1983 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 57">*57
Petitioner owned and operated an ornamental iron business as a sole proprietor. Pursuant to orders solicited by petitioner, petitioner's employees fabricated ornamental iron railings and other iron products out of an inventory of crude iron rods, using equipment and machinery. Petitioner then installed the finished products.
81 T.C. 91">*91 Respondent determined a $ 14,578 deficiency in petitioners' 1978 Federal income tax. The only issue is whether capital is a material income-producing factor in petitioners' ornamental iron business.
FINDINGS OF FACT
Some of the facts are stipulated and are found accordingly.
Petitioners John E. Van Kalker, Jr., and Carol Van Kalker, resided in South Holland, 1983 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 57">*59 Ill., when they filed their petition herein.
For the past 23 years, John E. Van Kalker, Jr. (hereinafter petitioner), has been a sole proprietor in the business of fabricating and installing wrought iron railings. Under the name "Van's Ornamental Iron Co.," petitioner operates the business out of a structure the size of a four-car garage adjacent to his home. This structure was built years ago by petitioner's father to repair farming equipment when the area was still a farming community. Since there was little money in farming when petitioner finished high school, he used the structure to start his ornamental iron business.
The ironwork is used primarily for railings around decks and for staircases; it is also used for fences, gates, and arches. Each railing or product is custom made by petitioner. It is separately measured, fabricated, and installed. Petitioner 81 T.C. 91">*92 visits the location, discusses designs and plans with the customer, and takes measurements. The specifications and measurements are then given to an employee who, in the normal case, prepares the desired product. The employee removes iron rods from stock and cuts, bends, welds, and paints them. The ironwork1983 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 57">*60 is then taken to the location wherein petitioner, himself, installs the finished product.
In the beginning, petitioner made his own tools which included a simple welder, a saw, and an old stoker. In the first 5 years, he employed one or two people. The business grew until its peak year 1978, the taxable year in issue, when petitioner employed six or seven people. As of 1978, equipment used in the business included two metal cutters, four welders, and an assortment of handmade tools. A stock of unworked iron rods and bars was also kept on the premises.
Petitioner sold a majority of his railings to individual homeowners; the rest were sold to building contractors for newly constructed homes. Petitioner's sales were generally made within a 40-mile radius of his home located 20 miles south of Chicago. Petitioner depended on word-of-mouth for advertising.
As of 1978, the bases of the following depreciable assets used in petitioner's business were as follows:
Depreciation allowed | ||
Adjusted | or allowable in | |
basis | prior years | |
Trucks and automobiles | $ 24,953 | $ 7,104 |
Machinery and equipment | 19,040 | 12,105 |
Furniture and fixtures | 2,728 | 758 |
Total | 46,721 | 19,967 |
1983 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 57">*61 Petitioner had $ 476,178 in gross receipts from sales in 1978. His cost of goods sold plus materials and supplies was $ 113,010. 1 The cost of labor was $ 105,125.
Petitioner's 1978 net profit from his business was $ 196,046. On their 1978 Federal income tax return, petitioners treated 81 T.C. 91">*93 the entire $ 196,046 net profit as personal service income within the meaning of
1983 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 57">*62 OPINION
In 1978, petitioner had net earnings of $ 196,046 from a business in which he engaged in the fabrication and sale of ornamental ironworks. He contends that capital was not a "material income-producing factor" in his business, within the meaning of
In the case of a taxpayer engaged in a trade or business in which both personal services and capital are material income-producing factors, under regulations prescribed by the Secretary, a reasonable allowance as compensation for the personal services rendered by the taxpayer, not in excess of 30 percent of his share of the net profits of such trade or business, shall be considered as earned income.
The congressional objective in incorporating by reference this trade-or-business language into
1983 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 57">*66 81 T.C. 91">*95 To aid in determining whether capital is material to the production of the income, the regulations set forth guidelines drawn mainly from the decided cases interpreting other Code sections or provisions of prior law involving the issue of capital as a material income-producing factor. See, e.g.,
(ii) Whether capital is a material income-producing factor must be determined by reference to all the facts of each case. Capital is a material income-producing factor if a substantial portion of the gross income of the business is attributable to the employment of capital in the business, as reflected, for example, by a substantial investment in inventories, plant, machinery, or other equipment. In general, capital is not a material income-producing factor where gross income of the business consists principally of fees, commissions, or other compensation for personal services performed by an individual. * * * 8
1983 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 57">*67 Under this test, capital was a material factor in earning a substantial portion of the gross income of petitioner's business. The earnings did not consist "principally of fees, commissions, or other compensation" (
Petitioner's manufacturing activities, involving the fabrication of ornamental ironworks, employed a significant amount 81 T.C. 91">*96 of capital which was material to the production of the business's income. In addition to the capital required to meet operating expenses, 9 capital was used to buy an inventory of iron rods and other materials and supplies at a total cost of $ 113,010. Although the inventories on hand at the beginning and at the end of the year were approximately $ 10,000 and $ 11,000, respectively, petitioner made purchases of $ 96,024 worth of raw materials during the year, equal to 20 percent of the gross receipts ($ 476,178). The total amount spent on the inventory of raw materials is a far more important figure than the opening and closing amounts. Significantly, the regulation (
Petitioner argues that he could just as easily have bought the iron he needed in his business piece by piece and kept no inventory of raw materials on hand and thus would have had no capital "invested" in inventory. But the result would have been the same. Petitioner was not a broker1983 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 57">*69 of these materials. Cf.
1983 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 57">*70 81 T.C. 91">*97 In addition to the employment of operating capital to cover current expenditures, petitioner had a capital investment in furniture, fixtures, and equipment in which the adjusted basis was $ 46,721 and on which allowed or allowable depreciation as of 1978 amounted to $ 19,967. These items included the vehicles used in the solicitation of business, the machinery and the tools employed in fabricating the products, and the trucks required to deliver the completed works. Moreover, petitioner had some capital invested in his plant. The record contains no estimate of the value in 1978 of the plant (a financial statement in the record carries the land at $ 3,204); petitioner emphasizes that his plant building was a modest structure, but it was adequate to house the manufacture of ironworks which petitioner was able to sell for $ 476,178 and at a $ 196,046 profit. All of these capital items contributed materially to the production of petitioner's income. "When the use of capital plays a vital part in the carrying on of the business, it can not be said that its use is merely incidental thereto."
Equally important, when we focus on what produced the income, we find that petitioner was not a mere "purveyor of services."
Petitioner argues that his income was "attributable primarily to personal services." We do not discount the importance of petitioner's efforts and skills -- 1983 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 57">*73 they were clearly necessary and probably indispensable. Petitioner solicited orders from the building contractors and homeowners; he designed the railings and other ornamental ironworks; he installed or supervised the installation of the ironworks fabricated by his employees. His services may have been equally or even more material than capital, but capital was also material. And the relative value of his services is not the question. The statute as it stood in 1978 recognizes that both capital and services may be income-producing factors. It does not permit the courts to compare the relative materiality of the capital and personal service components and hold that capital was not material even if the income was attributable primarily to personal services. If capital is material, as it is here, the statutory 30-percent limitation applies.
As explained in note 7,
81 T.C. 91">*99 In recent years, the Court has applied
1983 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 57">*76 In
To reflect the foregoing,
Fay,
This Court has always treated the issue before us as a question of fact, and we have consistently held that the distinction must be made between income earned by capital and income earned by personal effort.
1983 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 57">*79 What truly makes this case unique is the lack of any significant capital invested in petitioner's business. Lest anyone be misled by visions of smokestacks and assembly lines, petitioner's business was a very small concern with only a minimal investment in capital, certainly not the kind of investment associated with a "manufacturing" business. Petitioner started the business over 23 years ago and continues to operate it out of the same structure his father originally built to repair farm equipment. It is the size of a four-car garage. In the beginning, petitioner made his own tools. As of the year in issue, his tools included two metal cutters, four welders, and an assortment of handmade tools. His adjusted basis in these tools was only $ 19,040. He also kept a stock of unworked iron rods and bars which are reflected by a 1978 closing inventory of $ 11,066. Yet, despite this minimal capital investment, his business generated $ 476,178 in gross receipts and $ 196,046 in net profits. When the regulations speak of "a substantial investment in inventories, plant, machinery, or other equipment," I cannot imagine they had in mind this business. 2
The business generates its income through a labor-intensive process whereby raw materials in the form of crude iron rods are transformed into custom-made ornamental iron products. Petitioner visits the location, discusses various designs and plans with each customer, and takes measurements. 1983 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 57">*81 After 81 T.C. 91">*102 receiving the specifications and measurements, an employee removes the iron rods from stock and cuts, bends, welds, and paints them to create the finished product. Then petitioner installs it. The efforts, skill, and hours of labor that petitioner and his employees devote to the production of these ornamental products are what account for the business's income. The fruits of their efforts are just as much "earned income" as is a doctor's or lawyer's fee.
The majority points to the fact that petitioner's customers paid for a finished product. As the majority states, "petitioner sold goods not services." I agree that in the vast majority of cases where a tangible product is sold, capital is necessarily a material income-producing factor. For instance, in cases where the taxpayer is a retailer or wholesaler of goods, this Court has recognized that the business income is attributable to the markup in the product itself. 3 But this is not such a case. To be sure, petitioner's customers were buying iron products, but this does not place him in the same category as a wholesaler or retailer. It is not the value or markup in the raw materials that contributed to the1983 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 57">*82 business's income. As I have noted, the skill and effort that went into transforming such raw material into the finished product are what produced the income. To simply say petitioner sold goods and not services oversimplifies the problem. And for this reason, I do not place controlling significance on the cost of the raw materials. 4
1983 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 57">*83 In effect, the majority sets a standard which makes it literally impossible for any manufacturing or production concern to qualify for the 50-percent maximum tax rate, for any manufacturing concern is going to sell a product and is going to have a significant cost of material that goes into whatever is being produced. If all net profits of a business such as petitioner's do not qualify, I fail to see how any production 81 T.C. 91">*103 concern can qualify. Congress could have easily excluded manufacturing or production concerns, but it did not. The regulations speak of businesses with "
Furthermore, this Court has held that capital was not a material income-producing factor in a business that manufactured eyeglasses upon prescription from oculists.
lenses and frames [like crude iron rods in the instant case] were not kept for sale as such and had little value until made up as eyeglasses through the services performed upon them * * * [
Thus, despite the fact that the business manufactured and sold eyeglasses, we held the income was primarily attributable to the efforts and skills of the individuals involved. I see no meaningful distinction between this case and the case before us. 5
1983 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 57">*85
81 T.C. 91">*104 I also find support in both the legislative concern and purpose for enacting
My views are shared by the newly created Federal Circuit Court of Appeals. On facts even more favorable to the Government, the Federal Circuit considered this same issue with respect to a taxpayer engaged in the manufacture and production of taxidermy supplies and held capital was not a material income-producing factor.
Although it recognizes petitioner's efforts played a vital role in his business, the majority effectively pays lip service to this role. Instead, it focuses1983 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 57">*88 on the fact that petitioner operates a "manufacturing" concern, that he sells a product and not services, and that the cost of raw materials is significant. Without so stating, the majority excludes the benefits of
I, too, have serious doubts many production concerns can qualify. But I cannot rule out all of them, and this happens to be one I cannot rule out. This case is unusual in that, even though petitioner generated substantial net profits, he did so by using only a few tools. As this Court has stated, "Few modern 1983 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 57">*89 businesses are conducted without the use of capital in some form or other, and it cannot be assumed that Congress intended such a narrow reading of the term 'capital' under
Congress has given us a general standard to apply, and we must draw the line on the particular facts of each case. As the majority points out, this "is a matter largely of approximation." Yet, the majority sets a standard, admittedly easier to apply, that goes too far. In my opinion, Congress did not intend such a far-reaching result, and I believe the record in this case supports a finding in favor of petitioner.
1. The $ 113,010 figure is made up of $ 95,235 in cost of goods sold and $ 17,775 in materials and supplies. The $ 95,235 cost of goods sold is computed on the basis of a beginning inventory of $ 10,277, an ending inventory of $ 11,066, and purchases of $ 96,024.↩
2. All section references are to the Internal Revenue Code of 1954 as in effect during the tax year in issue, unless otherwise noted.↩
3. In addition to his primary argument under sec. 911(b), petitioner argues that sec. 401(c)(2)(C) applies to categorize the net profits as earned income. We disagree. That section defines "earned income" as certain gains and net earnings derived from "property (other than goodwill) by an individual whose personal efforts created such property." Where an individual's employees actually create the property in question, it cannot be said that the individual's "personal efforts created such property."
4. Sec. 911(b) provides in part as follows:
SEC. 911(b). Definition of Earned Income. -- For purposes of this section, the term "earned income" means wages, salaries, or professional fees, and other amounts received as compensation for personal services actually rendered, but does not include that part of the compensation derived by the taxpayer for personal services rendered by him to a corporation which represents a distribution of earnings or profits rather than a reasonable allowance as compensation for the personal services actually rendered. * * *↩
5. The regulations (
"If an individual is engaged in a trade or business * * * in which both personal services and capital are material income-producing factors,
6. See
7.
"In addition, the bill removes the 30-percent limitation on the amount of income from a trade or business that can be treated as personal services income where capital is an income-producing factor. Instead,
8. Clearly, "capital" in this context has a broader meaning than in many other Code provisions. Purchases of inventory, for example, are considered "capital" for purposes of
9. As stated in
10. In
11. We do not hold that the mere existence of a product determines that capital is material. Cases may arise in which materials, equipment, etc., play a role in creating a product, where an individual's own personal services are unique, where, in essence, personal services are purchased with capital being incidental. Cf.
12. This Court has held that capital was a material factor in producing the income in
13. Also distinguishable are
1. Although
2. Other businesses where this Court has held capital to be a material income-producing factor are marked by a substantially greater capital investment which played a significant role in the production of income. See
3. See
4. Moreover, I note the gross income of a business does not include the cost of goods sold.
5. In 1919, the business had gross receipts of $ 26,491.05. Opening inventory for the lenses and frames was $ 2,632.68. At the end of the year, the cost value of the assets, consisting of merchandise inventory, furniture and fixtures, and tools and machinery, was $ 8,445.48. No figures were given for the costs of materials.↩
6. In later years, Congress further expressed its dissatisfaction with the limitations on earned income. The 30-percent limitation was removed for years after 1978 by Revenue Act of 1978, Pub. L. 95-600, sec. 442(a), 92 Stat. 2878. Finally,
7. In
1972 | 1973 | |
Gross sales | $ 713,917 | $ 866,039 |
Materials | 162,496 | 222,630 |
Labor | 180,516 | 218,577 |
Cost of physical assets | 40,861 | 105,237 |