Broz v. Commissioner

727 F.3d 621, 2013 WL 4483517, 112 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 5823, 2013 U.S. App. LEXIS 17636
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedAugust 23, 2013
Docket12-1403
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 727 F.3d 621 (Broz v. Commissioner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Broz v. Commissioner, 727 F.3d 621, 2013 WL 4483517, 112 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 5823, 2013 U.S. App. LEXIS 17636 (6th Cir. 2013).

Opinion

OPINION

ROGERS, Circuit Judge.

Robert and Kimberly Broz appeal the judgment of the United States Tax Court affirming the Commissioner of Internal Revenue’s finding of an $18 million deficiency in their joint tax filings for the years 1996, 1998, 1999, 2000, and 2001. Robert Broz claims that he was “at risk” and had sufficient debt basis in Alpine PCS, a subchapter S corporation, to deduct its pass-through losses. Broz also argues that he made valid business-expense and amortization deductions for the activities of the Alpine license-holding entities, which were limited-liability companies taxed as partnerships. Because Broz lacked sufficient debt basis in Alpine PCS, the Tax Court properly disallowed his deductions for Alpine PCS’s pass-through losses. In addition, because the other Alpine entities were never engaged in any active trade or business, the Tax Court properly disallowed Broz’s business-expense and amortization deductions for those entities. The Tax Court therefore properly disallowed the pass-through losses and other claimed deductions.

Robert Broz 1 started a cellular telephone business in the 1990s by organizing a wholly owned S corporation, RFB Cellular, Inc., in 1991. That same year he purchased an FCC license to operate a cellular network in Northern Michigan. Broz later expanded his cellular telephone business by organizing additional entities: Alpine PCS, Inc., an S corporation 99-percent owned by Broz (the balance was owned by his brother), which was created to bid on more FCC licenses and to construct and operate digital networks servicing new license areas; several Alpine license-holding entities — limited liability companies that are taxed as partnerships — formed to hold and lease the additional FCC licenses Broz acquired 2 ; Alpine Investments, LLC, a financing intermediary; and Alpine PCS Operating, LLC (“Alpine Operating”), an equipment-holding entity. 3 Alpine Investments and Alpine Operating are both limited liability companies wholly owned by Broz and disregarded for tax purposes.

*624 Alpine PCS never operated any on-air networks during the years at issue. RFB operated the only on-air networks. RFB used Alpine PCS’s licenses, on, a limited basis, to provide digital service in geographic areas that RFB’s analog licenses already covered. Only two Alpine entities (Alpine PCS and Alpine Michigan F) reported any income — $1,312 and $67,423, respectively, allocated by RFB for RFB’s use of the FCC licenses in 2001. Alpine PCS did not report income during any of the other years at issue, but claimed depreciation deductions, interest deductions on debt owed to the FCC, and interest deductions on debt owed to RFB — even though Alpine PCS never made any interest payments. Alpine PCS also amortized and deducted startup expenses, even though Alpine PCS had not made a formal election under § 195(b) of the tax code. 4 The Alpine license-holding entities each claimed amortization deductions related to the licenses and deducted interest paid on amounts borrowed to service the FCC debt. Alpine PCS and the license-holding entities ceased all business activities by the end of 2002.

For the tax years at issue, Broz deducted the flow-through losses of Alpine PCS on his personal income taxes, on the grounds that he had debt basis in, and was “at risk” with respect to, Alpine PCS. He also deducted interest, depreciation, start-up costs, and other business expenses of the Alpine entities. Finally, he deducted the amortization cost of the FCC cellular licenses acquired and held by the Alpine license-holding entities.

The IRS Commissioner determined a deficiency of approximately $18 million in Broz’s income tax filings for the tax years at issue. The Commissioner found that Broz had insufficient debt basis in Alpine PCS to claim flow-through losses for the years at issue. The Commissioner also determined that Broz was not at risk with respect to his investments in the Alpine entities and was therefore not entitled to claim those entities’ loss deductions. The Commissioner found that the Alpine entities, were not entitled to interest, depreciation, startup expense, and other business-related deductions because they were not engaged in an active trade or business during the years at issue. Finally, the Commissioner disallowed the Alpine license-holding entities’ amortization deductions because those entities were not engaged in an active trade or business during the years at issue.

The Tax Court ruled in the Commissioner’s favor on each issue, finding that (1) Broz lacked debt basis in Alpine PCS to deduct its flow-through losses, (2) Broz was not at risk with respect to his investments in Alpine PCS and the Alpine license-holding entities, and for that additional reason could not deduct for flow-through losses, (3) Alpine PCS and Alpine Operating were not entitled to deductions for business expenses because they were not actively engaged in a trade or business, and (4) the Alpine license-holding entities were not entitled to amortization deductions because they were not engaged in an active trade or business. Broz v. Comm’r, 137 T.C. 46 (2011).

On the debt basis issue, the Tax Court determined that the loan ran, in substance, from RFB to Alpine PCS, and that Broz operated merely as a conduit for the funding and did not thereby obtain debt basis in Alpine PCS because there was no evidence that Alpine PCS was genuinely indebted to Broz rather than RFB. The Tax *625 Court noted that although interest accrued on the unsecured promissory notes that Broz issued, no payments were made and Broz signed the promissory notes on behalf of all the Alpine entities, making it unlikely that those entities would seek payment from Broz. Accordingly, the notes did not establish genuine indebtedness. The Tax Court also found that the funds paid to Alpine PCS from the CoBank loan proceeds were initially characterized as advances from RFB and were only later recharacterized as loans from Broz through year-end reclassifying journal entries and documents. Moreover, Broz offered no evidence of habitual payment to third parties to prove that RFB was Broz’s “incorporated pocketbook” making the payments to Alpine PCS on Broz’s behalf. The Tax Court also concluded that Broz did not establish any actual economic outlay showing that he incurred a cost because of his RFB stock pledge to secure the CoBank loan; that is, Broz did not establish that he was left ‘poorer in any material sense. The Tax Court'therefore applied the “step transaction doctrine” and ignored Broz’s participation in the transaction by which RFB obtained a loan from CoBank and advanced those funds to Alpine PCS. Id. at 60-63.

On the “at risk” issue, the Tax Court rejected Broz’s argument that his pledge of RFB stock to secure the CoBank loan placed him at risk within the meaning of § 465 of the tax code — meaning that Broz was disallowed from using the value of the RFB stock to increase the amount of loss deductions he could take. The Tax Court concluded that Broz was not at risk because the RFB stock pledged as security for the CoBank loan was related to — and therefore used in — the business.

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Bluebook (online)
727 F.3d 621, 2013 WL 4483517, 112 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 5823, 2013 U.S. App. LEXIS 17636, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/broz-v-commissioner-ca6-2013.