if shareholder-guaranteed debt should be characterized as a capital contribution,” but rather means “characterization of a shareholder-guaranteed corporate debt as a capital contribution after evaluation of traditional debt-equity principles.” Consider the Court’s textual statement, “after applying many of those traditional principles, we find * * * .” Blum v. Commissioner, supra at 439, quoted herein, supra at 222. Note 4 in Blum was improperly relied on by the majority.
J. Eustice & J. Kuntz in Taxation of S Corporations, par. 10.03[2][i], n. 184 (rev. 2d ed. Supp. 198Y), refer to Selfe v. United States, supra, as a “well reasoned opinion.”
See note 24 infra
Consider the following hypothetical:
Corporation A, a C corporation, pays “interest” on a shareholder-guaranteed debt to a bank. Respondent determines and this Court agrees that because the shareholder-guaranteed debt is in substance a capital contribution, the interest deduction is not allowable. Later corporation A becomes an S corporation. Would the “interest” payments now be deductible under the majority opinion’s analysis?
Frantz v. Commissioner,
Citation to subch. S cases relying on subch. C precedent would serve no purpose. Suffice it to say that all, or nearly all, subch. S cases cite subch. C precedent or subch. S precedent which relied on subch. C precedent.
The taxpayer in In re Lane, supra, did not actually make payments; rather, assets belonging to the taxpayer were sold to satisfy the obligation arising from the guarantee. We see no distinction between the two and analyze In re Lane, supra, as if the taxpayer did make payments pursuant to the guarantee.
In re Lane was also relied on in Selfe for the proposition that the taxpayer as well as the Government may question whether a shareholder’s advance to a corporation is debt or equity. Neither the majority nor respondent argues that petitioners are precluded from arguing substance over form. In Selfe v. United States, supra, the taxpayer was allowed to argue substance over form in claiming that her guarantee of a bank loan to an electing small business corporation in which she was a shareholder increased the amount of her sec. 1374(c)(2) limitation. The 11th Circuit stated:
“Although the question of whether a stockholder’s advances to a corporation constitute debt or capital contributions is usually raised by the government, nothing in the Internal Revenue Code or our decisions suggests that the factors used to determine the substantive character of a taxpayer’s interest in a corporation are available only to the government. See In re Lane,
Appeal in this case lies to the Fourth Circuit. Accordingly we are not required by Golsen v. Commissioner
In Brown v. Commissioner,
In In re Lane, supra, relying on Casco Bank & Trust Co. v. United States, supra, and Kavich v. United States, supra, the 11th Circuit examined traditional debt-equity principles to determine that, as of the time the taxpayer guaranteed a nominal debt of his corporation to a bank, he, not his corporation, was in substance the debtor. The nominal corporate debt was treated as the taxpayer’s debt with the loan proceeds being deemed transferred from the bank to the taxpayer to his corporation, with the latter transfer being a contribution to capital, not a loan. The 11th Circuit held that Putnam v. Commissioner,
See also sec. 385, the text of which is reproduced in note 8 in the majority opinion. Though sec. 385 was added by the Tax Reform Act of 1969, Pub. L. 91-172, sec. 415(a), 83 Stat. 487, 613, no regulations under this provision are currently in effect.
VAFLA apparently intended for the Bank of Virginia to look to the shareholder/guarantors for repayment as well. VAFLA reported the $300,000 loan as a liability to shareholders, not as a liability to the Bank of Virginia.
The $162,736.83 figure was arrived at as follows: During VAFLA’s taxable year ended Sept. 30, 1979, VAFLA used funds to (1) acquire capital assets, (2) reduce the outstanding balance of indebtedness incurred to acquire capital assets, (3) pay organizational expenses, (4) prepay insurance, (6) purchase inventory, and (6) finance its operations. As of Sept. 30, 1979, VAFLA had $4,200 in cash. Accordingly, it expended $295,800 on a combination of the six items described above. Financing operations required $102,009.63 [VAFLA’s loss for its taxable year ended Sept. 30, 1979, was $345,370.20. However, several of the items contributing to VAFLA’s loss did not require the expenditure of cash during such year. They were: depreciation — $88,845.35; accrued but unpaid sales tax — $1,969.91; accrued but unpaid property tax — $13,511.14; accrued but unpaid interest — $69,183.22; and various accrued but unpaid items represented by accounts payable — $69,850.95. After adjusting for these items, VAFLA made cash expenditures to finance its operations of only $102,009.63.], the purchase of inventory required $5,079.29 [The inventory may have been purchased on credit. If so, $5,079.29 of the $69,850.95 of accounts payable should have been considered incurred to acquire inventory and should not have been considered an accrued but unpaid item in determining the amount of VAFLA’s cash expenditures to finance its operations. See the immediately preceding bracketed material. As such, VAFLA’s cash expenditures to finance its operations would be $5,079.29 more and its cash expenditures to purchase inventory $5,079.29 less. The items would cancel one another out in determining the amount expended by VAFLA to acquire capital assets and to reduce the outstanding balance of indebtedness incurred to acquire capital assets.], the prepayment of insurance required $25,282.87, and the payment of organizational expenditures required $691.38 [Organizational expenditures may have been paid with credit. See the immediately preceding bracketed material.]. Accordingly, at least $162,736.83 of the $300,000 loan proceeds was used to acquire capital assets or to reduce the outstanding balance of debt incurred to acquire capital assets.
The Sept. 30, 1980, financial statements show that during VAFLA’s taxable year ended on Sept. 30, 1980, VAFLA received from shareholders $600,000 reported as a loan and $200,000 reported as a capital contribution. Petitioners did not participate in either the $600,000 or the $200,000 advance.
See note 18 supra.
I recognize that a corporation will lose its status as an electing small business corporation if it has more than one class of stock. Sec. 1371(a)(4). I do not consider the seven shareholder/guarantors’ deemed equity investments to give rise to a second “class of stock” within the meaning of see. 1371(a)(4). See Amory Cotton Oil Co. v. United States,
Respondént contends, and I agree, that petitioner Anthony D. Cuzzocrea should be treated no differently than the other shareholder/guarantors. I consider his guarantee which is limited to $300,000 “plus any other indebtedness related thereto and any costs and expenses * * * incurred to enforce this guaranty” to be, in effect, indistinguishable from the guarantees of the other shareholder/guarantors.
See also In re Breit,
The determination of the number of shareholder/guarantors and the amount of the obligation is to be made as of the time the loan proceeds are advanced because it is at this time that the shareholder/guarantors are deemed to make a capital contribution.
See Plantation Patterns Inc. v. Commissioner,
See Blum v. Commissioner,
