Bergersen v. Commissioner

109 F.3d 56, 79 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 1530, 1997 U.S. App. LEXIS 5356, 1997 WL 120530
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedMarch 21, 1997
Docket96-1730
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 109 F.3d 56 (Bergersen v. Commissioner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bergersen v. Commissioner, 109 F.3d 56, 79 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 1530, 1997 U.S. App. LEXIS 5356, 1997 WL 120530 (1st Cir. 1997).

Opinion

BOUDIN, Circuit Judge.

This appeal involves a tax dispute posing two questions: whether certain payments to the taxpayers by a controlled company were constructive dividends (rather than loans) and whether the taxpayers were residents of Illinois (rather than Puerto Rico) in 1986 and 1987. The Tax Court answered yes to both questions, resulting in adverse consequences for the taxpayers, who now appeal. We affirm the Tax Court.

The basic facts, derived from the record and the Tax Court findings, are largely undisputed, although the inferences and conclusions to be drawn are very much in dispute. The taxpayers are Earl and Evelyn Berger-sen, a long-married couple who resided for many years in Illinois. Earl Bergersen practiced as an orthodontist in Winnetka, Illinois, starting in 1959. In addition to practice and part-time teaching, Earl Bergersen invented and patented new orthodontic products, which enjoyed a good deal of success.

In the early 1970s, the Bergersens incorporated Ortho-Tain, Inc., under Delaware law, to manufacture and sell products based upon Earl Bergersen’s inventions. At all times pertinent, the couple were the only members of the Ortho-Tain board of directors. During the tax years at issue in this case (1985-1987), the Bergersens also held all of the class A voting shares in the company (56 each), with five class B voting shares held by each of their three children. Each of the children also held between 100 and 300 shares of class C nonvoting stock. Santos Ortiz, manager of the company’s Puerto Rico plant, held 200 shares of class D nonvoting stock, and Thomas Sedwick, the tool and die maker at the plant, held 190 shares of class E nonvoting stock.

*58 Initially based in Winnetka, the plant was moved to Puerto Rico in 1976. The Berger-sens hoped to move to Puerto Rico eventually; residents of Puerto Rico are exempt from U.S. income tax on income derived from Puerto Rico sources. 26 U.S.C. § 933. After the plant moved, Ortho-Tain elected to be treated as a possessions corporation, exempting it from U.S. income tax on Puerto Rico source income. Id. § 936. The company also received a 15-year industrial tax exemption from Puerto Rico, which also permitted Puerto Rico residents to receive company dividends free of income tax. See 13 L.P.R.A. § 252 et seq.; id. § 252b(a)(l).

During the late 1970s, Ortiz and Sedwiek ran the Puerto Rico plant while the Berger-sens handled the company’s finances from Illinois. Ortho-Tain’s sales grew from $600,-000 in 1977 to $1.2 million in 1987. During these years, the taxpayers received no salary from the company, and no dividends were declared on their stock until 1987. During most of the period, modest dividends (ranging from $5,000 to around $22,000) were paid annually to Ortiz and to Sedwiek.

In this same period, Ortho-Tain’s accumulated undistributed earnings grew from just under $350,000 in 1977 to just over $5 million in 1986. The company’s possession status freed it from the U.S. accumulated earnings tax. 26 U.S.C. § 936(g). Meanwhile, starting in 1982, Earl Bergersen borrowed substantial amounts from the company, totaling almost $3,700,000 by 1987. The loans were evidenced by unsecured demand notes and carried interest rates of 8.5 to 10 percent; the taxpayers regularly , paid this interest to the company and deducted the interest payments on their U.S. income tax returns for the years 1982 through 1986.

Apart from one loan repayment of about $400,000 in 1984, the loans were carried on Ortho-Tain’s books until March 1987, when Ortho-Tain issued dividends of about $2,800,-000 to the taxpayers, which they treated as exempt from U.S. income tax under section 933 and immediately paid back to the company to reduce their outstanding loans. The remaining loan balance was repaid after further dividends of just over $2,000,000 to taxpayers in 1988. As one might guess, it is the position of the Internal Revenue Service that the loans were constructive dividends subject to U.S. income tax when made.

The other issue in dispute concerns the timing of the Bergersens’ move to Puerto Rico. Looking toward this move, they purchased land in Puerto Rico in 1981 and, over the next several years, planned an elaborate house. Construction began in 1984 but, because of delays, the house was not finished as expected by late 1985. In the meantime, starting in 1984, Earl Bergersen turned over much of his orthodontics practice to another dentist and spent only a few days a month with established patients.

In July 1985, the Bergersens sold their Winnetka house and in September 1985 agreed to buy a town house in Glenview, Illinois. In April 1986, they joined a Glen-view social club. They also sublet an apartment in Puerto Rico from their employee Sedwiek from November 1985 through October 1986. When the sale closed on the Winnetka house in November 1985, the Berger-sens dispersed their belongings to various places in Illinois and Puerto Rico.

By summer 1986, the Bergersens’ new Puerto Rico house had one bedroom finished, which they used on occasion, and they installed a housekeeper couple in the house. More of their furnishings were shipped there in August 1986. At about the same time, the Bergersens shipped a car to Puerto Rico, registered it, and activated a country club membership there. They obtained an occupancy permit for the new house in January 1987, but construction continued until August 1987.

During 1986 and 1987, the Bergersens traveled a good deal for both business and pleasure, dividing their time between Puerto Rico and the United States mainland. They spent 108 days in Puerto Rico in 1986 and 93 there in 1987. They spent 107 days in the Glenview town house in 1986 and 138 days there in 1987. Thus, in 1986, they spent 150 days in places other than Illinois and Puerto Rico; in 1987, the figure was 134 days. Earl Bergersen spent no more than a few weeks each year seeing patients in Winnetka.

*59 In February 1987, the Bergersens replaced Illinois drivers’ licenses that they had lost. In August 1987, the new Puerto Rico house was completed, and the government admits that the taxpayers used it as their principal residence thereafter. Earl Bergersen wound up his Winnetka practice in late 1987. In 1988, the Bergersens acquired Puerto Rico voting cards and, in 1989, Puerto Rico drivers’ licenses.

The present case began after the Internal Revenue Service reviewed the taxpayers’ income tax returns for 1985 through 1987. In due course, the IRS ruled that the loans made to the Bergersens in these years were not bona fide loans but constructive dividends; the result was to include the amounts received as part of the taxpayers’ reportable income and to disallow deductions taken by them for interest payments on the loans.

The IRS also concluded that the Berger-sens in 1986 and 1987 were not bona fide residents of Puerto Rico for the entire year, as they claimed, but were residents of Illinois for all of 1986 and part of 1987. It is common ground that section 933 excludes Puerto Rico source income from U.S. income tax only where the taxpayer is a resident of Puerto Rico for the entire year in question. Vazquez v. Commissioner,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
109 F.3d 56, 79 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 1530, 1997 U.S. App. LEXIS 5356, 1997 WL 120530, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bergersen-v-commissioner-ca1-1997.