1980 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 23">*23
Petitioner Sam Klein was a creditor/shareholder of a subch. S corporation which was completely liquidated, thereby closing its taxable year, and which had a net operating loss for that year.
75 T.C. 298">*298 OPINION
Respondent determined a deficiency in petitioners' income tax of $ 26,782.29 for 1972. After concessions, the sole issue to be decided is the extent to which distributions in the course of a complete liquidation of an electing subchapter S corporation reduce a shareholder/creditor's basis in the corporation 75 T.C. 298">*299 for computing his net operating loss deduction limitation defined in
This case was submitted fully stipulated pursuant to
At the time the petition was filed, petitioners were married and resided in Boca Raton, Fla. Their joint Federal income tax return for 1972 1980 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 23">*27 was timely filed with the Internal Revenue Service Center, Cincinnati, Ohio.
Sam Klein was a shareholder and creditor of Midwest Fisheries, Inc. (hereinafter Midwest), an Ohio corporation which had a valid election to be treated as a small business corporation (subchapter S), in effect for the period in issue. By resolution dated April 6, 1972, the shareholders and directors of Midwest agreed to its complete liquidation, to be completed by April 5, 1973. On August 12, 1972, Midwest sold some of its assets to State Fish, Inc., for $ 250,000 plus the assumption of certain trade liabilities. The purchase price was to be paid in annual installments of $ 50,000 beginning August 12, 1973, and was evidenced by a promissory note bearing interest at the rate of 4 percent per year.
On December 29, 1972, Midwest completed its liquidation by filing a certificate of dissolution with the Ohio secretary of state and distributing its remaining assets, including the State Fish, Inc., note, to its shareholders/creditors. 2 Midwest's last taxable year began February 1, 1972, and between that date and December 29, 1972, Midwest sustained a net operating loss of $ 361,952.80. 3 As of December 29, 1980 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 23">*28 1972, Sam Klein had a basis in his Midwest stock of $ 40,762.78 and a basis of $ 309,327.72 in Midwest notes payable.
The dispute in this case arises because Midwest was an electing small business corporation (see
The dispute herein involves the order of application of Midwest's net operating loss and the distributions made in complete liquidation insofar as Sam Klein is concerned. Petitioners contend that Sam Klein's share of the net operating loss should first be applied to his basis in the stock and Midwest's indebtedness to him, thereby giving him the benefit of his full share of such loss. Respondent counters with the argument that the amount received should first be applied to the indebtedness of Midwest in Sam Klein's favor and that such application carries a reduction of $ 236,850 in the basis of Midwest's indebtedness to him, with the result that $ 121,206.261980 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 23">*30 4 of Midwest's net operating loss slipped through his fingers seconds before that loss solidified into a tax deduction. Expressed in the vernacular, the issue before us is, which comes first -- the chicken or the egg?
At the outset, we reject respondent's contention that we should look to Ohio law to resolve the question before us. We think that his reliance on
Human limitations being what they are, it is almost impossible to effectuate all the incidents of a single corporate liquidation with perfect simultaneity. The record does not disclose the precise sequence of events, but it does establish that the distribution to Sam Klein qua creditor and the distribution to him qua shareholder occurred on the same day, in all probability at almost the same time, and were intended to be two parts of a single plan of complete liquidation. We have upheld respondent's regulation providing in the context of section 337 liquidations that timing niceties should not be decisive (
Given the fact that neither the1980 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 23">*33 statute nor the legislative history nor respondent's regulations give us any precise guidance, 6 we look to a solution which best dovetails the provisions of subchapter S, in light of the legislative purposes which underlie 75 T.C. 298">*302 such provisions, with the more general provisions of chapter 1 of the Internal Revenue Code. Cf.
1980 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 23">*34 In our recent case of
First, if petitioner had been a shareholder of Midwest but not its creditor,
Second, we note that allowing petitioners to deduct Sam Klein's full share of Midwest's net operating loss without regard to its liquidating distributions comports well with the rationale which motivated the subchapter S legislation. Congress sought 75 T.C. 298">*303 to allow a small business corporation1980 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 23">*36 to be taxed much like a partnership so that "businesses [can] select the form of business organization desired, without the necessity of taking into account major differences in tax consequence." S. Rept. 1983, 85th Cong., 2d Sess. 87 (1958),
But for the limitation of
It is not disputed that Midwest did in fact suffer a substantial net operating loss during its last taxable year, nor that Sam Klein had invested in Midwest more than the amount of his full share of that loss as defined by
Third and last, it seems that respondent is trying to catch a capital fish within his ordinary net. 71980 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 23">*39 The clear thrust of
1. All section references are to the Internal Revenue Code of 1954 as amended and in effect during the taxable year in issue, except where otherwise indicated.↩
2. Two distinct assignments of assets were made by Midwest to its shareholder/creditors. The State Fish, Inc., note was distributed to them in respect of their debt interests, and the remaining assets were distributed to them in respect of their stock. Sam Klein received a share in the State Fish, Inc., note worth $ 236,850.↩
3. The parties agree that Sam Klein's share of this loss is $ 234,446.76. See
4. This amount is arrived at as follows: $ 40,762.78 (basis in stock) plus $ 309,327.72 (basis in indebtedness) minus $ 236,850 produces a net basis of $ 113,240.50. Subtracting this figure from $ 234,446.76 (see n. 3
5. Congress has embodied the rationale of
6. Midwest's taxable year ended on the day the distributions in complete liquidation were made. Sec. 443(a)(2). Under these circumstances, we think no inference should be drawn from the fact that where a taxpayer disposes of his stock (a situation which occurred herein, see sec. 331),
7. Petitioners' theory of the case yields a deduction against ordinary income of $ 234,446.76 and a capital gain of $ 121,206.26. Converting $ 121,206.26 of the deduction to capital loss, and then offsetting it against the capital gain, leaves a deduction of $ 113,240.50, precisely respondent's figure.↩
8. See