This appeal presents the 'question whether the Tax Court correctly relied on the substance over form doctrine in determining that Julian P. Kornfeld (taxpayer) was not entitled to a federal income tax deduction for amortization of a life interest in bonds that he purportedly jointly purchased with his daughters and secretary, who took remainder interests.
The legal.right of a taxpayer to decrease the amount of what otherwise would be his taxes, or altogether avoid, them, by means which the law permits, cannot be doubt-ed____ But the question for determination is whether what was done, apart from the tax motive, was the thing which the statute intended.
Gregory v. Helvering,
I
When a taxpayer purchases a bond the normal rule is that the security is not depreciable or amortizable for federal income tax purposes. 2 5 J. Mertens, Law of Federal Income Taxation § 23A.93 (1990). Instead the taxpayer has a cost basis in the bond and when the 'bond matures or is called or sold the money received is treated as a nontaxable return of capital to the extent of that basis. The interest paid while the taxpayer holds the bond is taxable income unless, as here, it is tax exempt. See Internal Revenue Code (IRC) § 1001. If the taxpayer owns the bond at his death its value is included in his estate for federal estate tax purposes. Id. § 2033. If during his lifetime he should transfer ownership of the bond by gift reserving income for his life the entire value of the bond would still be included in his estate for federal estate tax purposes. Id. § 2036. Additionally, because the gift would be of a future interest the $10,000 per donee annual gift tax exclusion of IRC § 2503(b) would not apply.
After taxpayer executed two agreements, Congress amended the Code to provide that “[n]o depreciation deduction shall be allowed ... to the taxpayer for any term interest in property for any period during which the remainder interest in such property is held (directly or indirectly) by a related person.” IRC § 167(e). A “term interest in property” is defined to include a life estate, and “related persons” includes taxpayers’ children. Id. §§ 167(e), 267, 1001(e)(2). Taxpayer modified the later agreements so that rather than purchase the entire remainder interest Nancy would purchase a second life estate to take effect after taxpayer’s death; taxpayer’s secretary, Patsy Permenter, purchased the final remainder interest with funds given her by taxpayer. Taxpayer reported the gifts to Nancy, Meredith and Permenter on belatedly filed gift tax returns, claiming the $10,000 annual exclusion for each donee and using his lifetime exemption (unified credit) to avoid paying any tax. See IRC §§ 2010 and 2505. The tax-exempt bonds at issue here had a combined face value of $1,510,000. The actuarial value of taxpayer’s life estate based on IRS tables was about $1,262,000.
We have only an income tax question before us. Taxpayer’s federal income tax returns for the years 1990 and 1991 reflected tax-exempt interest income on the bonds of $118,972 and $122,974, respectively. Taxpayer also claimed an amortization deduction on his life estate in the bonds of $56,203.94 for each year. After an audit the Commissioner disallowed the amortization deductions. Taxpayer petitioned the Tax Court for a redeter-mination of the. deficiency and before trial the parties stipulated to the facts and presented the case on that fully stipulated record.
Relying on the substance over form doctrine, the Tax Court found that the taxpayer had acquired the entire ownership interest in the bonds and then made a gift of the remainder interests to his daughters and Per-menter. Thus, the Tax Court upheld the Commissioner’s determination that taxpayer was liable for income tax deficiencies of $11,-803 for 1990 and $13,122 for 1991.
II
Taxpayer first asserts we must review the Tax Court’s decision de novo because the parties submitted the case to the Tax Court on a fully stipulated record, citing
ABC Rentals of San Antonio, Inc. v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue,
Ill
The taxation scheme set out in the Internal Revenue Code is complicated and the tax consequences of many transactions depend on form, how the transaction is structured. At the same time it has long been held that “[t]he incidence of taxation depends upon the substance of a transaction____ To permit the true nature of a transaction to be.disguised by mere formalisms, which exist solely to alter tax liabilities, would seriously impair the effective administration of the tax policies of Congress.”
Commissioner v. Court Holding Co.,
There would be no doubt of taxpayer’s right to annual amortization deductions had he acquired only a limited interest in the bonds in arm’s length commercial transactions in which the remainder interests had been retained, or independently acquired, by persons having no connection to taxpayer. A taxpayer may amortize a limited interest in property if the “intangible asset is known from experience or other factors to be of use in the ... production of income for only a limited period, the length of which can be estimated with reasonable accuracy.” Treas. Reg. § 1.167(a)-3. Here, however, one hundred percent ownership of the bonds was acquired from or through Prudential-Bache in a market transaction; but taxpayer presented no evidence that any brokerage firm would sell only a life estate in the bonds. The division of the interests between taxpayer’s life estate and the remainders was made by the separate agreements between taxpayer and his daughters and secretary; ■ the valuations were not determined by'market forces but in accordance with IRS valuation tables formulated for estate and gift tax purposes. The broker sent one bill to taxpayer’s trust, and taxpayer calculated the respective shares based- on the IRS tables, and then immediately gave the remaindermen gifts of nearly the exact amounts they needed to pay their shares. The parties stipulated that “[t]he purpose of these [gift] checks was to provide Meredith and Nancy with sufficient monies to pay their respective proportionate shares of the purchase price.” Doc. 14 at 7.
The government has applied, and the Supreme Court expressly sanctioned, a step-transaction doctrine to deal with purportedly separate transactions that the government believes should be treated as integrated.
See Commissioner v. Clark,
Taxpayer essentially argues that the facts here meet the “binding commitment” test because his daughters and secretary were not legally obligated to use his gifts to purchase the bonds. But in Associated Wholesale Grocers we stated that this test is seldom applied. See id. at 1522 n. 6. We thus examine the facts under the other step transaction tests. The “end result” test amalgamates into a single transaction separate events which appear to be component parts of something undertaken to reach a particular result. Id. at 1523. The instant case would appear clearly to satisfy the “end result” test. The “interdependence test” focuses on the relationship between the steps, whether under a reasonably objective view the steps were so interdependent that the legal relations created by one of the transactions seem fruitless without completion of the series. Id. Although the gifts here could stand on their own without relation to the investments, it is difficult to conceive that the parties would have made the investments as they did, or that they would have agreed to the valuations between life estates and remainders, in the absence of the gifts taxpayer made. Thus this case would seem to satisfy the “interdependence” test.
We conclude that the Tax Court properly characterized the transactions in the instant case as impermissible attempts to create amortizable term interests out of nondepreciable property. We agree with the
Gordon
opinion that “it is important to note that what is involved in this case is a simultaneous joint acquisition of income interests and remainder interests where the consideration moved to a third party who was not in any way concerned with the arrangements between the joint acquirers----[and that] it is appropriate to take into account the fact that the participation of the acquirer of the remainder interest is an essential element in affording the acquirer of the income interest the opportunity to obtain the tax benefit of an amortization deduction.”
We also agree with the
Gordon
opinion that where, as here, the “parties to the transactions in question are related, the level of skepticism as to the form of the transaction is heightened, because of the greater potential for complicity between related parties in arranging their affairs in a manner devoid of legitimate motivations.”
Id.
(quotation and citation omitted).
4
Complicity among the parties is farther supported by the following: the parties established their respective purchase obligations by IRS tables that are only periodically adjusted and which reflect market values only in a general way; the parties committed to acting jointly in disposing of their interests, agreeing that if one wanted to
Finally, although there was no legal requirement that remaindermen would use the gifts of money to purchase the bonds, taxpayer stipulated that his intention in making the gifts was to enable the donees to make the purchases. We question the financial capacity of at least some, donees, noting taxpayer ceased making daughter Meredith a party for fear her creditors might attach her interests. And there is no reason these remain-dermen would question making the investments when taxpayer was giving them the funds to make their purchases. Expressed colloquially, one does not look a gift horse in the mouth.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. After examining the briefs and appellate record, this panel has determined unanimously to grant the parties’ request for a decision on the briefs without oral argument. See Fed. R.App. P. 34(1); 10th Cir. R. 34.1.9. The case is therefore ordered submitted without oral argument.
. In the case of a taxable—not a tax-exempt— bond, the amount of the amortizable bond premium for the tax year may be allowed as a deduction. IRC § 171.
. After the first transaction taxpayer became concerned about his daughter Meredith’s precarious financial situation and he did not want her interests to be attached by her creditors. Thus the second, third, and fourth agreements included Nancy but not Meredith.
The bonds apparently were held in street name with no indication of the division of ownership between the life tenant and the remaindermen. The agreements also provided that evidence of ownership "may also be held by the First Interstate Bank of Oklahoma, as custodian” in such names or forms "as the custodian shall deem appropriate and convenient.” Ex. 4-D. The parties agreed to sell, assign, or pledge only on joint direction of all parties, and to give to each other a right of first refusal at the valuations established by the IRS regulations in the event any one sought to dispose of his or her interest.
. Although Permenter is not a natural object of taxpayer’s bounty in the same sense as his daughters, she is his long time secretary, cotrus-tee of his revocable trust, and taxpayer made contemporaneous gifts to her to enable the purchases of her remainder interests. In such circumstances it is not inappropriate to treat her in the same category as a related party.
