1996 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 205">*205 Decision will be entered for respondent.
Ps contributed three parcels of real property and their unsecured promissory note to their wholly owned corporation. The parcels were encumbered by deeds of trust securing debt obligations in amounts that were in excess of the combined adjusted basis of the parcels in the hands of Ps. The face amount of Ps' promissory note was greater than the excess of the encumbering liabilities over Ps adjusted basis in the properties.
MEMORANDUM OPINION
NIMS,
Since the parties agree that the deductible amount of petitioners' casualty loss will follow from the resolution of the property transfer issue, the sole issue for decision is whether petitioners must recognize gain on the transfer under
The parties submitted this case fully stipulated, and the facts as stipulated are so found.
Petitioners were residents of Fresno, California, at the time they filed their petition. During the year at issue, petitioners owned 100 percent of NAC Corporation, a Nevada Corporation, which had two wholly owned subsidiaries, National American Life Insurance Company of Pennsylvania, a Pennsylvania Corporation (NALICO), and Western States Administrators, a California Corporation (WSA).
During 1989, both NALICO and WSA required infusions of additional 1996 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 205">*207 capital. Because of significant 1989 losses in its accident and health insurance business, NALICO required additional capital in order to satisfy general industry guidelines and State law requirements relating to the maintenance of a premium-to-capital ratio of not more than 10 to 1. WSA required additional capital in order to maintain, on a consolidated basis, a minimum net worth of $ 7 million pursuant to a bank loan agreement. As of September 30, 1989, NAC Corporation, WSA, and NALICO had a consolidated net worth of $ 5,841,436.
Petitioners undertook to satisfy these capital requirements by transferring three parcels of improved real property, and their $ 1,060,000 unsecured promissory note (the Capital Note), to NAC Corporation, the parent corporation of the two capital-deficient, wholly owned subsidiaries. As of December 31, 1989, petitioners had a net worth far in excess of the consolidated net worth of NAC Corporation, WSA, and NALICO.
The first of the three parcels, the Clinton Way Property, had a fair market value of $ 1,870,000 on December 26, 1989, the date of transfer, and an adjusted basis of $ 349,774.06 in the hands of petitioners on that date. As of that date, the1996 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 205">*208 Clinton Way Property was encumbered by a deed of trust in favor of Standard Insurance Company securing a note (the Standard Insurance Note) having an unpaid principal balance of $ 1,386,654.50. NAC Corporation did not assume liability under the Standard Insurance Note, on which petitioners remained personally liable.
The second and third of the three parcels of real property which petitioners transferred to NAC Corporation, collectively referred to herein as the Fresno/Herndon Property, had a fair market value of $ 1,200,000 on December 26, 1989, the date of transfer, and an adjusted basis of $ 631,632.42 in the hands of petitioners on that date. As of that date, the Fresno/Herndon Property was encumbered by a deed of trust securing a note (the Bunn & Duran Note) in favor of certain individuals having an unpaid principal balance of $ 161,558.28. NAC Corporation did not assume liability under the Bunn & Duran Note, on which petitioners remained personally liable. The parties agree, however, that the Fresno/Herndon Property, when transferred to NAC Corporation, remained "subject to" the Bunn & Duran Note.
The following table reflects the computation of the excess of the above-described1996 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 205">*209 liabilities over petitioners' combined adjusted basis in the three parcels of real property transferred by petitioners to NAC Corporation on December 26, 1989:
Property | Liability | Adjusted Basis |
Clinton Way | $ 1,386,654.50 | $ 349,774.06 |
Fresno/Herndon | 161,558.28 | 631,632.42 |
Total | 1,548,212.78 | 981,406.48 |
The combined excess of liabilities over petitioners' adjusted basis was thus $ 566,806.30.
On December 26, 1989, petitioners also transferred their Capital Note in the face amount of $ 1,060,000 to NAC Corporation. The Capital Note was unsecured. It purported to be petitioners' unconditional promise to pay NAC Corporation interest at the rate of 11 percent per annum in monthly installments commencing February 1, 1990, and continuing in each consecutive month to and including January 1, 1995. Beginning February 1, 1995, monthly installments of $ 23,046.97 were payable until all principal and any accrued but unpaid interest were paid in full, with any remaining balance due January 1, 2000.
The Capital Note provided for acceleration in the event of default at the option of the holder. The payment terms of the Capital Note did not parallel those of the Standard 1996 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 205">*210 Insurance Note, which provided for equal monthly payments of principal and interest at 11 percent per annum (with provision for a certain rate adjustment after five years) until the earlier of January 1, 1998, or the date on which the note has been paid in full.
On December 21, 1989, in advance of the above actions, the NAC Corporation board of directors (consisting of petitioner Donald J. Peracchi as the sole director) "acknowledged and accepted" as capital contributions the above-mentioned parcels of real property, and the Capital Note "to offset the difference between the allocated liability and the basis in the buildings located at 5118 E. Clinton Way [the Clinton Way Property]."
The following table reflects the computation of the net amount of petitioners' contribution to capital if the Capital Note is taken into account at face value:
Item Contributed | Fair Market Value | ||
to Capital | or Face Value | Encumbrance | Net Amount |
Clinton Way Property | $ 1,870,000 | $ 1,386,654.50 | $ 483,345.50 |
Fresno/Herndon Property | 1,200,000 | 161,558.28 | 1,038,441.80 |
Capital Note | 1,060,000 | 1,060,000.00 | |
Total | 4,130,000 | 1,548,212.78 | 2,581,787.30 |
Petitioners made no payments on the1996 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 205">*211 Capital Note during 1989, or at any time thereafter until March 15, 1992, when they made an interest payment of $ 233,200. The IRS audit of petitioners' 1989 income tax return had been under way for almost a year, having commenced during April, 1991.
In February, 1990, management of NALICO was advised by Ernst & Young, NALICO's independent certified public accountants, that under Chapter 9 of the National Association of Insurance Commissioner's Accounting Practices and Procedures Manual for Life and Accident and Health Insurance Companies (NAIC Manual), the Capital Note would be classified as a "nonadmitted asset because it was unsecured;" thus, it would not be treated as an asset of NALICO for purposes of computing its capital-to-premium ratio as of December 31, 1989.
The parties agree that the transactions under scrutiny qualify under the nonrecognition provision of section 351, except as that section may be limited by
(a) General Rule.--Except as provided in subsections (b) and (c), if-- (1) the taxpayer1996 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 205">*212 receives property which would be permitted to be received under section 351, 361, 371, or 374, without the recognition of gain if it were the sole consideration, and (2) as part of the consideration, another party to the exchange assumes a liability of the taxpayer, or acquires from the taxpayer property subject to a liability, then such assumption or acquisition shall not be treated as money or other property, and shall not prevent the exchange from being within the provisions of section 351, 361, 371, or 374, as the case may be.
(1) In General.--In the case of an exchange-- (A) to which section 351 applies, or (B) to which section 361 applies by reason of a plan of reorganization within the meaning of section 368(a)(1)(D), if the sum of the amount of the liabilities assumed, plus the amount of the liabilities to which the property is subject, exceeds the total of the adjusted basis of the property transferred pursuant to such exchange, then such excess shall be considered as a gain from the sale or exchange of a capital asset or of property which is not a capital asset, as the case may be.
Thus, for present purposes,
Respondent argues that, by virtue of
Petitioners take the position that they did not realize (nor were they required to recognize) a gain when they transferred property, including their $ 1,060,000 Capital Note, to their wholly owned corporation, and that, for purposes of
1. Since NAC Corporation acquired the 5118 Clinton Way buildings and improvements subject only to $ 326,654.50 of the unpaid principal balance of the Standard Insurance Note, an amount not in excess of the adjusted basis of the 5118 Clinton Way buildings and improvements, no gain should be recognized by petitioners under
In so doing, petitioners attempt to apply the rationale of the wraparound mortgage-installment sale line of cases, of which the progenitor is
2. Since petitioners undertook genuine personal liability for the excess of the unpaid principal balance of the Standard Insurance Note over the adjusted basis in the 5118 Clinton Way buildings and improvements, no gain should be recognized by petitioners under
3. Under
4. Alternatively, under
All of petitioners' arguments presuppose that the Capital Note represents genuine indebtedness. Since we do not agree that it does, we need not address the various convoluted approaches petitioners ask us to take to arrive at the conclusion that they are not required to recognize gain under
Petitioners' own course of conduct belies their efforts to lead us to believe that on December 26, 1989, they placed a debt instrument in the hands of their 100-percent owned corporation that they actually intended to honor under all circumstances. Notwithstanding the fact that this case was submitted fully stipulated, petitioners nevertheless bear the burden of proving that they intended to and did create genuine indebtedness. Rule 142(a); see Rule 122(b);
The parties stipulated that as of December 31, 1989, petitioners had a net worth far in excess of the $ 5,841,436 consolidated net worth of NAC Corporation, WSA, and NALICO. It may therefore be presumed that, had they chosen to do so, petitioners could have funded the disputed excess of liabilities over basis by means other than an unsecured promissory note, which, as events transpired, cost them nothing in 1996 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 205">*217 terms of cash layouts for over two years after their December 26, 1989, contribution of the Capital Note to NAC Corporation.
As previously stated, the Capital Note contained petitioners' unconditional promise to pay NAC Corporation interest at the rate of 11 percent per annum in monthly installments (presumably $ 9,716.67 monthly) commencing February 1, 1990, and continuing until January 1, 1995. Despite the "unconditional" nature of petitioners' obligation, however, they chose to make no payments whatsoever until March 15, 1992, when they made a lump sum interest payment of $ 232,200. At the time of the payment, the IRS audit of petitioner's 1989 return had been underway for almost a year. (The parties stipulated that petitioners' obligation had been made current by December 4, 1994, the day before the case was submitted. We note, however, that since the Capital Note provides that no
Notwithstanding the provision of the Capital Note providing for acceleration in the event of default at the option of the holder, there is no evidence suggesting1996 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 205">*218 that NAC Corporation chose to exercise this option. Since petitioners did not intend to make timely payments on the Capital Note, it is not surprising that they did not see fit to cause NAC Corporation to exercise its option. Petitioners, 100 percent stockholders, were totally in control of NAC Corporation. Donald Peracchi was the sole director. In cases involving closely held corporations, such as this case, where the parties do not deal at arm's length, it is highly unrealistic to expect them to enforce obligations against themselves, as petitioners' casual approach to their payment obligations bears out. See
We have held on more than one occasion that in the closely held corporation context, loan repayments that commenced only after a taxpayer had notice of an IRS audit go far to weaken the payments as persuasive evidence of a preexisting intention of paying on schedule, or at all. See, for example,
Petitioners apparently wished to keep their commitments to their financially troubled consolidated group of corporations as ephemeral as possible. Although Ernst & Young advised petitioners in February, 1990, that the Capital Note would be treated as a nonadmitted asset for purposes of computing NALICO's capital-to-premium ratio under State insurance company regulations, the record reflects no effort by petitioners to rectify the situation, although their very substantial net worth exclusive of their NAC Corporation holdings would make it seem probable that they could have done so. From this, and from petitioners' and NAC Corporation's general indifference to compliance with the terms of the Capital Note, it is reasonable to conclude1996 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 205">*220 that the Capital Note's only significance was to serve as a makeweight against the potential of recognition of gain under
We accordingly find that petitioners did not intend to pay the Capital Note according to its terms, and that therefore no genuine indebtedness was created.
It is noteworthy in this connection that the December 21, 1989, NAC Corporation board of directors' minutes makes no reference to any corporate acceptance of the Capital Note as assistance in the rectification of the twin problems of net worth and capital-to-premium ratio deficiencies. Rather, insofar as any corporate purpose is reflected by the minutes, the sole function of the Capital Note was to offset the difference between the "allocated liability and the basis" of the Clinton Way Property; i.e., to aid NAC Corporation's sole shareholder--petitioners--in the avoidance of the recognition of gain under
Petitioners suggest on brief (although they do not press the point very vigorously) that even if their liability under the Capital Note is not taken into consideration, their continuing liability under both the Standard Insurance and Bunn & Duran obligations avoids the 1996 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 205">*221 requirement that they recognize gain under
In
In the case before us, the Standard Insurance Note was secured by the deed of trust encumbering the Clinton Way Property, and in the event of a default by NAC Corporation, Standard Insurance would unquestionably have looked in the first instance to the Clinton Way Property, the security under the Standard Insurance Note, for satisfaction of the debt. The same is true for the Bunn & Duran obligation. The fact that petitioners remained liable on the Standard Insurance and Bunn & Duran debts does not alter their
For the above reasons, we hold that petitioners are required to recognize gain under
To reflect this holding,