Alan Beckley and Virginia Johnston Beckley v. Commissioner , 130 T.C. No. 18 ( 2008 )


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    130 T.C. No. 18
    UNITED STATES TAX COURT
    ALAN BECKLEY AND VIRGINIA JOHNSTON BECKLEY, Petitioners v.
    COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent
    Docket No. 4722-06.               Filed June 30, 2008.
    Petitioner wife lent funds to a corporation in
    which petitioner husband was a shareholder. The
    corporation used the borrowed funds to develop a
    working model of Web-based video conferencing software.
    The corporation, however, had financial problems and
    was dissolved, and the working model was transferred to
    a second corporation in which petitioner husband was a
    shareholder. In 2001 and 2002, the second corporation
    made payments to petitioner wife. Petitioners treated
    a portion of the payments petitioner wife received as
    taxable interest income and the balance as nontaxable
    repayment of funds petitioner wife lent the first
    corporation. On audit of petitioners’ returns,
    respondent did not adjust petitioners’ treatment of the
    payments petitioner wife received from the second
    corporation as taxable interest income and as
    nontaxable repayment of loan principal, but respondent
    also treated 50 percent of the payments petitioner wife
    received as taxable constructive distributions to
    petitioner husband from the second corporation.
    - 2 -
    Held: No portion of the payments petitioner wife
    received from the second corporation are also taxable
    to petitioner husband as constructive corporate
    distributions.
    Steven M. Cyr, for petitioners.
    Wesley F. McNamara, for respondent.
    SWIFT, Judge:   Respondent determined deficiencies in
    petitioners’ joint Federal income taxes and penalties as follows:
    Penalty
    Year       Deficiency     Sec. 6662(a)
    2001        $10,192         $2,038
    2002          7,000          1,400
    The issue for decision is whether 50 percent of interest and
    loan principal that petitioner Virginia Beckley (Virginia)
    received in 2001 and 2002 also should be treated as taxable
    constructive corporate distributions to petitioner Alan Beckley
    (Alan).
    Unless otherwise indicated, all section references are to
    the Internal Revenue Code in effect for the years in issue, and
    all Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and
    Procedure.
    - 3 -
    FINDINGS OF FACT
    Some of the facts have been stipulated and are so found.
    At the time the petition was filed, petitioners resided in
    Oregon.
    On November 14, 1988, Alan and Robert Ebert (Ebert)
    incorporated Computer Tools, Inc. (CT), as an Oregon corporation
    for the purpose of developing computer services for graphic
    designers.    Alan served as president of CT, and Ebert served as
    secretary.    Alan and Ebert were each 50-percent shareholders in
    CT.1
    During 1988 through 1998, CT often was short of funds for
    operations and for development of business products, and CT
    borrowed from Virginia at least $106,834.    Using those funds, CT
    developed a working model of Web-based video conferencing
    software (working model).    Because of management problems, CT was
    dissolved in 1998.
    On March 17, 2000, VirtualDesign.net, Inc. (VDN), was
    incorporated as a C corporation under Oregon law to succeed to
    CT’s business and to continue developing business products.    From
    VDN’s incorporation in 2000 until sometime in 2003, Ebert was
    chief executive officer (CEO) of and a 50-percent shareholder in
    1
    The record does not indicate whether CT was incorporated
    as a C or as an S corporation.
    - 4 -
    VDN.        Alan was a VDN director and shareholder, but the record
    does not establish Alan’s percentage stock ownership interest in
    VDN.2
    As VDN CEO, Ebert had sole signing authority over VDN’s
    corporate bank accounts.
    In 2000, CT transferred the working model to VDN.3    Although
    the working model constituted a valuable asset to VDN, the record
    does not indicate whether VDN paid CT any cash for the working
    model.
    CT never made any repayments on the $106,834 loan it
    received from Virginia; and although VDN received the working
    model from CT, VDN did not execute a written loan assumption
    agreement with regard to CT’s loan repayment obligation to
    Virginia.        Upon CT’s dissolution, Virginia did not make a claim
    against CT for repayment of the funds she lent to CT.
    When VDN acquired the working model from CT, Virginia did
    not treat her loan to CT as a worthless loan, and Virginia did
    not claim an ownership interest in the working model.
    2
    Petitioners claim that Alan owned only 1 percent of VDN’s
    stock.       Respondent claims that Alan owned 50 percent of VDN’s
    stock.
    3
    Under Or. law, after its dissolution in 1998 CT retained
    the authority to conduct business appropriate to winding up and
    liquidating its affairs. Or. Rev. Stat. sec. 60.637 (2007).
    - 5 -
    In 2001 and 2002, Alan was employed by and received wages
    from VDN.    Virginia was not employed by and did not perform any
    services for VDN.
    In 2001 and 2002, VDN had no current or accumulated earnings
    and profits, and Alan had no tax basis in his VDN stock.
    In 2001 and 2002, VDN paid Virginia $95,434 and $70,000,
    respectively.    The parties have stipulated and we find that VDN
    paid those funds to Virginia as payment on her loan to CT.
    In 2003, new management gained control of VDN, and Alan and
    Ebert were terminated.    At a 2003 meeting of VDN’s new
    management, VDN executives stated that they did not believe VDN
    was obligated to pay any additional funds to Virginia and that
    VDN would not do so.    VDN’s new management did not ask Virginia
    to return any portion of the funds it had paid her in 2001 and
    2002.
    On a Form 1099-INT, Interest Income, that VDN mailed to
    Virginia and to respondent in early 2002, VDN characterized
    $58,600 of the $95,434 that it had paid to Virginia in 2001 as
    interest.    VDN did not report the $36,834 balance on the Form
    1099-INT and treated it at the time as a nontaxable repayment of
    loan principal that did not need to be reported on the Form 1099-
    INT.    VDN did not report any portion of the $95,434 as a
    corporate distribution to Alan.
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    On a Form 1099-MISC, Miscellaneous Income, that VDN mailed
    to Virginia and to respondent in early 2003, VDN reported the
    $70,000 it had paid to Virginia in 2002 as nonemployee
    compensation.
    No portion of the $95,434 or the $70,000 that VDN paid
    Virginia in 2001 and 2002 respectively was reported to respondent
    on a Form 1099-DIV, Dividends and Distributions, as a corporate
    distribution to Alan.
    On its corporate Federal income tax returns for both 2001
    and 2002, VDN deducted as nonemployee compensation the $95,434
    and the $70,000 it paid to Virginia in each year.    VDN claimed no
    interest expense deduction with regard to any portion of the
    funds it paid to Virginia in 2001 and 2002.
    Consistent with the Form 1099-INT they received from VDN, on
    their 2001 joint individual Federal income tax return,
    petitioners reported $58,600 of the $95,434 Virginia received
    from VDN in 2001 as interest income, and petitioners treated the
    balance as a nontaxable repayment of loan principal.
    For purposes of their 2002 joint individual Federal income
    tax return, petitioners treated the $70,000 that Virginia
    received from VDN in 2002 as a nontaxable repayment of loan
    principal.   Petitioners reported no interest income with respect
    to the $70,000 Virginia received from VDN in 2002.
    - 7 -
    Further, on their 2001 and 2002 joint Federal income tax
    returns, petitioners reported no corporate distribution from VDN
    to Alan with respect to the payments Virginia received from VDN.
    The schedule below reflects the payments Virginia received
    from VDN, VDN’s treatment of the payments to Virginia on the
    Forms 1099 VDN mailed to Virginia and to respondent, VDN’s
    treatment of the payments on its corporate Federal income tax
    returns, and petitioners’ treatment of the payments Virginia
    received from VDN on or for purposes of their joint individual
    Federal income tax returns:
    VDN’s                   VDN’s Corporate                Petitioners’
    Forms 1099                 Fed. Tax Returns           Fed. Tax Returns
    Payments                           Comp.                     Comp.
    Virginia    Loan       Loan       Expense    Loan    Loan   Expense    Loan       Loan     Comp.
    Year   Received    Prin.       Int.      Deduct.    Prin.   Int.   Deduct.    Prin.       Int.   Income
    2001    $95,434   $36,834    $58,600       --         --     --    $95,434   $36,834   $58,600       --
    2002     70,000     --          --       $70,000      --     --     70,000    70,000      --         --
    On audit of VDN’s returns for 2001 and 2002, respondent
    disallowed the above compensation expense deductions claimed by
    VDN, and respondent determined that the total payments VDN made
    to Virginia in 2001 and in 2002 constituted nondeductible
    constructive distributions to Alan and to Ebert–-50 percent to
    Alan and 50 percent to Ebert.
    On audit of petitioners’s returns, respondent did not adjust
    the manner in which petitioners on their joint Federal income tax
    returns for 2001 and 2002 reported the payments Virginia received
    from VDN (i.e., for 2001 $58,600 of interest income and $36,834
    - 8 -
    of loan principal, and for 2002 no interest income).   Respondent,
    however, treated one-half of the payments Virginia received from
    VDN (i.e., $47,717 in 2001 and $35,000 in 2002) also as corporate
    distributions taxable as capital gain to Alan.
    Under respondent’s audit theory, VDN’s payments to Virginia
    on her loan to CT were made without any legal obligation to do so
    and only on the basis of a personal moral obligation of Alan and
    Ebert to repay Virginia.   Accordingly, respondent concludes
    (1) that with respect to the payments VDN made to Virginia no
    deduction was allowable to VDN (i.e., neither a compensation
    expense deduction nor an interest expense deduction) and (2) that
    although the payments Virginia received represented to Virginia
    taxable interest income and nontaxable repayment of loan
    principal, they also represented to Alan and to Ebert taxable
    constructive corporate distributions.4
    OPINION
    Where corporations pay personal expenses of shareholders,
    the shareholders may be treated as having received constructive
    distributions to the extent of the value thereof to the
    shareholders.   Meridian Wood Prods. Co. v. United States, 
    725 F.2d 1183
    , 1191 (9th Cir. 1984); Falsetti v. Commissioner, 85
    4
    The record does not indicate whether respondent actually
    audited Ebert’s returns and charged Ebert with constructive
    corporate distributions with regard to any portion of the
    payments VDN made to Virginia.
    - 9 -
    T.C. 332, 356-357 (1985); Magnon v. Commissioner, 
    73 T.C. 980
    ,
    993-994 (1980); Smith v. Commissioner, 
    T.C. Memo. 1995-410
    .
    Shareholders may be charged with constructive distributions even
    though the corporate payments are made to third parties and not
    directly to the shareholders.    Broad v. Commissioner, 
    T.C. Memo. 1990-317
    ; Hufnagle v. Commissioner, 
    T.C. Memo. 1986-119
    ; Paoli v.
    Commissioner, 
    T.C. Memo. 1985-196
    .
    As stated, respondent made no adjustment to Virginia’s
    taxable income with respect to the payments Virginia received
    from VDN; and respondent acknowledges that if CT rather than VDN
    had made the payments to Virginia, petitioners’ reporting thereof
    on their 2001 and 2002 joint Federal income tax returns would be
    accepted without additional adjustment.
    The facts before us do not support respondent’s theory that
    VDN’s payments to Virginia were made to satisfy only personal
    moral obligations of Alan and of Ebert.
    Although VDN did not execute a written loan assumption
    agreement, the facts establish that VDN effectively purchased the
    working model from CT, that VDN assumed at least part of CT’s
    obligation to repay Virginia’s loan to CT, and that VDN’s
    payments to Virginia related thereto.   VDN received the working
    model CT had developed with the funds borrowed from Virginia.
    VDN made the payments to Virginia as payment on Virginia’s loan
    to CT.   For 2001, VDN reported to Virginia and to respondent that
    - 10 -
    the payments represented interest and principal on Virginia’s
    loan.
    HJ Builders, Inc. v. Commissioner, 
    T.C. Memo. 2006-278
    ,
    illustrates a typical constructive corporate distribution to a
    shareholder.     In HJ Builders, Inc., a corporation made lease
    payments on an automobile used by the wife of the owner of the
    corporation.     The lease payments were treated as constructive
    corporate distributions to the shareholder husband.     The wife who
    used the corporate automobile had no creditor or employee
    relationship with the corporation which would otherwise explain
    the lease payments.
    In contrast, the payments herein were made by VDN to
    Virginia in connection with the precedent creditor relationship
    Virginia had with CT, to which VDN at least in part succeeded.
    The payments herein are explained by that financial relationship.
    The facts before us do not justify a layer of taxation to
    petitioners with regard to the VDN payments Virginia received
    from VDN beyond the interest income that petitioners reported.
    In his posttrial brief, respondent argues for the first time
    that even if VDN had agreed to repay Virginia funds CT borrowed
    from her, because there was no written agreement relating to that
    obligation, under Oregon’s statute of frauds VDN’s obligation
    would not be enforceable.
    - 11 -
    Generally, under Oregon’s statute of frauds an agreement to
    be responsible for or to assume a debt obligation of another will
    be treated as unenforceable if the agreement is not evidenced by
    a writing.    Or. Rev. Stat. sec. 41.580(1)(b) (2007).   However, an
    agreement to assume a debt obligation of another may be excepted
    from Oregon’s statute of frauds and may be enforced if assumption
    of the debt obligation was part of a purchase of the debtor’s
    property.    Sandgren v. Cain Lumber Co., 
    264 P. 865
    , 866 (Or.
    1928); Feldman v. McGuire, 
    55 P. 872
    , 873 (Or. 1899).
    Further, part performance--conduct between the parties that
    corroborates the existence of an oral agreement--may cause an
    Oregon court to enforce an oral agreement if unjust enrichment
    would occur if the oral agreement were not enforced.     Tucker v.
    Or. Aero, Inc., 
    474 F. Supp. 2d 1192
    , 1215 (D. Or. 2007) (oral
    agreement to make royalty payments); Golden v. Golden, 
    541 P.2d 1397
     (Or. 1975) (oral agreement for sale of home).
    Although no written agreement existed reflecting VDN’s
    obligation to repay Virginia, VDN’s conduct in actually making
    payments to Virginia, which related to Virginia’s loan to CT and
    to CT’s transfer of the working model to VDN, establish the loan
    repayment character of the payments and the principal and
    interest nature thereof.
    - 12 -
    In addition, the Form 1099-INT that VDN mailed to Virginia
    and to respondent for 2001 reflected that $58,600 represented
    interest on a loan.5
    When VDN acquired the working model from CT, the development
    of which had been made possible by the funds Virginia lent to CT,
    VDN received the benefit of Virginia’s loan, and VDN would be
    unjustly enriched if VDN did not repay the loan.
    For Federal income tax purposes, the Oregon statute of
    frauds does not prevent us from concluding that the funds
    Virginia received from VDN in 2001 and 2002 constituted nothing
    more than interest and repayment of loan principal.    No portion
    of the funds Virginia received from VDN should be treated as
    constructive corporate distributions and taxed as capital gain to
    Alan.
    The penalties respondent determined are moot.
    To reflect the foregoing,
    Decision will be entered
    under Rule 155.
    5
    VDN’s reporting on its 2001 and 2002 Federal income tax
    returns of the payments to Virginia as nonemployee compensation
    appears to have been a self-serving attempt by VDN to deduct the
    full amounts paid to Virginia.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 4722-06

Citation Numbers: 130 T.C. No. 18

Filed Date: 6/30/2008

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 11/14/2018