Carey J. Perry and Marietta M. Perry v. United States of America, J. Doyle Medders and Constance D. Medders v. United States

520 F.2d 235, 44 A.L.R. Fed. 187, 36 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 5500, 1975 U.S. App. LEXIS 13423
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedJuly 29, 1975
Docket74-1852, 74-1853
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 520 F.2d 235 (Carey J. Perry and Marietta M. Perry v. United States of America, J. Doyle Medders and Constance D. Medders v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carey J. Perry and Marietta M. Perry v. United States of America, J. Doyle Medders and Constance D. Medders v. United States, 520 F.2d 235, 44 A.L.R. Fed. 187, 36 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 5500, 1975 U.S. App. LEXIS 13423 (4th Cir. 1975).

Opinion

WINTER, Circuit Judge:

In tax refund suits the district court gave judgment to two physicians for taxes assessed by the government and paid by them resulting from the government’s disallowance of their 1969 rental payments for their medical offices. The rental payments were held to be “ordinary and necessary” business expenses deductible under § 162 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954. 26 U.S.C. § 162(a)(3). The medical offices had been previously owned by taxpayers but leased back after they conveyed title to Clifford trusts for the benefit of their children. Because we conclude that the rental payments were not ordinary and necessary business expenses, we reverse.

I.

The facts, which were stipulated in most part, are set forth at length in the district court’s memorandum of decision, 1 and they need not be repeated at length. The salient ones are that taxpayers (whose wives are joined because they filed joint income tax returns with their husbands) practice medicine in a medical partnership known as Perry-Medders Clinic. They acquired land as tenants in common and constructed on it an office building suitable for their practice. The building was completed in 1963. Ever since, it has been used for their medical practice, and taxpayers have been its sole occupants.

In 1968, each taxpayer established a Clifford trust for the benefit of his children, *237 2 naming the same bank as corporate trustee. Each taxpayer then conveyed his half interest in the property to the trust of which he was the settlor; it was the sole asset of his trust. The trusts were known as the Perry trust and the Medders trust. The term of the Perry trust was ten years; the term of the Medders trust was fourteen years. The provisions of the trust instruments were otherwise identical. Under each, the trustee had broad administrative powers, and remainder interests were reserved in the settlors upon expiration of the trust, or the death of the beneficiaries, whichever should first occur.

Prior to the actual conveyance of the res to the trustee, a leaseback of the medical office building was arranged, and the trust instruments and leases were executed contemporaneously. Each taxpayer leased a one-half interest in the building for the same term as the term of the trust he created. Each agreed to pay a monthly rent of $200, to pay personal property taxes on equipment in the building, and to undertake interior maintenance and repairs.

II.

In concluding that the rent payments were ordinary and necessary business expenses and that taxpayers were entitled to recover the additional 1969 income taxes assessed by reason of their disallowance, the district court recognized an apparent divergence between the views expressed in Van Zandt v. Commissioner, 341 F.2d 440 (5 Cir. 1965), which held that rental payments under a similar Clifford trust and leaseback arrangement were not deductible as ordinary and necessary business expenses, and Skemp v. Commissioner, 168 F.2d 598 (7 Cir. 1948), which held them deductible. It followed Skemp, where the trustee was a bank, and distinguished Van Zandt on the basis that in Van Zandt the trustee of the Clifford trust was the settlor, who thus retained control over the trust assets. Skemp controlled, it was concluded, because in the instant cases a truly independent corporate trustee was named. Indeed, the district court even suggested in a footnote that the corporate trustee, by selling the property to a good-faith purchaser, had a legal right to avoid the prearranged leases because they were not recorded and under North Carolina law were not binding after the expiration of three years from the date of their execution. Although a factor probably leading to the result in Skemp was that, there, the settlor retained no reversionary interest in the res of the trust upon its termination, while here the property would revert to the settlors upon termination of the trusts, the district court ruled the factor irrelevant since taxpayers paid rent to use the property and not to enlarge their ownership.

We disagree. We think our cases are indistinguishable from Van Zandt, that the latter was correctly decided, and that it should be applied here. In Van Zandt, the trust and leaseback transaction was, in its essential elements, identical to the instant transactions. Dr. Van Zandt owned the office building in which he conducted his surgical practice. He conveyed it and his equipment to a trustee (himself) for his children for a term of ten years and two months, and simultaneously, as trustee, leased the property and equipment to himself as an individual. Upon the termination of the trust, its assets reverted to Dr. Van Zandt.

*238 Prior to the transactions, Dr. Van Zandt was under no obligation to pay rent, and the court could find no business purpose in establishing the trust and in the leaseback of the res to justify the diversion of a part of Dr. Van Zandt’s income to his children. The court was careful to point out that diversion of income was neither an illegal nor an immoral objective, but concluded that the “obligation to pay rent resulted not as an ordinary and necessary incident in the conduct of the business, but was in fact created solely for the purpose of permitting a division of the taxpayer’s income tax.” (Emphasis in original.) Accordingly, it concluded that “[rjent paid to discharge an obligation so created is itself not an ordinary and necessary business expense.” 341 F.2d at 443.

A careful reading of the opinion in Van Zandt does not indicate that the fact that Dr. Van Zandt named himself as trustee was crucial to the decision of the case. Rather, the primary basis of decision was the fact that “the trustee had nothing whatever to do in the management of the trusts, except to receive the income which had been predetermined. The whole principal amount of the trust was irrevocably committed to the possession of the grantor the moment the trust was created.” 341 F.2d at 443. Viewing the creation of the trust and the leaseback as a single transaction, the court concluded that the “obligation to pay rent” was not an ordinary and necessary incident to a transaction with a real business purpose; hence, the deduction for rental payments under § 162 was disallowed.

In the instant case, notwithstanding that the bank was named as trustee, the same is true. The bank had virtually no function save to hold legal title and to receive and remit the rental payments arranged by the settlors at the time the trusts were created. The terms and conditions of the leases were fixed before the trusts were created and the durations of the leases were identical to those of the trusts.

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Bluebook (online)
520 F.2d 235, 44 A.L.R. Fed. 187, 36 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 5500, 1975 U.S. App. LEXIS 13423, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carey-j-perry-and-marietta-m-perry-v-united-states-of-america-j-doyle-ca4-1975.