Cornelius v. Commissioner

494 F.2d 465
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedMay 16, 1974
DocketNo. 73-1005
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 494 F.2d 465 (Cornelius v. Commissioner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cornelius v. Commissioner, 494 F.2d 465 (5th Cir. 1974).

Opinion

GOLDBERG, Circuit Judge:

Appellant taxpayers, Paul G. Cornelius, Sr. and his wife Mary M. Cornelius, and Jack H. Cornelius (a son of Paul G. Cornelius, Sr.) and his wife Betty J. Cornelius, appeal from a decision of the United-States Tax Court declaring that taxpayers were deficient in their income tax payments for taxable year 1967 in the amounts of $59,525.71 [466]*466and $27,877.72, respectively.1 2This Court has jurisdiction to hear the appeal under Int.Rev.Code of 1954, § 7482.

From 1960 through July of 1966, Paul Cornelius, Sr., and Jack Cornelius conducted a farming operation as partners under the name Cornelius and Sons. The elder Cornelius had a two-thirds interest in the partnership, and his son had the remaining one-third interest. On July 29, 1966, Paul, Mary, and Jack Cornelius formed a Florida corporation entitled Cornelius and Sons, Inc., which assumed the farming operations of the partnership. The stock records reflect that 9000 shares were issued, with 5999 shares going to Paul Cornelius, one share to Mary Cornelius, and 3000 shares to Jack Cornelius. On August 4, 1966, Cornelius and Sons, Inc. elected to be taxed as a small business corporation under the provisions of Subchapter S of the Internal Revenue Code.3

Upon forming the corporation, taxpayers transferred to it partnership assets having a basis of $102,000. These assets, which included tractors and implements used in the process of farming, cash, and prepaid land rents, were credited to capital stock and paid-in surplus as follows:

The vegetable farming operation conducted by the corporation, as by the partnership which preceded it, consisted of growing and harvesting pole beans, yellow squash, and tomatoes, and was of a highly seasonal nature. Substantial funds were required in the fall of each year in order to meet planting expenditures. In the fall of 1966 taxpayers advanced $215,000 to the corporation in the following proportions: Paul Cornelius, $130,000; Mary Cornelius, $20,000; Jack Cornelius, $65,000. These advances, a continuation of the practice initiated by the partnership for financing the fall crop, were borrowed by the shareholders from a bank. Although the advances were reflected on the corporation records as “notes payable," no notes were actually given for such advances.

In its first short taxable year of operation, which ended December 31, 1966, the corporation incurred a net operating loss of $245,985.97. In accordance with the provisions of section 1374,3 Paul [467]*467and Mary Cornelius claimed a deduction of $163,990.65 on their 1966 joint income tax returns, representing their al-locable share of the net operating loss of the corporation; correspondingly, Jack Cornelius claimed a deduction of $81,995.32 as his allocable share of the loss. As a consequence of the net operating loss and accompanying deductions, the basis for each of taxpayers’ stock accounts was reduced to zero and the basis for each of their debt accounts was partially reduced, pursuant to section 1376(b).4 The result, as reflected in the following table, was an aggregate reduction in basis for stock of $102,000.00 and an aggregate reduction in basis for indebtedness of $143,985.97: 5

[468]*468In the spring of 1967, continuing a practice followed by the predecessor partnership, the coi'poration repaid the $215,000.00 advanced by taxpayers the previous fall. In the fall of 1967, Paul Cornelius and Jack Cornelius advanced $175,000.00 — $116,667.00 and $58,333.00, respectively — to the corporation to finance the fall crop.

Taxpayers treated the spring 1967 repayment apd the fall 1967 advance as investment transactions. The Commissioner, however, determined that the $215,000.00 repayment in the spring of 1967 constituted repayment of loans and thus represented gain to the extent that the repayments exceeded the loan bases which had been lowered as a result of the loss pass-through in 1966. According to the Commissioner’s ruling, taxpayers would have additional ordinary income of $143,985.97,6 yielding an additional tax of $89,014.58. The Tax Court sustained the Commissioner’s determination.

On this appeal taxpayers argue primarily that loans whose bases have been reduced by corporate losses should be treated together with stock as a composite “investment by a stockholder” for purposes of Subchapter S, so that the bases will be increased when undistributed profits are earned in subsequent years. Alternatively, taxpayers argue that the Tax Court erred in determining that the advances made to the corporation constituted debt rather than equity. Taxpayers make the further alternative argument that the 1967 repayments and readvances should have been netted before any tax incidence was determined. We find taxpayers’ contentions provocative and imaginative, but in the final analysis unpersuasive, and we affirm.

Subchapter S of the Internal Revenue Code was enacted in 1958 in response to recommendations over a number of years by a variety of individuals and groups — from entrepreneurs to tax lawyers to the President of the United States — that small businesses be enabled “to operate under whatever form of organization is desirable for their particular circumstances, without incurring unnecessary tax penalties.” 7 Most of the reformers suggested that closely held corporations be given the option to be taxed as partnerships. Congress chose instead, however, to create an entirely new statutory superstructure, many of whose potential perquisites and pitfalls have yet to be fully explored. On this appeal our duty is not to map all of the remaining uncharted territory, but to shape the juridical sinuosities of Sub-chapter S to the narrow problem before us — the interrelated tax effect of a small business corporation’s net operating loss and its repayment of shareholder loans.

Although Congress chose not to permit small business corporations to opt for partnership taxation as such, it did through Subchapter S create a system for relieving closely held corporations of federal income tax burdens while passing corporate profits and losses through to shareholders in a manner similar to a partnership.8 The basis of a sharehold[469]*469er’s stock is increased for amounts treated as dividends; and the basis of his stock and of corporate indebtedness are reduced for his portion of the corporation’s net operating loss.9 In the case sub judice the corporation sustained substantial losses in the same taxable year (1966) that taxpayers had made sizeable loans to the corporation. Because of the basis of indebtedness created by the loans, taxpayers were able to offset all of the corporation’s net operating losses against ordinary income. Those losses, however, reduced taxpayers’ bases in their loans to the corporation ; repayment of the loans in the spring of 1967 thus substantially exceeded taxpayers’ adjusted bases. Under general tax principles a loan repayment to a taxpayer constitutes income to the extent the repayment exceeds the taxpayer’s basis in the loan. Unless the loan is evidenced by “bonds, debentures, notes, or certificates or other evidences of indebtedness,” 10 such income is taxed at ordinary rates.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Jordan v. Comm'r
2009 T.C. Memo. 223 (U.S. Tax Court, 2009)
Brooks v. Comm'r
2005 T.C. Memo. 204 (U.S. Tax Court, 2005)
Everett W. Berger v. United States
87 F.3d 60 (Second Circuit, 1996)
Shaver v. Commissioner
1993 T.C. Memo. 619 (U.S. Tax Court, 1993)
Griffith v. Commissioner
1988 T.C. Memo. 445 (U.S. Tax Court, 1988)
Guyer v. Commissioner
1985 T.C. Memo. 210 (U.S. Tax Court, 1985)
Furman v. United States
602 F. Supp. 444 (D. South Carolina, 1984)
BROWN v. COMMISSION OF INTERNAL REVENUE
1981 T.C. Memo. 608 (U.S. Tax Court, 1981)
Post Corp. v. United States
640 F.2d 1296 (Court of Claims, 1981)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
494 F.2d 465, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cornelius-v-commissioner-ca5-1974.