Theodore B. Livernois Trust v. Commissioner

433 F.2d 879
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedOctober 12, 1970
DocketNos. 20141-20143
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 433 F.2d 879 (Theodore B. Livernois Trust v. Commissioner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Theodore B. Livernois Trust v. Commissioner, 433 F.2d 879 (6th Cir. 1970).

Opinions

EDWARDS, Circuit Judge.

These cases present 'ai complicated set of facts and at least one appellate issue of some importance in federal tax law. They were heard by the Tax Court which found for the Commissioner in an opinion containing a detailed statement of the cases and findings of fact and conclusions of law. (T.C. Memo 1969-111). We shall rely upon the Tax Court opinion for the details of the case and recite only those facts (most of which were stipulated) which are directly relevant to our decision.

The basic issue presented by this appeal is whether this record supports the conclusion of the Tax Court that approximately $294,000 of payments made by five corporations owned or controlled by appellant, Theodore B. Livernois Trust, were loans to the Trust, as [880]*880claimed by the taxpayers, or dividends, as claimed by the Commissioner and as found by the Tax Court.

The Theodore B. Livernois Trust was created May 2, 1958, by Theodore B. Livernois, Sr., — one month before he died from an accidental gunshot wound. Livernois, Sr., conveyed to the Trust substantially all of his assets, including his stock in five corporations in which he was the sole or principal shareholder.1 The Trust instrument provided that Livernois, Sr., would receive the income of the Trust for his lifetime and that on his death, his wife Alma would receive the income, with rights to invade the corpus. On her death the Trust was to terminate with distributions to children and grandchildren. The Trust instrument required the Trust to pay all debts and tax obligations of the settlor’s estate.

The Trust instrument provided for four Trustees — Livernois, Sr., Theodore Livernois, Jr., Albert Grigsby, and Ed Degree. During all relevant times Trustees Livernois, Jr., and Albert Grigsby were not only the dominant Trustees, but were also members of the Boards of Directors of all five of the corporations which made payments to the Trust.

After Livernois, Sr.’s, death, his estate filed its tax return. On I.R.S. audit an additional assessment of $61,000 was made. In addition, the I.R.S. made a joint assessment against Theodore Livernois, deceased, and Alma Livernois for $123,000 tax deficiencies (including fraud penalties) for the prior years 1950-1955. Neither Livernois, Sr.’s estate nor the Trust had money to pay these tax liabilities and the I.R.S. threatened to file liens upon the five corporations owned by the Trust. Livernois, Jr., and Grigsby, Trustees of the Trust, then caused the five corporations, of which they were also officers and directors, to make certain payments to meet the Trust obligations just referred to. These payments are summarized in this record as follows:

Name of Corporation 1958 1959 1960 1961 1962 1963 Totals
Supply $22,000.00 $ 9,500.00 $ 2,000.00 $ 33,500.00
Ohio Lumber 20,333.41 70,000.00 $12,000.00 $46,000.00 148,333.41
Greenfield 1,000.00 14,000.00 23,500.00 $26,501.00 11,000.00 76,001.00
Blue Water 9,000.00 9,000.00 9.000. 00 3,000.00 1,000.00 31,000.00
Style King_ _ _ 6.000. 00 ___6,000.00
TOTALS $22,000.00 $39,833.41 $95,000.00 $50,500.00 $29,501.00 $58,000.00 $294,834.41
CA28063

During the years in question, aside from these payments, the Trust had only about $30,000 of income. The earned surplus of the corporations during the years concerned is shown as follows:

Name of Corgoration^ 1959 1960> 1961 ¿222, £222.
Supply. $ 59,011.39 $ 52,766.95 $ 52,142.37 $ 63,423.15 $ 51,890.74 Ohio
Lumber 477,122.42 391,764.54 369,436.24 352,438.80 332,156.21
Greenfield 111,181.08 97,929.67 100,141.39 103,279.82 109,490.78
Blue Water 86,857.56 105,871.37 119,598.82 128,247.84 139,238.23
Style King 3,495.55 5,150.09 7,398.70 (11,336.16) (25,446.67)
CA28053

[881]*881Every payment by the corporations to the Trust was recorded as a loan and an unsecured “demand” note bearing 6 % interest was given in exchange. Generally, the notes were entered on the books of the corporations as receivables, but the interest was not. - No interest was ever paid. No demand for payment was ever made. In one year $4,000 was repaid, but in that same year $95,000 was transferred from the corporations to the Trust.

Appellants assert that the payments were bona fide loans and that there was a plan for repayment of them through liquidation of some of the Trust assets. As to Trust contentions the Tax Court found:

“After consideration of all the evidence, we conclude that at the time of the payments there was no intention or expectation that they would be repaid and that they are properly taxable as dividends.
“We are not persuaded that at the time of the payments the Trust intended to repay the Corporations. The Trust was the sole shareholder of Supply, Ohio Lumber, and Style King. It was the 70 percent majority shareholder of Blue Water and the 75 percent majority shareholder- of Greenfield. The balance of the stock of the latter two corporations was owned by Theodore Sr.’s three children. This stock represented substantially all of the Trust’s assets. By 1960, due to the disposition of certain other property held by the Trust, the stock was the Trust’s sole asset with the exception of a house and lots which had been mortgaged for $20,000. We think it is clear from the record that the Trust had but one source from which it could acquire funds. That source was the Corporations which it controlled. In a factual situation such as this, transactions are subject to the closest scrutiny. See Elliott J. Rosehuni, 29 T.C. 1193 (1958), affd. per curiam 271 F.2d 267 (C.A.5, 1959), certiorari denied 362 U.S. 988, 80 S.Ct. 1074, 4 L.Ed.2d 1021 (1960).
“From the date of Theodore Sr.’s death, the Trust has looked to the Corporations whenever and for whatever purpose it required money. The Corporations paid money to the Trust without collateral and without any express limitation as to the ceiling amount of such payments. Though the notes accompanying these payments called for the payment of interest at the rate of 6 percent per annum, no interest was in fact paid to, or accrued by, the Corporations. Nor have there been any significant payments of principal by the Trust to the Corporations. In essence, the trustees have withdrawn from the Corporations whatever money they needed to administer the terms of the Trust Agreement. We hold that the petitioners have not met their burden of demonstrating that there was any real intention or expectation that the monies advanced to the Trust by the Corporations would ever be repaid.
“The testimony about liquidating Ohio Lumber and Blue Water as part of a repayment plan is vague and unconvincing. Initially there is no evidence that such a plan was conceived when the withdrawal of money from the Corporations began. Nor are we convinced that such a plan was in any way a realistic consideration in the decision to pay the money to the Trust.

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