KRAVITCH, Circuit Judge:
This appeal requires us to determine whether a shareholder in a Subchapter S corporation, who personally guarantees and secures a corporate debt, may increase the adjusted basis of her stock by the full amount of the debt in order to maximize her loss deductions under I.R.C. section 1374.
The district court granted summary judgment in favor of the government and dismissed taxpayers’ suit for refund of $24,287 in federal income taxes and interest paid. The district court also denied appellants’ motion for summary judgment. We reverse and remand.
Taxpayer, Jane B. Selfe, formerly Jane Simon, entered into a retail clothing business in 1977 under the name of Jane Simon, Inc. She applied to the First National Bank of Birmingham for financing. In consideration of her pledge of 4500 shares of stock in Avondale Mills owned by her and close family members, the bank agreed to extend a line of credit to her in the amount of $120,000 for use in the business. Shortly thereafter, the business was incorporated. Taxpayer and her former husband were issued all of the stock, which was subsequently conveyed to Jane upon their divorce. The shareholders of the corporation elected to have the corporation taxed pursuant to Subchapter S of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954. At the request of the bank, all loans made to the taxpayer individually pursuant to the line of credit, except $10,000 initially advanced, were converted to corporate loans. Taxpayer executed an agreement guaranteeing the corporation’s indebtedness to the bank.
The loan officer testified that the bank wanted the assurance of having the corporation primarily liable to repay the loan, but that the conversion did not abridge the stock pledged as collateral, or the bank’s rights against the taxpayer as guarantor, in the event of the corporation’s default. Subsequently, the corporation granted the bank a security interest in its receivables, inventory and contract rights in order to obtain a renewal of its loans. The business began operations on August 4, 1977 and suffered losses for each year through 1980. It never, however, defaulted on its loan payments and the bank never was required to proceed against either the Avondale Mills stock or the taxpayer. On June 30, 1980, the outstanding balance of the corporation’s indebtedness to the bank exceeded $130,000.
The net operating loss of Jane Simon, Inc. for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1980 was $33,824. Taxpayer and her new husband, Edward Selfe, deducted the entire loss from gross income on their joint income tax return for the year 1980. The government, however, determined that the allowable portion of the loss was limited to $4,946, the amount it determined was the taxpayer’s adjusted basis in the corporation, and accordingly disallowed $28,878 of the claimed deduction, giving rise to an income tax deficiency in the amount of $16,839.42 plus interest in the amount of $7,648.64. Taxpayer paid the claim and then filed a claim for refund of the tax and interest. The government disallowed the claim and the taxpayer instituted a refund suit in the district court. The district court judge denied the taxpayer’s motion for summary judgment, but granted summary judgment to the government.
I.R.C. section 1374 permits a shareholder in a Subehapter S corporation to deduct his portion of the corporation’s net operating loss from his personal income. Section 1374 limits the amount of the deduction, however, to the sum of the adjusted basis of the shareholder’s stock in the corporation, plus the adjusted basis of any indebtedness of the corporation to the shareholder. Relying upon the principles of
Plantation Patterns, Inc. v. Commissioner,
462 F.2d 712 (5th Cir.),
cert. denied,
409 U.S. 1076, 93 S.Ct. 683, 34 L.Ed.2d 664 (1972),
the appellant argues that the bank is deemed to have made the loan directly to her and that she then contributed the loan proceeds to Jane Simon, Inc., thereby increasing her basis in the stock of the corporation. In
Plantation Patterns,
the Fifth Circuit held that a loan is deemed to be made to a stockholder who has guaranteed a corporate note when the facts indicate that the lender is looking primarily to the stockholder for repayment.
Plantation Patterns,
however, did not involve section 1372 as the corporation in that case was not a Subchapter S corporation. Rather, in
Plantation Patterns,
the former Fifth Circuit affirmed as not clearly erroneous, a Tax Court finding that a transaction structured as a loan by an independent third party to a corporation, and guaranteed by a shareholder, was in substance a loan to the shareholder followed by his contribution of the loan proceeds to the capital of the corporation, and that as a result, the corporation’s payments of principal and interest on the debt constituted constructive dividends to the shareholder. The taxpayer here does not argue that the cases are identical; rather, she argues that the principles announced in
Plantation Patterns
should apply here and points to the testimony of her bank officer that the loan to Jane Simon, Inc. was secured by the taxpayer’s Avondale stock and that the bank was primarily looking to the taxpayer and her pledged stock for repayment of the loan.
Taxpayer’s position is supported further by
Peter Blum,
59 T.C. 436 (1972) and
In re Lane,
742 F.2d 1311 (11th Cir.1984). In dicta, in the
Blum
case, the Tax Court stated it could see no distinction in principle between a situation such as Selfe’s and
Plantation Patterns.
In
Lane
we observed that “we pay close heed to the dictates set forth by ...
Plantation Patterns,”
when determining whether a shareholder’s capital infusion is a loan or equity investment. 742 F.2d at 1320 (citations omitted). The taxpayer also points to proposed regulations, section 1.385-9, under section 385 of the code, which apply the principles of
Plantation
Patterns.
These regulations, however, were withdrawn in 1983.
The district court, primarily relying upon
Brown v. Commissioner,
706 F.2d 755 (6th Cir.1983), held that an economic outlay resulting in an increase in a shareholder’s basis in a Subchapter S corporation occurs only when the shareholder-guarantor is called upon to pay the corporation’s debt. Here, although the corporation each year had suffered losses, it did not default on the payments due the bank on the loan. Furthermore, the bank had renewed the loan to the corporation upon assignment of its accounts receivable.
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
KRAVITCH, Circuit Judge:
This appeal requires us to determine whether a shareholder in a Subchapter S corporation, who personally guarantees and secures a corporate debt, may increase the adjusted basis of her stock by the full amount of the debt in order to maximize her loss deductions under I.R.C. section 1374.
The district court granted summary judgment in favor of the government and dismissed taxpayers’ suit for refund of $24,287 in federal income taxes and interest paid. The district court also denied appellants’ motion for summary judgment. We reverse and remand.
Taxpayer, Jane B. Selfe, formerly Jane Simon, entered into a retail clothing business in 1977 under the name of Jane Simon, Inc. She applied to the First National Bank of Birmingham for financing. In consideration of her pledge of 4500 shares of stock in Avondale Mills owned by her and close family members, the bank agreed to extend a line of credit to her in the amount of $120,000 for use in the business. Shortly thereafter, the business was incorporated. Taxpayer and her former husband were issued all of the stock, which was subsequently conveyed to Jane upon their divorce. The shareholders of the corporation elected to have the corporation taxed pursuant to Subchapter S of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954. At the request of the bank, all loans made to the taxpayer individually pursuant to the line of credit, except $10,000 initially advanced, were converted to corporate loans. Taxpayer executed an agreement guaranteeing the corporation’s indebtedness to the bank.
The loan officer testified that the bank wanted the assurance of having the corporation primarily liable to repay the loan, but that the conversion did not abridge the stock pledged as collateral, or the bank’s rights against the taxpayer as guarantor, in the event of the corporation’s default. Subsequently, the corporation granted the bank a security interest in its receivables, inventory and contract rights in order to obtain a renewal of its loans. The business began operations on August 4, 1977 and suffered losses for each year through 1980. It never, however, defaulted on its loan payments and the bank never was required to proceed against either the Avondale Mills stock or the taxpayer. On June 30, 1980, the outstanding balance of the corporation’s indebtedness to the bank exceeded $130,000.
The net operating loss of Jane Simon, Inc. for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1980 was $33,824. Taxpayer and her new husband, Edward Selfe, deducted the entire loss from gross income on their joint income tax return for the year 1980. The government, however, determined that the allowable portion of the loss was limited to $4,946, the amount it determined was the taxpayer’s adjusted basis in the corporation, and accordingly disallowed $28,878 of the claimed deduction, giving rise to an income tax deficiency in the amount of $16,839.42 plus interest in the amount of $7,648.64. Taxpayer paid the claim and then filed a claim for refund of the tax and interest. The government disallowed the claim and the taxpayer instituted a refund suit in the district court. The district court judge denied the taxpayer’s motion for summary judgment, but granted summary judgment to the government.
I.R.C. section 1374 permits a shareholder in a Subehapter S corporation to deduct his portion of the corporation’s net operating loss from his personal income. Section 1374 limits the amount of the deduction, however, to the sum of the adjusted basis of the shareholder’s stock in the corporation, plus the adjusted basis of any indebtedness of the corporation to the shareholder. Relying upon the principles of
Plantation Patterns, Inc. v. Commissioner,
462 F.2d 712 (5th Cir.),
cert. denied,
409 U.S. 1076, 93 S.Ct. 683, 34 L.Ed.2d 664 (1972),
the appellant argues that the bank is deemed to have made the loan directly to her and that she then contributed the loan proceeds to Jane Simon, Inc., thereby increasing her basis in the stock of the corporation. In
Plantation Patterns,
the Fifth Circuit held that a loan is deemed to be made to a stockholder who has guaranteed a corporate note when the facts indicate that the lender is looking primarily to the stockholder for repayment.
Plantation Patterns,
however, did not involve section 1372 as the corporation in that case was not a Subchapter S corporation. Rather, in
Plantation Patterns,
the former Fifth Circuit affirmed as not clearly erroneous, a Tax Court finding that a transaction structured as a loan by an independent third party to a corporation, and guaranteed by a shareholder, was in substance a loan to the shareholder followed by his contribution of the loan proceeds to the capital of the corporation, and that as a result, the corporation’s payments of principal and interest on the debt constituted constructive dividends to the shareholder. The taxpayer here does not argue that the cases are identical; rather, she argues that the principles announced in
Plantation Patterns
should apply here and points to the testimony of her bank officer that the loan to Jane Simon, Inc. was secured by the taxpayer’s Avondale stock and that the bank was primarily looking to the taxpayer and her pledged stock for repayment of the loan.
Taxpayer’s position is supported further by
Peter Blum,
59 T.C. 436 (1972) and
In re Lane,
742 F.2d 1311 (11th Cir.1984). In dicta, in the
Blum
case, the Tax Court stated it could see no distinction in principle between a situation such as Selfe’s and
Plantation Patterns.
In
Lane
we observed that “we pay close heed to the dictates set forth by ...
Plantation Patterns,”
when determining whether a shareholder’s capital infusion is a loan or equity investment. 742 F.2d at 1320 (citations omitted). The taxpayer also points to proposed regulations, section 1.385-9, under section 385 of the code, which apply the principles of
Plantation
Patterns.
These regulations, however, were withdrawn in 1983.
The district court, primarily relying upon
Brown v. Commissioner,
706 F.2d 755 (6th Cir.1983), held that an economic outlay resulting in an increase in a shareholder’s basis in a Subchapter S corporation occurs only when the shareholder-guarantor is called upon to pay the corporation’s debt. Here, although the corporation each year had suffered losses, it did not default on the payments due the bank on the loan. Furthermore, the bank had renewed the loan to the corporation upon assignment of its accounts receivable. The government points out that taxpayer has cited no decision in which a court has held that a shareholder’s guarantee of a loan made to a Subchapter S corporation increased his basis in the corporation and states that similar attempts to circumvent the limitations of section 1374(c)(2) repeatedly have been rejected by the courts.
We find the Sixth Circuit’s reasoning in
Brown
only partially persuasive. We agree with
Brown
inasmuch as that court reaffirms that economic outlay is required before a stockholder in a Subchapter S corporation may increase her basis.
We disagree, however, with the proposition that a stockholder/taxpayer must, in all cases, absolve a corporation’s debt before she may recognize an increased basis as a guarantor of a loan to a corporation.
In
stead, we conclude that under the principles of
Plantation Patterns,
a shareholder who has guaranteed a loan to a Subehapter S corporation may increase her basis where the facts demonstrate that, in substance, the shareholder has borrowed funds and subsequently advanced them to her corporation.
The government correctly argues that generally taxpayers are liable for the tax consequences of the transaction they actually execute and may not reap the benefit of some other transaction that they might have made. In other words, taxpayers ordinarily are bound by the “form” of their transaction and may not argue that the “substance” of their transaction triggers different tax consequences. In
Commissioner v. National Alfalfa-dehydrating,
417 U.S. 134, 149, 94 S.Ct. 2129, 2137, 40 L.Ed.2d 717 (1974) the Court observed:
While a taxpayer is free to organize his affairs as he choses, nevertheless, once having done so, he must accept the tax consequences of his choice, whether contemplated or not, ... and may not enjoy the benefit of some other route he might have chosen to follow but did not.
See also Don E. Williams Co. v. Commissioner,
429 U.S. 569, 579, 97 S.Ct. 850, 856, 51 L.Ed.2d 48 (1977);
Brown,
706 F.2d at 756.
It is equally well settled that the Commissioner need not always determine the tax effect of transactions based on the form of the transaction.
Higgins v. Smith,
308 U.S. 473, 477, 60 S.Ct. 355, 357-58, 84 L.Ed. 406 (1940). This principle is particularly evident where characterization of capital as debt or equity will have different tax consequences. Thus in
Plantation Patterns
the court held that interest payments by a corporation on debentures were constructive stockholder dividends and could not be deducted by the corporation as interest payments. There, the former Fifth Circuit recharacterized debt as equity at the insistence of the Commissioner. These principles, however, are not solely for the government’s benefit. I.R.C. section 385(b) sets forth five factors which are available to determine “whether a debtor-creditor relationship exists or a corporation-shareholder relationship exists.”
Similarly this circuit applies a thirteen factor analysis to characterize a taxpayer’s interest in a corporation.
In re Lane,
742 F.2d 1311 (11th Cir.1984) (applying factors set out in
Estate of Mixon v. United States,
464 F.2d 394, 402 (5th Cir.1972)).
Although the question of whether a stockholder’s advances to a corporation constitute debt or capital contributions is usually raised by the government, nothing in the Internal Revenue Code or our decisions suggests that the factors used to determine the substantive character of a taxpayer’s interest in a corporation are available only to the government.
See In re Lane,
742 F.2d at 1315;
cf. Peter E. Blum,
59 T.C. 436, 439 (1972) (principles for resolving debt-equity determinations are consistent regardless of the context in which such determinations arise);
J.A. Maurer, Inc.,
30 T.C. 1273 (1958). Accordingly, where the nature of a taxpayer’s interest in a corporation is in issue, courts may look beyond the form of the interest and investigate the substance of the transaction. These situations present an exception to the general proposition that a shareholder/taxpayer is bound by the form of her transaction.
See Georgia-Pacific Corp. v. Commissioner,
63 T.C. 790, 795-96 (1975).
At issue here, however, is not whether the taxpayer’s contribution was either a loan to or an equity investment in Jane Simon, Inc. The issue is whether the taxpayer’s guarantee of the corporate loan was in itself a contribution to the corporation sufficient to increase the taxpayer’s basis in the corporation. In most cases, a mere guarantee of a corporate loan is insufficient, absent subrogation, to increase a taxpayer’s basis.
See Brown; Borg v. Commissioner,
50 T.C. 257 (1968);
Duke v. Commissioner,
35 T.C.M. 229 (1976);
Mirow v. Commissioner,
34 T.C.M. 628 (1975); Rev.Rul. 75-144 (increase basis where shareholder substitutes his promise to pay for corporation’s promise). Thus arguments similar to Selfe’s — that the taxpayer’s guarantee is in reality a loan made to the shareholder/taxpayer that is subsequently advanced to the corporation— usually meet with little success because the taxpayer is unable to demonstrate that the substance of his transaction is different than its form. Indeed, the
Brown
court refused “to accept petitioners’ contorted view of the transaction in furtherance of their ‘substance over form’ argument when as the court below observed, ‘the substance matched the form.’ ” 706 F.2d at 756. Similarly, in
Blum v. Commissioner,
the court determined that although guaranteed loans might constitute contributions to capital, the taxpayer there was not entitled to an increased basis because the bank expected repayment of its loan from the corporation and not the taxpayer.
Blum,
59 T.C. at 440. That taxpayers rarely, if ever, have demonstrated that a guarantee was in reality a loan to the corporation from the shareholder/taxpayer does not mean that this argument is legally inadequate
per se.
As noted in
In re Breit,
460 F.Supp. 873, 875 (E.D.Va.1978), “[t]he issue is a mixed question of law and fact ... [and] [n]o single factor determines whether the loans were in fact by the bank to appellants followed by a capital contribution on their part.”
Under the principles of
Plantation Patterns,
a shareholder guarantee of a loan may be treated for tax purposes as an equity investment in the corporation where the lender looks to the shareholder as the primary obligor. Essential to the
Plantation Patterns
court’s analysis was that the notes guaranteed by the shareholder were issued by a thinly capitalized corporation and had more equity characteristics than debt. The
Plantation Patterns
court stressed that its inquiry focused on highly complex issues of fact and that similar inquiries must be carefully evaluated on their own facts. 462 F.2d at 719;
see also
private letter ruling 8139012 (June 19, 1981). Here, the taxpayer has presented the deposition testimony of her loan officer stating that the bank primarily looked to the taxpayer and not the corporation for repayment of the loan. Moreover, the tax
payer also has elicited testimony indicating that Jane Simon, Inc. was thinly capitalized. The taxpayer argues that it is highly unlikely that the bank would have advanced funds directly to Jane Simon, Inc. —a fledgling enterprise operated by a novice in a highly competitive field. This argument is further supported by the fact that the bank previously had approved a line of credit consistent with the credit enjoyed by Jane Simon, Inc. to Jane Selfe, nee Simon, based upon her pledge of Avondale stock. The government, however, notes that it was at the bank’s insistence that the line of credit originally approved for the taxpayer was converted to loans to the corporation guaranteed by the taxpayer.
Accordingly, we conclude that there are material facts still in issue and therefore summary judgment was inappropriate. We remand for a determination of whether or not the bank primarily looked to Jane Selfe for repayment and for the court to apply the factors set out in
In re Lane
and I.R.C. section 385 to determine if the taxpayer’s guarantee amounted to either an equity investment in or shareholder loan to Jane Simon, Inc. In short, we remand for the district court to apply
Plantation Patterns
and determine if the bank loan to Jane Simon, Inc. was in reality a loan to the taxpayer.
REVERSED and REMANDED.