Vanney Assocs. v. Comm'r
This text of 2014 T.C. Memo. 184 (Vanney Assocs. v. Comm'r) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Tax Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Decision will be entered for respondent.
BUCH,
Vanney Associates, Inc., was incorporated in 1987. It is a personal service C corporation that uses the cash method of accounting. Robert Vanney is a licensed architect with over 39 years of architectural and interior design experience. He is the sole shareholder, chief executive officer, chief financial officer, vice president of marketing, vice president of operations, and director of human resources of Vanney Associates. Vanney Associates employs about 25 others, but Mr. Vanney is the*183 one responsible for marketing, bringing in new business, and signing construction documents. At the time it filed the petition, Vanney Associates' principal place of business was in Minnesota.
Karen Vanney, Mr. Vanney's spouse, is responsible for maintaining Vanney Associates' books and records. Ms. Vanney is a certified public accountant with an inactive license and is employed as the vice president of finance for a company unrelated to Vanney Associates. She has never been a shareholder, director, *186 employee, or independent contractor of Vanney Associates. Nonetheless, Ms. Vanney would prepare payroll checks for Vanney Associates. Mr. Vanney would then sign the checks on behalf of Vanney Associates and distribute them.
In 2008 Vanney Associates paid Mr. Vanney monthly wages totaling $240,000. At the end of each year, it was the Vanneys' practice to determine Vanney Associates' remaining profit after paying any outstanding bills and paying bonuses to employees. After determining this amount, Ms. Vanney would prepare a check on behalf of Vanney Associates and pay the remaining profit to Mr. Vanney as a yearend bonus. The Vanneys testified that their intent behind the yearend bonus was*184 only to pay out the remaining profit; it was not to zero out the tax liability of Vanney Associates even if that was the effect.
On December 30, 2008, Vanney Associates paid Mr. Vanney a yearend bonus totaling $815,000. After withholding and paying to the IRS the appropriate Federal income, Social Security, and Medicare taxes, Vanney Associates wrote a check to Mr. Vanney for $464,183.1 Mr. Vanney signed the check on behalf of Vanney Associates and then endorsed the check in his own name and made it *187 payable to Vanney Associates. He never attempted to cash the check. Ms. Vanney recorded the payment on the books as a loan from Mr. Vanney, and Vanney Associates repaid Mr. Vanney in March 2009.2
Although Vanney Associates wrote Mr. Vanney a check for over $460,000, on December 31, 2008, the total balance in Vanney Associates' bank accounts was $389,604; the balance was $283,033 after adjusting for outstanding deposits and checks. Mr. Vanney testified that he "*185 believe[d]" he knew that Vanney Associates did not have the funds necessary to honor the check. However, he maintained that Vanney Associates could have gotten a loan to cover the check. Further, Ms. Vanney testified that Vanney Associates was a strong company with considerable receivables, and although the Vanneys considered taking out a loan for Vanney Associates, they decided not to because they personally did not need the money and they wanted to avoid the expenses that would come with obtaining the loan.
Vanney Associates timely filed its 2008 Form 1120, U.S. Corporation Income Tax Return, which reflected no taxable income or tax. Vanney Associates claimed various deductions, among them $1,055,000 for compensation of officers and $123,191 for taxes and licenses, which included $11,818 paid for Medicare *188 taxes. The IRS selected the return for examination and mailed Vanney Associates a notice of deficiency on August 5, 2011, disallowing $815,000 of the deduction for compensation of officers and $11,818 of the deduction for taxes and licenses.3*186 The notice also made other adjustments that are not at issue. In response, Vanney Associates timely petitioned.
The Commissioner's determinations in the notice of deficiency are generally presumed correct, and taxpayers bear the burden of proving otherwise.4 Although the burden may shift to the Commissioner under
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
2014 T.C. Memo. 184, 108 T.C.M. 265, 108 Tax Ct. Mem. Dec. (CCH) 265, 2014 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 182, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vanney-assocs-v-commr-tax-2014.