VHC, Inc. v. CIR ( 2020 )


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  •                               In the
    United States Court of Appeals
    For the Seventh Circuit
    ____________________
    Nos. 18-3717 & 18-3718
    VHC, INC.,
    Petitioner-Appellant,
    v.
    COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE,
    Respondent-Appellee.
    ____________________
    Appeals from the United States Tax Court.
    Nos. 4756-15 & 21583-15 — Kathleen Kerrigan, Judge.
    ____________________
    ARGUED JUNE 10, 2020 — DECIDED AUGUST 6, 2020
    ____________________
    Before FLAUM, BARRETT, and ST. EVE, Circuit Judges.
    BARRETT, Circuit Judge. For more than a decade, Ron Van
    Den Heuvel received cash payments from VHC, a company
    founded by his father and owned by his family. These pay-
    ments primarily supported Ron’s business ventures but also
    helped him pay personal taxes and cover other personal ex-
    penses. Ron didn’t pay VHC back, and the company wrote
    down these payments as “bad debts” for which it received tax
    deductions. After a years-long audit, the IRS concluded that
    VHC never intended to be paid back and that these payments
    2                                      Nos. 18-3717 & 18-3718
    were not bona fide debts qualifying for the deduction. The
    Tax Court upheld this determination and rejected VHC’s al-
    ternative theories as to why the payments qualified for a de-
    duction. We see no error in this decision and affirm the Tax
    Court’s judgment.
    I.
    Ron Van Den Heuvel’s father founded VHC in 1985 to
    provide services to the paper manufacturing industry. Ron
    and his four brothers have all worked for VHC or its subsidi-
    aries in some capacity, but Ron found particular success. He
    started two of VHC’s subsidiaries, directed a number of its
    other companies, and launched his own companies separate
    from VHC.
    Between 1997 and 2013, VHC advanced $111 million to
    Ron and his companies. These payments took several forms
    and fulfilled several purposes, including paying debts owed
    by both Ron and his companies. Ron and his companies
    would come to owe VHC $132 million, including interest, by
    2013 but would only ever repay $39 million.
    In 2002, Associated Bank, a creditor to both Ron and VHC,
    demanded that VHC guarantee all of Ron’s debts to Associ-
    ated—about $27 million—as a condition of preserving VHC’s
    line of credit with Associated. VHC agreed and made similar
    arrangements a year later with two other banks.
    Ron’s companies do not appear to have turned a profit,
    and in 2004 VHC began writing off its payments to Ron as
    “bad debts,” ultimately writing off $95 million by 2013. After
    an audit, the IRS issued a notice of deficiency to VHC, reject-
    ing $92 million of these write-offs.
    Nos. 18-3717 & 18-3718                                       3
    VHC petitioned the Tax Court to review the agency’s de-
    ficiency determination. The court held a ten-day bench trial,
    during which VHC presented both documentary evidence
    and live witness testimony. But the Tax Court upheld the
    agency’s deficiency finding. It determined that VHC could
    not deduct the payments to Ron as “bad debts” because Ron
    and VHC lacked a bona fide debtor-creditor relationship. The
    Tax Court also rejected VHC’s alternative arguments, includ-
    ing its contention that its payments to Ron were ordinary and
    necessary business expenses because of VHC’s 2002 agree-
    ment with Associated. The Tax Court slightly reduced VHC’s
    liability, however, concluding that the unpaid interest ac-
    crued on the payments to Ron was not taxable as income be-
    cause the debts were not bona fide.
    VHC appeals the Tax Court’s ruling, arguing that the Tax
    Court erroneously determined that the payments were not
    deductible either as bad debts or as ordinary and necessary
    business expenses, and contending that the Tax Court did not
    sufficiently reduce VHC’s interest income.
    II.
    We begin with the two avenues by which VHC argues the
    payments could have been deducted. From the outset, we
    note that a petitioner who asserts entitlement to a deduction
    faces a steep climb. Income tax deductions are “a matter of
    legislative grace and … the burden of clearly showing the
    right to the claimed deduction is on the taxpayer.” INDOPCO,
    Inc. v. Comm’r, 
    503 U.S. 79
    , 84 (1992) (citation omitted). As a
    result, when the Commissioner makes a deficiency assess-
    ment, we place the burden on the taxpayer to prove that the
    assessment was erroneous. Cole v. Comm’r, 
    637 F.3d 767
    , 773
    (7th Cir. 2011). We give the Commissioner’s assessment a
    4                                      Nos. 18-3717 & 18-3718
    “presumption of correctness” but shift the burden of proof to
    the Commissioner if the taxpayer can demonstrate that a de-
    ficiency assessment “lacks a rational foundation or is arbitrary
    and excessive.”
    Id. (citation omitted). In
    evaluating whether an assessment is arbitrary and ex-
    cessive, we review legal questions de novo and factual find-
    ings for clear error, and we disturb a factual finding only if
    we are “left with the definite and firm conviction that a mis-
    take has been committed.”
    Id. (citation omitted). When
    evalu-
    ating a claim of entitlement to a deduction, “[t]he tax court’s
    determination that a taxpayer has failed to come forward with
    sufficient evidence to support a deduction is a factual find-
    ing.” Buelow v. Comm’r, 
    970 F.2d 412
    , 415 (7th Cir. 1992).
    A.
    VHC disputes the Tax Court’s determination that its cash
    payments to Ron did not constitute loans that were deductible
    as “bad debts” when they went unpaid. In general, taxpayers
    may deduct “any debt which becomes worthless within the
    taxable year” or the nonrecoverable part of a partially worth-
    less debt that is written off within the taxable year. I.R.C.
    § 166(a). Treasury Regulations specify that “[o]nly a bona fide
    debt qualifies for … section 166” and define a “bona fide
    debt” as one that “arises from a debtor-creditor relationship
    based upon a valid and enforceable obligation to pay a fixed
    or determinable sum of money.” Treas. Reg. § 1.166-1(c). The
    regulations specifically exclude any “gift or contribution to
    capital” as qualifying as a bona fide debt.
    Id. VHC’s ability to
    claim the deduction therefore turns on
    whether it had a debtor-creditor relationship with Ron such
    that he had an enforceable obligation to pay VHC a fixed sum.
    Nos. 18-3717 & 18-3718                                        5
    To determine whether such a relationship exists, we look to
    “a number of factors” as “indications of intent,” and the bur-
    den to establish the presence of such indicators lies with the
    taxpayer. Busch v. Comm’r, 
    728 F.2d 945
    , 948 (7th Cir. 1984).
    For its part, the Tax Court views intrafamily transfers with
    particular skepticism. See Van Anda's Estate v. Comm’r, 
    12 T.C. 1158
    , 1162 (1949), aff’d per curiam, 
    192 F.2d 391
    (2d Cir. 1951)
    (“Intrafamily transactions are subject to rigid scrutiny ….
    However, this presumption may be rebutted by an affirma-
    tive showing that there existed at the time of the transaction a
    real expectation of repayment and intent to enforce the collec-
    tion of the indebtedness.”).
    Though the question whether a debtor-creditor relation-
    ship existed “has been variously described as one of fact and
    one of law,” we conclude that the Tax Court reached the cor-
    rect conclusion under either standard. In re Larson, 
    862 F.2d 112
    , 116 (7th Cir. 1988). The Tax Court looked to ten factors to
    determine that Ron and VHC did not have a debtor-creditor
    relationship. VHC does not confront these factors. Instead, it
    argues that the Tax Court’s reliance on indicia of a debtor-
    creditor relationship prevented it from seeing the forest for
    the trees and that the only relevant factor is the intent of the
    parties.
    We need not belabor the other factors upon which the Tax
    Court relied—even under VHC’s own theory it still loses. It
    contends that it held out to third parties that the advances
    were debts and signed promissory notes, indicating that it be-
    lieved the advances to be debt for which it expected to be re-
    paid. But, as the Tax Court noted, the way that VHC described
    the advances does not match the way that VHC and Ron
    treated these payments. For example, the Tax Court noted
    6                                         Nos. 18-3717 & 18-3718
    that, though many of the promissory notes had fixed maturity
    dates, VHC routinely deferred payment or renewed the notes
    without any receipt of payment. Further, the Tax Court
    pointed to evidence that VHC did not expect to be repaid un-
    less various other events occurred, such as Ron securing ad-
    ditional investments and projects. But, as we have described,
    this sort of relationship is that of an investor, not of a creditor:
    “[T]he creditor expects repayment regardless of the debtor
    corporation’s success or failure, while the investor expects to
    make a profit … if, as he no doubt devoutly wishes, the com-
    pany is successful.” In re 
    Larson, 862 F.2d at 117
    . Though VHC
    may have described the payments as debt, it did not treat
    them as part of an ordinary debtor-creditor relationship and
    therefore did not establish that the parties intended such a re-
    lationship.
    VHC bears the burden of demonstrating that its payments
    to Ron were bona fide debts that arose from a debtor-creditor
    relationship in which it expected Ron to pay VHC back in full.
    VHC has not shown that it presented such evidence to the Tax
    Court or that the Tax Court made grave errors in its evalua-
    tion of the evidence. Because it failed to carry its burden, we
    conclude that VHC’s payments to Ron were not “bad debts”
    qualifying for a deduction.
    B.
    VHC has an alternative argument: that it could deduct its
    payments to Ron as ordinary and necessary business ex-
    penses, which are deductible under I.R.C. § 162. That provi-
    sion provides a deduction for “all the ordinary and necessary
    expenses paid or incurred during the taxable year in carrying
    on any trade or business,” including salaries, travel expenses,
    rentals, and payments made for continued use or possession
    Nos. 18-3717 & 18-3718                                           7
    of assets. I.R.C. § 162(a); see also Treas. Reg. § 1.162-1(a)
    (providing a more comprehensive list). VHC argues that As-
    sociated Bank—a creditor of both Ron and VHC—threatened
    to terminate VHC’s line of credit, forcing VHC into bank-
    ruptcy, if it did not float money to Ron to help him pay his
    own debts to Associated.
    To support its position, VHC highlights that the Tax Court
    has previously determined that payments made by a taxpayer
    for the benefit of a third party may be deductible as ordinary
    and necessary business expenses if the taxpayer benefited
    from the payment. VHC principally relies on Lohrke, in which
    the Tax Court noted that generally an expense incurred to sat-
    isfy the obligations of another taxpayer is not an ordinary or
    necessary business expense. Lohrke v. Comm’r, 
    48 T.C. 679
    , 688
    (1967); see also Baker Hughes, Inc. v. United States, 
    943 F.3d 255
    ,
    263 (5th Cir. 2019) (citing Lohrke). But the Tax Court “con-
    clude[d] that in some situations an individual may deduct the
    expenses of another person.” Lohrke, 
    48 T.C. 688
    . To deter-
    mine if a payment fell under this exception, the Tax Court
    used a two-part test. First, the court would “ascertain the pur-
    pose or motive which cause the taxpayer to pay the obliga-
    tions of the other person,” then the court would determine if
    that motive constitutes “an ordinary and necessary expense
    of the [taxpayer’s] trade or business.”
    Id. Here, the Tax
    Court determined that VHC had neither met
    its burden to substantiate its claimed business expenses nor
    established that the claimed business expenses, if substanti-
    ated, qualified for the deduction under § 162. As for VHC’s
    substantiation of the expenses, the Tax Court noted that
    VHC’s records were “riddled with inconsistencies” and that
    documentary evidence it provided either did not support or
    8                                      Nos. 18-3717 & 18-3718
    outright contradicted its spreadsheet purporting to list the de-
    ductible expenditures.
    VHC points generally to its summary records and spread-
    sheets as evidence of its expenditures. But the Tax Court has
    “repeatedly concluded that self-generated or nonitemized re-
    ceipts or expense records are insufficient to substantiate ex-
    penses.” Gorokhovsky v. Comm’r, 
    104 T.C.M. 87
    (2012),
    aff’d, 549 F. App’x 527 (7th Cir. 2013). VHC has not pointed to
    much in the way of specific evidence to bolster these general,
    self-reported summaries, nor has it addressed the inconsist-
    encies observed by the Tax Court, other than to comment that
    one might expect some inconsistencies in records of such
    large sums. That is not enough. VHC carries the burden to
    highlight any error by the Tax Court, and it has not done so.
    See 
    Buelow, 970 F.2d at 415
    .
    Even assuming VHC had substantiated these expenses,
    however, we also agree with the Tax Court that VHC’s pay-
    ments to Ron did not qualify as ordinary and necessary busi-
    ness expenses. To qualify for this deduction, an expenditure
    must (1) be paid or incurred during a taxable year, (2) be for
    the purpose of carrying on a business, and (3) be an “expense”
    (4) that is “necessary” and (5) “ordinary.” Comm’r v. Lincoln
    Sav. & Loan Ass’n, 
    403 U.S. 345
    , 352 (1971). That Associated
    required VHC to guarantee Ron’s loans does not automati-
    cally make any related expenses ordinary and necessary, be-
    cause “the fact that a payment is imposed compulsorily upon
    a taxpayer does not in and of itself make that payment an or-
    dinary and necessary expense.”
    Id. at 359.
    What’s more, even
    if we assume that the payments were “necessary” for the pur-
    poses of § 162, VHC has made no showing whatsoever that
    such payments ordinarily occur in the paper services
    Nos. 18-3717 & 18-3718                                         9
    industry. See United Draperies, Inc. v. Comm’r, 
    340 F.2d 936
    , 937
    (7th Cir. 1964) (“There is nothing to show that the practice was
    a normal incident to the drapery manufacturing industry or
    to suppliers of mobile home manufacturers generally.”). VHC
    counters that securing access to credit comprises an ordinary
    part of any business. But that oversimplifies what it says oc-
    curred here. VHC’s arrangement was no simple extension of
    credit by Associated. Rather, VHC and Associated entered
    into a seemingly unusual arrangement through which VHC’s
    credit depended on its support of a third party. The burden
    rested with VHC to show that its payments to support Ron
    under such an arrangement were ordinary in its industry. It
    has not done so and thus cannot establish its entitlement to
    the deduction.
    III.
    Finally, VHC argues that, if its payments to Ron did not
    create bona fide debts, it should be allowed to reduce its tax-
    able income in the amount of any interest that accrued on the
    payments. Because VHC is an accrual method taxpayer, it de-
    ducts the accrued interest on debts once it becomes entitled to
    it, regardless of whether that interest is paid within the tax
    year. Although the Tax Court deducted the unpaid interest
    from VHC’s income, it did not deduct the relatively small
    amount of interest that Ron did pay. VHC argues that all of
    the interest should be deducted.
    The Tax Court determined that the payments to Ron
    stopped accruing interest in 2007 when VHC decided that it
    did not expect repayment. VHC has pointed to no reason why
    10                                             Nos. 18-3717 & 18-3718
    this finding was clearly erroneous.1 And as for the interest
    that accrued before 2007, VHC asked the Tax Court to reduce
    its income only by the amount that was unpaid by Ron, not the
    total amount it now requests on appeal. VHC may have com-
    mitted a tactical error by limiting its request to the Tax Court,
    but we will not search for error where the court below did
    exactly as VHC requested. See Naeem v. McKesson Drug Co.,
    
    444 F.3d 593
    , 609 (7th Cir. 2006) (“[W]hen error is invited, not
    even plain error permits reversal.”). VHC asked the Tax Court
    to deduct its income only by the unpaid interest amount and
    the Tax Court did so for the period before 2007. Since we find
    no error in the Tax Court’s determination that interest accru-
    als stopped in 2007, we will not disturb its conclusion on the
    interest deductions.
    ***
    VHC has not demonstrated its entitlement to a deduction
    under either I.R.C. § 166 or § 162. Nor has VHC shown any
    error by the Tax Court in accounting for the interest that ac-
    crued on the payments made to Ron. We therefore AFFIRM
    the judgment of the Tax Court.
    1VHC asserts that its records “made clear” that interest continued to
    accrue on some of the payments after 2007. But its support for that prop-
    osition is one blurry, illegible page of the record that appears to be an im-
    age of a spreadsheet. This reference shows nothing about which payments
    might have continued accruing interest or for how long, and it is nowhere
    near enough to show that the Tax Court clearly erred.