The single issue for decision is whether a cash basis corporate taxpayer may deduct in the year of its delivery the value of a demand promissory note guaranteed by its stockholders and delivered to the trustees of its profit-sharing trust as a contribution to that trust where the note remains unpaid at the end of the taxable year. We hold that it is not entitled to the claimed deduction and affirm the Tax Court.
The facts were stipulated. Petitioner is a professional corporation organized under the laws of Michigan. The three officers, who are also the only shareholders and directors of the corporation, are practicing attorneys. On the day prior to the end of the corporation’s fiscal year, October 30, 1970, the officers executed and delivered to the trustees of its profit-sharing trust (one of whom was Frederick A. Patmon, president and director of the corporation) an interest-bearing promissory note payable on demand. The three officer-directors of the corporation also executed an agreement guaranteeing payment of the note. The note was not paid prior to the end of the corporation’s taxable year, and remained unpaid at the time of hearing before this court, though at least one payment of interest had been made. The respondent disallowed the face value of the note claimed as a deduction for the fiscal year ending October 31, 1970 and assessed a deficiency. The Tax Court upheld the Commissioner.
The deduction of contributions paid to pension and profit-sharing trusts is authorized by § 404(a) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954, 26 U.S.C. § 404(a). The question is whether execution and delivery of the notes described herein constituted payment.
In
Eckert v. Burnet,
As the return was on the cash basis, there could be no deduction in the year 1932, unless the substitution of respondent’s note in that year constituted a payment in cash or its equivalent. There was no cash payment and under the doctrine of the Eckert case the giving of the taxpayer’s own note was not the equivalent of cash to entitle the taxpayer to the deduction.309 U.S. at 413 ,60 S.Ct. at 673 .
In
Price
the taxpayer argued that the fact that his note was secured took it outside the
Eckert
rule. The Court held, however, that
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this fact was immaterial — “ . . . the giving of security for performance did not transform the promise into the payment required to constitute a deductible loss in the taxable year.”
Id.
at 414,
Though the two Supreme Court decisions here cited did not deal with deductions under § 404(a), the principles which they enunciated apply to all claims for income tax deductions by cash basis taxpayers. There must be a payment of cash or property having a cash value in the year for which the deduction is claimed. The giving of a note which remains unpaid at the end of the taxable year does not meet this requirement. Our decision is consistent with past holdings of this court. In
Embry Realty Co. v. Glenn,
Cases cited by petitioner which involve accrual basis taxpayers are not in point.
See Wasatch Chemical Company v. C.I.R.,
The Seventh Circuit has recently denied a deduction to an accrual basis taxpayer under § 404(a) on facts otherwise similar to those stipulated in the present case.
See Don E. Williams Company v. C.I.R.,
The judgment of the Tax Court is affirmed.
