Knight v. United States

395 F. Supp. 1
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Mississippi
DecidedMay 20, 1975
DocketCiv. A. No. 73J-213(R)
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 395 F. Supp. 1 (Knight v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Mississippi primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Knight v. United States, 395 F. Supp. 1 (S.D. Miss. 1975).

Opinion

OPINION

DAN M. RUSSELL, Jr., Chief Judge.

This is an income tax recovery case in which all jurisdictional and venue requirements have been met by the timely filing of claims for refund, followed [2]*2by the rejection of said claims by Internal Revenue Service (IRS). The case has been submitted to the Court on the pleadings, an agreed statement of facts appearing in a pre-trial order and exhibits referred to therein, a stipulation to which are attached certain exhibits, the deposition of Thomas R. Ward, a member of the law firm of Ward, Mestayer and Knight, a partnership during the period of time involved herein, and on briefs.

As set out in the pre-trial order, the following facts are established by the pleadings, stipulation or admissions of counsel:

I.
Plaintiffs, James P. Knight, Jr., and Annie Lou Knight, husband and wife, reside at 5975 Waverly Drive, Jackson, Mississippi, and the defendant is the United States of America.
II.
This is an action for recovery of United States income taxes, and this Court has jurisdiction by reason of 28 U.S.C., Sec. 1346(a).
III.
Plaintiffs timely filed their United States income tax returns for the calendar years 1969 and 1970, and paid the amounts of income tax shown to be due thereon, i. e., $3,395.33 for 1969 and $3,022.04 for 1970. On May 24, 1973, plaintiffs paid the following additional assessments for these years, which assessments arose from examination of the aforesaid income tax returns :
1969 1970
Income tax $ 529.42 $ 229.19
Interest 98.63 28.95
Totals $ 628.05 $ 258.14
All of the aforesaid totals of assessed income tax and interest are at issue.
IV.
In addition to the aforesaid amounts, plaintiffs overpaid their 1969 income tax resulting from failure to claim distributable losses of $648.87 from Subchapter S corporations in which the husband was a stockholder, and $25.96 additional medical deduction allowable as a result of said losses. The refund due therefrom, plus the amounts in paragraph III above, make up the total of $1,071.77 refund claimed and demanded in this suit, and the portion thereof attributable to said losses is not at issue herein.
V.
On December 31, 1968, Ward, Mestayer & Knight, a partnership engaged in the practice of law in which plaintiff husband was a partner, adopted a profit sharing plan with Hancock Bank, Gulfport, Mississippi, as trustee. By letter dated November 17, 1970, the District Director of Internal Revenue, Jackson, Mississippi, determined that said plan as originally constituted met the requirements of Section 401(a) of the Internal Revenue Code, that the trust created thereby was exempt from tax under Section 501(a) of the Code, and that employer contributions under the plan were deductible from income subject to Section 404 of the Code. Cash contributions of $7,500.00 ($2,500.00 for each of the three partners) were made for the year 1968.
VI.
In late 1969, Sanderson Farms, Inc., one of the clients of the law firm, offered to sell 1,500 shares of its capital stock to Thomas R. Ward for $17,-580.00. The offer flowed to Mr. Ward personally; however, in recognition of the fact that it came to him as a result of partnership activities, he made it available to the partnership and it was decided by the partners that the profit sharing trust should be the vehicle of ownership.
VII.
At the date the offer to allow the partners to purchase the stock was [3]*3made, the trust had o-nly $7,500.00 in assets, this being the amount contributed to it for the year 1968. The trustee was instructed to transmit this amount to Thomas R. Ward, who borrowed $10,000.00 from the Citizens National Bank, Meridian, Mississippi, on behalf of the partnership, added $80.00 of partnership funds thereto, and purchased the stock. Within a day or two thereafter, he executed a declaration of trust on October 6,1969, in favor of Hancock Bank, and delivered the declaration and stock certificate to said bank. The Hancock Bank thereafter carried this stock as corpus of the trust fund until James P. Knight, Jr., withdrew from the partnership in December, 1971. Plaintiffs’ portion of the trust assets were then transferred to First National Bank, Jackson, Mississippi, as trustee of Mr. Knight’s profit sharing plan.
VIII.
The partners deducted $7,500.00 ($2,500.00 each) on their 1969 individual income tax returns and $2,580.00 ($860.00) each on their 1970 returns, this being the total of $10,080.00 referred to hereinabove.
IX.
The Internal Revenue Service subsequently determined that an excess contribution in the amount of $2,580 had been wilfully made to the trust in 1969, and, alternatively, that if the $2,580 represented a loan from the beneficiaries or a contribution of stock to the trust, it was a prohibited transaction within the meaning of Section 503(g) [j].(l) (D) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954.

The parties also agree that contested issues of fact are as follows:

1. Whether the amount of $2,580 over their $7,500 deductible contribution flowing from the partners of Ward, Mestayer and Knight to their retirement trust was a loan or whether this amount represented an excess contribution to the retirement trust.

2. If, and only if, the Court determines that the $2,580 represented an excess contribution rather than a loan, then whether such excess contribution was wilful.

3. Whether there was a transfer in 1969 of cash or stock to the trust, and if the Court determines that the transfer was of stock, whether this is a prohibited transaction under Section 503(j) (1) (D) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954.

The only contested issue of law is as follows — if the Court determines it to be a fact that $2,580 represents a loan made by the partners to the retirement trust, then whether such loan was a prohibited transaction within the terms of Section 503(j) (1)(D).

One additional fact, conceded by the government in its brief, is that Annie Lou Knight, co-plaintiff with her husband, is a party to the action merely because she signed the 1969 and 1970 tax returns jointly with her husband, James P. Knight, Jr., who is considered to be and is referred to as the plaintiff herein.

In arriving at the additional assessments for the years 1969 and 1970 as reflected on IRS Form 4549, “Income Tax Audit Changes”, an exhibit to the pre-trial order, the examining officer added as taxable income to plaintiff in 1969 the full sum of $2500 which plaintiff had claimed as his retirement plan deduction for that calendar year. After adjusting for a loss of $648.87 attributable to losses from Small Business Corporations and adjusting to add $74.04 designated as medical deductions, these last two amounts, not in issue here, the IRS examining officer determined that plaintiff had a statutory deficiency for 1969 of $529.42, plus interest.

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395 F. Supp. 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/knight-v-united-states-mssd-1975.