West v. Commissioner

88 T.C. No. 9, 88 T.C. 152, 1987 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 9
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1987
DocketDocket Nos. 20549-84, 20550-84
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 88 T.C. No. 9 (West 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
West v. Commissioner, 88 T.C. No. 9, 88 T.C. 152, 1987 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 9 (tax 1987).

Opinion

SWIFT, Judge:

In a statutory notice of deficiency dated April 5, 1984, respondent determined deficiencies in petitioners’ Federal income tax liabilities and additions to tax as follows:

Additions to tax
Years Deficiencies sec. 6659
1977 $3,591
1978 1,822
1979 5,823
1981 9,642 $2,893
1982 4,798 1,439

After concessions, the issues for decision are: (1) Whether petitioners are entitled to deduct depreciation and to claim an investment tax credit with respect to the purchase of a single print of a motion picture; (2) whether, in the alternative, petitioners are entitled to deduct the out-of-pocket costs of the investment as a theft loss; and (3) whether petitioners are hable for the additions to tax under section 66591 set forth above. By way of written motion filed during trial of these consolidated cases, respondent also seeks the Court’s determination as to whether petitioners are hable for the increased rate of interest for underpayments of tax attributable to tax-motivated transactions under section 6621(d).

FINDINGS OF FACT

Some of the facts have been stipulated and are so found. Petitioners resided in West Valley, Utah, at the time they filed their petitions in these consohdated cases. The deficiencies and additions to tax at issue relate to an investment made by petitioner Joe H. West in a motion picture entitled “Bottom.” The motion picture was produced by Commedia Pictures, Inc. (Commedia), a Utah corporation. During the years in issue, Commedia was engaged in the production, distribution, and sale of motion pictures. Commedia had its principal place of business in Salt Lake City, Utah.

In 1981, Commedia offered investments in a feature-length motion picture entitled “Bottom.” According to the prospectus associated with the investments, “Bottom” was to be a musical comedy about a Shakespearian actor named “Nick Bottom” who dies in a theater fire in 1605 and reappears as a ghost in Salt Lake City, Utah, some 375 years later.

The prospectus sets forth purported gross revenues received by various distributors from major motion pictures such as “Grease,” “Star Wars,” and “Jaws 2.” It provides some general information about the demand for the distribution of motion pictures, and briefly and generally describes the experience of the individuals acting in “Bottom.” The prospectus also briefly describes other motion pictures Commedia intended to produce, sets forth a sample of a projection of the profits that might be made from a motion picture (not specifically “Bottom”), and a description of the different ways investments could be made in “Bottom.” The prospectus also provides a specific and detailed schedule of the tax benefits purportedly flowing from an investment in “Bottom,” and a legal opinion which specifically states that the opinion is not based on the attorney’s independent verification of the facts with respect to which the opinion is rendered.

Conspicuously absent from the prospectus are any specific projections of the profit that might realistically be expected from the motion picture “Bottom.” Also absent from the prospectus is any helpful information about the actual success and experience of Commedia in producing and distributing motion pictures. All that is said about Commedia is the following:

Commedia Pictures Inc. is a Utah corporation engauged [sic] in the business of producing quality motion pictures, for both domestic and foreign television and theatrical release. Commedia maintains its home office at 1879 South Main Suite 104 Salt Lake City, Utah 84115 at 801-486-3453. Commedia is insuring the integrity and excellence of its product by a staff of outstandingly compentent [sic] craftsmen. The organization is based on absolute integrity and efficiency principles.

According to the prospectus, the projected cost of producing “Bottom” was “close to $1,000,000.” Also according to the prospectus, investments in the motion picture could be structured in two different ways. Under the first structure, ownership of “Bottom” was divided into 100 units, each of which was to be sold to investors for $10,000 in cash. No debt or leverage was to be associated with such an investment. Commedia would have the right to and responsibility for distributing and marketing the movie and would be paid a distributor’s fee for those services, which fee would be paid out of sales proceeds from the motion picture.

Under the second structure described in the prospectus for investing in “Bottom,” investors could purchase individual prints of “Bottom.” After acquiring ownership of a print, an investor would have the complete rights to and responsibility for marketing and distributing his individual print of “Bottom.” Commedia was not to be involved in the marketing and distribution of prints of “Bottom” owned by individual investors. Each investor who owned a print would be required to negotiate for the viewing of his particular print anywhere in the world.

Under this second method of investing in “Bottom,” the purchase price for an individual print of “Bottom” was stated in the prospectus to be “$18,000 with a 10 percent down payment and the balance due over a 10 year period.” Documents attached to the prospectus clarified that the purchase price for individual prints of “Bottom” actually was to be $180,000, to be paid by an $18,000 cash downpayment and a $162,000 recourse promissory note due in installments over 10 years. The prospectus also indicated, however, that during the last 5 years of the note, the investor’s obligation thereunder could be converted by the investor to a nonrecourse obligation merely upon the payment of $1,000. The prospectus represented that a maximum of 30 prints of “Bottom” would be sold to individual investors and that the reason individual prints were being sold to individual investors was to raise funds “to meet production costs.”

The record does not indicate that any investors purchased undivided interests in “Bottom” under the first investment alternative described in the prospectus. Instead, apparently all 100 investors who purchased an interest in “Bottom” purchased individual prints thereof under the terms of the second investment alternative described in the prospectus.

Sometime in the early fall of 1981, petitioner. Joe H. West2 obtained a copy of the prospectus describing the investment opportunity in “Bottom.” On October 23, 1981, petitioner signed a Production Service Agreement in which he agreed to purchase a single print of “Bottom” for $180,000. The representative of Commedia, Frank Evans, and petitioner backdated the agreement to June 30, 1980. The agreement stated that the producer (Commedia) “shall deliver the print(s) to owner on or before December 10, 1980.”

At the same time petitioner signed the Production Service Agreement, he also signed a promissory note to Commedia for $162,000. The note also was backdated to June 10, 1980, and expressly stated that it was a recourse liability.

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Bluebook (online)
88 T.C. No. 9, 88 T.C. 152, 1987 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 9, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/west-v-commissioner-tax-1987.