Adelson v. United States

6 Cl. Ct. 102, 54 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 5959, 1984 U.S. Claims LEXIS 1309
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedSeptember 12, 1984
DocketNo. 112-76
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 6 Cl. Ct. 102 (Adelson v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Court of Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adelson v. United States, 6 Cl. Ct. 102, 54 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 5959, 1984 U.S. Claims LEXIS 1309 (cc 1984).

Opinion

OPINION

SPECTOR, Senior Judge.

This is the third decision on this taxpayer’s refund claim. It is required by an opinion of the United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit (Bennett, J)1 in which it is ordered and adjudged with respect to the prior two opinions:

AFFIRMED IN PART, VACATED IN PART, AND REMANDED, to the Claims Court for additional findings, regarding [103]*103the taxpayer’s business interest as compared to his equity interest.

This mandate requires a recapitulation of the two prior Claims Court decisions, and of the total record on which they are based.

1. U.S. Claims Court Decision of December 27, 1982.2

It was found that plaintiff was engaged in the business of providing financial consulting services to clients for an agreed upon fee. His clients consisted of new, growth oriented companies whose founders planned eventually to go public, but who lacked the business experience to do so without the assistance of a professional financial consultant. Plaintiff’s services consisted of formulating growth plans, dealing with lending institutions, and mar-shalling the other professionals (attorneys, accountants, underwriters) whose efforts were required to take these enterprises public.3 It was further found that in many cases the client companies were unable to obtain loans from traditional sources due to their speculative nature, or lack of collateral. In those instances, plaintiff would himself lend the client the required funds out of his own capital, or out of funds he would personally borrow and re-lend at approximately the same rates he paid his lending institution.

There was no profit in the loans themselves. The quid pro quo flowing to the plaintiff was the borrower’s agreement to retain plaintiff as a financial consultant for an indefinite but appreciably longer period of time. For these consultant services, plaintiff would negotiate and receive a monthly fee of from $500 to $1,500. The record shows that on occasion plaintiff would alternatively receive compensation for his services in the form of stock or warrants of the client-company.4 The borrowers became insolvent and the plaintiff taxpayer elected the reserve method5 of reporting the defaulted loans as business bad debts on his return.

It is again emphasized that the conclusions expressed in this Claims Court opinion are based on a two day trial at which plaintiff presented nine witnesses (including the debtors), all of whom described the nature of these loans, their relationship to plaintiff’s financial consulting business, and the absence of any relationship to plaintiff’s investments. Defendant presented no witnesses. In addition, plaintiff introduced 27 exhibits into the record. Defendant introduced four exhibits, two of which had been furnished by the plaintiff.

On the basis of that record, the Claims Court found that the funds advanced to the various client companies were loans, and not contributions to equity; that the dominant motive for these loans was to advance plaintiff’s business as a financial consultant, and that they were not gifts, nor were they to protect any minor equity interest in the debtors; and that they therefore qualified for treatment as business bad debts under Section 166 of the Code. The evidence of record in this fact-intensive case is overwhelmingly in support of the above conclusions. There is, in fact, no evidence in the record which would support contrary findings. It was found that the debts were created in connection with the taxpayer’s business as a financial consultant and when they became worthless the resultant losses were therefore business related.

The uncontradicted testimony of record is that these loans were made upon the reasonable assumption that they would be repaid, whether or not the borrowers’ business ventures were successful. In other words, the funds advanced were not put at the risk of the borrowers’ business ventures.6

Because plaintiff was also a minority shareholder in several of the client businesses which he was serving as a financial [104]*104consultant, defendant offered an argument (not evidence) that his dominant motive in making the loans must therefore have been to protect his investments. Defendant introduced no facts to support that argument. The Claims Court found that these are fact-intensive eases, and that the result must be determined in each case based on the facts in that particular case, following a judicial analysis of all of the facts.7

The facts in Frank A. Garlove8 were found to be “on all fours” with those developed in this case. Garlove, a practicing attorney, made loans to a client-company in which he was also a minority stockholder. He testified that his purpose was to enhance the prospect that the corporation would remain with him as one of his fee-paying clients. The Tax Court concluded:

The petitioner testified that his purpose in loaning money to (his client) was to support a regular paying client and not to protect his capital investment. We deem this testimony reasonable and worthy of belief____ [T]he mere fact of stock ownership in the debtor corporation is not sufficient by itself to overcome the weight of petitioner’s evidence that the primary purpose of the loan was to aid petitioner’s business.

In the instant case, there was not only the testimony of the taxpayer to support that conclusion, but also the confirming testimony of the debtor-companies, and of others familiar with the overall nature of his financial consulting service.

The case was remanded to the Secretary of the Treasury to determine whether the taxpayer’s deductions from income for an addition to his bad debt reserve, were reasonable in amount.

11. U.S. Claims Court Decision of June U, 1983.9

Defendant filed a Motion for Rehearing and to Reopen Proof addressed solely to the propriety of a remand to the Secretary of the Treasury10 to determine whether the taxpayer’s deductions from income for an addition to a bad debt reserve, were reasonable in amount. Counsel for defendant argued somewhat inconsistently that:

A. Tax cases are not “appropriate matters” for remand.
B. A remand is unnecessary because the Secretary has already determined that the advances did not become worthless at the end of the year in question.11
C. The Secretary has already exercised his discretion to determine the reasonableness of the amount of the reserve addition claimed as a deduction.12

The plaintiff responded that “[t]he Court had before it expert testimony as to the reasonableness of the additions to the bad debt reserve. Defendant offered nothing whatsoever on this issue.” 13

[105]*105This court found it “apparent from the foregoing that both parties now believe that a remand to the Secretary is unnecessary and futile.” It was concluded that the remaining issue to be decided on defendant’s motion was as follows:

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Related

Adelson v. United States
12 Cl. Ct. 231 (Court of Claims, 1987)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
6 Cl. Ct. 102, 54 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 5959, 1984 U.S. Claims LEXIS 1309, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adelson-v-united-states-cc-1984.