Richard J. Todd and Denese W. Todd v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue

862 F.2d 540, 63 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 523, 1988 U.S. App. LEXIS 17812
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedDecember 16, 1988
Docket88-4118
StatusPublished
Cited by172 cases

This text of 862 F.2d 540 (Richard J. Todd and Denese W. Todd v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Richard J. Todd and Denese W. Todd v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 862 F.2d 540, 63 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 523, 1988 U.S. App. LEXIS 17812 (5th Cir. 1988).

Opinion

PATRICK E. HIGGINBOTHAM, Circuit Judge:

Taxpayers Richard and Denese Todd appealed deficiencies and penalties assessed by the Commissioner of Internal Revenue. The Tax Court denied the taxpayers’ claimed depreciation deductions and investment tax credits. In a later opinion, the Tax Court refused to impose the Commissioner’s requested penalties under Internal Revenue Code § 6659 for tax underpayments attributable to valuation overstatements. The Commissioner appeals that determination. We affirm.

I

Beginning in 1980, FoodSource, Inc. sold investors interests in refrigerated food containers. The containers were designed to preserve perishable agricultural products during shipment to foreign and domestic markets. Each investor paid a fraction of the alleged purchase price of part or all of a refrigerated unit, signing a promissory note for the balance. FoodSource managed the containers, renting them to food transporters and regularly reporting profits supposedly earned by each investor.

Appellees Richard and Denese Todd purchased two FoodSource containers on December 8, 1981, and a third on October 14, 1982. The Todds paid $52,000 to Food-Source for each unit, signing notes to raise *541 the “purchase price” of each container to $260,000. Using the $260,000 figure as the basis of each unit, the Todds claimed investment tax credits and depreciation deductions for the 1981 and 1982 tax years, carrying unused portions of the investment tax credits back to 1979 and 1980. However, due to a payment dispute with Food-Source, the manufacturer retained control of all three containers .purchased by the Todds until 1983.

The Internal Revenue Service assessed deficiencies and penalties against many investors in the FoodSource program, including the Todds. The Todds participated with various other “test case petitioners” in litigation before the Tax Court, challenging the IRS actions. In Noonan v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 1 the Tax Court determined that the Todds were not entitled to their claimed deductions and credits for 1979-82, since none of their containers had been placed in service until 1983. Other investors, such as the Hillendahls and the Hendricks, did have containers placed in service during the years for which they claimed tax benefits. Finding the obligations represented by the promissory notes illusory, the Tax Court limited the maximum adjusted basis taxpayers could claim in each FoodSource container to the lesser of its $60,000 fair market value or the actual cash payments made by the investor. Consequently, investors like the Hendricks and Hillendahls, though purchasing their containers with an actual profit motive, still received substantially smaller deductions and tax credits due to their reduced basis in their assets. These investors were also found liable under IRC § 6659 for a 30% addition to tax on portions of their tax deficiencies “attributable to [] valuation overstatement[s].”

Upon remand for calculation of deficiencies, the Commissioner assessed a § 6659 penalty against the Todds. The Todds appealed once again to the Tax Court. In Todd v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 2 the Tax Court refused to allow the § 6659 addition to tax. It reasoned that the Todds’ deductions and credits were disallowed on the Commissioner’s alternative ground that the food storage units had not been placed in service during the tax years in issue. Consequently, the Tax Court decided, the taxpayers’ underpayments of tax could not be “attributable to” the valuation overstatements contained in their tax returns. The court refused to read § 6659 as imposing a penalty anytime a tax underpayment had been accompanied by a valuation overstatement. The Commissioner now asks us to reverse the Tax Court’s decision.

II

The statute we must construe, IRC § 6659(a), provides:

(a) Addition to the tax.—If—
(1) an individual, or
(2) a closely held corporation, or a personal service corporation,
has an underpayment of the tax imposed by chapter 1 for the taxable year which is attributable to a valuation overstatement, then there shall be added to the tax an amount equal to the applicable percentage of the underpayment so attributable.

The penalty only applies if the tax underpayment attributable to the overstated valuation equals at least $1000 and the claimed property value or adjusted basis is at least 150 percent of the actual value or basis. 3 The parties agree that, under the Tax Court ruling in Noonan, the Todds overstated the value of their FoodSource containers by 500%. If § 6659 applies, the Todds will be liable for an addition to tax of 30% of underpayments attributable to the valuation overstatements. 4

The parties divide only over the meaning of the words “attributable to” in the statute. The Commissioner asks us to hold the Todds liable under § 6659, basing his arguments on the statute’s language, its legislative history, its underlying policy, and the *542 Commissioner’s perception of inequity in the Tax Court’s result. First, the government argues that “attributable” ordinarily means “capable of being attributed.” Thus, it contends that § 6659 applies anytime a taxpayer’s underpayment is “capable of being attributed” to a valuation overstatement, regardless of the actual ground relied on to uphold the deficiency. Unfortunately, the Commissioner’s formulation merely substitutes one ambiguity for another. Whether a given underpayment is “capable of being attributed” to a valuation overstatement depends on the meaning of “capable.” In one sense, that urged by the government, there can be several problems with a particular deduction and the resulting tax deficiency is, then, capable of being attributed to any of them. In this case, however, the Commissioner asserted and the Tax Court found that the Todds’ Food-Source units had not been placed in service until after the 1982 tax year. Given those circumstances, no deductions or credits could legally be taken with respect to these food containers on the Todds’ 1981 and 1982 tax returns. Thus, the value claimed for the containers became irrelevant to the Todds’ tax liability, since it played no part in calculating the tax they actually owed. One can certainly argue the position that a tax underpayment is not “capable of being attributed” to an irrelevant figure on the income tax return. While a client might be “capable” of kicking the bottom of her lethargic lawyer in an abstract sense, one might still say she was “incapable” of doing so at a time when the two were a thousand miles apart. Thus, we find the language of the statute ambiguous, and look instead to the legislative history. 5

Congress initially enacted § 6659 as part of the Economic Recovery Tax Act of 1981.

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Bluebook (online)
862 F.2d 540, 63 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 523, 1988 U.S. App. LEXIS 17812, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/richard-j-todd-and-denese-w-todd-v-commissioner-of-internal-revenue-ca5-1988.