COBORN v. COMMISSIONER
This text of 1998 T.C. Memo. 377 (COBORN 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.
Opinion
*380 Decision will be entered for respondent.
MEMORANDUM OPINION
SWIFT, JUDGE: Respondent determined deficiencies of $ 249,919, $ 96,478, $ 5,627, and $ 16,300, respectively, in petitioner's Federal income taxes for 1988, 1989, 1990, and 1991.
The issue for decision is whether petitioner is entitled to a claimed $ 1.6 million nonbusiness bad debt deduction relating to funds transferred to a closely held corporation.
BACKGROUND
Petitioner resided in St. Cloud, Minnesota, at the time the petition was filed.
On June 16, 1972, petitioner became holder of stock in Environmental Protection Laboratories, Inc. (EPL), a newly formed Minnesota corporation established, among other things, to develop products relating to laboratory testing and to environmental*381 monitoring equipment.
Beginning in 1983 and through January of 1990, petitioner was the controlling shareholder of EPL. One of petitioner's business objectives for EPL was for EPL to become sufficiently successful and profitable so that the stock in EPL could be sold to a third party at a large profit.
In 1983, petitioner's son, Robert C. Coborn, Jr., became EPL's president. Over the years, petitioner invested heavily in EPL, in part, to financially support the corporation of which his son was president.
In the early 1980's, it was estimated that EPL would need $ 1.5 to $ 1.9 million in additional capital funds to implement for EPL the business plan that petitioner, his son, and others had developed.
Between 1972 and 1988, petitioner transferred at least $ 1,571,429 to EPL.
Over the years, EPL obtained a number of loans from banks. These loans were personally guaranteed by petitioner. Funds that petitioner individually transferred to EPL were not secured and were subordinated to bank loans EPL obtained.
Not until September of 1990 did petitioner take steps to secure funds he alleges to have loaned to EPL.
Between 1973 and 1984, a series of purported promissory notes were*382 executed on behalf of EPL and in favor of petitioner that apparently related to some of the funds petitioner transferred to EPL. Neither petitioner nor EPL, however, maintained adequate, current documentation and accounting records reflecting funds petitioner transferred to EPL. Certain documentation relating to the funds petitioner transferred to EPL appears to have been originated not at the time the funds were transferred but in later years.
Of the $ 1,571,429 that petitioner alleges constituted funds he loaned to EPL, $ 729,248 thereof is not reflected by any purported promissory notes.
At some point in time, an undated document was executed on behalf of EPL and in favor of petitioner indicating that petitioner agreed to loan over an unspecified period of time an unspecified amount of funds to EPL and that EPL would repay the funds on demand with interest at a rate of 14 percent per annum.
On petitioner's Federal income tax returns for the years in issue, the reporting of interest income by petitioner relating to funds petitioner received from EPL and relating to the alleged loans petitioner purportedly made to EPL is erratic and inconsistent. In some years, petitioner*383 received no funds from EPL, but petitioner reported on his income tax returns interest income received from EPL. In other years, petitioner reported on his income tax returns more or less in interest income than the total funds he received from EPL. In some years, petitioner reported none of the funds he received from EPL as interest income. The schedule below indicates, for some years, the amounts of funds petitioner apparently received from EPL and the amounts petitioner reported on his respective Federal income tax returns as interest income received from EPL:
| Funds Petitioner | Received Funds Reported | |
| Year | from EPL | As Interest Income |
| 1979 | -0- | $ 4,965 |
| 1984 | $ 2,400 | 6,286 |
| 1985 | -0- | 14,125 |
| 1986 | 52,469 | -0- |
| 1987 | 45,267 | 3,600 |
| 1988 | 48,454 | 6,000 |
On a final decree of divorce between petitioner and his wife dated January 12, 1987, it is stated that petitioner is awarded debt owed by EPL to him in the amount of $ 591,606.
In July of 1988, apparently before petitioner made any claim that the debt purportedly owed to him by EPL was worthless, EPL's financial statements for 1986 were prepared and reflected total assets of $ 3,029,877 and total stockholder*384 equity of $ 552,097.
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1998 T.C. Memo. 377, 76 T.C.M. 705, 1998 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 380, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coborn-v-commissioner-tax-1998.