HAINES, Judge.
Respondent determined a deficiency in petitioners' Federal income tax of $1,302,102 and an accuracy-related penalty under section 6662(a) of $260,420 for 2003.
After stipulations
Some of the facts have been stipulated and are so found. The stipulation of facts, the supplemental stipulation of facts, the stipulation of settled issues, and the exhibits attached thereto are incorporated herein by this reference. At the time they filed their petition, petitioners resided in Illinois.
Rogers is a tax attorney with over 40 years of experience. He received a law degree from Harvard University in 1967 and a master's degree in business administration from the University of Chicago. He worked in the tax department of Arthur Andersen for over 24 years before serving for 7 years as the tax director and assistant treasurer at FMC Corp. In 2003 Rogers was a partner with the law firm Altheimer & Gray until its bankruptcy on June 30, 2003. For the remainder of the year Rogers was a partner with the law firm Seyfarth Shaw, LLP.
Rogers promoted to clients "tax advantaged" transactions that dealt with the acquisition of, and sales of indirect interests in, Brazilian consumer receivables.
Rogers set up three business entities to manage numerous holding and trading companies used in the Brazilian receivable transactions. The first, PPI, was incorporated under the laws of Illinois on April 1, 1989, and elected on January 1, 1992, to be treated as an S corporation under section 1361(a)(1). Rogers was its sole shareholder. The second, Jetstream Business Limited (Jetstream), a British Virgin Islands limited company, was formed by Rogers with PPI as its sole shareholder. Rogers was Jetstream's only director. In 2003 Jetstream was treated as a disregarded entity for Federal tax purposes. The third, Warwick Trading, LLC (Warwick), an Illinois limited liability company (LLC), was formed in 2001. In 2003 Jetstream was the managing member of Warwick. Consequently, in 2003 Rogers had sole control over PPI, Jetstream, and Warwick.
In 2003 Warwick entered into transactions directly and through affiliated entities for, in effect, purchasing Brazilian consumer receivables and selling interests in them to numerous investors through trading and holding companies.
Rogers prepared PPI's 2003 Form 1120S, U.S. Income Tax Return for an S Corporation. PPI reported $1,958,877 of gross receipts or sales, including income of $27,877 from transactions unrelated to the receivables, and a deduction of $1,190,500 for the $1,190,500 transferred to Multicred. Lucas & Rogers Capital, Inc. (L&R), a second S corporation with Rogers as its sole shareholder, reported $450,000 of gross receipts in 2003 attributable to investor money for the receivables. The parties agree that the $450,000 L&R reported as gross receipts in 2003 should have been reported by PPI. Further, the parties agree that the $1,190,500 transferred to Multicred is not includable in PPI's income and does not entitle PPI to a deduction.
PPI distributed $732,000 to Rogers in 2003. Petitioners deposited this amount in their joint bank account. PPI deducted $513,501 of this amount as legal and professional fees paid to Rogers.
On August 24, 2007, respondent issued a statutory notice of deficiency to petitioners determining, among other things, that the $218,499 was income to petitioners in 2003. On October 2, 2007, the Court filed petitioners' timely petition.
The Commissioner's determinations in the notice of deficiency are generally presumed correct, and the taxpayers bear the burden of proving them incorrect. See Rule 142(a)(1). Petitioners do not argue that the burden of proof shifts to respondent pursuant to section 7491(a), nor have they shown that the threshold requirements of section 7491(a) have been met. The burden therefore remains on petitioners with respect to all issues to prove that respondent's determination of the deficiency in income tax is erroneous.
Generally, unless otherwise provided, gross income under section 61 includes all accessions to wealth from whatever source derived.
See also
In 2003 PPI reported $1,958,877 of gross receipts or sales, including income of $27,877 from transactions unrelated to the receivables and the $1,190,500 transferred to Multicred. Additionally, PPI deducted the $1,190,500 transferred to Multicred. The parties subsequently have agreed that the $450,000 L&R reported as gross receipts in 2003 should have been reported by PPI, and the $1,190,500 transferred to Multicred (1) is not includable in PPI's income, and (2) does not entitle PPI to a deduction. Therefore, PPI's gross income for 2003 is its reported gross receipts or sales of $1,958,877, plus $450,000 from L&R, less the $1,190,500 that was transferred to Multicred, for a total of $1,218,377.
Inconsistent with PPI's 2003 Form 1120S, as prepared by Rogers, petitioners argue that the $1,190,500 PPI received from investors was not income to PPI. Rather, petitioners argue that the $1,190,500 was: (1) Held in trust on behalf of Warwick or Jetstream; or (2) income to Warwick. Neither of these contentions has merit.
In
Jetstream was also a disregarded entity in 2003 for Federal tax purposes. Because both Warwick and Jetstream were disregarded entities for Federal tax purposes, the $1,190,500 received from the investors is attributable only to PPI. Nothing in the record supports petitioners' argument that PPI was required to hold these funds on behalf of or for the benefit of any other person or entity. The $1,190,500 deposited in PPI's bank account constituted unrestricted funds. In fact, PPI distributed $732,000 of these funds to Rogers. Consequently, the $1,190,500 PPI received from the investors is income to PPI in 2003.
Deductions are a matter of legislative grace, and the taxpayer must prove he is entitled to the deductions claimed. Rule 142(a);
In 2003 PPI deducted legal and professional fees of $513,501 paid to Rogers and $22,039 paid to Altheimer & Gray and Seyfarth Shaw. In turn, petitioners included the $513,501 Rogers received from PPI as income on their Schedule C. The parties agree that if PPI must include in income the $1,190,500 received from investors, it is entitled to a deduction for legal and professional fees incurred with respect to the $1,190,500. We agree with this position. Consistent with our holding that the $1,190,500 is PPI's income, PPI is entitled to deduct legal and professional fees of $513,501 paid to Rogers and $22,039 paid to Altheimer & Gray and Seyfarth Shaw.
On its face, the $218,499 transfer from PPI to Rogers is a distribution from an S corporation to a shareholder. Generally, section 1368(b) provides that distributions from an S corporation with no accumulated earnings and profits (E&P) of a predecessor C corporation are not included in the gross income of the shareholder to the extent that they do not exceed the adjusted basis of the shareholder's stock, and any excess over adjusted basis is treated as gain from the sale or exchange of property. If the S corporation has accumulated E&P of a predecessor C corporation, then the portion of the distributions in excess of the S corporation's accumulated adjustment account (AAA) is treated as a dividend to the extent it does not exceed the accumulated E&P. Sec. 1368(c)(1) and (2). The AAA is intended to measure the accumulated taxable income of an S corporation that has not been distributed to the shareholders. See
Section 1366(a)(1) provides that a shareholder shall take into account his or her pro rata share of the S corporation's items of income, loss, deduction, or credit for the S corporation's taxable year ending with or in the shareholder's taxable year. Section 1367 provides that basis in S corporation stock is increased by income passed through to the shareholder under section 1366(a)(1), and decreased by, inter alia, distributions not includable in the shareholder's income pursuant to section 1368.
Unless a statutory or legal principle applies to remove the $218,499 distribution from the S corporation rules described above, these rules will govern whether the $218,499 distribution from PPI to Rogers is income to petitioners and, if so, the character of that income. Petitioners argue that the rules should not apply because the $218,499 distribution from PPI to Rogers was not a distribution from an S corporation to a shareholder, but rather, a distribution to a fiduciary to be held in trust.
Petitioners argue that Rogers held the $218,499 distribution from PPI in trust pursuant to a duty of loyalty to Warwick under the Illinois Limited Liability Company Act (Illinois LLC Act). The Illinois LLC Act requires the manager of an Illinois LLC to "account to the company and to hold as trustee for it any property, profit, or benefit derived by the member in the conduct or winding up of the company's business". 805 Ill. Comp. Stat. Ann. 180/15-3(b)(1) (West 2010). Petitioners contend that the $218,499 distribution from PPI to Rogers is not income to petitioners because Rogers held this amount in a fiduciary capacity as manager of Warwick through Jetstream.
Petitioners' reliance on the Illinois LLC Act is illogical and misguided. PPI, and not Warwick, distributed the $218,499 in question to Rogers. PPI is an S corporation and is not subject to the Illinois LLC Act. We have no reason to view the transaction at issue as anything more than a distribution from an S corporation to a shareholder. Therefore, PPI's $218,499 distribution to Rogers does not give rise to a duty of loyalty pursuant to the Illinois LLC Act.
Rogers did not have a fiduciary duty to PPI under the Illinois LLC Act, but he was a shareholder, officer, and director of PPI. Generally, "a taxpayer need not treat as income moneys which he did not receive under a claim of right, which were not his to keep, and which he was required to transmit to someone else as a mere conduit."
Whether Rogers was acting as an agent of PPI is a question of fact. See
Petitioners rely on
The Commissioner contended that the excess of the amounts received by 7-Up over the advertising expenses incurred and paid constituted income to 7-Up. In holding that the excess was not taxable, we stated:
In
The premiums were commingled with other funds; however, they were segregated in MRA's financial records, earmarked for the benefit of its members, and credited to a liability account. Further, MRA's chief officer and board of directors believed that they were obligated to use the premium credits for the benefit of its members. In 1978 MRA executed a declaration of trust acknowledging its rights and responsibilities with respect to the excess premiums. Citing these facts and circumstances, the Court held that MRA was merely a conduit through which excess premiums were returned for the benefit of its members.
Both
The objective evidence in the record contradicts Rogers' contention that he was acting as an agent of PPI in furtherance of a corporate purpose. Rogers did not hold the $218,499 in escrow or segregate the funds for PPI's use. Rather, Rogers held and used the funds without restriction. The $218,499 was transferred to petitioners' joint bank account. The record is devoid of any evidence establishing either an express or constructive trust between Rogers and PPI. Further, petitioners have not presented any written agreement providing that Rogers, through PPI, acted as a trustee to hold the $218,499 for the benefit of any other entity. Rogers controlled Warwick, Jetstream, and PPI. Nothing in the record indicates that Rogers used the funds from the sale of the receivables to serve the interest of any of these entities. Rather, Rogers' actions with respect to these funds clearly show that his only interest was to use Warwick, Jetstream, and PPI to avoid tax on his income. Accordingly, we sustain respondent's determination with respect to the trust issue.
The $218,499 distribution from PPI to Rogers was nothing more than a distribution from an S corporation to a shareholder. PPI was incorporated on April 1, 1989, but did not elect to be treated as an S corporation until January 1, 1992. As a result, it is possible that PPI has accumulated E&P from its predecessor C corporation. Pursuant to the S corporation rules discussed above, if PPI has accumulated E&P then the $218,499 distribution is a dividend to Rogers to the extent it exceeds PPI's AAA but does not exceed its accumulated E&P. If PPI does not have accumulated E&P, then the $218,499 distribution must be treated as a gain from the sale or exchange of property to the extent it exceeds Rogers' basis in his PPI stock. A Rule 155 computation of PPI's E&P and AAA, as well as Rogers' basis in his PPI stock, is required to make a final determination.
The Court, in reaching its holdings, has considered all arguments made, and, to the extent not mentioned, concludes that they are moot, irrelevant, or without merit.
To reflect the foregoing,