Larry Zavadil v. Commissioner of IRS

793 F.3d 866, 116 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 5260, 2015 U.S. App. LEXIS 12262, 2015 WL 4285265
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedJuly 16, 2015
Docket14-1053
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 793 F.3d 866 (Larry Zavadil v. Commissioner of IRS) 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
Larry Zavadil v. Commissioner of IRS, 793 F.3d 866, 116 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 5260, 2015 U.S. App. LEXIS 12262, 2015 WL 4285265 (8th Cir. 2015).

Opinion

COLLOTON, Circuit Judge.

Larry and Diane Zavadil and the Internal Revenue Service dispute the propriety of certain deductions that the Zavadils claimed on their personal tax returns in 2004 and 2005. The Service issued a notice of deficiency, and the dispute was aired in the United States Tax Court. The tax court ruled for the Zavadils in part and for the Service in part. The Zavadils appeal the adverse portion of the decision, and we affirm.

I.

In 1981, Larry Zavadil organized American Business Forms, Inc., which did business ás American Solutions for Business. American Solutions sold business supplies and promotional products. Zavadil was the sole owner of the company until 2000, when he sold it to an employee stock ownership plan. In exchange for all outstanding shares of American Solutions, the company provided Zavadil with a $28,760,000 note, payable with interest in twenty annual installments. Zavadil thereafter served without compensation as the company’s chief executive officer and as a member of the board of directors.

In 2004 and 2005, Zavadil had a financial arrangement with American Solutions under which the company paid Zavadil’s personal expenses and Zavadil later reimbursed the company by personal check. American Solutions recorded Zavadil’s personal expenses on a ledger. To generate a ledger entry, Zavadil charged an item to his American Solutions credit card or instructed an employee to direct the finance department to issue a check. As a condition of extending credit to American Solutions, the company’s creditors re- . quired that all ledger accounts, including Zavadil’s, must be paid off at the end of each month. To comply, Zavadil reimbursed the company on a monthly basis by personal check.

At the end of certain months in 2004 and 2005, however, Zavadil’s personal bank account had insufficient funds to reimburse American Solutions for the amount recorded on the ledger. For those months, Za- *868 vadil and American Solutions employed a system of advances that allowed the ledger to reflect a zero balance at the end of the month. At the end of each month, Zavadil wrote a personal check to the company, and the company brought the ledger balance to zero. At the beginning of the next month, however, American Solutions advanced funds to Zavadil’s personal bank account to cover some or all of the amount of the check, recorded the advance as an expense on the ledger, and then cashed the personal check received at the end of the previous month.

The tax court found that the company’s advances were used to pay some or all of Zavadil’s ledger balance in four months in 2004 and three months in the first half of 2005, but that as of December 31, 2004, and June 30, 2005, Zavadil fully reimbursed American Solutions for all expenses previously recorded on his ledger. The court also found that advances from American Solutions were used to pay some or all of the ledger balance in each month from July through November 2005. The ledger balance and advance for each month from July through November 2005 was as follows:

Month Ledger balance and amount of Zavadil’s personal check Amount American Solutions advanced before cashing check

July $1,429,372 $587,000

August $1,428,517 $62,000

September $1,258,723 $1,371,000

October $1,579,358 $1,302,000

November $1,813,757 $1,800,000

For December 2005, the record did not show whether American Solutions advanced funds in January 2006, but the court found that Zavadil’s bank account showed a deposit of $1,610,000 on January 3, 2006, the same date on which the bank paid Zavadil’s check for $1,508,316 to cover the December 2005 ledger balance.

Zavadil used the ledger system in 2004 and 2005 to make three categories of disbursements that were later disputed by the Internal Revenue Service. In their tax returns, the Zavadils claimed charitable deductions for 2004 and 2005. They claimed nonpassive losses for “unreim-bursed expenses,” in the amounts of $150,000 in 2004 and $75,000 in 2005, paid to a company called National Business Development & Finance, which we will call National Business. And they listed other “unreimbursed expenses” of $35,800 in 2004 paid to Becky DePree, the widow of Zavadil’s former colleague Dusty DePree.

Zavadil asserts that the payments to National Business were compensation for consulting services that National Business provided to the Zavadils’ other wholly-owned businesses. Zavadil contends the payments to DePree were a death benefit for Dusty that American Solutions had agreed to pay, but which the company later refused to fund.

In 2010, the Internal Revenue Service issued the Zavadils a notice of deficiency for the 2004 and. 2005 tax years, disallowing $358,472 of charitable deductions claimed in 2004 and $333,672 of the charitable deductions claimed in 2005. The Service also disallowed the Zavadils’ claims for the payments to DePree and National Business.

*869 The Zavadils challenged the notice of deficiency in the tax court. As relevant to this appeal, the tax court ruled in favor of the Zavadils on charitable contributions made prior to July 2005, ruling that they were deductible because Zavadil reimbursed American Solutions for those contributions and thus bore the economic burden. The tax court, however, disallowed charitable deductions made from July 2005 through December 2005, because the Zava-dils did not demonstrate that they — not American Solutions — bore the economic burden of those contributions. Because the record did not establish that Zavadil bore the economic burden of paying the entire ledger balance in any of those months, the court found that the Zavadils failed to prove “what portion, if any, of the charitable contributions made after June 2005 Mr. Zavadil effectively paid with his own funds and not funds advanced by [American Solutions].” The court also found no evidence that the ledger account balance at the end of 2005 represented bona fide indebtedness of Zavadil.

The tax court disallowed the Zavadils’ claimed unreimbursed expenses for payments to National Business, finding they failed to introduce credible evidence regarding the nature and purpose of the payments. The tax court also disallowed the claimed deduction for the payments to DePree, concluding that Zavadil failed to prove he made the payments to promote his business. The tax court then assessed deficiencies against the Zavadils: $101,674 with a $20,334.80 penalty for tax year 2004, and $113,668 with a $22,733.60 penalty for tax year 2005.

II.

Generally, “an income tax deduction is a matter of legislative grace and ... the burden of clearly showing the right to the claimed deduction is on the taxpayer.” INDOPCO, Inc. v. Comm’r, 503 U.S. 79, 84, 112 S.Ct. 1039, 117 L.Ed.2d 226 (1992) (internal quotation omitted). The burden shifts to the Service in some circumstances, see 26 U.S.C. § 7491(a)(1); Blodgett v. Comm’r, 394 F.3d 1030

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793 F.3d 866, 116 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 5260, 2015 U.S. App. LEXIS 12262, 2015 WL 4285265, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/larry-zavadil-v-commissioner-of-irs-ca8-2015.