G. Douglas Burck and Marjorie W. Burck v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue

533 F.2d 768, 37 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 1009, 1976 U.S. App. LEXIS 12539
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedMarch 4, 1976
Docket452, Docket 75-4163
StatusPublished
Cited by85 cases

This text of 533 F.2d 768 (G. Douglas Burck and Marjorie W. Burck v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
G. Douglas Burck and Marjorie W. Burck v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 533 F.2d 768, 37 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 1009, 1976 U.S. App. LEXIS 12539 (2d Cir. 1976).

Opinion

OAKES, Circuit Judge:

This case arises out of the ever-present potential for arbitrariness and evasiveness which is inherent in the cash-basis method of income tax accounting. The specific feature of this general problem brought for review here concerns the deductibility of a year-end transfer of over $300,000 from a taxpayer 1 to his bank, purportedly made as a prepayment of one year’s interest expense accruing on an outstanding loan over the course of the next tax year. The United States Tax Court, William M. Fay, Judge, held that the prepayment was an interest expense in the year the payment was made under Section 163(a) of the Internal Revenue Code, 26 U.S.C. § 163(a), but also ruled that the Commissioner did not abuse his discretion under Section 446 of the Code, 26 U.S.C. § 446, by applying the accrual method of accounting to the payment and disallowing all of the deduction representing interest expense accruing in the succeeding tax year. Burck v. Commissioner, 63 T.C. 556 (1975). Since the payment at issue concerned a loan made on December 29, 1969, the Commissioner allowed the taxpayer to deduct only 3/365 of the total payment on his 1969 income tax return. On the taxpayer’s appeal, we affirm.

Appellant has consistently used the cash receipts and disbursements method of income tax reporting in preparing his return. His taxable incomes for 1967 and 1968 had been $46,000 and $49,000 respectively. In 1969, however, he realized a long term capital gain of $968,000. At year’s end in 1969 he entered into negotiations with a Michigan bank, Bank of the Commonwealth (which evidently could use income of its *770 own to offset some available deductions), that culminated in a loan transaction having the following agreed-upon features:

1. The taxpayer was to borrow $5,388,600 from the Michigan bank on December 29, 1969 (the “Michigan loan”). Of this sum, $2,388,600 was to be left in a non-interest bearing account at the Michigan bank. The remaining $3,000,000 from the Michigan loan was then to be disposed of as follows: (A) $2,000,000 was to be loaned by the taxpayer to the Comae Company, a partnership in which he held no proprietary interest, at a 12 per cent rate of interest; (B) $1,000,000 was to be transferred to the taxpayer’s existing account in a New York bank (which prior to transfer had a credit balance of $42,000). It was understood that before the end of the year (i. e., within the next two days) the taxpayer would retransfer the sum of $377,202 from his New York account to the Michigan bank as one year’s “prepaid interest” on the Michigan loan (7 per cent of the loan amount). 2 The taxpayer was then to use the remaining portion of the Michigan loan on deposit in his New York account for (1) an additional loan of $350,000 to the Comae Company at 12 per cent; (2) purchase of a $100,000 interest in an Ohio partnership; and (3) purchase of a $150,-000 interest in a personal residence for the taxpayer. The remaining $22,798 of the $1,000,000 transfer to the New York bank was to be retained in his account at the bank.
2. The taxpayer was to sign two promissory notes for the Michigan bank, both at a stated interest rate of 7 per cent. The first note was for $3,000,000, half of which was payable on January 4, 1971, with the balance due on March 31, 1972. This note was secured by a pledge of approximately 120,000 shares of stock in National Student Marketing Corp. The second note, in the amount of $2,388,600, was a demand note secured by the taxpayer’s deposit of that same amount in the non-interest bearing account at the Michigan bank.

All of the steps in this transaction were executed by the parties pursuant to their agreement. This appeal concerns the effects of the transaction on the appellant’s tax liability for 1969.

The taxpayer’s 1969 return showed a gross income of $1,049,600, which included the $968,000 capital gain. After deductions, including a claimed deduction of $377,202 for the “prepaid interest” expense, the taxable income was $41,383. The Commissioner’s disallowance of the interest deduction resulted in a deficiency of $245,956.55.

Tax Court Judge Fay found that the taxpayer did prepay one year’s interest on the notes so as to be entitled to an interest deduction under § 163(a). 3 But he found that the Commissioner had properly exer *771 cised his authority under Section 446 4 when he disallowed the major portion of the deduction in order clearly to reflect taxpayer’s income. With this we agree.

Taxpayer makes three principal arguments on this appeal. The first is that no material distortion in income would result from allowance of the deduction here; the second is that neither Section 446(b) of the Code nor Regulation 1.446-l(a) 5 gives the Commissioner power to disallow the deduction of prepaid interest in the year paid; the third is that the Commissioner abused his discretion in this instance. We will treat them seriatim.

The first argument is that the cash method of accounting used by appellant here for his prepaid interest expense deduction does “clearly reflect income” within the meaning of Section 446(b). The taxpayer argues that since his 1969 income had been vastly “distorted” by the nonrecurring capital gain of almost $1,000,000, the allowance of the interest deduction (and presumably other deductions as well) is necessary to reduce his taxable income to the $40,000 range where it had been for several years. Appellant claims that the prepaid interest deduction, rather than distorting his income, is necessary to normalize his income and thereby “clearly reflect” it. While this argument is ingenious it is also fallacious. We do not accept appellant’s suggestion that it is appropriate to allow extraordinary deductions which would be distorting in the case of a level-income taxpayer but which have a “normalizing effect” when employed by a taxpayer with fluctuating income. The appellant’s 1969 income was increased by a large long term capital gain. Such capital gains receive preferential treatment in our tax code predominantly for the purpose of ameliorating the harsh effects of taxing what may be several years of appreciation of a capital asset that is recognized at the time of a sale or exchange in a single year. 6 Nowhere does the history or reasoning of Sections 163 and 446 suggest that Congress intended to permit extraordinary prepayment of in *772 terest to be employed as part of its preferential treatment of capital gains income. We must assume to the contrary, that Congress intended to exhaust its concern over unusual fluctuations of capital gains income in the provisions of the Code expressly adapted to that purpose.

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Bluebook (online)
533 F.2d 768, 37 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 1009, 1976 U.S. App. LEXIS 12539, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/g-douglas-burck-and-marjorie-w-burck-v-commissioner-of-internal-revenue-ca2-1976.