1982 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 121">*121
In 1974, petitioners constituted an affiliated group of corporations which filed a consolidated return for that year. P, the parent corporation, directly owned 93 percent of the stock in MHL, which directly owned 95 percent of the stock in KI. In 1973, KI purchased and began operating a marina business, which it sold in 1974. On Aug. 27, 1974, Concepts, one of P's subsidiaries, created a wholly owned subsidiary, CIYC, whose business purpose was to establish a marina and yacht club. In 1974, CIYC did collect some application fees from persons seeking membership in its proposed yacht club. CIYC, however, did not include these fees in gross receipts because the moneys had to be returned if the yacht club was never established. CIYC neither operated a marina facility or yacht club, nor had any yacht club members until 1975. Nevertheless, on petitioners' consolidated return for 1974, preopening expenses incurred by CIYC during that year were deducted.
78 T.C. 458">*458 Respondent determined a deficiency of $ 93,895 in petitioners' 1974 Federal income tax. After concessions, the issues for decision are:
(1) Whether certain preopening expenditures claimed on 78 T.C. 458">*459 petitioners' consolidated1982 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 121">*123 return were incurred in the course of a trade or business under
(2) Whether petitioners are entitled to a deduction in excess of the amount allowed by respondent for a liability incurred under a profit sharing plan.
FINDINGS OF FACT
Some of the facts have been stipulated and are found accordingly.
Petitioners maintained their principal places of business in Maryland Heights, Mo., at the time the petition in this case was filed. For petitioners' 1974 taxable year, they filed a consolidated return. Among the corporations which were listed on the return as members of the affiliated group were Bennett Paper Corp., Commodores International Yacht Club, Inc., Concepts, Inc., and Maryland Heights Leasing, Inc.
Bennett Paper Corp. (hereinafter petitioner) was incorporated in 1956, and is authorized to do business under the laws of the State of Missouri. Petitioner manufactures corrugated boxes and various paper packaging products. 1982 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 121">*124 Petitioner's president is Samuel F. Bennett (hereinafter Mr. Bennett), who also is the president of some of petitioner's subsidiaries.
Two of petitioner's subsidiaries are Maryland Heights Leasing, Inc. (hereinafter MHL), and Concepts, Inc. (hereinafter Concepts). Both MHL and Concepts are Missouri corporations which were formed in 1960 and 1973, respectively. Petitioner owns directly all of Concepts' stock. Petitioner owns directly 93 percent of MHL's stock; the remaining 7 percent of MHL's stock is owned by Mr. Bennett's mother. On July 16, 1973, MHL formed King Island, Inc. (hereinafter KI), a Florida corporation, to operate a marina business. MHL owned 95 percent of KI's stock; the remaining 5 percent of KI's stock was owned by Mr. Bennett's accountant, Bernard Stock.
In August of 1973, KI purchased a marina facility from Williams Marine Lodge, Inc. The purchase price consisted of $ 75,000 cash and a $ 300,000 purchase money mortgage on the 78 T.C. 458">*460 property. No person other than KI signed the mortgage note or was liable to make any payments on it. In operating the marina business it had purchased, KI used the trade name of1982 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 121">*125 "Pirate's Cove Marina" (hereinafter Pirate's Cove) and offered the following services: sale, repair, and storage of boats, and the sale of gas and marine supplies. From the start, Pirate's Cove was an unprofitable venture for KI, largely because the marina was located on a creek which was filled with silt. The silt prevented the marina from getting its customers' boats in and out of the water, except at high tide.
Early in 1974, KI planned to start a yacht club at Pirate's Cove in addition to operating its marina business. The plan called for the yacht club to buy sailboats and power boats of various sizes and to make these boats available to club members; anyone interested in enjoying the benefits of the yacht club could apply for club membership and, if accepted, pay a membership fee of $ 500. It was also proposed that a member of the yacht club would pay a $ 40 monthly membership fee and a rental fee each time that he used one of the club's boats.
KI never opened up a yacht club at Pirate's Cove, and by August 1974, KI decided to sell the marina. In August 1974, petitioner considered the possibility of KI's establishing a marina and yacht club venture at another location, 1982 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 121">*126 but petitioner did not want the venture to be saddled with KI's $ 300,000 mortgage liability. 2 Consequently, on August 27, 1974, Concepts created a wholly owned subsidiary, the Commodores International Yacht Club, Inc. (hereinafter CIYC), a Florida corporation, to establish a marina and yacht club.
In September and October 1974, CIYC entered into leases of certain raw unimproved land with water rights. CIYC originally planned to operate a marina and yacht club on the leased premises, and it set up a temporary office thereon to sell memberships in the proposed yacht club. CIYC soon realized, however, that it would be less costly to purchase an existing marina facility rather than to build one on the unimproved leased property. As a result, CIYC decided to attempt to 78 T.C. 458">*461 purchase an existing marina facility, and it never established a marina or yacht club on the leased premises.
By the end1982 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 121">*127 of 1974, CIYC had not yet purchased a marina; however, it had collected approximately $ 5,000 in application fees from persons interested in becoming members of its proposed yacht club. On CIYC's books, it recorded these application fees as liabilities because it was obligated to refund the moneys if the yacht club never began operation. As of December 31, 1974, CIYC recorded no gross receipts of any kind; it had neither yacht club members nor the facilities, boats, and other equipment needed to operate a yacht club; it neither owned nor operated a marina facility; it did not own any depreciable property; and it did not have reciprocal membership privileges with other marinas or yacht clubs.
In March 1975, CIYC purchased an existing marina facility known as the Caladesi Cay Marina (hereinafter Caladesi Cay), which was adjacent to the property that CIYC had leased in September and October of 1974. CIYC immediately began operating the marina at Caladesi Cay. On June 1, 1975, CIYC held the grand opening of its yacht club at Caladesi Cay, and first made boats available for rental on June 16, 1975.
On petitioners' consolidated return for 1974, a deduction of $ 57,870 was claimed for1982 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 121">*128 business expenses incurred by CIYC during such year. In the notice of deficiency, respondent determined that the claimed $ 57,870 business deduction represented nondeductible preopening expenses, which were required to be capitalized.
Throughout 1974, petitioner employed an accrual basis of accounting and had a profit sharing plan (hereinafter the plan) in effect for its salaried employees. The amount of profit sharing that an employee would receive was dependent upon his salary and petitioner's quarterly and annual profits. Petitioner's plan provided, in pertinent part, the following:
(a) [Those eligible] Must be an employee of the Company for the entire quarter.
(b) [Those eligible] Must be an employee of the Company at time of payment of bonus.
(c) The combined income of Bennett Paper and its applicable subsidiaries 78 T.C. 458">*462 must be in excess of three (3) percent on gross sales for the quarter. Quarters due on a calendar basis, ending March 31, June 30, September 30 and December 31.
(a) The quarter's profit sharing will be determined from the operating statement as prepared from the records of the Accounting1982 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 121">*129 Department.
(b) Fifty (50) percent of the calculated profit sharing will be paid in the month following the end of the quarter.
(c) The second half of the calculated profit sharing will be paid if the company maintains a minimum return of four (4) percent on gross sales for the entire calendar year. The percent of return will exclude all previous payments and accruals of calculated profit sharing.
(d) If the company achieves a rate of return on gross sales in excess of four (4) percent, then the second half of the calculated profit sharing will be paid as follows:
1. Twenty-five (25) percent of the total profit sharing to be paid in April, along with the following year's first quarter profit sharing.
2. The remaining twenty-five (25) percent to be paid in July, along with the following year's second quarter profit sharing.
(a) Determine gross sales for the quarter.
(b) Divide operating profit by gross sales.
(c) On profits in excess of the three (3) percent, you earn one (1) percent for each one fourth (1/4) percent of profit.
[Example] | |
Sales for quarter | $ 850,000 |
Profit for quarter | 59,500 |
Percent of return on sales | 7% |
Less | 3% |
Net balance for profit sharing | 4% |
Multiply by | 4 |
Equals percentage for calculated | |
profit sharing | 16% |
1982 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 121">*130 The total base salary paid during the quarter is then multiplied by the 16%.
Earnings | ||||
for quarter | Percentage | Total | Paid | Withheld |
$ 2,000 | 16% | $ 320 | $ 160 | $ 160 |
As of December 31, 1974, petitioner determined that its employees earned $ 364,274.06 in bonuses during 1974. The plan required petitioner to pay $ 181,650.01 of this $ 364,274.06 in April and July of 1975, but only if the employees who 78 T.C. 458">*463 earned the bonuses were still employed by petitioner at such times. Nevertheless, petitioner accrued the $ 181,650.01 as a liability that it incurred in 1974, and such amount was deducted on petitioners' consolidated return for 1974. In the notice of deficiency, respondent determined that $ 129,476 of the claimed $ 181,650.01 deduction for accrued bonuses was not a fixed liability in 1974, and, therefore, disallowed such portion of the claimed deduction. 3
OPINION
Petitioners argue that since they filed a consolidated return, the marina activities of KI may be attributed to CIYC in determining whether CIYC was carrying on a trade or business when it incurred the preopening expenses at issue. Essentially, petitioners maintain that the formation of CIYC did not constitute a new business venture, but rather a continuation of its predecessor's (KI's) marina operation with an additional marketing concept (the yacht club). Thus, 78 T.C. 458">*464 petitioners contend that the preopening expenses which CIYC incurred in 1974 were properly deductible in such year under
Underlying respondent's position is his claim that CIYC was formed for bona fide business purposes and was not a sham corporation. Respondent maintains that the mere filing of a consolidated return1982 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 121">*133 is not a sufficient basis for imputing KI's activities to CIYC. With respect to the recognition or nonrecognition of corporate entities, the Supreme Court in
The doctrine of corporate entity fills a useful purpose in business life. Whether the purpose be to gain an advantage under the law of the state of incorporation or to avoid or to comply with the demands of creditors or to serve the creator's personal or undisclosed convenience, so long as that purpose is the equivalent of business activity or is followed by the carrying on of business by the corporation, the corporation remains a separate taxable entity.
To this rule there are recognized exceptions.
The exceptional cases where the courts have disregarded corporate lines between parent and subsidiary corporations have generally involved extraordinary or "peculiar" circumstances where disregarding the corporate lines was done to arrive at a "just taxing basis."
Recent decisions by this Court have specifically considered and rejected petitioner's position that the trade or business requirement of
In
Our decisions in
Our decision to consider only CIYC's activities in determining whether CIYC satisfied the carrying on requirement of
Petitioners rely primarily on
In
In
All of the facts which influenced the District Court in
The instant case also differs from
Petitioners argue that even if KI's activities are not attributable to CIYC, CIYC was carrying on a trade or business when it incurred the preopening expenses in 1974. We disagree. The leading case of
The uniform teaching of these several cases is that, even though a taxpayer has made a firm decision to enter into business and over a considerable period of time spent money in preparation for entering that business, he still has not "engaged in carrying on any trade or business" within the intendment of
See also
In light of the foregoing, we hold that CIYC was not carrying on a trade or business in 1974. Prior to CIYC's acquisition of Caladesi Cay in 1975, CIYC was in no position to carry out its intended business purpose, to operate a marina and yacht 78 T.C. 458">*470 club. As of December 31, 1974, CIYC had none of the following: ownership or use of a marina facility; yacht club members or the boats and equipment to operate such a club; reported gross receipts1982 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 121">*146 or depreciable property of any kind; reciprocal membership privileges with other yacht clubs. During 1974, CIYC's only activities related to preparations for entering the marina and yacht club business. In fact, as late as December 31, 1974, CIYC was still uncertain as to when, if ever, it would be operating a marina and yacht club. Consequently, we uphold respondent's determination that the preopening expenses which CIYC incurred were not properly deductible on petitioners' consolidated return for 1974.
We must determine whether or not the amounts that petitioner accrued on its books as contributions to its plan are deductible in excess of the amount allowed by respondent.
Petitioner was using the accrual method of accounting during the taxable year in issue. An accrual basis taxpayer may deduct an expense for the taxable year in which all events have occurred which determine the fact of the liability and which fix the amount of such liability with reasonable certainty.
Upon reviewing the terms of the plan, we hold that petitioner's liability was not fixed at the year's end. Any employee who failed to survive or remain in petitioner's1982 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 121">*148 employ until April and July of 1975 would forfeit a portion of the 1974 bonus. Since all such forfeitures reverted back to 78 T.C. 458">*471 petitioner, the extent of petitioner's liability under the plan was not fixed at the end of 1974. Thus, the instant case does not involve a situation where petitioner had a fixed liability to an employee group on December 31, 1974, with the only uncertainty at that date being the specific individuals who made up such group. See
Since we have found that petitioner's liability to pay the employee bonus amounts was not fixed by December 31, 1974, it is not entitled to accrue and deduct such amounts which respondent disallowed for 1974.
To reflect the foregoing,
1. All statutory references are to the Internal Revenue Code of 1954 as amended.↩
2. In October 1974, KI sold all of its assets, but it maintained its legal existence until approximately September 1975.↩
3. Respondent did not explain why he allowed $ 52,174.01 of the claimed $ 181,650.01 deduction.↩
4. Since respondent has not argued that CIYC should have characterized the application fees it received as income, we express no opinion on the matter.↩