1959 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 230">*230
Petitioner's loans to corporation, and unrecouped guaranty payment, later transferred for nominal amount, being wholly uncollectible and proximately related to petitioner's individual business,
31 T.C. 1121">*1121 Respondent determined deficiencies in petitioners' income tax for the years 1947, 1948, 1949, and 1950 in the respective amounts of $ 14,704.93, $ 1,178.02, $ 927.54, and $ 1,827.60. The only item in controversy is a part of the deficiency determination for 1947. The issues remaining are: (1) Whether petitioner Mac Levine's claims against his partly owned corporation became worthless in the tax year and whether they constituted a business or nonbusiness bad debt; or whether his transfer of such claims to a purchaser of the corporation constituted the sale or exchange of capital assets; and (2) whether the loss sustained by petitioner Mac Levine upon payment as a guarantor of the corporation's1959 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 230">*231 obligation constituted a business or nonbusiness bad debt.
FINDINGS OF FACT.
Certain facts were orally stipulated and are hereby found.
Mac Levine, hereafter called petitioner, and Anne Levine, husband and wife, filed their joint Federal income tax return for the calendar year 1947 on an accrual method of accounting with the collector of internal revenue for the district of Massachusetts.
From 1945 through 1947, petitioner engaged in the business of manufacturing springs for furniture and bedding. He conducted this business as a sole proprietor under the name of Webster Spring Company.
Sometime in 1945, petitioner determined that his customers needed fabrics in addition to springs. The market for fabrics was tight with the result that it was difficult to sell springs unless petitioner's customers had a fabric source. Petitioner felt that the establishment of a plant to produce fabrics which could be sold to petitioner's spring customers would increase the sales of his spring business. On December 19, 1945, petitioner and his brothers organized General Textile Mills, Inc., hereafter called General, which manufactured and sold fabrics for upholstering furniture. Petitioner's hopes1959 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 230">*232 to increase the sales of his spring business by the operation of General were realized 31 T.C. 1121">*1122 and he received spring business because General was able to supply textile fabrics also.
In 1946, one of petitioner's other brothers formed a sales organization on the west coast with the purpose of obtaining upholstery fabrics and springs to sell. In 1946, petitioner sold $ 85,000 to $ 90,000 of its total volume of $ 500,000 to this west coast organization. Prior to this time he had had no west coast customers. The brother was also able to purchase fabrics from General.
Petitioner and his brothers invested $ 30,000 in the capital stock of General and unrelated parties contributed machinery valued at approximately $ 5,000. At a later date petitioner and one of his brothers invested in the preferred stock of General.
During 1946 and 1947, General needed money and petitioner made the following loans to it:
Date | Amount |
June 17, 1946 | $ 5,000 |
July 1, 1946 | 5,000 |
Mar. 10, 1947 | 1,200 |
Mar. 24, 1947 | 1,000 |
Apr. 3, 1947 | 1,000 |
Apr. 9, 1947 | 1,000 |
Apr. 11, 1947 | 1,000 |
Total | 15,200 |
These loans were evidenced by promissory notes payable in 3 months or less. General did not1959 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 230">*233 repay petitioner.
In 1946, Paul Barrow, a customer of petitioner's spring business, loaned $ 4,000 to General which petitioner and his brother guaranteed. General repaid $ 1,400 on this loan, and in May 1947, petitioner and his brother each paid $ 1,300. General did not repay petitioner.
General borrowed money from Mill Factors Corporation, hereafter called Factor. To secure the notes so given, General assigned its accounts receivable and mortgaged its inventory and machinery to Factor.
Sometime in April 1947, Factor took over control of General and informed petitioner that his "interests were practically wiped out." After this petitioner exercised no management, authority, or control over General.
Sometime in May 1947, petitioner's accountant studied a balance sheet of General as of April 30, 1947. He estimated the value of the assets and the nature of the liabilities, determined that the secured claims and the priority claims exceeded the estimated values of the assets, and so reported to petitioner. Petitioner thereupon instructed his bookkeeper to write off as uncollectible the loans to General in June 1947, the next writeoff date in the course of his business. The loans1959 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 230">*234 were written off as bad debts in June 1947.
31 T.C. 1121">*1123 In September 1947, Factor sold its General notes and obligations to Quaker Pile Fabric Corporation, hereafter called Quaker. In October 1947, a stockholder of General informed petitioner that Quaker was interested in acquiring General. Petitioner, at the request of this stockholder, attended a conference on October 6, 1947, in Providence, Rhode Island.
At this conference, in which petitioner took no active part, Quaker offered $ 500 as a "token" settlement of all claims against General and offered petitioner a minority interest for his General stock and a sum of money for an assignment of his claims against General. There were no negotiations as to the amount to be paid for the assignment of claims. Petitioner transferred to Quaker, in consideration of $ 362, all his claims against General under the promissory notes. The parties signed the documents on October 6, 1947. Petitioner retained possession of the promissory notes.
On October 6, 1947, General was reorganized and its name was changed to Providence Pile Fabric Corporation, hereafter called Providence. Quaker surrendered and canceled the claims against Providence1959 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 230">*235 acquired from Factor, petitioner, and other creditors in exchange for capital stock of Providence.
Petitioner deducted on Schedule C of his return for 1947, $ 16,138 as a "Loss on Notes Receivable." This figure constitutes the result of adding $ 15,200 of advances and $ 1,300 payment on guaranty, making a total of $ 16,500, and deducting therefrom the $ 362 received from Quaker. Respondent disallowed the deduction and determined that $ 14,838 represented a long-term capital loss and $ 1,300 represented a nonbusiness bad debt loss.
Petitioner's claims against General became worthless and were charged off in the spring of 1947.
Losses sustained from the worthlessness of the loans and unrecouped payment on petitioner's guaranty were proximately related to petitioner's trade or business.
OPINION.
Respondent determined that petitioner's loss when he was required to make good on a guaranty was a "nonbusiness bad debt" -- a result possible only if the primary debtor was unable to reimburse him. At the same time, respondent has determined that other debts owed to petitioner by the primary debtor did not become worthless during the taxable year.
Without regard to this apparent inconsistency, 1959 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 230">*236 the record seems to us to show prima facie that all of the indebtedness became worthless early in the tax year, and that any burden of going forward was shifted to respondent. The business of the debtor was taken over at that time by a factoring concern which was the debtor's principal 31 T.C. 1121">*1124 secured creditor. Petitioner was informed by it that his interest was wiped out, but in order to confirm the information, his accountant examined the balance sheet and concluded that the secured and priority liabilities exceeded the assets. Thereupon petitioner instructed his bookkeeper to charge off the accounts.
It is true that the testimony of petitioner and his accountant is the source of these statements. See
Later in the same year petitioner received a token payment from a prospective purchaser of the debtor's 1959 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 230">*237 business. This development lacks significance, because the payment then of a nominal nuisance value fails to negate the actual worthlessness of the claims, and if anything, in fact demonstrates it. See
When a debt is "written off" it is not thereby disposed of. It remains an asset in the hands of the obligee. The precedents are replete with instances of subsequent recoveries on obligations previously treated1959 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 230">*238 as totally or partially worthless. E.g.,
To be sure, if a debt is written off in whole or in part, subsequent developments in the same tax year may throw light on the correctness 31 T.C. 1121">*1125 1959 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 230">*239 of such action. In that case it is of little consequence whether we view the original writeoff as correct, subject to the adjustment, or as a single process to be treated as a year-end entry. This would be true whether a wholly worthless debt turned out to be partially collectible, or even presumably where a debt originally considered worthless only in part developed as entirely uncollectible. A sale might, of course, indicate the error of regarding a debt as totally worthless. But this would be merely evidentiary and not substantive.
We conclude that respondent erred in dignifying the later transfer for a nominal amount as the sale of a capital asset, at least to any extent beyond a zero basis; but that, on the contrary, the indebtedness had already become worthless and was properly treated as such.
A possible impediment to these conclusions is certain language contained in
The Tax Court made this ruling: Where a taxpayer partially charges off a note and later in the same taxable year sells the note at a price equal to the reduced value remaining after the charge-off, the taxpayer may not deduct the amount of the charge-off under
But the result is different if the taxpayer has arranged for the sale before he makes the charge-off; 1959 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 230">*241 for then, in reality, he is charging off a debt he no longer owns. * * *
The case was remanded for consideration of a contention not advanced below. The principles stated by the Court of Appeals have apparently since been accepted by the Tax Court.
While a much closer question, we conclude also that the indebtedness, including the1959 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 230">*242 guaranty, was a business rather than a nonbusiness bad debt. Petitioner, being a sole proprietor, does not run afoul of such cases as
1. "True, the charge-offs were made earlier in the year, but their effectiveness for deduction purposes must be judged at the close of 1944, at which time they had lost their significance, due to the disposal of the obligations to which they were related."↩