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Foster v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue |
United
States Court of Appeals,
Ninth
Circuit.
Richard
H. FOSTER and Sara B. Foster, T. Jack Foster, Jr. and Patricia Foster,
Jack R.
Foster and Caroline Foster, and Estate of T. Jack Foster, Deceased,
Gladys
H. Foster, Executrix, and Gladys H. Foster, Petitioners‑Appellants,
v.
COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent‑Appellee.
No.
83‑7745.
Argued
and Submitted Nov. 16, 1984.
Decided
April 3, 1985.
Taxpayers,
partners in development partnership, appealed from decision of the
United States Tax Court, 80 T.C. 34, affirming Commissioner's
deficiency determination relating to development of 2,600‑acre parcel
into a self‑ contained city. The Court of Appeals, J. Blaine Anderson,
Circuit Judge, held that: (1) Commissioner did not abuse his
discretion in reallocating sales income from corporations held by
developer's partners to developer partnership; (2) Commissioner was
not clearly erroneous in characterizing bonus to be paid to lender as
interest; (3) partnership could not capitalize interest that it did
not pay; (4) partnership would not be allowed charitable deductions
for transfers of school and church sites; (5) taxpayers would not be
allowed business deductions for a portion of their travel and
entertainment expenses; and (6) penalty assessment for negligent or
intentional disregard of income tax rules and regulations would be
vacated.
Affirmed in part, vacated in
part.
Valentine Brookes, Brookes &
Brookes, San Francisco, Cal., for petitioners‑appellants.
R. Pomerance,
Washington, D.C., for respondent‑appellee.
Appeal from the Decision of
the United States Tax Court.
Before DUNIWAY,
KENNEDY, and ANDERSON, Circuit Judges.
J. BLAINE ANDERSON, Circuit
Judge:
In 1955, Jack Foster and his
three sons formed a partnership, T. Jack Foster and Sons
(Partnership), for the general purpose of dealing in property, with
Jack as the managing partner. In 1958, the Partnership began to
investigate the reclamation potential of Brewer's Island, a 2,600 acre
undeveloped and partially submerged tract of land located about 12
miles south of San Francisco. After commissioning engineering studies,
the Partnership determined that the tract could be transformed into a
self‑contained city (Foster City) of 35,000.
In December,
1959, the Partnership acquired an option to purchase the property for
$12.8 million; in May, 1960, it secured enabling legislation from the
California legislature for a municipal improvement district known as Estero, which was coterminus with Brewer's Island; and, in August,
1960, it exercised its option to purchase the tract. Thereafter, the
Partnership and Estero began developing the property by neighborhood.
The Commissioner
of Internal Revenue issued notices of deficiency to the Fosters for
the years 1963‑67 concerning their role in the development of Foster
City. The Fosters appeal the United States Tax Court's affirmance of
the Commissioner's determination. We affirm in part and vacate in
part.
I.
Section 482
The Internal
Revenue Code of 1954, § 482, 26 U.S.C. § 482 (1976), authorizes the
Commissioner to reallocate income or deductions among commonly
controlled businesses "if he determines that such ... allocation is
necessary in order to prevent evasion of taxes or clearly to reflect
the income of any of such ... businesses."
A.
Standard of Review
In § 482 cases,
this court has held that "[t]he Commissioner has broad discretion
under section 482, and neither we nor the Tax Court will countermand
his decision unless the taxpayer shows it to be unreasonable,
arbitrary or capricious." Erickson v. Commissioner, 598 F.2d
525, 528 (9th Cir.1979).
The Fosters argue
that this standard was diluted in Commissioner v. First Security
Bank of Utah, 405 U.S. 394, 92 S.Ct. 1085, 31 L.Ed.2d 318 (1972),
in which the Court concluded that "[t]he Commissioner's exercise of
his § 482 authority was therefore unwarranted in this case." 405 U.S.
at 407, 92 S.Ct. at 1093. We do not believe the Court, by employing
the term "unwarranted," was signaling a change in the standard of
review. The issue before the Court was not the appropriate standard of
review. Moreover, the Court was affirming the determination of the
Tenth Circuit, which had employed the arbitrary and capricious
standard in reaching its decision. See First Security Bank of Utah,
N.A. v. Commissioner, 436 F.2d 1192, 1198 (10th Cir.1971).
B.
The "Avoidance" of Taxes
Section 482
refers to the "evasion of taxes," whereas the Tax Court based its
decision on the Fosters'"avoidance of taxes." We have noted the
"sometimes elusive" distinction between the two terms, Stewart v.
Commissioner, 714 F.2d 977, 987 (9th Cir.1983), and agree with the
Tax Court's finding that "for purposes of section 482, a non‑punitive
section, the terms are interchangeable." Foster v. Commissioner,
80 T.C. 34, 158 (1983).
The regulations
support the Tax Court's holding.
Additionally, this court, in discussing the application of § 482, has
stated that "Congress enacted the predecessor of section 482 to
prevent the evasion of taxes through such means as 'shifting of
profits, the making of fictitious sales and other methods frequently
adopted for the purpose of "milking."'" Stewart, 714 F.2d at
987 (citations omitted). Put another way, the taxpayer must establish
that he did not "cash in" on the gain. Id. at 989. In a civil
case, a thorough analysis of the facts in light of the above criteria
is more important than whether the Tax Court labeled its ultimate
conclusion tax avoidance or evasion.
Our conclusion is
not altered by Commissioner v. First Security Bank of Utah, 405
U.S. 394, 92 S.Ct. 1085, 31 L.Ed.2d 318 (1972), in which the Court
reiterated the long‑standing shibboleth that a taxpayer is free to
arrange his affairs in the manner calculated to minimize his tax
liability. 405 U.S. at 398 n. 4, 92 S.Ct. at 1089 n. 4. In First
Security, the Court disapproved the Commissioner's reallocation
under § 482. First Security, however, did not, as in this case,
involve a nonrecognition transaction. Also, the determinative factor
in disallowing the reallocation was that it would have been illegal
for the entity to receive the income, id. at 401‑402, 92 S.Ct.
at 1090‑1091, which is not the situation here.
C.
Application of § 482 to the Disposition of Property Acquired in a
Nonrecognition Transaction
The first of the nine
neighborhoods to be developed was Neighborhood One. In October, 1962,
before any sales to builders were consummated, the Partnership
transferred an undivided one‑quarter interest in 127 acres of
Neighborhood One to each of four newly formed corporations as tenants
in common. Each of the four corporations, referred to collectively by
the Tax Court as the Alphabets, was solely owned by one of the
Fosters.
In August, 1966, the
Partnership transferred 311 lots in Neighborhood Four, which had been
improved to a lesser extent than Neighborhood One, to Foster
Enterprises, a corporation owned by the Fosters in equal shares.
Foster Enterprises, which was incorporated in 1960 to take title to a
hotel in Hawaii, had accumulated a net operating loss of $1.2 million.
The Neighborhood One
transaction was an exchange of property for stock under § 351. The
Neighborhood Four transaction was a contribution to capital under §
1032. Under both sections, neither the transferor nor the transferee
recognize gain or loss on the transfer, and the basis of the property
does not change. The transferee therefore inherits the potential gain
or loss inherent in the property at the time of its transfer.
The Tax Court was
correct in its determination that the Commissioner may employ § 482 to
reallocate income derived from the disposition of property previously
acquired in a nonrecognition transaction. Rooney v. United States,
305 F.2d 681, 686 (9th Cir.1962) (Section 482 will control when it
conflicts with § 351 as long as the discretion of the Commissioner in
reallocating is not abused.); Treas.Reg. § 1.482‑1(d)(5) (1984);
see also Stewart v. Commissioner, 714 F.2d 977, 989 (9th
Cir.1983).
D.
Section 482 Reallocation
The Tax Court, pursuant to §
482, reallocated all the income from the sale of the lots in
Neighborhood One and Neighborhood Four from the Alphabets and Foster
Enterprises to the Partnership. The income reallocated was divided
into two parts, income due to appreciation in value before the
transfers and income due to appreciation after the transfers.
1.
Pre‑transfer Appreciation
The Tax Court
reallocated the income attributable to appreciation before the
transfers on the ground that the purpose of the transfers was to avoid
taxes. It found that A.O. Champlin, the Fosters' long‑time tax
advisor, decided it was advantageous from a tax standpoint for the
Fosters to undertake the development of Foster City in a partnership
form. Losses incurred during the early years could then be used by the
partners to reduce income on their personal tax returns. Later, as the
land was developed, certain lots were transferred from the Partnership
to its controlled entities in an effort to shift income. As noted by
the Tax Court, "only highly appreciated inventory pregnant with income
was conveyed." Foster, 80 T.C. at 179. Moreover, according to
the testimony of Champlin, the value of money on hand to the Fosters
far exceeded any interest that might eventually have to be paid on a
tax deficiency, particularly when the rate of interest charged by the
Government was less than that charged by commercial banks.
In the case of
the Alphabets, which were formed within a month of the transfer, the
Tax Court determined that the object was to shift from the Partnership
the income from the sale of the lots and split it among taxpayers
subject to a lower rate of tax. The Fosters argue that the transfer
could not have been tax motivated because it would have increased
taxes; the income reported by the Alphabets was not offset by any
losses, whereas if the income had been reported by the Partnership, it
would have been offset by the operating losses which the Partnership
claimed on its returns. The Tax Court, however, found that "the tax
savings to an individual realized by preserving a partnership loss may
very well exceed the tax cost to his corporation incurred by reporting
the income." Id., 80 T.C. at 173.
The Fosters contend that
although the Neighborhood Four transfer may have resulted in a tax
saving, it was made for a business purpose. There was evidence that
Rex Johnson, a senior vice president of Republic National Bank who was
in charge of monitoring the Fosters' account, insisted that the lots
be conveyed to Foster Enterprises as a condition to Republic's
renewing the Partnership's loans. The Tax Court discounted this as the
motivation behind the transfer, and we find its reasoning persuasive.
Foster
Enterprises was not indebted to Republic. It had borrowed money from Likins‑Foster Honolulu Corporation and Roy Turner Associates, Ltd., a
subsidiary of Likins‑Foster. Both Likins‑Foster and the Partnership
were indebted to Republic.
According to
Johnson, the transfer was necessary to improve the liquidity of Foster
Enterprises and thereby (1) enhance the collectibility of the
indebtedness of Likins‑Foster to Republic, (2) improve the bank's
security in the Likins‑Foster stock, and (3) insulate the bank from
the fortunes of the Foster partnership. The Tax Court, however, found
that a special audit report prepared by the bank stated that the
Likins‑Foster loans were being paid according to schedule. Moreover,
if Johnson were concerned about the ability of Likins‑Foster to repay
its loan, it would have made more sense to transfer the lots directly
to that corporation because it was the Likins‑Foster stock that had
been pledged as security. The transfer of the lots obviously weakened
the Partnership's ability to repay its loan to Republic, noted the Tax
Court, and certainly exacerbated its cash flow problem.
The sales
proceeds were not used by Foster Enterprises to liquidate its debts to Likins‑Foster and Turner Associates. Rather, they were loaned to the
Partnership to further develop Foster City. Although Foster
Enterprises still had an asset, it was now, continued the Tax Court,
an unsecured receivable from the Partnership. Collectibility was
therefore dependent upon the Partnership's overall success with the
Foster City undertaking, precisely the risk against which Johnson
ostensibly wanted to protect.
The Tax Court
found that the purpose of the Neighborhood Four transaction was to
shift to Foster Enterprises the income earned from the sale of the
lots so that it could be absorbed by that corporation's losses. The
record contains ample evidence to support the Tax Court's conclusions
concerning both the Neighborhood Four and the Neighborhood One
transactions.
We therefore find that the Commissioner did not abuse his discretion
in reallocating to the Partnership that portion of the sales income
due to appreciation before the date of transfer. See Rooney v.
United States, 305 F.2d 681, 684‑85 (9th Cir.1962).
2.
Post‑transfer Appreciation
Because
Neighborhoods One and Four were both further developed after the
transfers, a part of the income derived from the sale of lots was
created after the transfer date. The Tax Court concluded that Estero
was controlled by the Partnership, and was used by it as its
instrument for the development of Foster City. Thus Estero's efforts
were to be viewed as those of the Partnership, and the gain was to be
attributed to it.
Estero, a
Municipal Improvement District, was created in 1960 by a special act
of the California legislature. It was authorized to tax and to issue
tax‑ exempt bonds to finance its activities in reclaiming and
improving Brewer's Island. It was also vested with a broad array of
general governmental powers. As enumerated by the Tax Court:
It was empowered to reclaim
land, make provision for street lighting, sewage, storm drainage,
garbage and water service, and parks and playgrounds. It was also
empowered to construct small craft harbors, provide fire and police
protection, condemn land, enter into contracts, and make and enforce
such regulations as were necessary and proper to the exercise of its
enumerated powers. A violation of such regulation constituted a
misdemeanor.
Foster, 80
T.C. at 58.
We agree with the
Tax Court that during the years in issue, the Fosters, as the
principal landowners and developers, controlled Estero. Indeed, the
California Supreme Court has recognized that the Estero Act was
designed by the California legislature to place control of the
district in the landowner/developer. Cooper v. Leslie Salt Co.,
70 Cal.2d 627, 451 P.2d 406, 408‑409, 75 Cal.Rptr. 766, 768‑769,
cert. denied, 396 U.S. 821, 90 S.Ct. 62, 24 L.Ed.2d 64 (1969). The
Tax Court stated:
There is no question that
Estero added value to Brewer's Island. However, it never realized that
value because it did not own the land or receive the proceeds from its
sale. All we are deciding here is whether the value added by Estero is
allocable to the Foster partnership because of the legislatively
conferred control that the partnership exercised over the district. To
answer that question in the affirmative does not require that we
ignore Estero's legal identity as a public agency.
Foster, 80
T.C. at 169. Estero was the Partnership's creature, used by it to
improve the land and thus increase its value. That is what it was
designed to be and do. Because it is a public body, validly created,
its own income, if any, belongs to it, and would not be allocable to
some other entity.
Commissioner v. Birch
Ranch & Oil Co., 192 F.2d 924 (9th Cir.1951), on which
the Partnership relies, is quite different from our case. There, the
taxpayer owned substantially all the land in a California reclamation
district, and, along with certain related parties, substantially all
of the district's bonds. In order to pay interest on the bonds, the
district made assessment calls which the taxpayer paid and later
deducted as taxes. The Commissioner denied the deduction on the ground
that the payor and the payee were economically identical. We upheld
the deduction, stating:
Since the district met the
requirements of California law, its status as a district entity, not
to be confused with the owners of the ranch, or the
taxpayer‑corporation, cannot be questioned regardless of the fact that
the district served but a single ranch, (plus one 240 acre parcel).
The western states have long considered that the reclamation, even of
a single parcel of land in single ownership, may justify the exercise
of sovereign powers.
192 F.2d at 928. The case
dealt with the validity, as a tax deduction by the owner of the
property in the district, of an assessment levied by the district
against the landowners and actually paid by the owners to the
district. Nothing comparable is involved in our case.
The Tax Court
stated that its finding that the Partnership controlled Estero did not
conflict with the district's status as a "juristic entity," and
therefore, Birch Ranch & Oil was inapposite. 80 T.C. at 169. We
agree. The primary question here is not whether Estero is an
independent entity. The primary question is whether the Commissioner
can allocate to the Partnership the income arising from value created
by Estero that would have gone to the Partnership but for the
transfers to the Alphabets and Foster Enterprises. The Alphabets' and
Foster Enterprises' function was to divert what would normally be the
income of the Partnership away from it and to the Alphabets and Foster
Enterprises. If the transfers had not been made, the income in
question would not have been Estero's; it would have been that of the
Partnership. The relationship between the Partnership and its
creatures, the Alphabets and Foster Enterprises, was precisely the
same, whether the appreciation in value occurred before the transfers
or after them. Under section 482, the Commissioner may allocate income
earned subsequent to the income evading event or transfer. The fact
that some of it is attributable to a time following the transfers
makes no difference. Because Estero did not own the land, the gain in
value would never accrue to Estero, but would have accrued to the
Partnership, the landowner, but for the transfers. By the transfers,
the Partnership shifted that income away from itself and to the
Alphabets, which had nothing, and to Foster Enterprises, which had
large losses from unrelated ventures. By that device, the Partnership
sought to get out from under large tax liabilities and yet retain
control of Foster City. Under § 482, the Commisioner could reallocate
to the Partnership the income that the Partnership had shifted to the
Alphabets and Foster Enterprises. The transfers had no business
function; their purpose was tax avoidance. The Tax Court properly
upheld the Commissioner's reallocation.
II.
The Westway Notes
A.
Form Over Substance Doctrine
As of August, 1962, the
Partnership had borrowed $3 million from Republic for the development
of Foster City. As an inducement for the loan, the Fosters agreed
that, in addition to interest, they would pay a bonus equal to the
amount borrowed. Republic desired that the bonus be structured as
capital gain rather than ordinary income. The advantage to the
Partnership would be a stepped‑up basis in the land.
Thus began a
complex succession of incorporations, transfers, liquidations, and
mergers. See Foster, 80 T.C. at 198‑200. At the core of this
arrangement was the conveyance and reconveyance of stock in Foster
Bayou, a corporation organized by the Fosters and capitalized with 200
acres of land in Foster City. In August, 1962, the Partnership sold
its stock in Foster Bayou to Westway Investment Co. for $5,000 cash
and a $100,000 non‑interest‑ bearing note. Westway was a subsidiary of
Howard Corporation, which in turn was owned by trustees for the
benefit of Republic's shareholders. In May, 1964, Esteroy, a
corporation organized by the Fosters the previous year and capitalized
with $10,000, bought the stock from Westway for $5,000 cash plus $3.1
million in non‑interest‑bearing notes (Westway Notes). Both Foster
Bayou and Esteroy were later liquidated so that the Partnership
eventually assumed the notes.
The Tax Court,
relying on the well‑established doctrine of form over substance,
see Stewart, 714 F.2d at 987‑88, found that the notes represented
an obligation by the Partnership to pay interest on the money borrowed
from Republic, rather than the cost of reacquiring the Foster Bayou
stock. Consequently, the Tax Court disallowed the Fosters the $3
million step‑up in the basis of two of the Foster City neighborhoods.
On review, the Tax Court's determination that the Westway transaction
was lacking in economic substance will not be set aside unless clearly
erroneous. Thompson v. Commissioner, 631 F.2d 642, 646 (9th
Cir.1980), cert. denied, 452 U.S. 961, 101 S.Ct. 3110, 69
L.Ed.2d 972 (1981).
Contrary to the
Fosters' assertion that the notes were indicative of the
profit‑sharing aspect of a partnership, the Tax Court cites
overwhelming evidence that the relationship between the Fosters and
Republic was always one of debtor‑creditor. Foster, 80 T.C. at
202‑203. Additionally, Republic's right to share in the profits was
strictly limited in amount, the bank bore no risk of loss except with
respect to its loan, and it was not entitled to participate in the
management of the project.
The Fosters
contend that $3.1 million ($15,500/acre) was a realistic price, not
because of evidence that that was the value of the land, but because
of the property's alleged investment potential. Their argument that
the transaction was made at arm's length, however, is belied by the
fact that although the Fosters had originally paid approximately $4500
per acre for the land, Foster Bayou, in selling the stock to Westway
for $105,000, sold it for about $500 per acre. The Tax Court noted
that Westway was not equipped to develop the land, nor did it improve
the land during its ownership. Moreover, the record contained evidence
(correspondence between Jack Foster and his attorney) that that
particular parcel was chosen only because it could be expediently
transferred. Id. at 94‑95.
In any event, the
result of this complex series of transactions was that when Esteroy
purchased the Foster Bayou stock from Westway, it recovered the $5,000
in cash that it originally paid to purchase the stock; its $100,000
non‑ interest‑bearing note was effectively canceled by Esteroy's
$100,000 non‑ interest‑bearing note, both of which were due on the
same date; Westway's gain on the transaction was therefore $3 million,
the amount of the bonus that the Fosters had agreed to pay under their
agreement with Republic. Furthermore, the $3 million was structured as
capital gain (gain derived from the sale of corporate stock), which
was also part of the agreement. Finally, that the Partnership
anticipated the "sale" and "repurchase" of the stock by the Fosters
for the purpose of disguising the agreed upon bonus as capital gain
was evidenced by correspondence between Jack Foster and his attorney.
Foster, 80 T.C. at 94.
United States v.
Mississippi Chemical Corporation, 405 U.S. 298, 92 S.Ct. 908,
31 L.Ed.2d 217 (1972), is distinguishable. In that case, cooperative
associations under the Agricultural Marketing Act were required to
purchase stock in a member bank as a condition for securing a loan.
The Court held that the stock was a capital asset having long‑term
value. Its cost, therefore, was not deductible as an interest expense.
Here, although the Fosters were required to pay a sum in addition to
the stated interest rate, they received nothing in return other than
the amount borrowed. An additional reason noted by the Court in
Mississippi Chemical for disallowing the interest deduction was
that Congress had intended to provide loans to farmers at low interest
rates; it therefore would have been "odd" for Congress to have
provided a hidden interest charge in the legislation. 405 U.S. at 310,
92 S.Ct. at 915. No such considerations of legislative intent apply in
this case.
We find that the Westway Notes represented "the amount [the debtor] contracted to pay
for the use of borrowed money." Old Colony Railroad Company v.
Commissioner, 284 U.S. 552, 560, 52 S.Ct. 211, 214, 76 L.Ed. 484
(1932). Thus, the Commissioner was not clearly erroneous in
characterizing them as interest.
B.
Capitalization of Interest
The Fosters
contend that if the Westway Notes represent an obligation to pay
additional interest, then under 26 U.S.C. § 266 (1976), such interest
may be capitalized at the election of the Partnership and added to the
basis of the land. Section 266 provides:
No deduction shall be allowed
for amounts paid or accrued for such taxes and carrying charges as,
under the regulations prescribed by the Secretary, are chargeable to
capital account with respect to property, if the taxpayer elects, in
accordance with such regulations, to treat such taxes or charges as so
chargeable.
The Tax Court,
relying on the language of § 266, legislative history, and the
regulations, found that an item not otherwise deductible may not be
capitalized under § 266. Foster, 80 T.C. 212‑213. The
Partnership used the cash, rather than the accrual, method of
accounting. Under the cash method, interest may not be deducted until
it is paid. 26 U.S.C. § 461 (1976); Treas.Regs. §§ 1.461‑1(a)(1),
1.446‑1(c)(1)(i) (1984).
We agree with the
Tax Court's analysis and therefore find that the Partnership may not
capitalize interest that it did not pay. The Fosters do not dispute
that the Partnership paid no portion of the Westway Notes during the
years in issue. Thus, the option of capitalizing the Westway Notes was
not available.
Crane v. Commissioner, 331 U.S. 1, 67 S.Ct. 1047, 91 L.Ed. 1301 (1947),
does not change this result. Under Crane, a taxpayer may
include the amount of a loan in computing the basis in the property
against which the loan was taken. The loan, however, is a part of the
cost of the property, whereas interest is the cost of the loan.
Congress has expressly provided for interest in the form of a
deduction. 26 U.S.C. § 163(a) (1976).
C.
Charitable Deductions
The Partnership conveyed
three parcels of land in Foster City for which it claimed charitable
deductions: a school site, by gift deed, and two church sites for
$20,000 per acre. On its tax returns, the Partnership valued the sites
at $40,000 per acre, deducting the difference as a charitable
contribution.
A business will
not be allowed a charitable deduction if the dominant motive behind
the transfer was the expectation of economic benefit. Allan v.
United States, 541 F.2d 786, 788 (9th Cir.1976). Contrary to the
Fosters' assertion, this standard was employed by the Tax Court.
Foster, 80 T.C. at 223. The Tax Court's determination that the
Fosters were not entitled to a charitable deduction will not be
overturned unless it was clearly erroneous. Allan, 541 F.2d at
788.
The Tax Court
found that, as demonstrated by Estero's prospectus and the
Partnership's promotional publications, Foster City was designed to be
a self‑ sufficient community with provision for all services required
by the resident population, including schools and churches. The Tax
Court determined that the transfer of the three sites was therefore
designed to enhance the value of the Partnership's remaining land and
to promote its sale. See Stubbs v. United States, 428 F.2d 885,
886‑87 (9th Cir.1970), cert. denied, 400 U.S. 1009, 91 S.Ct.
567, 27 L.Ed.2d 621 (1971). Additionally, concluded the Tax Court, the
transfer of the school site was made to secure the cooperation of the
school district and to persuade the district to abandon its threat to
cancel school bus service to Foster City.
The Fosters
object to the Tax Court's attributing the representations in Estero's
prospectuses to the Partnership. Given our holding that the activities
of Estero may not be attributed to the Partnership, we agree with the
Fosters' contention. The Fosters, however, do not challenge the Tax
Court's finding that the same benefits were touted in the
Partnership's publications. Thus, even without attributing the Estero
prospectuses to the Partnership, the Tax Court's finding, that there
was sufficient motivation of economic benefit to disallow the
deductions, was not clearly erroneous.
The Fosters argue
that if the transfers are disallowed, the cost of the school site
should be capitalized as part of the Partnership's basis in only the
residential acreage of the neighborhood the future school would serve
(Neighborhood One), rather than the Commissioner's capitalization of
the cost as part of the Partnership's basis in all of lits remaining
land in Foster City. The Fosters state that the only benefit to flow
from the transfer was the continued bus service, which was of benefit
only to Neighborhood One. We, however, do not believe that the Tax
Court was clearly erroneous in finding that, "[t]he transfer was the
first step in implementing the partnership's neighborhood school plan.
Moreover, it gave credibility to its 'sales pitch' that Foster City
was a planned community. Both of the factors enhanced the value and
promoted the sale of land in all the neighborhoods and not just in
Neighborhood One." Foster, 80 T.C. at 226.
D.
Business Deductions
The Tax Court
affirmed the Commissioner's determination that a portion of the
Fosters' travel and entertainment expenses were personal to the
Fosters and therefore not deductible as business expenses. The
deficiency notice did not itemize the particular deductions
disallowed, but instead gave the total disallowance for each taxpayer.
We note initially that the deficiency notice was not defective.
Abatti v. Commissioner, 644 F.2d 1385, 1389‑90 (9th Cir.1981).
The
Commissioner's deficiency determination carries a presumption of
correctness. Rockwell v. Commissioner, 512 F.2d 882, 885 (9th
Cir.1975), cert. denied, 423 U.S. 1015, 96 S.Ct. 448, 46
L.Ed.2d 386 (1975). The Fosters' reliance on Weimerskirch v.
Commissioner, 596 F.2d 358 (9th Cir.1979), and United States v.
Janis, 428 U.S. 433, 96 S.Ct. 3021, 49 L.Ed.2d 1046 (1976), is
misplaced. In Weimerskirch, this court interpreted Janis
as indicating "that the Commissioner must offer some foundational
support for the deficiency determination before the presumption of
correctness attaches to it." 596 F.2d at 361. In both Weimerskirch
and Janis, however, the Commissioner had determined that the
taxpayer had unreported income. As a rationale for its decision, the
Weimerskirch court observed that absent a showing by the
Commissioner, the taxpayer, in a case of unreported income, would have
the difficult task of proving a negative. Id. Such is not the
case with a deduction.
"The presumption
in favor of the Commissioner is a procedural device which requires the
taxpayer to come forward with enough evidence to support a finding
contrary to the Commissioner's determination." Rockwell, 512
F.2d at 885. The evidence offered by the Fosters to rebut the
presumption was testimony that their recordkeeping system was accurate
and that the examining revenue agent so scrambled their records that
they could not be reassembled to prove the legitimacy of the claimed
deductions. The Fosters do not dispute the Commissioner's assertion
that they agreed with several of the Commissioner's adjustments, thus
undermining their argument that their record‑ keeping system was
fail‑safe. In any event, we agree with the Tax Court that the Fosters'
self‑certification of their record‑keeping system is not a substitute
for proof of their deductions. Deductions are a matter of legislative
grace with the taxpayer bearing the burden of their substantiation.
Rockwell, 512 F.2d at 886. We cannot say that the Tax Court's
decision that the Fosters did not carry this burden was clearly
erroneous. See Zmuda v. Commissioner, 731 F.2d 1417, 1421 (9th
Cir.1984).
E.
Penalty
The Tax Court
affirmed the Commissioner's assessment of a penalty against Jack and
Gladys Foster for negligent or intentional disregard of income tax
rules and regulations. 26 U.S.C. § 6653(a) (1976). We vacate the
assessment. This is a case of first impression with no clear authority
to guide the decision makers as to the major and complex issues. The
positions taken by the Fosters were reasonably debatable. Under all of
the circumstances, we do not believe it can be fairly said that the
Fosters acted negligently or intentionally in disregard of the law.
AFFIRMED in part, VACATED in
part.