We must decide whether government loan proceeds embezzled with intent to repay are taxable in the year of the embezzlement.
I.
Ronald and Sharon Pomella established River Realty Trust (“Trust”), a qualified Massachusetts business trust, as the entity which would operate the South River Marina in Scituate, Massachusetts. Under the trust agreement, Sharon was designated sole trustee and Ronald received title to all transferable Trust stock. In April 1978, Ronald sold his Trust stock to appellant Frederick L. Webb, who also became sole trustee. As sole trustee, Webb applied for a United States Small Business Administration (SBA) storm disaster loan, representing to SBA that the marina had sustained serious damage during the blizzard of February 1978. Under SBA loan eligibility rules, applicants must have owned (or contracted to buy) the property before the property damage occurred. Appellant Webb therefore backdated the marina purchase and sale agreement to January 3, 1978.
■On July 15, 1978, SBA and the Trust executed a loan agreement and promissory note which provided that the Trust would use the loan proceeds ($376,900) to repair the marina ($196,900), to replace marina inventory ($2,000), and to amortize two outstanding Trust mortgages ($178,000). Webb signed the note as “trustee.”
1
As a condition of the loan, Webb was required to submit receipts
Webb was indicted by a federal grand jury on three counts of making false statements on an SBA loan application, 15 U.S.C. § 645 (1993), five counts of “embezzling” or “converting” United States government funds, 18 U.S.C. § 641 (1993), and two counts of obstructing justice., 18 U.S.C. §§ 1503, 1510 (1993). Webb pled guilty to one “false statement” count, relating to the backdated purchase and sale agreement, and to all five embezzlement counts, which encompassed the unauthorized diversion of the $64,730 to his personal use. Ultimately, the SBA called the loan, and Webb repaid the entire balance.
In 1986, the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) assessed a $37,369 deficiency against Webb for the tax year 1978, based in part on the unreported $64,730. After Webb paid the deficiency, he filed a timely claim for refund with the IRS, asserting that the $64,-730 represented
bona fide
loan proceeds not includable in gross income. After the IRS rejected the refund claim, Webb brought the present action to recover a refund.
See
26 U.S.C. § 7422(a). The district court granted summary judgment to IRS. The court concluded, in reliance on
James v. United States,
II.
We review the grant of summary judgment
de novo,
employing the same standards incumbent on the district court. “Summary judgment is appropriate where ‘the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any, show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to judgment ás a matter of law.’ ”
Gaskell v. The Harvard Coop. Soc’y,
III.
The issue presented is centered at the confluence of two fundamental principles of federal tax law. On the one hand,
bona fide
loan proceeds are not gross income to the borrower,
see Commissioner v. Indianapolis Power & Light Co.,
Whenever a taxpayer acquires earnings, lawfully or unlawfully, without the consensual recognition, express or implied, of an obligation to repay and without restriction as to their disposition, “he has received income which he is required to return, even though it may still be claimed that he is not entitled to retain the money, and even though he may still be adjudged liable to restore its equivalent.” In such case, the taxpayer has “actual command over the property taxed — the actual benefit for which tax is paid_” This standard brings wrongful appropriations within the broad sweep of “gross income”; it excludes loans.
Id.
at 219-20,
In a refund action under section 7422(a), therefore,
James
presumably requires that the taxpayer prove
either
(i) that he did not “acquire” earnings
or
(ii) that any such earnings were “acquired” in one of two ways: under a “consensual recognition of an obligation to repay” or subject to restrictions on their disposition. Since the
James
Court did not elaborate on the meaning of “consensual recognition,” however,
see id.
at 221-22,
IV.
Webb’s argument seems to be that the last three words in the above-quoted passage from
James
(“it excludes loans”),
see supra
at p. 206, required the district court to consider whether he had a
bona fide
intention to repay. Thus, Webb would characterize the events relevant to tax year 1978 as follows: although the Trust was the named borrower on the SBA note, Webb was the
de facto
borrower, and his signature on the note, whether as trustee or guarantor, betokens his continuing and binding obligation to repay SBA.
2
Therefore, he acquired the $376,-
Y.
The record belies Webb’s expedient characterization of these events. Contrary to his implicit assumption, the record reflects that the Trust,
not Webb,
was the
borrower,
and therefore, absent evidence or developed argumentation to the contrary,
see Rhode Island Hosp. Trust Nat’l Bank v. Howard Communications Corp.,
Affirmed.
Notes
. The loan was personally guaranteed by Webb and one John McNamara.
. The parties have generated considerable needless confusion concerning the nature and timing of the taxable event at issue in this case. In its appellate brief and at oral argument, IRS suggested that Webb may have embezzled the SBA loan funds at the time he submitted the false loan application and the backdated purchase agreement to SBA, since the SBA would not have approved the loan to the Trust “but for” those misrepresentations. In other words, Webb was not qualified for the loan, hence he never acquired lawful access to the loan proceeds.
We do not address this broader contention for three reasons. First, if the IRS’s characterization were correct, the entire loan proceeds of $376,900 would have been taxable to Webb, or at least the disbursements of $170,350 to the Trust and $178,000 to amortize the Trust mortgages. IRS has never asserted that these portions of the loan proceeds were taxable to Webb upon receipt. Second, the record is unclear whether Webb’s false statement
(i.e.,
the backdating of the marina purchase-sale agreement) was "material" to' SBA’s decision to grant the Trust loan, nor is it clear that Webb’s guilty plea under 15 U.S.C. § 645 would foreclose relitigation of this particular issue,
see, e.g., United States v. Carter,
.The support for Webb's implicit assumptions is unclear.
See, e.g., United States v. Kristofic,
. Massachusetts business trusts apparently possess many essential attributés of corporations,
see
Mass.Gen.L. ch. 182, §§ 1-14 (1993);
Swartz v. Sher,
. Webb's potential liability as guarantor or trustee does not alter the essential fact that the Trust was the SBA borrower to which the loan proceeds were disbursed.
. Moreover, by his guilty plea Webb is collaterally estopped from claiming that
he
personally "acquired” the $376,900 (including the $64,730) prior to September-October 1978.
See
IB James W. Moore, Jo D. Lucas, Thomas S.- Currier,
Moore's Federal Practice
¶ 0.418[1], at 557 (2d ed. 1992) (guilty pleas are conclusive against defendant in subsequent civil suit as to all facts necessarily "decided” as predicate for criminal conviction); Fon
tneau v. United States,
