Becker v. Internal Revenue Service

286 B.R. 250, 90 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 7480, 2002 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 22808
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedNovember 27, 2002
Docket02 CIV.5044 (LAK)
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 286 B.R. 250 (Becker v. Internal Revenue Service) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Becker v. Internal Revenue Service, 286 B.R. 250, 90 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 7480, 2002 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 22808 (S.D.N.Y. 2002).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

KAPLAN, District Judge.

Debtor appeals from a decision of the Bankruptcy Court overruling, after trial, his objection to federal income and employment tax claims interposed by the Internal Revenue Service. 1 The appeal presents essentially two issues: whether the court below erred in holding that (1) debt- or was not entitled to a business bad debt deduction on his personal income tax return for 1990 in respect of advances he had made to and payments he had made on *252 guarantees of obligations of his professional corporation because he had failed to establish the existence of a debtor-creditor relationship between himself and the corporate entity, and (2) the IRS was entitled to reinstate an employment tax assessment against the debtor, after the statute of limitations had run, where the assessment initially had been abated in error.

The Bad Debt Deduction

The Bankruptcy Court rejected the claimed bad debt deduction on the grounds that the debtor failed to establish that (a) there was a debtor-creditor relationship between him and his corporation, and (b) the corporation had a valid and enforceable obligation to pay a fixed or determinable sum of money. In doing so, it relied, among other things, on the five factors articulated in 26 U.S.C. § 385(b), as well as others set forth in cases including Gilbert v. Commissioner, 2 as pertinent to the determination of whether corporate obligations are debt or equity. 3 In finding that the advances to the corporation were equity rather than debt, the judge below rejected the debtor’s contention that he had a reasonable expectation of repayment and found, inter alia, that the debtor established no definitive dates or demands for repayment, demanded no interest, and produced no notes or other evidence of indebtedness and that the corporation furnished no security, had a high debt-equity ratio, and lacked the ability to obtain similar advances from other lenders. 4 In concluding that the payments on account of guarantees were not debt, he found that the corporation issued no writings to document indebtedness to the debtor, that repayment depended upon the success of the business, that third party lenders refused to loan to the corporation absent the personal guarantee because of its poor financial condition, that the corporation’s initial capitalization was very thin, and that the corporation provided no security. 5

As debtor concedes, 6 the characterization of corporate obligations as debt or equity is primarily a question of fact. 7 While debtor argues that the evidence should have been weighed differently, 8 he does not contend that any of the Bankruptcy Judge’s findings were clearly erroneous. Rather, he argues that the court below erroneously relied upon the opinion of the government’s expert 9 and on Section 385(b) of the Internal Revenue Code, 26 U.S.C. 385(b). Neither contention is meritorious.

The first contention is based on the fact that the expert witness, Mr. Rapp, testified that the advances were capital contributions because they were intended to pre *253 serve the client base of the corporation which, under Standard Canons of the Accounting Profession, had no proprietary rights in its client base. 10 But this is a distortion and oversimplification of Rapp’s testimony, which broadly supported the IRS’s position and the findings below for a host of reasons.

The contention regarding Section 385(b) is similarly misguided, distorting both what the court below actually did and the significance of the statute. To be sure, the debtor is correct in arguing that Section 385 of the Code authorized the adoption of regulations to determine whether an interest in a corporation is debt or equity, that Section 385(b) listed five factors which “may” be included in such regulations, 11 and that no regulations ever have been adopted. 12 But that is not to say that the factors that Congress in Section 385(b) suggested for consideration, among others, in any regulations are irrelevant to the debt-equity determination simply because no regulations ever were adopted. Indeed, the case law makes crystal clear that the question of whether an interest is debt or equity depends upon its true nature, which must be determined in light of a host of pertinent factors including but not limited to factors that happen also to be listed in Section 385(b). 13 Thus, the fact that Section 385 regulations never were promulgated does not even begin to transform the debtor’s sow’s ear into a silk purse. For the court below did precisely what it ought to have done — it made findings as to the subsidiary facts pertinent to the classification of the advances and guarantee payments as debt or equity, weighed them all together, and made an ultimate finding that they constituted equity. 14 That the debtor or, for that matter, another judge might have come to a different conclusion based on the same subsidiary facts is neither here nor there. There was no error of fact or law.

The Employment Tax Issue

The debtor concedes that the reinstatement of the employment tax assessment after the expiration of the statute of limitations was effective against the debt- or, notwithstanding the running of the statute of limitations, unless the debtor was prejudiced. 15 The court below found, as a factual matter, that he was not. 16 Although the debtor has steered clear of challenging that finding as clearly erroneous, he does contend that he relied to his detriment on the abatement of the assessment and, in consequence, that the em *254 ployment tax claim should have been dismissed.

In June 1988, the IRS assessed debtor for over $182,000 for employment taxes payable by his corporation for 1987 and a limited prior period. In late 1989, the Service mistakenly abated substantially the entire liability. It reinstated the assessment in 1991. Although there is a dispute, unresolved by the court below, as to when the debtor learned of the reinstatement, the debtor was aware of the reinstatement no later than November 20, 1992, when the IRS filed its proof of claim in the bankruptcy court.

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Bluebook (online)
286 B.R. 250, 90 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 7480, 2002 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 22808, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/becker-v-internal-revenue-service-nysd-2002.