1972 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 58">*58
Petitioners, shareholders in Nova Corp., guaranteed notes of Nova to Citizens National Bank, Mercantile National Bank, and Tex-Tool Manufacturing Corp. Nova was adjudged a bankrupt in 1967 and was insolvent as of Dec. 31, 1967. During 1967 petitioners paid the following: (1) Principal and interest as guarantors on Nova's note to Citizens; (2) principal and interest as guarantors on Nova's note to Mercantile; (3) legal expenses associated with the note to Tex-Tool; and (4) legal and accounting expenses associated with the sale of Nova's assets as the corporation was closed out.
58 T.C. 996">*996 Respondent determined deficiencies in the income taxes of the petitioners, as follows:
Taxable | |||
Docket No. | Petitioners | year | Amount |
ended | |||
2550-70 | Mozelle Rushing | 12/31/67 | $ 7,468.34 |
2551-70 | Double H Corp | 1/31/67 | 6,915.89 |
1/31/68 | 354.91 | ||
2552-70 | W. B. Rushing | 12/31/67 | 7,468.34 |
2582-70 | W. B. Rushing and Mozelle Rushing | 12/31/66 | 181,644.80 |
2583-70 | Lubbock Commercial Building, Inc | 1/31/67 | 3,129.40 |
1/31/68 | 13,046.91 | ||
3659-70 | Catherine Tidmore | 12/31/67 | 2,513.69 |
3660-70 | Max Tidmore | 12/31/67 | 2,513.69 |
58 T.C. 996">*997 1972 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 58">*61 Numerous concessions having been made by the parties, the only issues left for decision involve the petitioners at docket Nos. 2550-70, 2552-70, 3659-70, and 3660-70.
The first question is whether the petitioners are entitled to interest expense deductions under
FINDINGS OF FACT
Some of the facts have been stipulated; they are so found and incorporated herein by this reference.
Petitioners W. B. Rushing (hereinafter referred to as Rushing), docket No. 2552-70, and Mozelle Rushing, docket No. 2550-70, are husband and wife and have resided in Lubbock, Tex., since before 1950. At the time the petitions were filed, they were residents of Lubbock. They filed separate community1972 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 58">*62 income tax returns for 1967 prepared on the cash basis of accounting with the district director of internal revenue, Dallas, Tex.
Petitioners Max Tidmore (hereinafter referred to as Tidmore), docket No. 3660-70, and Catherine Tidmore, docket No. 3659-70, are husband and wife and have resided at Lubbock, Tex., since before 1950. At the time the petitions were filed, they were residents of Lubbock. They filed separate community income tax returns for 1967 prepared on the cash basis of accounting with the district director of internal revenue, Dallas, Tex.
The use of the word "petitioners" hereinafter will refer collectively to Rushing and Tidmore, unless otherwise indicated.
Nova Corp. (hereinafter referred to as Nova or the corporation) was in the business of manufacturing a particular type of radio. Tidmore and Rushing were approached by Robert L. Cash regarding their possible acquisition of stock in Nova. Nova was in need of capital at the time, and this was the prime reason for offering petitioners an interest in Nova. Tidmore and Rushing acquired a portion of the corporation and helped provide the needed additional financing. They arranged a line of credit for Nova at the1972 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 58">*63 Citizens National Bank of Lubbock, Tex. (Citizens). The stock in Nova Corp. was acquired in January 1966 and Nova began borrowing from Citizens in July 1966. By 1967 Citizens had advanced over $ 300,000 to Nova. The procedure for these loans was generally the same. Money was advanced directly 58 T.C. 996">*998 to Nova or placed in the Nova account for use in Nova's business operations. Notes were then prepared by Citizens, and signed on the face on behalf of the corporation by Robert L. Cash and Ronald Boucher. These notes were then endorsed on the back by Tidmore. Rushing endorsed all but two of the notes. Nova could not have borrowed the sums advanced without the endorsements of the petitioners, and the petitioners acted as guarantors specifically to enhance the value of their interest in Nova.
Petitioners were involved in a further transaction wherein Nova acquired Hallmark, Inc. In order to finance this acquisition, Nova borrowed an additional $ 35,000 from the Mercantile National Bank, Dallas, Tex. (Mercantile). Rushing, at the time, guaranteed the notes for $ 35,000 and Tidmore, by a letter dated March 16, 1967, acknowledged his 50-percent liability on Rushing's guarantee.
1972 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 58">*64 Nova was adjudged a bankrupt in 1967 and was insolvent as of December 31, 1967. Rushing and Tidmore, pursuant to their guarantee agreements, were called upon to pay Nova's outstanding notes. Upon demand of Mercantile, petitioners on May 3, 1967, paid the corporation notes and interest. On June 8, 1967, petitioners paid Citizens in full for all of the unpaid notes and accrued interest of Nova.
In 1967 petitioners paid interest on the Nova notes, as follows:
Docket No. | Petitioner | Amount |
2550-70 | Mozelle Rushing | $ 3,604.78 |
2552-70 | W. B. Rushing | 3,604.79 |
3659-70 | Catherine Tidmore | 6,776.49 |
3660-70 | Max Tidmore | 6,776.50 |
The petitioners on their 1967 income tax returns deducted the foregoing amounts as interest expenses. In addition, petitioners in docket Nos. 2550-70 and 2552-70 paid interest in the total amount of $ 440.42 to Mercantile which was not claimed and is not reflected in the foregoing figures. This amount is now claimed as a deduction.
In 1967 petitioners paid certain legal and accounting expenses. They paid the law firm of Evans, Pharr, Trout and Jones $ 1,505.76 ($ 376.44 in each docket) for services rendered regarding pending litigation by Tex-Tool Manufacturing1972 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 58">*65 Co., a Dallas corporation. Nova acquired a subsidiary known as Capco-Capacitators from Tex-Tool for cash and a $ 40,000 note. Petitioners, subsequent to and independent of their original promises of guarantee which accompanied their purchase of Nova's stock, agreed to further guarantee Nova's $ 40,000 note to Tex-Tool. The legal expenses were a result of Tex-Tool's threat to file suit against Nova, Capco-Capacitators, and petitioners on this outstanding obligation. This action was taken by Tex-Tool as the petitioners were attempting to close out Nova Corp. The petitioners were fully aware 58 T.C. 996">*999 of Nova's pending insolvency and they incurred these expenses specifically to reduce the amounts they would eventually be responsible for as guarantors of this outstanding obligation. In fact, through these negotiations some sort of extension was eventually worked out.
The petitioners expended further amounts when they paid an attorney and a C.P.A. firm "more or less an agent's fee" to negotiate the sale of certain of Nova's assets. The specific amounts expended were as follows:
Tidmore paid a fee of $ 100 to an attorney, Buddy Adams, for expenses Adams incurred while trying to dispose1972 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 58">*66 of Nova's assets during the process of liquidation.
Tidmore also hired a C.P.A. firm to aid in negotiations which eventually led to Nova's sale of Capco-Capacitators. The fee for this work amounted to $ 656.16.
The petitioners deducted all of the above legal and accounting fees as business expenses on their 1967 returns. Respondent, in his notices of deficiency increased petitioners' taxable income to reflect the disallowance of the interest deductions and the legal and accounting expenses.
OPINION
Two issues are presented for our consideration.
The first is whether petitioners are entitled to a deduction under
It is clear that according to Texas State law, the petitioners were endorsers 41972 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 58">*67 on Nova's notes to Citizens. As to the Mercantile notes, a formal guarantee agreement existed. They were not cosigners of any of the notes and were, therefore, only secondarily liable on the notes of Nova. 5
In the case of
Subsequent to that case, the Supreme Court decided the case of
Relying on the scope of the
Respondent in the present case, relying on
The second issue for consideration is the deductibility of the various legal and accounting expenses incurred while Nova was in the process of discontinuing its operations.
The petitioners claim that all of these expenses were incurred by them in their capacity as guarantors of Nova's notes. The respondent contends that these are corporate expenses and are not deductible by the petitioners. The respondent views the amounts expended by petitioners as capital contributions which must be added to their basis in Nova's stock.
Prior to the
"These expenditures occurred for the sole purpose of reducing her liability under the guaranty. As such, they are deductible as losses on a 58 T.C. 996">*1001 transaction entered into for profit."
There are many questions inherent in this second issue. First, we must determine whether any of the expenses are the type of expenses held deductible by
1972 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 58">*71 There is no doubt that the expenses relating to the attempted litigation by Tex-Tool are similar in nature to those held deductible under
First, it should be noted that
It is still possible in many circumstances to consider payments resulting from guarantor transactions as payments made in a transaction entered into for profit. Indeed, in numerous post-Putnam cases, this Court has held1972 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 58">*72 that certain payments which had their genesis in petitioners' status as guarantors were payments which resulted in losses incurred in a transaction entered into for profit, deductible under section 165(c)(2). See, for example,
In
1972 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 58">*74 It is true that a guarantor liability undertaken as part and parcel of a stock acquisition is a transaction which is capital in nature, see
More importantly, the undertaking [assumption of guarantor liability] was given subsequent to, and 1972 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 58">*75 independently of, the acquisition of the original investment by the taxpayer. Under such circumstances, it would have been difficult to hold that the payments were part of the
The final question we must answer is whether the petitioners are the proper parties to claim this expense. Respondent contends that 58 T.C. 996">*1003 the primary obligor on the note was Nova, not petitioners, therefore the legal expenses were deductible only by Nova.
As a general rule, for tax purposes, a corporation is an entity distinct from the stockholders.
As in the case of most general rules, an exception to this one has been developed. In a number of cases, the courts have allowed deductions when the expenditures were made by a taxpayer to protect or promote his own business, even though the transaction giving rise to the1972 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 58">*76 expenditures originated with another person and would have been deductible by that person if payment had been made by him. * * *
The Court in
The tests as established by all of these cases are that we must first ascertain the purposes or motive which cause the taxpayer to pay the obligations of the other person. Once we have identified that motive, we must then judge whether it is an ordinary and necessary expense of the individual's trade or business; that is, is it an appropriate expenditure for the furtherance or promotion of that trade or business? * * * [
The exception to the general rule as expressed in
In
whether an individual who is not named as a party defendant in an action, but who will be substantially affected by its result, may employ attorneys to defend it and protect his interests and deduct the expenditure as ordinary and necessary business expense. [
The Board of Tax Appeals found that Potter was engaged in the business of financing and managing hotels as a regular vocation. It went on to state at page 255: "We think there was a necessity that the petitioner protect his interests, as his interests would be vitally 58 T.C. 996">*1004 affected * * *, and that he had a right to employ counsel and deduct the expenditure as a business 1972 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 58">*78 expense."
In a later case,
We find
It is true that in the present case the primary obligor on the debt was Nova. However, the real economic beneficiaries of the legal services rendered were the petitioners. The motive behind these expenses was not to aid an all but defunct corporation but rather to reduce the amount by which the guarantors would esentually be liable. By affecting Nova's obligation, petitioners were able to reduce the amounts due on their guarantees at their very source. The significant fact in the present case is that at the point in time at which these legal services were required it was a foregone conclusion that petitioners, not Nova, would bear the cost of Nova's impending insolvency. In
Under the limited circumstances of the present case, where there is an impending corporate bankruptcy accompanied by an inevitable 58 T.C. 996">*1005 guarantor liability, the rationale of
Respondent's reliance on
Two items remain for disposition. These are the fees which petitioners characterized as agent's fees paid to accountants and attorneys for their services in selling Nova's assets. These fees are not the type of legal expenses encompassed by the rule in
Expenses such as these are related to the sale of Nova's capital and section 1231 assets and are properly capitalized. See
Aside from the characterization of these expenses, we do not believe that the same proximate relationship exists between these agent's fees and petitioners' guarantor liability as existed in the Tex-Tool legal expense item. These items1972 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 58">*82 were improperly deducted by petitioners.
Reviewed by the Court.
1. Cases of the following petitioners have been consolidated herewith: Double H Corporation, docket No. 2551-70; W. B. Rushing, docket No. 2552-70; W. B. Rushing and Mozelle Rushing, docket No. 2582-70; Lubbock Commercial Building, Inc., docket No. 2583-70; Catherine Tidmore, docket No. 3659-70; and Max Tidmore, docket No. 3660-70.↩
2. Unless otherwise indicated, all section references are to the Internal Revenue Code of 1954.↩
3.
(a) General Rule. -- There shall be allowed as a deduction all interest paid or accrued within the taxable year on indebtedness.↩
4. Vernon's Texas Codes Annotated, sec. 3.402, states:
"Unless the instrument clearly indicates that a signature is made in some other capacity, it is an indorsement. * * *"
There is no evidence that petitioners' signatures herein were made in any capacity other than as endorsers.↩
5. Vernon's Texas Codes Annotated, sec. 3.414, states:
"(a) Unless the indorsement otherwise specifies * * * every indorser engages that upon dishonor and any necessary notice of dishonor and protest he will pay the instrument according to its tenor at the time of his indorsement * * *"↩
6. Implicit in our analysis is the assumption that, with respect to these expenses, petitioners would have no claim for reimbursement giving rise to a bad debt, the deduction of which would be controlled by
7. Furthermore, in the present case, petitioners' guarantor obligations which gave rise to the involved legal expenses had not evolved into a bad debt of any kind at the time the legal expenses were incurred. In fact, the result of the legal work done was to extend the time in which payment was to be made on this outstanding obligation.↩