1991 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 378 | Tax Ct. | 1991
1991 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 378">*378
MEMORANDUM OPINION
The Commissioner determined that the employee stock ownership plan (the plan) operated by the Stark Truss Company, Inc. (petitioner) does not meet the requirements of
Petitioner is a corporation with its principal place of business at Canton, Ohio. Petitioner and the plan each operate on a calendar year basis. The plan first became effective on January 1, 1978. On April 11, 1980, the Commissioner issued a determination that the plan was a qualified plan under
In 1982 and 1984, Congress enacted extensive amendments to certain sections of the Code relating to the qualification of stock bonus plans under
TEFRA changed substantially the requirements for a pension plan to be qualified under
TRA and REA also changed substantially the requirements for a plan to be qualified under
In view of the amendments that had to be made to a plan by reason of TEFRA, TRA, and REA, in order to satisfy the numerous additional qualification requirements of
1991 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 378">*384 There is no dispute that petitioner did not make any of the required amendments to the plan prior to the expiration of the final deadlines. However, petitioner makes a lame contention that there is no proof that the plan as it existed prior to any amendment failed to satisfy all of the requirements of TEFRA, TRA, and REA. The point is utterly without merit. Apart from the unlikelihood that the plan had been so presciently crafted as to anticipate all of the numerous detailed requirements that were added by TEFRA, TRA, and REA some four to six years after the adoption of the plan in 1978, the burden of proof was upon petitioner to show that the existing plan already satisfied those requirements. See
On May 23, 1988, the IRS received an application from petitioner dated April 14, 1988, for "Determination for Defined Contribution Plan," which had attached to it a supplemental application for approval 1991 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 378">*385 of employee benefit plans under TEFRA, TRA and REA. Thereafter, in a letter to the IRS dated August 23, 1988, petitioner submitted "proposed amendments" to the plan. And, on February 22, 1989, the IRS sent two letters to petitioner. The first was a favorable determination in respect of petitioner's plan, but was made applicable only "to plan years beginning after December 31, 1987," 4 and was explicitly made "subject to your adoption of the proposed amendments submitted in your or your representative's letter dated August 23, 1988." The second was a proposal to to disqualify the plan for each of the years 1984 through 1987. That letter stated that the plan did "not meet the requirements of
Although we are satisfied that the plan was properly amended on March 3, 1989, we consider briefly petitioner's contention that it was amended on April 14, 1988. The record contains a copy of the complete plan dated April 14, 1988, which incorporates
Petitioner relies upon the so-called April 14, 1988 version of the plan as reflecting the amendments required by TEFRA, TRA, and REA, and treats it as being retroactively effective1991 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 378">*388 January 1, 1984. 5 However, it concedes for purposes of this case that the amendments to the plan allegedly adopted on April 14, 1988, were "not timely so as to comply with the requirements of
1991 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 378">*389 In
The holding in favor of Aero must be read in the context of the employer's promptness in responding to the objections raised during the administrative consideration of its application for a favorable ruling, and the fact that it initiated its request for the ruling only some six months after the plan was adopted. In explaining its reason, at least in part, for its conclusion that the plan was qualified for 1969 and 1970, the Court stated that the employer "certainly acted with due diligence1991 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 378">*390 so far as 1970 was concerned, and although it could have acted more promptly with respect to 1969, its conduct was still within the realm of reason."
Subsequent cases have identified two conditions that must be satisfied by an employer seeking retroactive effect for amendments to its plan. First, no circumstances may have arisen which call into operation the objectionable provisions of the plan. Second, the employer must have exercised "reasonable diligence" in attempting to obtain a favorable determination letter from the Internal Revenue Service.
Petitioner's action or inaction can hardly be described as reflecting "reasonable1991 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 378">*391 diligence," particularly when contrasted with the Court's views as to the conduct of the employer in
1991 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 378">*393 Petitioner argues that "Stark Truss' previous diligence [in 1980] in obtaining its original determination letter, coupled with its compliance in operation should indicate sufficient diligence to apply
We have considered other contentions made by petitioner, and have found them unpersuasive.
Footnotes
1. Except as otherwise indicated, all section references are to the Internal Revenue Code as amended and in effect for the years at issue. ↩
2. Petitioner does not present any separate arguments with respect to exemption under
sec. 501(a) , and there is no dispute that exemption of the trust undersec. 501(a) would follow automatically in this case from qualification of the plan undersection 401↩ .3. At first, calendar year plans such as petitioner's had to be amended by December 31, 1984, in order for such amendments to have retroactive effect. See I.R.S.
Notice 83-4 ,1 C.B. 532">1983-1 C.B. 532 . The IRS then extended the date for retroactive amendment to comply with the requirements of TEFRA to September 15, 1985. SeeNotice 85-5 ,1 C.B. 427">1985-1 C.B. 427 ;Notice 85-14 ,2 C.B. 407">1985-2 C.B. 407 , 408. September 15, 1985, was also the date by which plans had to comply with the top-heavy requirements ofsecs. 401(a)(10) and416 as modified by TRA. SeeNotice 85-5 ,supra ;Notice 85-14 ,supra . Petitioner's plan was required to comply with all other changes required by TRA, and all changes required by REA, by December 31, 1985. SeeNotice 85-5 ,supra ;Notice 85-14 ,supra . In News Release IR-85-89, dated August 30, 1985, the Commissioner again extended the time allowed for remedial amendment by postponing the deadline for compliance with TEFRA, TRA, and REA until November 1, 1985.Announcement 86-60 ,19 I.R.B. 17">1986-19 I.R.B. 17 . As noted above in the body of this opinion, the final deadline for compliance with respect to the 1984 and 1985 plan years was June 30, 1986, and the final deadlines for compliance with respect to the 1986 and 1987 plan years were December 31, 1986, and December 31, 1987, respectively. SeeNotice 86-3 ,1 C.B. 388">1986-1 C.B. 388 -389.After June 30, 1986, individual plans could no longer be amended to conform with the requirements of TEFRA. However, employers could still obtain retroactive qualified status for their plans by adopting a master or prototype plan. See
Notice 86-3 ,1 C.B. 388">1986-1 C.B. 388 . The opportunity to obtain retroactive qualified status by adopting such plans did not end until January 14, 1988.Notice 87-80 ,2 C.B. 388">1987-2 C.B. 388↩ . No such master or prototype plan was adopted at any time here, and none is involved in this case.4. The limited retroactivity of the approval of the plan to the year 1988, conditioned on the amendments adopted on March 3, 1989, is related to the provisions of
sec. 401(b) andsecs. 1.401(b)-1(b) and(c), Income Tax Regs. Seeinfra↩ note 6.5. The April 14, 1988 version states that "the provisions of this Plan, as set forth herein, shall apply only to an Employee who terminates employment on or after January 1, 1984, or such other date as set forth herein." We assume without deciding that the quoted language is sufficient, to the extent relevant, to make the plan operative as of January 1, 1984. ↩
6.
Section 401(b) is not easily read. It provides:(b) CERTAIN RETROACTIVE CHANGES IN PLAN. -- A stock bonus, pension, profit-sharing, or annuity plan shall be considered as satisfying the requirements of subsection (a) for the period beginning with the date on which it was put into effect, or for the period beginning with the earlier of the date on which there was adopted or put into effect any amendment which caused the plan to fail to satisfy such requirements, and ending with the time prescribed by law for filing the return of the employer for his taxable year in which such plan or amendment was adopted (including extensions thereof) or such later time as the Secretary may designate, if all provisions of the plan which are necessary to satisfy such requirements are in effect by the end of such period and have been made effective for all purposes for the whole of such period.
The IRS February 22, 1989 approval of the plan for years beginning after December 31, 1987, was conditioned on the adoption of specified amendments. Such one year retroactivity to 1988 was probably based on the fact that petitioner's returns for 1988 were not due until after the favorable ruling of February 22, 1989, and the March 3, 1989 adoption of the amendments. See
secs. 1.401(b)-1(b) and(c) ,1.6072-2(a), Income Tax Regs.↩ 7. In its administrative appeal from the IRS February 22, 1989 letter proposing to disqualify the plan for the years prior to 1988, petitioner attempted to explain its tardy adoption of the plan reflecting the amendments required by the statute. It stated that "The Company changed counsel in 1982. Prior counsel had great experience in the retirement plan area and new counsel had very limited experience with retirement plans." This circumstance, however, can hardly make timely that which was otherwise unacceptably untimely.↩