Beech Trucking Company, Inc., Arthur Beech, Tax Matters Person v. Commissioner

118 T.C. No. 27
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedMay 23, 2002
Docket16452-99
StatusUnknown

This text of 118 T.C. No. 27 (Beech Trucking Company, Inc., Arthur Beech, Tax Matters Person v. Commissioner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Tax Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Beech Trucking Company, Inc., Arthur Beech, Tax Matters Person v. Commissioner, 118 T.C. No. 27 (tax 2002).

Opinion

118 T.C. No. 27

UNITED STATES TAX COURT

BEECH TRUCKING COMPANY, INC., ARTHUR BEECH, TAX MATTERS PERSON, Petitioner v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent

Docket No. 16452-99. Filed May 23, 2002.

P, a trucking company, leases its drivers from an affiliated company. P compensates the drivers at a rate of 24 to 26 cents per mile dispatched, of which amount 6.5 cents is designated as a per diem allowance. R does not dispute that P’s per diem payments are ordinary and necessary business travel expenses that are deemed substantiated pursuant to Rev. Proc. 94-77, 1994-2 C.B. 825, and Rev. Proc. 96-28, 1996-1 C.B. 686.

Held: On the facts involved herein, P is the common law employer of the drivers and therefore is subject to the 50-percent limitation of sec. 274(n), I.R.C., to the extent the per diem payments are for the drivers’ meal expenses. Held, further, pursuant to Rev. Proc. 94-77, supra, and Rev. Proc. 96-28, supra, the per diem payments are treated as being for the drivers’ meal expenses and thus are subject to the sec. 274(n), I.R.C. limitation. - 2 -

James Allen Brown, for petitioner.

Edith F. Moates and John S. Repsis, for respondent.

THORNTON, Judge: By notice of final S corporation

administrative adjustment (FSAA), respondent determined

adjustments of $251,885 and $286,878 to the ordinary income of

Beech Trucking Co., Inc. (Beech Trucking), for 1995 and 1996,

respectively. At issue is the amount that Beech Trucking may

deduct with respect to per diem allowances it provided drivers

that it leased from an affiliated company, and, more

particularly, whether the 50-percent limitation of section 274(n)

applies to the total amount of the per diem payments. Subsumed

in these issues is the question of whether the section 274(n)

limitation applies to Beech Trucking as the recipient of the

services of the leased drivers.

Unless otherwise indicated, all section references are to

the Internal Revenue Code in effect for the years at issue; all

Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and

Procedure.

FINDINGS OF FACT

The parties have stipulated some of the facts, which we

incorporate herein by this reference. - 3 -

Beech Trucking

During the years at issue, Beech Trucking was an S

corporation within the meaning of section 1361(a)(1). Arthur

Beech (petitioner) was the tax matters person. When the petition

for readjustment was filed, Beech Trucking had its principal

office in North Little Rock, Arkansas.

During the years at issue, Beech Trucking had six

shareholders. As of yearend 1996, their ownership percentages

were as follows:1

Ownership Shareholder percentage

Arthur Beech 55.333 Ed Harvey 26.000 Ralph Bradbury 16.667 Diane Miller .667 James Willbanks .667 Warren Garrison .667

Petitioner was president of Beech Trucking, Ed Harvey (Harvey)

was vice president, and Ralph Bradbury was secretary-treasurer.

Beech Trucking operated as an irregular-route, common

carrier transporting general commodities within the midwestern

and southern United States. During 1995 and 1996, it had one

terminal in Little Rock, Arkansas, and another in Nashville,

Tennessee. During 1995 and 1996, Beech Trucking owned and

1 The record suggests that there may have been minor fluctuations in the ownership percentages of these six shareholders during the course of the years at issue. Any such fluctuations are immaterial to the results reached herein. - 4 -

operated between 100 and 125 trucks, all of which were purchased

used and with high mileage.

Beech Trucking drivers were dispatched on both long and

short hauls. On a long haul (typically over 500 miles), the

driver would typically leave the Beech Trucking terminal on

Sunday afternoon and be gone for about five nights before

returning to the terminal. On a short haul, the driver might

return the same day.

Almost every Beech Trucking truck had a sleeper cab (a small

area behind the driver’s compartment with a bunk for sleeping).

When a trip required an overnight stay, the driver might either

sleep in the sleeper cab or arrange other lodging, which might or

might not be in a motel. Parking overnight at a truck stop

typically would cost $5 to $10. Showering at a truck stop

typically would cost $5 to $7.

Arkansas Trucking Service

Beech Trucking leased its drivers from a company known as

Arkansas Trucking Service (ATS).2 Harvey owned ATS, and

petitioner, Arthur Beech, who was an employee of ATS, acted as

its sales and operations manager.

2 The record does not contain the leasing agreement between Beech Trucking and ATS or otherwise reveal its precise terms. Testimony elicited at trial suggests vaguely that ATS also provided drivers to companies other than Beech Trucking, but the record does not reveal the identities or ownership of any such other companies. - 5 -

ATS employees hired the drivers and provided them

orientation. Drivers who were hired to drive for Beech Trucking

signed employment agreements, wherein they agreed they would

drive equipment owned by Beech Trucking but would be the

employees of ATS and would be paid by ATS. Petitioner had final

authority to fire drivers who were hired to drive for Beech

Trucking.

ATS maintained all payroll records for the Beech Trucking

drivers and issued their payroll checks, as well as their Forms

W-2, Wage and Tax Statement. ATS paid workers’ compensation

insurance for the drivers, who were also eligible to participate

in a section 401(k) plan maintained by ATS.

Each week, ATS would bill Beech Trucking for all the

drivers’ expenses that ATS paid out, and Beech Trucking would

write a check to ATS for the total payroll (including expense

reimbursements), in addition to a service fee of undisclosed

amount.

Drivers’ Compensation and Per Diem Payments

On long hauls, Beech Trucking drivers were paid at a

specified rate for each mile dispatched, as determined by ATS

employees using the Rand McNally Mileage Maker, a guide

indicating mileage between selected points. During the years at

issue, the drivers were paid between 24 and 26 cents per mile.

Of this amount, 6.5 cents was designated as a per diem travel - 6 -

allowance (the per diem allowance).3 Short-haul drivers were

paid a flat weekly salary, in addition to the 6.5 cents per mile

per diem allowance. The total per diem allowances, so

calculated, were included in the drivers’ paychecks issued by ATS

and were listed on the corresponding check stubs under the

category of current deductions and reimbursements, separate from

amounts listed as earnings. The drivers were not required to

turn in receipts to receive the per diem allowances or otherwise

to account for the manner in which they spent the allowances.

Per diem payments to the Beech Trucking drivers totaled

$839,169 and $956,261 for 1995 and 1996, respectively.

Expense Reimbursements

The drivers’ paychecks included, in addition to the amounts

previously described, expense reimbursements. The Beech Trucking

drivers were reimbursed $25 per day for “layovers” when they were

detained for at least 24 hours waiting for a load or waiting for

a truck to be repaired; otherwise, they were not separately

reimbursed for lodging expenses, overnight parking, or showers.

The drivers were reimbursed for such items as tolls, “lumpers”

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