In 1965 plaintiff Rolwing-Moxley Company, Elot H. Raffety Farms, Inc., Missouri corporations, and L. D. Joslyn, attorney for Raffety Farms and a director and shareholder of Rolwing-Moxley, orally agreed to establish a Mexican enterprise, El Sombrero Sociedad de Responsibilidad Limitada (El Sombrero) which would farm cotton in Mexico. The partners agreed that Raffety Farms would own a one-half interest in the enterprise and plaintiff and Joslyn would each own one-fourth interests. In 1966 and 1967 the partners advanced a total of $444,-000 to El Sombrero in the following shares: Raffety Farms — $222,000, plaintiff and Jos-lyn — $111,000 each.
El Sombrero suffered financial reverses and eventually collapsed. Plaintiff subsequently sought to deduct the sums it had extended to El Sombrero as “bad debts” under 26 U.S.C. § 166(a)(1) of the Internal Revenue Code, or alternatively as operating losses deductible under 26 U.S.C. § 165(a) or ordinary business expenses, 26 U.S.C. § 162(a). The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) disallowed the deductions, and plaintiff sought a refund.
The district court 1 agreed with the IRS that plaintiff had received an equitable interest in El Sombrero proportionate to the sums advanced and that the advances, rather than “debt,” were contributions to capital, deductible as capital losses under 26 U.S.C. 165(f).
The relationship among the partners has been considered by this court in
Raffety Farms, Inc. v. United States,
The district court, in determining that the amounts extended by plaintiff did not qualify as bona fide debts arising from a debtor-creditor relationship, relied on the guidelines set forth in
United States
v.
Uneco, Inc.,
We note, in addition, the testimony of plaintiff’s partners in the district court. When asked whether his understanding of the arrangement entitled plaintiff (as a creditor of El Sombrero) to “get its money out of this venture before [Joslyn] got [his] money out,” L. D. Joslyn stated, “Absolutely not. * * * I understood that we, as close as we were together, would operate that thing and keep money in there as long as was necessary until we had capital to operate and take money out when we thought it was provident and businesslike to do so.”
Elot Raffety testified that had El Sombrero earned a profit in 1966 of $100,000, the sum would have been divided among the partners according to their contributions, i. e., 50 percent to Raffety Farms and 25 percent to plaintiff and Joslyn. There was no indication that plaintiff’s partners intended plaintiff’s advances to be repaid before the others received a share of the profits or that they intended plaintiff to receive the amount of $111,000 as well as its share of the profits.
Accordingly, we affirm on the basis of Judge Meredith’s well-reasoned opinion.
Notes
. The Honorable James H. Meredith, Chief United States District Judge for the Eastern District of Missouri.
