John P. Broadaway v. CIR

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedApril 16, 1997
Docket96-2154
StatusPublished

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

Bluebook
John P. Broadaway v. CIR, (8th Cir. 1997).

Opinion

United States Court of Appeals FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT

___________

No. 96-2154 ___________

John P. Broadaway; Teena G. * Broadaway, * * Appellants, * * Appeals from the v. * United States Tax Court * Commissioner of Internal * Revenue, * * Appellee. *

No. 96-2155 ___________

John M. Cameron; Caroline D. * Cameron, * * Appellants, * * v. * * Commissioner of Internal * Revenue, * * Appellee. * ___________

Submitted: January 16, 1997

Filed: April 16, 1997 ___________ Before BOWMAN and MURPHY, Circuit Judges, and KYLE,1 District Judge.

BOWMAN, Circuit Judge.

John P. and Teena G. Broadaway and John M. and Caroline D. Cameron appeal from a final decision of the Tax Court2 upholding the Commissioner’s assessment of tax deficiencies based on dividend distributions from Cameron Construction Company made to the Broadaways and the Camerons during the 1989 tax year. We affirm.

I.

This case was submitted to the Tax Court on the basis of a fully stipulated record that provides the following salient facts. The Broadaways and the Camerons are shareholders in Cameron Construction Company (the Company) which operated and paid taxes as a Subchapter C corporation, see I.R.C. §§ 301-385 (1988),3 until October 31, 1988. The Company has at all times been engaged in the road and highway construction business and has at all times calculated its taxable income from long-term

1 The Honorable Richard H. Kyle, United States District Judge for the District of Minnesota, sitting by designation. 2 The Honorable David Laro, Judge, United States Tax Court. 3 Unless otherwise indicated, all references to the Internal Revenue Code are to the 1988 edition of Title 26 of the United States Code, as amended effective through December 31, 1989, which is applicable to the tax years in dispute. We have disregarded amendments effective after December 31, 1989.

-2- construction contracts using the completed contract method of accounting.4 While

4 Under the completed contract method, the total income from a contract is recognized, and the total costs of performance are deducted, in the taxable year in which the contract is completed. See Treas. Reg. § 1.451-3(d)(1) (as amended in 1985). While income from most long-term construction contracts must be reported using the percentage of completion method, see I.R.C. § 460(a), (b) (Supp. I 1989), the Code provides an exception for construction contracts estimated to be completed within two years. This exception applies only to taxpayers whose average annual gross receipts for the three preceding taxable years do not exceed ten million dollars. See I.R.C. § 460(e)(1)(B).

-3- operating as a C corporation, the Company was required to maintain an earnings and profits account from which distributions to Company shareholders--including the Broadaways and the Camerons--would be taxed as dividends. See I.R.C. § 316(a). For purposes of determining earnings and profits, the parties agree that the Company, even though it calculated its taxable income under the completed contract method of accounting, was required under I.R.C. § 312(n)(6) to account for its long-term construction contracts under the percentage of completion method of accounting.5 The dispute in this case flows from the Company’s election pursuant to I.R.C. § 1362(a) to switch from Subchapter C status and to be taxed as a Subchapter S corporation, see I.R.C. §§ 1361-1379, effective upon the close of the Company’s taxable year ended October 31, 1988. Under Subchapter S, the Company does not pay corporate-level income taxes. Instead, the Company’s income is taxed directly to its shareholders based on their ownership of

5 The percentage of completion method of accounting requires that the Company account for income from long-term contracts each taxable year as the work progresses. The amount of income accrued for each taxable year is that proportion of the expected total contract income that the amount of costs incurred through the end of the taxable year bears to the total expected costs, reduced by cumulative amounts of contract income that were reported for previous years. See I.R.C. § 460(b) (Supp. I 1989); Berger Eng’g Co. v. Commissioner, 20 T.C.M. (CCH) 1518, 1522 (1961) (“The object of the percentage of completion method is to provide a means of reporting income in a steady flow as work on the contract advances toward completion.”).

-4- corporate stock--whether or not the funds are actually distributed to the shareholders.6 Instead of maintaining an earnings and profits account, an S corporation monitors its undistributed corporate earnings, those that have been taxed to the shareholders but not yet distributed, using an accumulated adjustments account from which distributions to shareholders are generally tax-free.7 See I.R.C. § 1368(c)(1). The parties agreed in their jointly filed stipulation of facts that the Company remained obligated to account for its earnings and profits in 1989 under the percentage of completion method of accounting, despite the Company’s election to switch to Subchapter S status. A number of long-term construction contracts begun while the Company was a C corporation were completed after it became an S corporation.

From November 1, 1988 through December 31, 1989, the Company incurred costs on long-term contracts begun while it was a C corporation that exceeded the reasonable estimates the Company had used under the percentage of completion method of accounting to calculate earnings and profits for its last taxable year as a C corporation.8 As a result of the disparity between the Company’s

6 For S corporations with no carried-over earnings and profits, any distribution to a shareholder is treated first as a nontaxable return of capital to the extent of the shareholder’s stock basis, and second, to the extent the distribution exceeds the shareholder’s stock basis, as a capital gain. See I.R.C. § 1368(b). 7 The accumulated adjustments account is a corporate level account that begins with a zero balance and is adjusted to reflect the net earnings of the corporation. The account is adjusted upward by the amount of the corporation’s income and is decreased by the amount of any losses and by return-of-capital distributions to shareholders. See I.R.C. § 1368(e)(1)(A). 8 As a C corporation, the Company computed its taxable income based on a fiscal year ending October 31. As an S corporation, the Company was required to compute its taxable income on a calendar year basis. See I.R.C. § 1378. The Company’s first tax year as an S corporation was a short year beginning on November 1, 1988 and ending on December 31, 1988. See id.

-5- reasonable cost estimates and its actual costs to complete these long-term contracts, the taxpayers argue that the accumulated earnings and profits account carried over from the Company’s existence as a C corporation9 reflects an artificially high balance. This artificially high earnings and profits balance, they contend, ultimately resulted in the Commissioner’s improper characterization of a $300,000 distribution to the taxpayers as a taxable dividend to the extent of the balance in the Company’s carried- over earnings and profits account. The parties stipulate that the balance in the Company’s earnings and profits account as of October 31, 1988--the end of the Company’s last year as a C corporation--was $251,650.13. The taxpayers argue that the Company should be allowed to adjust this amount by retroactively revising the reasonable cost estimates that it used to calculate earnings and profits on long-term contracts in progress on October 31, 1988 to reflect the actual, higher costs eventually incurred during its 1989 tax year.

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Related

Berger Engineering Co. v. Commissioner
1961 T.C. Memo. 292 (U.S. Tax Court, 1961)

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John P. Broadaway v. CIR, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/john-p-broadaway-v-cir-ca8-1997.