Farley Funeral Home, Inc. v. Commissioner

62 T.C. No. 18, 62 T.C. 150, 1974 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 114
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedMay 13, 1974
DocketDocket No. 9218-72
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 62 T.C. No. 18 (Farley Funeral Home, Inc. 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.

Bluebook
Farley Funeral Home, Inc. v. Commissioner, 62 T.C. No. 18, 62 T.C. 150, 1974 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 114 (tax 1974).

Opinion

Drennen, Judge:

Respondent determined the following deficiencies in, and additions to, petitioner’s income taz:

TYE Oct. SI Additions to taxt Deficiency sec. 6651 (a)
1968_ $1, 035. 68 $51. 79
1969_ 1, 721. 53 430. 38
1970___ 1, 148. 02 _

The only issue is whether petitioner is entitled to deduct contributions to its employees’ pension plan in each of the years involved. This in turn depends on whether the plan, which the corporation took over from its predecessor- partnership with certain amendments, qualifies under section 401(a), I.R.C. 1954. As interpreted and applied by the corporate petitioner, the amended plan permitted the former partners, who were not participants in the partnership plan, to use past service to the partnership after it adopted the plan to be counted in determining whether they met the 1-year-service eligibility requirement for immediate participation in the plan.

FINDINGS OP PACT

Certain facts have been stipulated and are so found.

Petitioner Farley Funeral Home, Inc., a Michigan corporation, formed on October 9, 1967, had its principal office in Battle Creek, Mich., at the time its petition was filed. Its corporate income tax returns were filed on an accrual basis of accounting for the fiscal years ending October 31, 1968, through October 31, 1970, with the director of the Internal Revenue Service Center, Cincinnati, Ohio.

Petitioner is engaged in conducting a funeral service business. Prior to incorporation, the corporate stockholders, Clarice Farley, Donald F. Estes, and Cylde B. Schimmel, were engaged in this same business as a partnership under the name Farley Funeral Home. Schimmel had been a common-law employee of Farley Funeral Home from 1940 to 1948. During this time George D. Farley and his father-in-law were partners in this funeral home. In 1948 Farley’s father-in-law died and Schimmel became a partner of Farley. They continued the business as partners until Farley’s death in 1953. From 1953 to 1958 the business was carried on by two partners, Schimmel and Clarice Farley, the widow of George D. Farley. In 1958 Estes became a third partner in this funeral home. Prior to becoming a partner, Estes had been a common-law employee of the partnership of Schimmel and George Farley and the partnership of Schimmel and Clarice Farley. This partnership of Schimmel, Farley, and Estes carried on the business from 1958 until petitioner was incorporated in 1967. From the date of incorporation, October 9, 1967, continuing through the years in issue, these three persons each owned 33y3 shares of petitioner’s common stock and were officers and directors of petitioner. During the years in issue, petitioner did not declare any dividends.

On November 2, 1966, petitioner’s predecessor, Farley Funeral Home, a partnership, executed an instrument entitled “Trust Agreement.” This instrument was designed to provide a trusteed pension plan for the benefit of the employees of the partnership. The plan was designed as a money purchase plan. The employer contributed a specified percentage of each participating employee’s current monthly salary to the trustees for the employees’ accounts. Upon retirement of an employee the trustees were to purchase a retirement annuity for the employee providing monthly retirement benefits for the employee from date of retirement until death, with 10 years’ certain, in such amount as that employee’s account would purchase on his retirement date. Retirement benefits were not specifically based on years of past and future service, but were dependent on the amounts contributed by the employer and credited to the employee’s account for each year of participation under the plan.

The partnership pension trust defined “employee” in the following manner:

1.03 “Employee” shall mean any person regularly employed by the employer on a full time basis, excluding such persons whose customary employment is not more than 20 hours in any such week, or for not more than five (5) months in any calendar year.

Article II of this instrument established the eligibility requirements for the employees of the partnership to participate in the pension plan, as follows:

ARTICLE II
Eligibility
2.01 Any employee who has completed two years of continuous service with the Employer and who has attained the age of Twenty-one (21) years but not the age of fifty-five (55) years shall be eligible to participate hereunder as of the 2nd day of November following the date upon which such employee has completed such two years of service and has attained the age of twenty-one (21) years. Partners shall not be deemed employees for purposes hereunder.

Only one common-law employee of tbe partnership was ineligible to participate in the plan based on his advanced age. He was Fred C. Meyers, who was approximately 64 in 1966. He, however, received a substantial 'bonus on retiring to make up for the fact he did not have benefits under the plan. Section 2.01, quoted above, also specifically excluded the partners of Farley Funeral Home from participating in the pension plan.

A determination letter from the respondent regarding the qualification of the trust under section 401,1.E.C. 1954, was neither requested nor issued during the operation of the partnership.

On October 9,1967, the date on which Farley Funeral Home, Inc., was incorporated, a special meeting of .the board of directors of the corporation was held. At this meeting the directors, Donald F. Estes, Clyde B. 'Sohimmel, and Clarice Farley, adopted the pension plan originally established by the corporation’s predecessor, Farley Funeral Home. The directors simultaneously adopted certain amendments to the pension trust. These amendments were contained in a separate instrument designated “Amendments to the Farley Funeral Home Employee’s Pension Trust.”

Also on October 9, 1967, Donald F. Estes, as president of Farley Funeral Home, Inc., and the three trustees signed the document captioned “Amendments to the Farley Funeral Home Employee’s Pension Trust.” As a result of the above actions, Farley Funeral Home, Inc., adopted an amended version of the pension plan and trust originally established by the partnership.

The amendments to the trust agreement provided, inter alia:

G. Amendments to Article I
1.09
(a) Change to read: “The effective date of this Trust Agreement shall mean the 2nd day of November, 1966, and the effective date of the adoption and assumption of the obligations of this Trust by Farley Funeral Home, Inc. shall mean October 9,1967.”

Article 2.01 of the trust agreement, which enumerated the eligibility requirements of an employee for participation in the pension plan, was amended in its entirety to read as follows:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
62 T.C. No. 18, 62 T.C. 150, 1974 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 114, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farley-funeral-home-inc-v-commissioner-tax-1974.