Weddle v. Commissioner

39 T.C. 493, 1962 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 17
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedNovember 30, 1962
DocketDocket No. 87431
StatusPublished
Cited by43 cases

This text of 39 T.C. 493 (Weddle v. Commissioner) 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.

Bluebook
Weddle v. Commissioner, 39 T.C. 493, 1962 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 17 (tax 1962).

Opinion

FisheR, Judge:

Respondent determined a deficiency in petitioners’ income tax for the calendar year 1955 in the amount of $9,865.69.

One of the issues has been conceded. The only issue before us is whether petitioner may deduct a loss incurred during 1955 as a business or nonbusiness bad debt.

FINDINGS OF FACT.

Petitioners, George P. and Bertha R. (Terris) Weddle, are husband and wife and during the taxable year involved herein, 1955, lived in East Norwalk, Connecticut. Petitioners filed their joint Federal income tax return for the taxable year 1955 with the district director of internal revenue for the district of Connecticut. Inasmuch as George is a party to this proceeding only because of the filing of a joint return and the transaction in issue relates only to Bertha, she will hereinafter be referred to as petitioner.

In 1933 Arthur Terris and Louis Terris formed a corporation under the laws of the State of New York to manufacture and sell ladies’ lingerie, and transferred all the assets and liabilities of their partnership to the corporation, known as Terris Brothers, Inc. (hereinafter referred to as the Company), each of the brothers receiving 50 percent of the 500 shares of the capital stock of the company.

After Louis died in 1943, his stock was purchased by the company from his estate, leaving Arthur holding all of the outstanding stock of the company.

When Arthur died in 1945, he bequeathed 60 percent of such stock to his widow, Bertha, the petitioner herein, and 20 percent to each of his two daughters.

In Schedule B of the Federal estate tax return filed for Arthur’s estate, the 250 shares of stock of Terris Brothers, Inc., was valued at $205,000.

The company’s book net worth (capital plus earned surplus) totaled $337,220.01 and $204,598.33 as of December 31,1950, and December 31, 1951, respectively.

From the date of the death'of Arthur, petitioner, who had previously been a housewife, operated the business of the company as president and general manager, devoting her full time to the company. She received a yearly salary of $25,000 during the years 1945 through 1949; $20,000 for 1950, and $18,560 in 1951, and about $17,000 for the years 1952 through 1954. This salary comprised the bulk of petitioner’s income during these years.

In 1951 the company purchased from one of the daughters her 20 percent share of the capital stock, leaving petitioner owning 75 percent of the stock and her other daughter, 25 percent of the stock in the company.

In March of 1951, it became necessary for the company to obtain a line of credit from a bank.

Pursuant to the bank’s requirement, petitioner personally endorsed and guaranteed all of the company’s loans. In addition, the bank insisted that all loans made during a year must be paid in December of that year, or, at the latest, by the end of January of the following-year. Payment was made by the corporation on the loans made during 1951 and 1952.

All of the loans made during the year 1953 could not be paid by the company by the end of January 1954, and in March 1954, when the outstanding indebtedness was $85,000 and the financial condition of the corporation was precarious, the bank insisted that petitioner, as the endorser, liquidate such debt or collateralize the loan with marketable securities. In order to continue the business for the balance of the season, the taxpayer put up, as collateral, stock registered in her name at a market value of more than sufficient to meet the indebtedness to the satisfaction of the banking institution.

The company continued to make partial payments on the bank indebtedness until the balance, in September 1954, totaled $59,945.58.

At such time it became apparent that the financial condition of the company, instead of improving, was getting worse, and petitioner, as an officer and director of the company, entered into an agreement assigning the company’s assets to trustees for the benefit of creditors.

From the liquidation of the corporation, the bank realized $25,753.94, resulting in an unsatisfied balance of $34,191.64. Demand was thereupon made on the petitioner for the unpaid balance pursuant to her guarantee, and she paid the requisite amount of $34,191.64 to the bank.

In addition to the above venture, petitioner, beginning in 1951, assumed on a salary basis, the operation and management of Samuel Roodner, Inc., a real estate corporation whose controlling shares she inherited from her father.

On her Federal joint income tax return for the taxable year 1955 petitioner deducted the full amount she paid to the bank pursuant to her personal endorsement of the company’s notes of $34,191-64 as a “loss” with the explanation that such amount “was a total, definite and complete loss to her and a proper deduction, from her ordinary income for the calendar year 1955.”

Respondent determined that the “deduction in the amount of $34,191.64 claimed for a loss arising from the guarantee of a corporate indebtedness should be disallowed inasmuch as the transaction is held to have resulted in a nonbusiness bad debt, deductible only as a short-term capital loss under the provisions of section 166(d) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954.”

Petitioner during the years in issue was engaged in the trade or business of being a president and general manager of the company.

The endorsement of the company’s notes was not proximately related to such trade or business.

OPINION.

The parties agree that a valid debt was created between petitioner and the company in the amount of $34,191.64, upon payment of such sum by petitioner to the bank pursuant to petitioner’s personal guarantee of the company’s notes, Putnam v. Commssioner, 352 U.S. 82 (1951), and that such debt became worthless in 1955. The only issue which they have placed before this Court is whether petitioner may deduct the loss on such debt as a business bad debt or nonbusiness bad debt, within the meaning of section 166 (d)(2).1

Respondent argues on brief that petitioner was not entitled to a business bad debt deduction because she was “not in the money lending business,” or in the “business of organizing, promoting, financing, and mortgaging corporations so extensively as to elevate that activity to the status of a separate business,” that a taxpayer should not be considered to be engaged in a business of his own merely because he advances money on behalf of a corporation of which he is an officer and substantial stockholder, and that the business of a corporation is not the business of its stockholders or employees.

While we agree with the above statements of law and fact, we do not accept them as finally dispositive of the issue before us.

The code, in its definition of what is not a nonbusiness bad debt inferentially provides two requirements: (1) That the taxpayer be engaged in a trade or business and that (2) the debt be incurred in connection with and proximately related to such trade or business.

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Bluebook (online)
39 T.C. 493, 1962 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 17, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weddle-v-commissioner-tax-1962.