Grojean, Thomas F. v. CIR

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedApril 13, 2001
Docket00-2252
StatusPublished

This text of Grojean, Thomas F. v. CIR (Grojean, Thomas F. v. CIR) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Grojean, Thomas F. v. CIR, (7th Cir. 2001).

Opinion

In the United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit

No. 00-2252

Thomas F. Grojean and Therese Grojean,

Petitioners-Appellants,

v.

Commissioner of Internal Revenue,

Respondents-Appellees.

Appeal from the United States Tax Court. No. 14374-98--David Laro, Judge.

Argued December 1, 2000--Decided April 13, 2001

Before Posner, Diane P. Wood, and Williams, Circuit Judges.

Posner, Circuit Judge. The question presented by this appeal from a decision by the Tax Court is whether that court committed a clear error in characterizing Thomas Grojean’s participation interest in a loan made by American National Bank to Grojean’s Subchapter S corporation, Schanno Acquisition, Inc., as a guaranty.

Grojean had formed Schanno Acquisition in order to buy a trucking company from Transamerica Leasing Corporation. The price was a shade under $14 million. To finance the purchase, Grojean turned to American National Bank. He asked to borrow $11 million from the bank, which was willing but insisted that he personally guarantee the loan. He refused, but continued negotiating with the bank, and eventually they worked out a deal by which the bank would make two loans to Schanno, aggregating $10 million, plus a $1.2 million loan to Grojean conditioned on his purchasing a $1.2 million participation in one of the bank’s loans to Schanno, a loan for $8.4 million. The participation agreement subordinated Grojean’s interest in that loan to the bank’s. The interest rate was the same on both the $8.4 million bank loan to Schanno in which Grojean participated and the $1.2 million bank loan to Grojean, and it was agreed that he would receive no payments on his participation interest until the bank was repaid its share of the $8.4 million loan. Thus, if Schanno repaid the $8.4 million loan in accordance with its terms Grojean would neither be out of pocket any cash nor receive any cash--his participation interest in that loan, and the bank’s loan to him, would cancel each other out--while if Schanno defaulted, Grojean would have to make good on the bank’s loss up to $1.2 million, the amount the bank had lent him.

Although Schanno did not default, it did lose money, and Grojean wanted to deduct those losses on his federal income tax return, since the gains and losses of Subchapter S corporations pass through to the shareholders. But he could do this only to the extent of his investment in Schanno, consisting of the adjusted basis of his stock plus any indebtedness of the corporation to him. 26 U.S.C. sec. 1366(d)(1). He treated his participation interest in the bank’s $8.4 million loan to Schanno as a $1.2 million indebtedness of Schanno to him and it is this move that the Tax Court rejected. It did so on the alternative grounds that (1) the participation interest was really a guaranty, not a loan, and (2) if a loan it was a loan to American National, not to Schanno. The parties agree that a guaranty is not an investment for purposes of section 1366(d)(1).

A lender like a guarantor assumes a risk of default and by doing so reduces the risk borne by any creditor to whose interest the loan is subordinated. From American National’s standpoint it was irrelevant whether Grojean guaranteed $1.2 million of the bank’s loan to Schanno or took a subordinated $1.2 million participation interest in that loan. Lenders differ from guarantors, however, in doing more than assuming risk: they procure funds for the use of the borrower (often just to replace a previous loan, but that of course is a use by the borrower of the newly borrowed funds). Grojean did not procure $1.2 million for the use of Schanno, as he would have done had he gone to a bank or other lender, borrowed $1.2 million from it, and written a check for that amount to Schanno. Instead the $1.2 million that Grojean "lent" Schanno was a slice of the $8.4 million loan that the bank made to Schanno. The only significance of Grojean’s "loan," since it involved no transfer of money from him to Schanno or any other entity, was that it operated to guarantee that amount of American National’s loan. Functionally, it was not a loan or loan participation at all, but a guaranty, and so the Tax Court committed no error, clear or otherwise, in reclassifying it as a guaranty. Otherwise a taxpayer could, by the kind of restructuring engineered here, obtain for a guaranty a tax advantage intended for a loan or other indebtedness. The difference between a loan and a guaranty may seem a fine one, since, when the amount is the same, the lender and guarantor assume the same risk (subject to a possible wrinkle, concerning bankruptcy, discussed later). The difference between the two transactional forms may seem to amount only to this: the loan supplies funds to the borrower, and the guaranty enables funds to be supplied to the borrower. That is indeed the main difference, but it is not trivial or nominal ("formal"). As explained in Avery Katz, "An Economic Analysis of the Guaranty Contract," 66 U. Chi. L. Rev. 47, 113-14 (1999), the three- cornered arrangement (borrower, lender, guarantor) created by a guaranty makes economic sense only if the lender has a comparative advantage in liquidity (that is, in being able to come up with the money to lend the borrower) and the guarantor a comparative advantage in bearing risk. Otherwise the additional transaction costs of the more complex arrangement would be uneconomical.

At a high enough level of abstraction, it is true, the difference between providing and enabling the provision of funding may disappear. Indeed, at that level, the difference between equity and debt, as methods of corporate financing, disappears. See Franco Modigliani & Merton H. Miller, "The Cost of Capital, Corporation Finance and the Theory of Investment," 48 Am. Econ. Rev. 361 (1958). But at the operational level, because of various frictions that some economic models disregard, such as transaction and liquidity costs, there really is a substantive and not merely a formal difference between lending and guaranteeing. In contrast, the difference between a guaranty and the form that Grojean’s loan participation assumed was nothing but the label. It was a purely formal difference, and in federal taxation substance prevails over form. Gregory v. Helvering, 293 U.S. 465 (1935); Williams v. Commissioner, 1 F.3d 502, 505 (7th Cir. 1993); Yosha v. Commissioner, 861 F.2d 494, 498-99 (7th Cir. 1988); Boris I. Bittker & James S. Eustice, Federal Income Taxation of Corporations and Shareholders sec. 1.05[2][b] (7th ed. 2000).

If a transaction has "economic substance which is compelled or encouraged by business or regulatory realities, is imbued with tax- independent considerations, and is not shaped solely by tax-avoidance features that have meaningless labels attached, the Government should honor the allocation of rights and duties effectuated by the parties." Frank Lyon Co. v. United States, 435 U.S. 561, 583-84 (1978). "Business realities" cast Grojean in the role of guarantor rather than lender; no business realities compelled him to recharacterize his guaranty as a loan participation. The Internal Revenue Service was therefore entitled to recharacterize the participation as a guaranty, in much the same way that it is entitled to recharacterize a shareholder’s loan to his corporation as an equity investment if the "loan" label has no economic significance. Bittker & Eustice, supra, sec. 1.05[2][b], p. 1-20.

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Grojean, Thomas F. v. CIR, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grojean-thomas-f-v-cir-ca7-2001.