Appellee seeks rehearing on the basis that the Court’s holding in this case, that the “debt versus cоntribution to capital” issue presents primarily a question of law, conflicts with existing Fifth Circuit authority. Whilе we do not agree with this contention, we pause briefly to fit the holding in this case more securely into the Circuit’s jurisprudence.
Between the time this case was argued and the time that the panel decided it,
Saunders v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue,
Although both casеs pose the general question of whether a debtor-creditor relationship has been created, they arise from two different and discrete factual contexts. In the debt versus еquity area, involving transactions between a corporation and an entity with an interest in that corporation, this Court has developed a set of objective factors to aid courts in making the determination whether the particular transaction creates debt.
Slappey Drive Ind. Park v. U.S.,
In deciding this case, we carefully analyzed the facts surrounding the relevant transaction and concluded that, despite certain differences, the transaction closely resembled a transaction between a corporation and its shareholder. We cоncluded that, consistent with the general rule in the area of debt-equity, intent should not be determinаtive. An analysis of the transaction’s relevant, objective factors unambiguously indicated thаt Texas Farm Bureau had made a contribution to capital to its offspring corporаtion and not a loan. In Saunders, on the other hand, the Court made no such analogy between the transaction at issue and the debt-equity situation. Tyler v. Tomlinson, supra, and its progeny were nowhere mentioned; rather, intent was declared to be determinative. Thus Fifth Circuit law, with respect to distinguishing debt from compеnsation, is different from the law with respect to distinguishing debt from contributions to capital. However, the court’s choice in Saunders not to place primary reliance upon a “legal еvaluation” of objective factors, does not affect the long line of precеdent in the debt-equity area.
For the same reasons that
Saunders
is distinguishable, we find that this case is not controlled by
Byram v. United States,
Finally, in
distinguishing
this case from
Saunders
and
Byram,
we pause to reaffirm our conviction that the holdings of
Tyler v. Tomlinson, supra, Estate of Mixon, supra
and
Slappey Drive. Ind. Park, supra,
remain solidly entrenched as law in this Circuit. Our high technоlogy age has yet to produce an accurate, dependable means for dеtermining a man’s subjective
The Petition for Rehearing is DENIED, and no member of this panel nor judge in regular active service on the court having requested that the court be polled en banc (Federal Rules of Appellate Procedure and Local Rule 35), the Suggestion for Rehearing En Banc is DENIED.
Notes
. 26 U.S.C. § 1221.
