MEMORANDUM FINDINGS OF FACT AND OPINION
PARKER, Judge: Respondent determined deficiencies in petitioners' Federal income taxes for the years 1974 and 1975 in the amounts of $2,371.43 and $4,375.51, respectively. The issues for decision are whether there was a bad debt and, if so, whether it was a business or nonbusiness bad debt.
FINDINGS OF FACT
The facts of this case have been fully stipulated and are so found. The stipulation of facts and the exhibits attached thereto are incorporated herein by this reference.
At the time the petition was filed in this case, Herbert and Kathryn Rapoport were husband and wife, residing in Omaha, Nebraska. Generally, the Rapoports will be called "petitioners," but where individual reference is necessary, they will be referred to as Herbert and Kathryn. After the filing of the petition in this case, Herbert died. Kathryn was appointed special administrator for Herbert's estate, and, in that capacity, was substituted for Herbert as petitioner. Petitiones filed their joint Federal income tax returns for the taxable years 1974 and 1975 with the Internal Revenue Service Center, Ogden, Utah. Petitioners prepared their returns using the cash receipts and disbursements method.
The Carriage Shop, Inc. (the Omaha store) was incorporated in 1966 as a Nebraska corporation, and petitioners owned all of its outstanding stock. Their original cost basis in the Omaha store stock was $10,000. By the tax years in question, the records of the Omaha store showed the stated capital as $45,000. The Carriage Shop of Lincoln, Inc. (the Lincoln store) was incorporated in 1968 as a Nebraska corporation, and petitioners owned all of its outstanding stock. Upon incorporation of the Lincoln store, petitioners filed a section 1244 1 election with respect to their stock in the Lincoln store. Petitioners paid $10,000 for their section 1244 stock in the Lincoln store. 2Both corporations used fiscal tax and accounting years beginning February 1 and ending January 31 of the following year.
The Omaha store and the Lincoln store were engaged in selling similar lines of ladies' clothing and accessories at retail. Inventory for both stores was purchased in the name of the Omaha store. The Lincoln store was supplied with merchandise through transfers of inventory from the Omaha store. Costs of the transferred merchandise were entered on the Lincoln store's books as accounts payable to the Omaha store and on the Omaha store's books as accounts receivable from the Lincoln store.
The Lincoln store ceased operations sometime on or before January 31, 1973. At that time, a large amount of money remained due and owing to the Omaha store from the Lincoln store for merchandise previously shipped to the Lincoln store. The Lincoln store transferred its remaining inventory back to the Omaha store to reduce the debt. After this transfer of inventory, the Lincoln store's remaining assets were insufficient to pay both the remaining account payable to the Omaha store and the corportion's other creditors.
On January 31, 1973, Herbert purported to assume the obligation to pay $52,829.42 of the Lincoln store's debt to the Omaha store. 3 In closing both stores' books for the period ended January 31, 1973, adjusting journal entries were made to reflect such an assumption of debt. On the Lincoln store's books, a credit was made to Herbert's account and a debit was made to the account payable to the Omaha store. On the Omaha store's books, a debit was made to Herbert's account and a credit was made to the account receivable from the Lincoln store. Herbert's purported assumption of $52,829.42 left the Lincoln store with sufficient assets to pay all creditors, including the Omaha store, other than Herbert.
On February 1, 1974, the Omaha store's ledger sheet for accounts receivable from Herbert (to the Omaha store) showed a balance forwarded of $48,649.70. 4 That leader sheet also reflected that during 1974, payments were made on the accounts receivable to the Omaha store, reducing the balance in the account, and that periodic payments of money were made to Herbert from the Omaha store, increasing the balance in his account. 5 As of February 28, 1975, that ledger sheet showed his balance due to the Omaha store as $41,566.90, reflecting a net decrease during this one-year period of $7,082.80. This ledger sheet seems to treat Herbert's wages from the corporation as a payment on his account. The record does not establish that Herbert made any actual cash payments on the alleged indebtedness during the year 1974.
Over a period of years, the Omaha store borrowed funds from the First West Side Bank, Omaha, Nebraska (West Side or the bank). On December 7, 1967, petitioners executed a guarantee in favor of West Side covering all debts or obligations of the Omaha store to the bank. The guarantee stated that it was to be continuous until revoked in writing and was to be in consideration of credit given and to be given by the bank to the Omaha store. On January 31, 1972, the Omaha store owed the bank $78,220.91. By July 31, 1972, that debt had been reduced to $49,246. A payment of $3,394.38 was made on July 13 and a payment of $23,684.24 was made on July 24. 6 As of January 31, 1973, the date on which Herbert purported to assume the Lincoln store's debt to the Omaha store, the balance due to the bank from the Omaha store was $44,246.22. The record does not establish that West Side ever loaned any money to the Lincoln store or that petitioners ever executed a guarantee in regard to the Lincoln store. See Footnote 6.
On May 30, 1974, petitioners adopted a resolution directing that the Lincoln store be dissolved within 12 months (a section 337 plan of complete liquidation). Herbert executed a Form 966, Corporate Dissolution or Liquidation, which the Internal Revenue Service Center, Ogden, Utah, received on June 17, 1974.
Petitioners received no salary or other income from the Lincoln store during the years in question. Petitioners received the following salary from the Omaha store:
| Income-- | Income-- |
| Year | Herbert Rapoport | Kathryn Rapoport |
| 1971 | | $6,480.00 |
| 1972 | | 6,480.00 |
| 1973 | | 6,480.00 |
| 1974 | $20,000.00 | 6,920.00 |
| 1975 | 20,000.00 | 7,260.00 |
During the years in question, the Lincoln store showed deficit earned surplus (retained earnings). The Omaha store reported earned surplus in the following amounts:
| January 31, 1972 | $15,098.32 |
| January 31, 1973 | 20,437.64 |
| January 31, 1974 | 29,731.50 |
| January 31, 1975 | 31,501.26 |
On their 1974 income tax return, petitioners reported an ordinary loss of $62,829.42 under section 1244 for their worthless stock in the dissolved Lincoln store. Consequently, their 1974 return showed a net loss of $35,883.70, and no tax due. On their 1975 income tax return, petitioners reported a net operating loss carryforward in the amount of $19,101.17, representing the balance of their claimed section 1244 loss for 1974. 7 In his notice of deficiency, respondent allowed $10,000 of petitioners' claimed section 1244 loss for 1974, which was their basis in their section 1244 stock. Respondent disallowed the balance of $52,829.42 as either a section 1244 loss or as a business bad debt under section 166, and consequently disallowed any carryover of any portion of that amount to 1975. 8
OPINION
Herbert purported to assume the Lincoln store's obligation on its account payable to the Omaha store, to the extent of $52,829.42. Petitioners argue: (1) that through this assumption, the Lincoln store became obligated to pay Herbert the $52,829.42 which he undertook to pay the Omaha store; (2) that this obligation became worthless in 1974; and (3) that Herbert's dominant motivation in assuming this obligation was to protect his status and Kathryn's status as employees of the Omaha store. Respondent contends that there was no "debt" within the meaning of section 166. Alternatively, respondent argues that even if such a bona fide debt were involved, it was incurred to protect petitioners' investment rather than their status as employees, and was therefore deductible only as a short-term capital loss. See Sec. 166(d). We agree with respondent's first argument that no bona fide debt is here involved and therefore we need not reach his alternative argument. 9
Section 16610 generally allows a deduction for "any debt which becomes worthless within the taxble year." Sec. 166(a)(1). If non-corporate taxpayers, such as petitioners here, are involved, only business debts are deductible against ordinary income; non-business debts are treated as short-term capital losses. Sec. 166(d)(1)(B). There is a threshhold requirement that there be a "bona fide" debt, defined in the pertinent regulations as follows:
A bona fide debt is a debt which arises from a debtor-creditor relationship based upon a valid and enforceable obligation to pay a fixed or determinable sum of money. A gift or contribution to capital shall not be considered a debt for purposes of section 166. * * *
Sec. 1.166-1(c), Income Tax Regs. No deduction is allowable if at the time of acquiring the debt the taxpayer had no reasonable expectation of repayment of the sums advanced. Arrigoni v. Commissioner,73 T.C. 792, 799 (1980); Thompson v. Commissioner,22 T.C. 507, 517 (1954); Hoyt v. Commissioner,145 F. 2d 634 (2d Cir. 1944).11 An exception to the general rule arises where a guarantor of a debt is compelled to pay on his guarantee, and then the worthlessness of the debt upon acquisition does not necessarily preclude a bad debt deduction. Putnam v. Commissioner,352 U.S. 82, 85 (1956). That is because upon payment by the guarantor, the debtor's obligation to the creditor becomes an obligation to the guarantor, not a new debt, and by subrogation the guarantor steps into the shoes of the creditor. As this Court explained the rule in Crown v. Commissioner,77 T.C. 582, 598 (1981):
The deduction is allowed not because of the payment as guarantor but because the payment gives rise to a claim which if worthless constitutes a bad debt. Estate of Pachella v. Commissioner,37 T.C. 347, 354 (1961), affd. per curiam 310 F. 2d 815 (3d Cir. 1962); see Santa Anita Consolidated, Inc. v. Commissioner,50 T.C. 536, 559 (1968).
In such a case, the time for determining whether the taxpayer had a reasonable expectation of repayment is the time the guarantee was given, rather than the time the taxpayer acquires, by subrogation or otherwise, 12 the debt that he has been compelled to pay. Arrigoni v. Commissioner,supra;Markle v. Commissioner,17 T.C. 1593, 1598 (1952);Hoyt v. Commissioner,supra.
Petitioners do not dispute the general rule stated above, that a debt, worthless when acquired, is not a bona fide debt for purposes of section 166. Instead they argue that the general rule does not apply to them. The basis for their argument seems to be the guarantor exception. Petitioners seem to argue that the assumption was made on account of their personal guarantee of the Omaha store's debt to West Side, that it was made under financial coercion by the creditors of the Omaha store, most notably the bank and the Small Business Administration (SBA), and that the assumption was necessary to prevent the bankruptcy of the Omaha store.
Petitioners' arguments are wholly unsupported by the record. 13 Nothing in the record indicates that the Lincoln store's account payable to the Omaha store in any way resulted in petitioners' personal liability on their guarantee of the Omaha store's debt to the bank. Nothing in the record in any way shows that Herbert's purported assumption was necessary for the financial survival of the Omaha store, much less for the preservation of petitioners' employment at the Omaha store. Other than allegations in the petition which were denied in respondent's answer, the record is devoid of any reference to the SBA. That petitioners guaranteed the Omaha store's obligation to the bank and that the Omaha store was used as purchasing agent for the Lincoln store in no way justify the conclusion that somehow the Lincoln store was directly liable to the bank, or that petitioners' guarantee for the Omaha store extended to any such liability of the Lincoln store.
Petitioners seem to suggest that we should disregard the separate corporate entities of the Lincoln and the Omaha stores because their creditors allegedly treated them as a single economic unit. We decline their invitation to do so. There are no facts of record as to how West Side or any other creditors treated either corporation. The record discloses no basis for treating the Lincoln and the Omaha stores as a single corporation. Furthermore, we note that to so treat the separate corporations would be of no avail to petitioners. Even if Herbert had assumed the account payable because of a guarantee of the corporate group's debt to the bank, any debt acquired by payments on such a guarantee would not be worthless. The Omaha store was still in existence and still earning money during the taxable years in question, and thus, from the record, fully able to pay any debt to Herbert.
The only transaction here involved that could conceivably permit a bad debt deduction under section 166 is the Lincoln store's purported debt to Herbert, created on its books on January 31, 1973, in exchange for Herbert's purported assumption of the Lincoln store's account payable to the Omaha store. Analyzing that transaction, we find no bona fide debt. In exchange for his purported assumption of the Lincoln store's debt to the Omaha store, Herbert purportedly received the Lincoln store's "promise" to pay him the amount of $52,829.42 (reflected by an entry in its ledger to an account payable). On January 31, 1973, when the adjusting entries were made in the books to reflect this purported assumption, the Lincoln store was hopelessly insolvent. It had ceased active business operations and existed as a mere corporate shell. From the stipulated facts, it is clear there was no way that the Lincoln store could eer have repaid Herbert. Consequently, any debt which Herbert obtained from the Lincoln store was worthless at its inception, and he entertained no reasonable expectation of repayment. Since no bona fide debt is involved here, petitioners are not entitled to a bad debt deduction under section 166.
Moreover, it is well established that no deduction for a bad debt is available to a cash basis taxpayer such as Herbert unless he has made an outlay of cash or property having a cash value. Helvering v. Price,309 U.S. 409 (1940); Eckert v. Burnet,283 U.S. 140 (1931); Crown v. Commissioner,77 T.C. at 592-593. Herbert never advanced or loaned any money or property to the Lincoln store in connection with the alleged indebtedness of $52,829.42. Any "payments" that were made were made to the Omaha store. And we are not persuaded that the book entries reflecting "payments" of some $8,000 to the Omaha store during the calendar year 1974 represented any actual cash outlays by petitioners.
Since we hold that there was no bona fide debt in this case, we need not decide whether such "debt" was business or nonbusiness. We note that under the objective test of United States v. Generes,405 U.S. 93 (1972), any such debt would almost certainly have been a nonbusiness debt. In addition to their initial investment of $10,000, any shareholder "loan" would have been treated as part of petitioners' capital investment in the Lincoln store. Since petitioners received no income from the Lincoln store for the years in question, the conclusion that the "loan" was merely to protect their investment would appear to be inescapable.
Decision will be entered for the respondent.