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[PUBLISH]
IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT
________________________
Nos. 14-15773, 14-15774
________________________
Agency Nos. 16263-11, 2068-12
CHRISTINE C. PETERSON,
ROGER V. PETERSON,
Petitioners - Appellants,
versus
COMMISSIONER OF IRS,
Respondent - Appellee.
________________________
Petitions for Review of a Decision of the
U.S. Tax Court
________________________
(May 24, 2016)
Before ROSENBAUM and FAY, Circuit Judges, and MIDDLEBROOKS, * Judge.
FAY, Circuit Judge:
*
The Honorable Donald M. Middlebrooks, United States District Court Judge for the Southern
District of Florida, sitting by designation.
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Christine C. Peterson and Roger V. Peterson 1 appeal the decision of the
United States Tax Court, determining deferred compensation payments under
corporate plans made after Peterson’s retirement from Mary Kay, Inc. (“Mary
Kay”) in tax year 2009 were derived from her former Mary Kay association,
making them subject to self-employment tax. We affirm in part and dismiss in
part.
I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
A. Mary Kay Sales Structure and Commission Compensation
Mary Kay is a manufacturer and seller of cosmetics, toiletries, skin care, and
related products. Mary Kay has prospered in the United States and
internationally, because of its indigenous, highly incentivized levels of
independent sellers, who are commission compensated. A Mary Kay seller can
progress rapidly according to her sales and commissions; each advancement is
more lucrative to the seller and financially beneficial to Mary Kay. Unique to
Mary Kay are its post-retirement, deferred-compensation programs, the ultimate
1
Although Christine C. Peterson and Roger V. Peterson, husband and wife who filed joint tax
returns, have litigated these cases together, the issue on appeal concerns Christine Peterson’s
income derived from her retirement distributions, derived from her association with Mary Kay.
Hereinafter, “Peterson” refers to Christine Peterson, while “Petersons” refers to the taxpayer
couple.
2
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financial incentive for Mary Kay sellers, who have risen through the seller ranks
to earn the opportunity to participate in them.
All of Mary Kay’s sellers are independent contractors. The entry level is an
independent Beauty Consultant (“BC”), each of whom enters into a written
agreement with Mary Kay and commits to develop a customer base to whom they
sell Mary Kay products. BCs buy Mary Kay products wholesale and sell them
retail to public customers. BCs have two responsibilities: (1) to build a customer
base and (2) to recruit new BCs, from whom a BC earns commissions on
purchases made by their recruited BCs.
When a BC has recruited 24 independent BCs, she can become a Sales
Director (“SD”), which involves signing a SD agreement with Mary Kay. Her 24
BCs constitute a personal sales unit, from all of whom she earns commissions. A
SD has additional responsibilities: she oversees the BCs under her by educating
and inspiring them to excel in selling Mary Kay products. She also continues to
acquire additional personal units, from which she earns a percentage of their sales
commissions. BCs within a SD’s sales unit may become SDs, resulting in an
offspring sales unit, from which the SD continues to earn a percentage of their
sales commissions.
3
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A SD is eligible to advance to National Sales Director (“NSD”), the highest
level of the Mary Kay sales network, when she has acquired 20 offspring units and
is approved for the position by a Mary Kay committee. An NSD is the only
appointed Mary Kay sales position; each is required to sign an NSD Agreement,
which states the contingent relationship between an NSD’s responsibilities and her
commission compensation:
NSD recognizes that NSD’s earnings as a National Sales
Director are contingent upon the results of NSD’s efforts in
promoting the sale of Mary Kay cosmetics and in inspiring,
motivating, counselling and aiding others to become successful
sellers of Mary Kay cosmetics and successful Unit Sales
Directors. NSD agrees to assume responsibility for offering
effective, conscientious advice and assistance to Beauty
Consultants and Unit Sales Directors wishing to avail themselves
of NSD’s experience and suggestions for building successful
Mary Kay businesses of their own.
....
In consideration of the commission compensation provided under
this Agreement and the other rights and benefits provided
hereunder, NSD agrees to conscientiously and faithfully employ
NSD’s best efforts to promote the sale of Mary Kay cosmetics
throughout the market area served by Director’s Sales Group
during the period this Agreement is in effect.
NSD Agreement § 8.1, 8.2, 8.10 (emphasis added). NSDs generally no longer
solicit new Mary Kay customers; instead, they provide training, direction and
motivation through telephone calls, regular meetings, and workshops to Mary
Kay sales personnel, especially those in their networks whose wholesale
4
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purchases generate their commissions. The NSD Agreement details an NSD’s
status, obligations, and compensation relative to commissions from her sales
units, based on monthly wholesale purchase volume. 2 The percentage for
calculating an NSD’s commissions decreases as the offspring units become
farther removed from the NSD’s original sales unit.3
At the sole discretion of Mary Kay, NSDs, who had maintained a personal
sales unit prior to July 1, 1991, were eligible for a Director Unit Volume Bonus
based on an NSD’s personal sales unit’s monthly Unit Wholesale Purchase
Volume, while concurrently serving as an NSD as designated under Annex II of
the NSD Agreement. Based on the monthly Unit Wholesale Purchase Volume, an
NSD’s bonus ranged from $300 for the sales unit’s sales of $4,000 to $5,999 to
$3,500 for sales of $40,000 or more. NSD Agreement, Annex II at iii. A Senior
2
Regarding commission compensation, the NSD Agreement applicable in this case states the
NSD shall have the right to receive from [Mary Kay] incentive
compensation for NSD’s activities in counselling and motivating and
promoting retail sales and recruiting of the Units within NSD’s Sales Group
which shall be in the form of a monthly commission based upon the total
monthly wholesale purchases (“Wholesale Purchase Volume”) of all Mary
Kay cosmetics bought for resale by all members of the particular Sales
Group counselled and advised by NSD.
NSD Agreement § 3.1 (first emphasis added).
3
An NSD’s commission ranges from 5% to 8% for sales of $3,999.99 or less to $18,000 or more
for the Monthly Wholesale Purchase Volume of her First-Line Offspring. NSD Agreement,
Annex I at i. An NSD’s commission is 3% on her Second-Line Offspring Sales Unit’s
Combined Monthly Wholesale Volume and 1/2% on her Third-Line Offspring Sales Unit’s
Combined Monthly Wholesale Volume. Id.
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NSD also receives a 5% commission, payable on the Wholesale Purchase Volume
of the Personal Sales Unit of a First-Line Offspring Director, who becomes an
NSD; 3% for a Second-Line Offspring Director, who becomes an NSD; and 2%
for a Third-Line Offspring Director, who becomes an NSD. Id. The NSD
Agreement also subjects the NSD to a noncompetition agreement for two years
after termination of her NSD Agreement. 4
4
The noncompetition agreement in the NSD Agreement provides:
In consideration of the commission compensation provided under this
Agreement and the other rights and benefits provided hereunder, NSD
agrees to continuously and faithfully employ NSD’s best efforts to promote
the sale of Mary Kay cosmetics throughout the market area served by
Director’s Sales Group during the period this Agreement is in effect. NSD
further agrees not to engage; directly or indirectly; in soliciting or recruiting
Mary Kay Beauty Consultants or other Sales Directors to sell products or
services other than those sold by [Mary Kay] during the period this
Agreement is in effect and for a period of two (2) years after its termination.
NSD further agrees not to utilize, or knowingly permit any other person to
utilize, any names, mailing lists or other non-public business information
which NSD obtains during NSD’s association with [Mary Kay] for
recruiting or for promotion of the sale of any other company’s products in
the United States during the period that this Agreement is in effect and for a
period of two (2) years after its termination. NSD further agrees that during
the period of NSD’s business relationship with [Mary Kay] as a National
Sales Director and for a period of two (2) years following date of any
termination of such status for any reason, that NSD will refrain from
directly or indirectly soliciting or inducing any Sales Director or Beauty
Consultant to terminate their business relationship with [Mary Kay],
whether such solicitation or inducement be for NSD’s own account or that
of others. NSD further expressly agrees to refrain, during the period of
NSD’s relationship with [Mary Kay], whether such solicitation or
inducement be for NSD’s own account or that of others. NSD further
expressly agrees to refrain, during the period of NSDs relationship with
[Mary Kay] as a National Sales Director and for a period of two (2) years
following the date of any termination of such status from seeking, receiving,
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Relevant to this case, the NSD Agreement clearly provides the status of an
NSD is that of an independent contractor, who files state and federal tax returns as
a self-employed individual:
The relationship created and intended to be created is that NSD
acts as an independent contractor for commission compensation
measured by the results achieved, the measurement of those
results being the Wholesale Purchase Volume of NSD’s Sales
Group. It is recognized that NSD is not a joint venture with, or
partner, agent or employee of [Mary Kay]. Nothing in this
Agreement shall be deemed to permit or empower NSD to
conduct business in the name of, or on account of [Mary Kay], or
to incur or assume any expense, debt, obligation, liability, tax or
responsibility in behalf of, or in the name of [Mary Kay] or to act
in [Mary Kay’s] behalf to bind [Mary Kay] in any way
whatsoever. [Mary Kay] shall have and reserves no right of
power to determine or control the manner, means, modes or
methods by which NSD performs NSD’s activities or
accomplishes NSD’s objectives hereunder and shall only look to
or accepting directly or indirectly, any fee, commission, override
commission, financial benefit, contract right, monetary or non-monetary
reward or other form of compensation from any other company or business
organization based on or associated with the solicitation, recruitment,
enrollment or association by employment, contract or otherwise for such
company or business organization of any person whom NSD knows or has
reason to believe is then under contract as a member of [Mary Kay] or
business organization of any person whom NSD knows or has reason to
believe is then under contract as a member of the Mary Kay independent
sales organization. NSD agrees that [Mary Kay] may have, in addition to
any other remedies available at law, an injunction restraining NSD from any
violation of the terms of this Section 8.10, and that a temporary restraining
order may be issued, without prior notice to NSD, upon sworn application
therefor being made by [Mary Kay] setting forth the facts constituting any
such alleged violation.
NSD Agreement § 8.10 (emphasis added).
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NSD for results achieved, as measured by the Wholesale
Purchase Volume of NSD’s Sales Group.
As an independent contractor, NSD shall have the obligation to
file all necessary income tax returns to reflect self-employment
income in a manner required by any applicable state or Federal
laws or governmental regulations and, in connection therewith,
[Mary Kay] shall furnish NSD with a statement in the form
prescribed by law reflecting all compensation including all
commissions, prizes, awards, or other compensation paid by
[Mary Kay] to NSD or on NSD’s behalf during the year or other
legally prescribed reporting period.
The independent NSD will not be treated as an employee with
respect to any services for state or Federal tax purposes, or
otherwise.
Id. § 11.1, 11.3, 11.4 (emphasis added).
The NSD Agreement clarifies that NSDs are compensated by commissions
for sales of their sales units. They are not salaried employees but independent
contractors, whose incentive to increase their income is based on commissions
from sales of their sales units. It is to the financial benefit of an NSD and her sales
units working under her to maximize sales of Mary Kay products. Significantly,
the NSD Agreement in this case provides: “[Mary Kay] reserves the right to alter,
modify or change any discount, commission and bonus provision of this Agreement
from time to time by not less than sixty (60) days’ prior written notice to NSD to be
effective on or after the commencement of any annual renewal term of this
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Agreement.” 5 NSD Agreement § 3.4 (emphasis added). While Mary Kay has a
sales network of approximately 2.7 million worldwide, there are only 200 NSDs
and approximately 155 “emeritus” or retired NSDs. 6
B. Mary Kay Post-Retirement, Deferred-Compensation Programs for NSDs
Mary Kay offers two post-retirement, deferred-compensation programs for
which only NSDs are eligible as part of their pay package: (1) the Family
Security Program (“Family Program”) and (2) the Great Futures Program
(“Futures Program”). Jill Wedding, Mary Kay Director of Consultant
Management, testified at trial in the Tax Court: “I don’t know another direct
selling company that offers anything like [these Programs].” Trial Tr. 176. While
the retirement Programs are voluntary, if an NSD participates in either Program,
she must sever her NSD Agreement with Mary Kay at age 65, when the
Programs become effective. Wedding testified that she had “never seen [an
eligible NSD] decline” either program, since they are incentive for an NSD to
5
The NSD Agreement provides it is an annual calendar-year, employment contract : “Unless
otherwise terminated pursuant to the provisions hereof, the initial term of this Agreement shall
commence on the date first above written and end on December 31 of the same year and the
Agreement shall be automatically renewed each January 1 thereafter for additional periods of
one (1) year each.” NSD Agreement § 9.
6
Jill Wedding, Mary Kay Director of Consultant Management, testified at trial in the Tax Court
that Mary Kay refers to NSDs, who have completed their work for Mary Kay and thereby ended
their NSD Agreements as “emeritus” rather than “retired,” because “[w]e just don’t use
retirement since [NSDs] are self-employed.” Trial Tr. 175. Nonetheless, we will use “retired”
and “emeritus” interchangeably to refer to NSDs no longer actively associated with Mary Kay.
9
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maximize the sales of her area, because the Programs are “so financially
lucrative,” when she enters emeritus status; this incentive also means “[m]ore
revenue” for Mary Kay. Id.
1. Family Program
The preamble of the Family Program, adopted effective July 1, 1991,
“recognizes the valuable contribution made by those select group of independent
contractors who have attained the coveted position of ‘National Sales Director,’”
and Mary Kay “desires to establish a program which will offer financial security
and other valuable consideration to the National Sales Director and her family.”
Family Program, Preamble. 7 To be eligible for the Family Program, an NSD must
elect to participate; have an NSD Agreement with Mary Kay; have attained 65, the
normal retirement age; and have completed 15 years as an NSD. 8 Family Program
art. I, § 1.1, art. IV, § 4.1. The election of a NSD to participate in the Family
Program is “irrevocable.” Id. art. III, § 3.1. Each NSD who participates in the
Family Program “shall continue as a Participant under the Plan so long as she is
under contract with [Mary Kay] as an NSD.” Id. § 3.2. “An NSD shall receive
credit for NSD Service commencing with the original effective date of the NSD
7
Wedding testified the Family Program was “an incentive program to thank [NSDs] for building
other successful Mary Kay independent consultants and directors.” Trial Tr. 180.
8
The Family Program also provides for early retirement at 55 with 5 years of NSD service.
Family Program art. IV, § 4.3.
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Agreement executed by the NSD” for as long as she continues to be “an NSD
under a current and valid National Sales Director’s Agreement, including any
subsequent renewal, revision, amendment, modification or replacement” made by
Mary Kay to the NSD Agreement. Id. § 3.3(b).
The Family Program provides three types of benefits to an NSD and her
family: (1) if she dies or (2) becomes disabled after serving one year as an NSD,
and (3) financial payments for 15 years after the NSD takes emeritus status. The
financial payments, which are at issue in this case, are calculated on the average of
the highest three years of an NSD’s commissions of her last five years before
becoming emeritus. The amount the retired NSD is paid results from “a certain
percentage [of her former commissions] based on her age when she debuts as an
emeritus.” Trial Tr. 174. As part of NSDs’ pay package, Wedding testified the
Family Program payments are “based on the services they provided when they
were an active independent national sales director.”9 Id. 184 (emphasis added).
An NSD, Family Program participant, who retires at 65 after 15 years as an NSD,
receives the highest retirement benefit of 60% of her “Final Average Commissions,
9
Nan Smoot, Mary Kay Director of United States Taxes, testified the purpose of the Family
Program “is to provide for incentive payments based on past services.” Trial Tr. 259 (emphasis
added). It gave participating NSDs incentive to “increase [their] wholesale area production
which would provide for greater compensation in the future.” Id. 260.
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payable for 15 years.” 10 Family Program, Addendum I. “The Participant’s
normal retirement benefit shall be payable in the Normal Form of benefit payment
and shall be payable in monthly amounts equal to one-twelfth (1/12th) of the
annual amount of such benefit.” 11 Id. art. V, § 5.1.
The Family Program Agreement clearly states it is not an employment
contract and an NSD, Family Program participant is an independent contractor:
Participant hereby acknowledges her legal status as an
independent contractor, and pursuant to Internal Revenue Service
Code Section 3508, the services she performs as a direct seller
[prior to retirement] are such that she is not treated as an employee
of [Mary Kay] for Federal tax purposes, or otherwise. Further, her
association with the Company is not to be construed as creating an
agency relationship, or any other relationship . . . . The Plan is not
an employment contract and it shall not be construed to create or
otherwise give any NSD any employment right with [Mary Kay].
The maintenance of the Plan by [Mary Kay] shall not in any
manner affect [Mary Kay’s] rights to alter, modify or terminate its
contractual arrangement with any NSD.
Id. art. X, § 10.3 (emphasis added).
The Family Program contains a noncompetition agreement that states the
consideration an NSD has received from Mary Kay is its confidential and
10
“‘Final Average Commissions’ means the NSD’s annual average NSD Commissions for the
three Plan Years during which the NSD had the highest amount of NSD Commissions during the
last five Plan Years of NSD Service.” Family Program art. II, § 2.1(h).
11
“‘Normal Form’ means the payment of a retirement benefit, disability benefit or death benefit
to or with respect to [an eligible NSD Family Program Participant] (as the case may be) for a
period of 15 years from the date on which the first payment of a benefit was made to or with
respect to a [NSD Family Program Participant].” Family Program art. II, § 2.1(n).
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proprietary information, including marketing, financial, and product-development
information as well as sales lists. In return, an NSD Participant agrees not to use
this valuable information outside of Mary Kay for the NSD’s profit, which conduct
would constitute a breach of the NSD’s relationship with Mary Kay and give Mary
Kay the right to take legal action against the violating NSD. 12
12
The noncompetition agreement for the Family Program provides:
Participant acknowledges that, during her association with [Mary
Kay] as an NSD, she will have access to valuable information which is
highly confidential and proprietary in nature, such as marketing and financial
information, product development information and sales organization lists.
Participant agrees that she has received valuable consideration from [Mary
Kay] in the form of specialized skin care training and sales management
training in connection with her qualifications for, and business career as an
NSD. Additionally, Participant acknowledges that she has received valuable
publicity, goodwill, nationwide advertising and promotional support from
[Mary Kay] to enhance her business success. In consideration of the rights
and privileges contained in the Plan and other valuable consideration
referenced herein, Participant agrees to faithfully observe and comply with
the following covenants and agreements for so long as Participant is entitled
to receive benefits under the Plan: (1) Participant agrees not to promote,
distribute or sell to other members of the Mary Kay sales organization in the
United States of America, without [Mary Kay’s] prior written approval, any
products or services which are not produced, sold or endorsed in writing by
[Mary Kay]; and (2) Participant agrees not to promote, distribute or sell to
anyone any products which are not produced, sold and/or distributed by
[Mary Kay] in a manner which would falsely designate or suggest, or would
be likely to suggest or indicate such products as originating with, or endorsed
by [Mary Kay]; and (3) Participant agrees not to engage, directly or
indirectly in recruiting Mary Kay Beauty Consultants, Sales Directors or
National Sales Directors in the United States of America to sell products or
services other than those sold by [Mary Kay], or to utilize, or knowingly
permit any other person to utilize, any names, mailing lists or other
information which Participant has obtained during Participant’s association
with [Mary Kay] for recruiting or for promotion of the sale of any other
company’s products or services; (4) Participant agrees to refrain from
directly or indirectly soliciting or inducing any National Sales Director, Sales
Director or Beauty Consultant in the United States of America to terminate
their business relationship with [Mary Kay], whether such solicitation or
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In return for their longevity in overseeing a successful sales network in the
United States, the Family Program gave eligible NSDs an opportunity to provide
for deferred income following their retirement from Mary Kay with an income
percentage of the sales commissions of the sales network the NSD had developed.
For an NSD who retired at the normal retirement age of 65, 13 the income amount
was 60% of her Final Average Commissions, the average NSD commissions for
inducement be for Participant’s own benefit or that of others; and (5)
Participant agrees to refrain from seeking, receiving or accepting, directly or
indirectly, any fee, commission, override commission, financial benefit,
contract right, monetary or non-monetary reward or other form of
compensation from any other company or business organization based on or
associated with the solicitation, recruitment, enrollment or association by
employment, contract or otherwise for such company or business
organization of any person whom Participant knows or has reason to believe
is then under contract as a member of the Mary Kay independent sales
organization. Participant agrees that [Mary Kay] may have, in addition to
any other remedies available at law, an injunction restraining Participant
from any violation of this Section 10.2, and that a Temporary Restraining
Order may be issued without prior notice to Participant, upon sworn
application therefore being made by [Mary Kay] setting forth the facts
constituting any such alleged breach of the Plan provisions.
Family Program art. X, § 10.2 (emphasis added).
13
“‘Normal
Retirement Date’ means the January 1 immediately preceding or immediately
following the date on which the Participant attains age 65 or any January 1 following the date on
which Participant has completed 15 years of NSD Service.” Family Program art. II, § 2.1(o).
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the three years an NSD had the highest amount of NSD commissions during the
final five Family Program years of NSD service.14
2. Futures Program
While the Family Program provided post-retirement, commission income to
an NSD participant from her domestic sales network, the Futures Program
incentivized an NSD to use her leadership skills in Mary Kay’s emerging markets
in countries outside the United States by affording similar post-retirement, global-
network-commission income to an NSD participant. The preamble of the Futures
Program “recognizes the valuable contribution made by those select group of
independent contractors who have attained the coveted title of ‘Independent
National Sales Director’ . . . within its independent sales organization and have
extended their Mary Kay business into certain designated countries beyond the
boundaries of the United States of America,” and Mary Kay “desires to establish a
program which will offer financial reward and other valuable consideration to the
NSD and her family.” Futures Program, Preamble. Mary Kay established the
Futures Program effective January 1, 2005, “for the benefit of its NSDs who have
14
The sales network, commission percentages varied according to the NSD’s age at retirement.
The percentages ranged from 40% for early retirement at 55 to 58% for retirement at 64. Family
Program, Addendum I. An NSD eligible for early retirement under this schedule would “receive
the ‘Applicable Percentage’ of [her] Final Average Commissions, payable for 15 years.” Id.
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extended their Mary Kay business into certain designated countries outside of the
United States of America.” Futures Program art. I, § 1.1.
The normal NSD participant must be “credited with at least 5 years of NSD
service” and “shall discontinue her Mary Kay business in the Applicable GLDP
Market(s) . . . as of the Normal Participation Date applicable to such
Participant.” 15 Id. art. IV, § 4.1 (emphasis added). “The Normal Participation
Date shall be the January 1 immediately preceding or immediately following the
date on which such Participant attains age 65” and “such Participant has completed
15 years of NSD Service.” Id. “[I]n no event shall the Normal Participation Date
hereunder be different from the Participant’s Normal Retirement Date under
Participant’s Family Security Program.” Id. An NSD’s election to participate in
the Futures Program also is “irrevocable.” Id. art. III, § 3.1. An eligible NSD who
elects to participate in the Futures Program first must have submitted a
Participation Agreement and a Beneficiary Designation Form to Mary Kay. Id. A
retired NSD participating in the Futures Program is eligible to receive monthly
15
GLDP means Global Leadership Development Program, which was created by Mary Kay “to
give those experienced members of its independent sales organization, specifically Independent
Sales Directors and Independent National Sales Directors, the opportunity to enhance their
income earning potential by extending their Mary Kay business beyond the United States of
America into certain designated countries.” Futures Program art. II, § 2.1(j).
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Normal Participation Awards “based on the NSD GLDP Commissions of the
Participant’s Great Futures Area for the applicable month.”16 Id. art. V, § 5.1.
Like the Family Program, retired NSDs, with a minimum of 5 years as an
NSD, earn commission percentages of sales of their foreign sales units depending
on their age at retirement. These percentages range from 40% for retirement at 55
to 60% for retirement at 65, paid monthly for 12 years. 17 Futures Program,
Addendum I. The Futures Program contains a noncompetition agreement with the
same provisions as the noncompetition agreement in the Family Program for a
retired NSD participant. Futures Program art. X, § 10.2. The Futures Program
also provides disability and death benefits payable to the NSD’s designated
beneficiary. Futures Program art. V, § 5.3, 5.4.
16
NSD GLPD Commissions refers to “all commissions paid to an NSD by [Mary Kay] for her
business as an NSD in each respective” country outside of the United States, “based on the total
Net Wholesale Volume Production and the GLDP commission in effect.” Futures Program art.
II, § 2.1(r). NSD GLPD Commissions “includes both the annual NSD Offspring Development
Bonus for NSD offspring and the annual, qualified first-line Independent Sales Director
Offspring Development Bonus.” Id. “The term does not include other commissions from her
personal unit, or other prizes, contest or awards.” Id. Great Futures Area “means Participant’s
NSD GLDP Commissionable Area existing,” when the NSD retired “in exchange for the
opportunity to participate in” the Futures Program. Id. art. II, § 2.1(k) (emphasis added).
“Great Futures Area shall be as composed” in each country outside the United States, when the
NSD’s participation in the Futures Program becomes effective, “subject only to any growth or
reduction within the Great Futures Area, including debut of new units and termination of existing
units, in each” country. Id.
17
“The monthly award for those [NSD] Participants under Normal Participation [65 at
retirement] is 60% of NSD GLDP Commissions of the Participant’s Great Futures Area for that
particular month, subject to Participant’s Great Futures Area having Net Wholesale Production
for the respective month, for twelve (12) consecutive years.” Futures Program, Addendum I.
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As in the Family Program, an NSD under the Futures Program receives the
designated percentage of commissions from her foreign sales units after she retires
and is no longer providing training and motivation to them. If she effectively
trained her sales units while she was an active NSD, then her foreign sales units
should be able to continue to produce the same level of sales “after she’s no longer
providing services.” Trial Tr. 272. The incentive to an NSD is to maximize
training her foreign sales units; if they continue to produce, she enhances her
retirement commission compensation as well as Mary Kay’s profits. If she does
not train them to produce successfully, then they will not perform well after the
NSD’s retirement and her post-retirement commission compensation will diminish
accordingly.
Regarding the Futures Program as it related to post-retirement commissions of
an NSD who trained sellers in emerging markets in foreign countries, Smoot
likened Mary Kay’s Futures Program to “succession planning in a normal office
environment.” Trial Tr. 313. In building a foreign market for Mary Kay products,
it takes time “for [sellers abroad] to catch the excitement that the national sales
director hopefully is, in those services she’s providing to that country.” Id. 313.
While the fruition of the sales of the NSD may be delayed by “teaching [the
foreign sellers] the right things,” they “will be successful because you taught them
well.” Id. 313-14. Consequently, by “providing education, training, team
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building, motivation, [which] is sustainable going forward . . . that ability will
continue and . . . will be reflected in future sales.” Id. at 313. While initial sales in
a new foreign market would not be comparable to sales in a new market in the
United States, the foreign sales were expected to increase under the training and
guidance of the NSD.18 Developing a foreign Mary Kay sales market for an NSD,
who knew she would be retiring within a few years, was a timely incentive to
invest her efforts there, because she would benefit financially in retirement with
the success of her foreign sales units after she retired, as would Mary Kay.
Additionally, like the Family Program, the Futures Program agreement
provides the participating NSD is an independent contractor without employment
rights with Mary Kay:
Participant hereby acknowledges her legal status as an
independent contractor, and the services she performs as a direct
seller are such that she is not treated as an employee of [Mary Kay]
for Federal tax purposes, or otherwise. Further, her association
with [Mary Kay] is not to be construed as creating an agency
relationship, or any other relationship other than as previously
stated in this Section 10.3. The Program is not an employment
contract and it shall not be construed to create or otherwise give
any NSD any employment right with [Mary Kay]. The
maintenance of the Program by [Mary Kay] shall not in any
manner affect [Mary Kay’s] rights to alter, modify or terminate its
contractual arrangement with any NSD.
18
Smoot testified that Peterson “provided [sales] services in Mexico and there were three or four
other countries that she provided services to, although they were very, very small.” Trial Tr.
270. Consequently, Peterson’s Futures Program commissions were considerably less than her
commissions from the domestic Family Plan.
19
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Futures Program art. X, § 10.3 (emphasis added).
C. 2008 Amendments to NSD Retirement Programs
Both the Family Program and the Futures Programs provided Mary Kay
could “amend, modify or terminate” them “at any time and in any manner.”
Family Program art. VIII, § 8.1; Futures Program art. VIII, § 8.1. Effective
December 1, 2008, Mary Kay amended both Programs under art. VIII, § 8.1 with
the respective prefacing explanation: “Mary Kay Inc. acting through its Board of
Directors hereby amends the Program as follows to comply with new tax rules
under Internal Revenue Code Section 409A.” Preface to Mary Kay 2008
Amendment No. 1 to the Family Program & Futures Program. Accordingly, art. X
of each Program was amended by adding section 10.9, stating “Section 10.9 is
added to specifically reflect compliance with Section 409(A) of the Internal
Revenue Code:”
Internal Revenue Code Status. The Program [Plan] is intended to be
a non-qualified deferred compensation arrangement and is not
intended to meet the requirements of Section 401(a) of the Code. The
Program [Plan] is intended to meet the requirements of Section 409A
of the Code and shall be construed and interpreted in accordance
with such intent. No person connected with the Program [Plan] in any
capacity, including but not limited to [Mary Kay] and any affiliates of
[Mary Kay] and their respective directors, officers, agents and
employees, makes any representation, commitment or guarantee that
any tax treatment, including but not limited to federal, state and local
20
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income, estate, and gift tax treatment, will be applicable with respect
to any amounts deferred or payable under the Program [Plan] or that
such tax treatment will apply to or be available to a Participant on
account of participation in the Program [Plan].19
Mary Kay Amend. No. 1, § 10.9, Family Program & Futures Program (emphasis
added).
Smoot testified she was involved in drafting the Mary Kay Amendments for
the Family Program and Futures Program in 2008 to ensure they complied with
IRS regulation 409A. She explained the IRS “did not want a receiver of income to
be able to manipulate what year they received the income”; “if . . . deferred
compensation plans were not compliant with the 409A rules, . . . the person who
would be receiving the payments, would be subject to a 20 percent penalty on the
plan amounts” plus “100 percent of all amounts under the plan to be paid in the
future, that amount would be subject to tax up front.” Trial Tr. 285, 286.
Consequently, Smoot testified the 2008 Amendments to the Family and Futures
Programs were favorable to a participating NSD, because, instead of the 20 percent
penalty, the regular income tax rate would have applied “on all future payments
covered under the contract.” Id. at 286. As the Tax Court judge clarified with
Smoot, this penalty tax would have been imposed “before receipt . . . , if the
Program did “not comply with [the IRS] rules,” which Smoot testified would be
“pretty onerous” to the NSD participants. Id. at 286, 287 (emphasis added).
19
The amendment to the Family Program uses “Plan” instead of “Program.”
21
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Through the 2008 Amendments, Smoot testified the intent of Mary Kay was to
make “extremely clear to the IRS” that the 409A rules applied, which was to the
benefit of the NSDs participating in the Family Program and Futures Program. Id.
at 289.
In response to the judge’s inquiry as to the significance of a nonqualified-
deferred-compensation arrangement, Smoot responded the participant NSDs are
“independent contractors,” and “there’s no way to have a qualified pension plan
for a non-employee. So, it had to be a non-qualified plan. It’s not a pension
arrangement under 401.” Id. at 288 (emphasis added). For tax purposes, Smoot
explained Mary Kay treated payments to NSDs under the Family Program and
Futures Program as deferred compensation based on past services, making them
ordinary deductions for Mary Kay. She testified the 2008 Amendments did not
change Mary Kay’s tax reporting regarding these Programs: “We have always
treated the [Program] payments as payments for past services” or deferred
compensation. Id. at 293. This deferred-compensation treatment for payments
under the Family Program and Futures Program is shown by Mary Kay on its
books, tax returns, and reported to the IRS as nonemployee compensation on Form
1099-MISC.
22
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D. Peterson’s Mary Kay Career
Peterson became an independent BC for Mary Kay in the summer of 1982 in
the San Diego, California, area. Because she was extremely successful at selling
Mary Kay products and recruiting new BCs, Peterson had acquired 14 personal
sales units and became a SD in March 1983. Three months later, she had a pink
Cadillac, which was acquired by a SD with a sustained high sales level for 6
months.
Peterson and her husband subsequently moved to Houston, Texas, for several
years, where she became an NSD within her first nine years with Mary Kay. On
July 1, 1991, Peterson signed her National Sales Director Agreement with Mary
Kay, which enabled her to earn commissions on wholesale purchases of Mary Kay
products by her network of independent BCs, SDs, and NSDs. Wedding testified
Peterson was “in the top ten,” sometimes in the top two or three in ranking of all
Mary Kay NSDs, based on sales commissions. Trial Tr. 192.
Peterson and her husband, who was her business partner, next moved to
Chicago, Illinois, for approximately four years.20 Thereafter, the Petersons moved
to Atlanta, Georgia, for approximately eight years. Peterson testified that the
20
Peterson’s husband, who had sold real estate and was retired, instructed her in marketing. He
had suggested that they move to Houston and Chicago, respectively the fourth and third largest
cities in the United States, for increased ability to add to Peterson’s Mary Kay sales units.
23
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moves to large cities were to increase her potential to develop new personal sales
units, which generated her commissions. She explained: “[W]e have no territories.
. . . So I can keep [sales units] that I’d already built,” while adding new ones. Id.
at 205. As an NSD, Peterson did not continue to sell products but focused on
educating, training, and inspiring her sales units and offspring to sell Mary Kay
products and become NSDs. At trial, Peterson testified her relationship to Mary
Kay “was an independent contractor,” meaning “I was in business for myself.” Id.
at 209, 210. She explained: “I was building my business to sell back . . . . I was
building a business. That’s why I was running so hard.” Id. at 211.
As part of Peterson’s NSD compensation package, she was offered the
opportunity to participate in the Family Program and the Futures Program. On
November 1, 1992, Peterson entered into the Family Program agreement, which
became effective for her as of July 1, 1991. Peterson entered into the Futures
Program on July 1, 2005; she and her husband executed the Beneficiary
Designation Form for the Futures Program on January 18, 2011, designating their
daughter, Shannon Andrews, as the beneficiary. Peterson continued as a highly
successful NSD for almost 19 years. The year before her retirement in 2009, she
had an international network of approximately 23,000 individuals and received
commissions on wholesale purchases in excess of $15,000,000.
24
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By a Mary Kay letter dated September 26, 2008, Peterson received notice
and copies of the 2008 amendments to the Family Program and Futures Program to
comply with amendments made to the Internal Revenue Code by section 409A.
The letter informed “the revisions contained in these amendments make no
substantive change to the benefits available under the Programs. The changes
simply clarify the language of the Programs to make it absolutely clear that all
provisions are in compliance with section 409A.” Mary Kay letter to Peterson
(Sept. 26, 2008). The letter stated the amendments would become effective on
December 1, 2008. Id.
The Mary Kay letter also included Frequently Asked Questions concerning
the provisions of section 409A of the Internal Revenue Code.
Section 409A generally provides that unless specified requirements are met,
all amounts deferred under a nonqualified deferred compensation plan for
all taxable years are currently includable in the recipient’s gross income
and therefore subject to immediate taxation, and the recipient may be
assessed potential interest and penalties. Under section 409A, a
nonqualified deferred compensation plan is generally any plan that provides
for the deferral of compensation. The deferral of compensation occurs
generally if the terms of the plan and relevant facts and circumstances, the
service provider has a legally binding right during a taxable year to
compensation that is or may be payable in a later taxable year.
Mary Kay letter to Peterson, Frequently Asked Questions at 1 (Sept. 26, 2008)
(second & third emphases added). Specifically addressing the effect of the
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Amendments on the Family Program and Futures Program, the Frequently Asked
Questions informed:
Section 409A is broad in its application and specifically covers payments to
independent contractors that are made on a deferred basis, unless certain
specific exceptions are met. Because payments under the Family Security
Plan and Great Futures Program begin when you cease active NSD service
and are paid out into the future, it appears that these Programs likely fall
within the broad definitions applied to section 409A and they were therefore
amended to be 409A compliant.
Id. (emphasis added). Regarding Peterson’s notice of the 2008 Amendments,
which stated her commission compensation under the Family Program and Futures
Program would be nonqualified deferred compensation, Smoot testified Mary Kay
heard “[n]ot a word” from Peterson. Trial Tr. 290.
Peterson retired from Mary Kay on January 1, 2009, the year she would
become 65, after being an NSD for almost 19 years. Consequently, she was
entitled to receive 60% of the applicable commissions each year through 2023
under the Family Program and through 2020 under the Futures Program. In 2009,
Peterson received $408,133.44 under the Family Program and $12,840.87 under
the Futures, totaling $420,974.31. Mary Kay reported those Program payments as
Nonemployee Compensation on Form 1099, issued to Peterson for tax year 2009. 21
21
In addition to the 2009 Program payments, the Nonemployee Compensation reported on
Peterson’s Form 1099 included non-Program commissions of $68,732.87 she earned in 2008, but
were paid to her in January 2009.
26
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Despite Peterson’s noncompetition agreements under her NSD, Family
Program, and Futures Program agreements, Peterson testified she “joined another
networking company to start a new business in Isagenix,” which sells health and
nutritional products. Trial Tr. 222. In a conference call, Isagenix asked Peterson
to relate her sales experience, including comparing the sales operation of Mary
Kay and Isagenix. Id. Wedding testified Mary Kay learned Peterson had made
“some derogatory comments” about Mary Kay during this “conference call with
another direct selling organization,” after her retirement. Id. at 170. As a result of
these comments, Mary Kay informed Peterson of being “disappointed” in her. Id.
at 223. Consequently, Peterson testified Mary Kay did not permit her to go on a
Greece cruise, one of three cruises she was entitled to take in her first five years of
retirement under the Family Program. Id. at 223-24. Peterson was not further
penalized for her perceived derogatory comments about Mary Kay, and never
stopped receiving her monthly retirement commissions under the Family Program
and Futures Program from Mary Kay. To date, Peterson’s monthly commission
payments from the Family Program and Futures Program have continued
uninterrupted.
27
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E. Petersons’ Businesses and Tax Reporting
In 1991, Peterson hired financial advisor Craig Foster and his company, First
Tax, to assist her with an IRS audit; he also assisted her with a subsequent tax
audit. Pleased with Foster’s services, the Petersons sought his advice regarding
their estate planning and asset protection. Following Foster’s advice, the Petersons
created several business entities. On April 1, 2000, they established the Christine
Peterson Defined Benefit Plan and Trust (“CP Plan”) and designated themselves as
trustees with Peterson as the employer. The Petersons formed NSD Interests, L.P.
(“NSD Interests”), a Georgia limited partnership in December 2002. The
Petersons were limited partners of NSD Interests with NSD Management as the
managing general partner. Peterson and her husband were respectively president
and secretary of NSD Management. For NSD Management to pay compensation
to the Petersons, Foster testified NSD Interests, the “limited partnership, a part of
its ordinary and necessary business expenses, paid management fees to the
managing general partner for services that it rendered through the use of its
employees,” the Petersons. Trial Tr. 127.
Peterson attempted to assign her Mary Kay commissions to NSD Interests
before her retirement. The assignment was ineffective, because Mary Kay did not
consent. On December 29, 2003, NSD Interests entered into an adoption
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agreement relating to the NSD Interests, L.P., Defined Benefit Plan and Trust
(“NSD Plan”). The adoption agreement provided that it amended and restated the
CP Plan, the previously established qualified plan of the employer, effective
January 1, 2000. The NSD Plan designated NSD Interests as the employer and the
Petersons as trustees.
First Tax prepared all the agreements creating the business entities for the
Petersons and prepared their tax returns for the years involved in this litigation,
2006-2009. Foster testified regarding the interrelationship of the business entities
his company had created for the Petersons:
There were several ways in which Mrs. Peterson and her
husband both received monies from the limited partnership. They
received compensation from the management company as officers of
the management company for services that they were rendering on
behalf of the business. They received fringe benefits and allowances
for doing the same. They were provided a pension plan through the
company for the same, just like any other normal company. And then
in their role as limited partners, the partnership distributed the excess
profits to them directly through Form K1 as the distribution items.
Id. at 66. For tax purposes, Foster considered the distributive share of limited
partner NSD Interests as not being subject to self-employment tax, because “it was
passive income.” Id.
Regarding Peterson’s 2009 commission payments from the Mary Kay
Family Program after her retirement, Foster considered those payments to be either
29
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of two types of characterizations. First was a retirement plan that “was not pre-
funded” with no effect on the balance sheet of Mary Kay, which “simply paid as
they went with respect to this as a promise to the taxpayer.” Id. at 70. Second was
the “purchase of [Peterson’s Mary Kay] business because there was a covenant not
to compete, there was good will associated with it, there was the sale of the assets
of all of the clients’ business and activities, and [she was] prohibited from any kind
of activity involved in Mary Kay going forward.” Id. Foster, however, chose to
characterize Peterson’s emeritus commission income under the Family Program as
“retirement income, ordinary income but clearly not subject to self-employment
tax, because they had no more earnings associated with it.” Id. at 71.
Mary Kay reported nonemployee compensation to Peterson of $750,127 in
2006, $799,191 in 2007, and $892,543 in 2008. In 2009, Peterson retired from
Mary Kay, which reported nonemployee compensation to her under the Family
Program and Futures Program of $489,707. The Petersons timely filed their 2006,
2007, 2008, and 2009 joint federal tax returns. On Schedule C, Profit or Loss
From Business, the Petersons reported “Other Expenses” equivalent to Peterson’s
nonemployee commission compensation from Mary Kay, which are deductions not
subject to self-employment tax. NSD Interests timely filed federal income tax
returns for the same years and reported gross receipts of $750,127, $799,191,
$892,543, and $489,707, the identical amounts reported on the Petersons’
30
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Schedules C. NSD Interests claimed deductions of $275,365, $312,266, and
$173,500 for retirement contributions to the NSD Plan relating to tax years 2006,
2007, and 2008.
The Petersons used the same tax-accounting methods in 2009 as they had in
tax years 2006 through 2008. They reported Peterson’s income from the Family
and Futures Programs as “gross receipts or sales” on their joint tax return, and
claimed a deduction in an amount equal to the Mary Kay payments, characterizing
the claimed deduction as “nominee income” of NSD Interests to avoid self-
employment tax. The program payments were reported on the 2009 tax return of
NSD Interests.
F. Tax Court Proceedings
The IRS sent the Petersons a notice of deficiency relative to tax years 2006
and 2007 on April 7, 2011, and a notice of deficiency for tax years 2008 and 2009
on October 18, 2011. The notices advised the Petersons were subject to self-
employment tax for their distributive shares of net partnership income reported by
NSD Interests and had incurred accuracy-related penalties under IRS Code section
6662(a). Residing in Florida, the Petersons timely filed petitions with the Tax
Court on July 11, 2011, and January 23, 2012. In amendments to answers filed on
August 30, 2012, and December 13, 2012, the IRS determined NSD Interests was
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not engaged in a trade or business during the subject years; deductions made by
NSD Interests were not ordinary and necessary expenses; all income reported to
NSD Interests was allocable to Peterson; NSD Interests did not qualify as an
employer pursuant to IRS Code section 401(c)(4); and Peterson’s nonemployee
Mary Kay compensation was subject to self-employment tax. The Petersons
petitioned the Tax Court for redetermination of their tax deficiencies. Following
concessions, two issues remained for the Tax Court to decide: (1) whether
retirement-plan contributions made by NSD Interests for 2006, 2007 and 2008
were deductible under IRS Code section 404(a), and (2) whether distributions
received by the Petersons during 2009 under the Family Program and the Futures
Program were subject to self-employment tax.
Following trial, the Tax Court issued its Memorandum Findings of Fact and
Opinion. The Tax Court determined NSD Interests was not entitled to deduct
retirement-plan contributions for tax years 2006, 2007, and 2008, because it was
not engaged in a trade or business during those years.22 The Tax Court, however,
22
Regarding whether NSD Interests was engaged in a business during tax years 2006, 2007, and
2008, the Tax Court reasoned:
Petitioners concede that NSD Interests “was not engaged in a trade or
business in 2008 . . . and was merely the passive recipient of income”. Mrs.
Peterson readily acknowledged that NSD Interests was merely a “structure” to
hold her Mary Kay earnings and that it was created “for the tax savings”.
Furthermore, petitioners concede that during 2006, 2007, and 2008, NSD Interests
had no income and that the income reported on its returns should have been
32
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concluded Peterson was an employer for the CP Plan, which entitled her to deduct
the retirement contributions for tax years 2006, 2007, and 2008.23 The Tax Court
decided Peterson’s 2009 retirement distributions from the Family Program and
Futures Program were derived from her former Mary Kay business, and the
Agreements for both Programs provided they were deferred compensation, which
made these distributions subject to self-employment tax. 24
reported on petitioners’ returns. In sum, NSD Interests was not engaged in a trade
or business during 2006, 2007, and 2008. Accordingly, NSD Interests is not
entitled to deduct retirement plan contributions relating to these years.
T.C. Memo. 2013-271, at 6-7 (Nov. 25, 2013) (citations omitted).
23
In concluding Peterson was entitled to deduct retirement contributions under the CP Plan for
tax years 2006, 2007, and 2008, the Tax Court explained:
Respondent concedes that the NSD plan is valid; Mrs. Peterson “was engaged in
carrying on a Mary Kay business during the taxable years 2006, 2007, and 2008”;
and certain “expenses that were originally reported on the Form 1065 for NSD
Interests are allowable as deductions and are reportable on Schedule[s] C of
petitioners’ Form[s] 1040”. Mrs. Peterson formed the CP Plan and was
designated as the employer pursuant to it. On December 29, 2003, NSD Interests
amended and restated the CP Plan. The NSD Plan defined an “Employer” as “the
entity specified in the Adoption Agreement, any successor which shall maintain
this Plan and any predecessor which has maintained this Plan.” Mrs. Peterson
(i.e., a predecessor who maintained the plan) was an “Employer” pursuant to the
NSD Plan, and the retirement contributions were “expenses which would be
deductible under section 162”. Accordingly, Mrs. Peterson is entitled to deduct,
pursuant to section 404(a), the retirement contributions relating to 2006, 2007,
and 2008.
Id. at 7-8 (citations and footnote omitted) (alterations in original).
24
Regarding its conclusion the 2009 retirement distributions from the Family Program and
Futures Program were subject to self-employment tax, the Tax Court reasoned:
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The Tax Court’s decision, issued in Case No. 16263-11, concerned the
Petersons’ reporting for tax years 2006 and 2007, before Peterson retired. Tax
Court Case No. 2068-12 dealt with the Petersons’ reporting for tax years 2008 and
2009. The Petersons’ notice of appeal to this court states they are appealing the
attached Tax Court decision, “determin[ing] deficiencies Petitioners owe for 2008
and 2009 Federal income tax.” Notice of Appeal (Dec. 29, 2014). This is Tax
Court Case No. 2068-12. The Tax Court decision in Case No. 16263-11,
concerning the Petersons’ income-tax deficiencies for tax years 2006 and 2007,
Petitioners contend that the distributions they received during 2009
pursuant to the FSP [Family Security Program] and the GFP [Great Futures
Program] agreements are not subject to self-employment tax. We disagree.
Section 1401 imposes a tax on a taxpayer’s self-employment income. Self-
employment income consists of gross income derived by an individual from any
trade or business carried on by that individual. Therefore, Mary Kay’s 2009
distributions pursuant to the FSP and the GFP agreements are subject to self-
employment tax if they were “derived” from Mrs. Peterson’s business . . . .
Pursuant to the FSP agreement, Mrs. Peterson’s distributions were based on her
average commissions over the five years prior to her retirement. Pursuant to the
GFP agreement, Mrs. Peterson’s distributions were based on the postretirement
wholesale volume of her network (i.e., how well the network performed based on
her prior services). . . . Moreover, the FSP and GFP agreements expressly
provided that the distributions were deferred compensation (i.e., related to Mrs.
Peterson’s prior labor). Petitioners failed to adduce proof sufficient to alter the
construction of these unambiguous agreements or show that they were
unenforceable. Accordingly, the 2009 FSP and GFP distributions are subject to
self-employment tax pursuant to section 1401.
Id. at 8-9 (citations omitted) (emphasis added).
34
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was not attached to the notice of appeal; they do not address it on appeal.25
Nonetheless, Tax Court Case No. 16263-11 was assigned Appeal No. 14-15773 in
this court, and Tax Court Case No. 2068-12 was assigned Appeal No. 14-15774 in
this court, apparently because these were consolidated cases in the Tax Court.
Both parties agree that only Tax Court Case No. 2068-12, our Appeal No.
14-15774, was appealed. 26 In their reply brief, the Petersons further clarify they
specifically have appealed only tax year 2009, for which the Tax Court found their
tax deficiency for self-employment tax to be $33,594. Accordingly, the sole issue
we address is whether the 2009 distributions from the two post-retirement
Programs are subject to self-employment tax, a first-impression issue for this
circuit.
25
We lack jurisdiction to decide a case improperly appealed procedurally. See Fed. R. App. P.
3(c)(1) (“The notice of appeal must . . . (B) designate the judgment, order, or part thereof being
appealed . . . .”); Fed. R. App. P. 13(a)(3) (stating “Rule 3 prescribes the contents of a notice of
appeal” from a Tax Court decision).
26
The Commissioner notes: “Because taxpayers did not file a notice of appeal from the decision
in Tax Court Case No. 16263-11, this Court lacks jurisdiction and should dismiss No. 14-
15773.” Appellee’s Br. at xvi. The Commissioner further suggests: “It appears that the Clerk of
the Tax Court misinterpreted the notice of appeal as appealing from both decisions . . .,
presumably because the cases had been consolidated and the notice of appeal was filed
[incorrectly] in both. The docketing of No. 14-15773 appears to have resulted from that clerical
error.” Id. at n.2 (citations omitted). In their Reply Brief, the Petersons state: “Peterson concurs
that this Court does not have jurisdiction over Tax Court Case No. 16263-11 and this Court’s
Case No. 14-15773 because Peterson appealed only tax year 2009.” Appellants’ Reply Br. at 1.
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II. ANALYSIS
We have jurisdiction to review decisions of the Tax Court on appeal “in the
same manner and to the same extent as decisions of the district courts in civil
actions tried without a jury.” 26 U.S.C. § 7482(a)(1). “Generally, the Tax Court’s
findings of fact, like those of a district court, are subject to the ‘clearly erroneous’
standard of review.” Steffens v. Comm’r, 707 F.2d 478, 482 (11th Cir. 1983)
(quoting Comm’r v. Duberstein, 363 U.S. 278, 291, 80 S. Ct. 1190, 1200 (1960));
see Patterson v. Comm’r, 740 F.2d 927, 930 (11th Cir. 1984) (“The tax court’s
finding that an additional tax is due will not be overturned unless clearly
erroneous.”). But “the Tax Court’s rulings on the interpretation and application of
the statute are conclusions of law subject to de novo review,” and its “findings of
ultimate fact which result from the application of legal principles to subsidiary
facts are subject to de novo review.” Estate of Wallace v. Comm’r, 965 F.2d 1038,
1044 (11th Cir. 1992) (citations, internal quotation marks, and alterations omitted).
“The taxpayer has the burden of showing that [s]he did not negligently or
intentionally disregard the [tax] rules.” Patterson, 740 F.2d at 930. We may
affirm the Tax Court on any grounds supported by the record. See Steffens, 707
F.2d at 483.
36
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A. Self-Employment Tax and Deferred Compensation
Under the Internal Revenue Code, “[t]he term ‘self-employment income’
means the net earnings from self-employment derived by an individual . . . during
any taxable year.” 26 U.S.C. § 1402(b). Net earnings are defined as “the gross
income derived by an individual from any trade or business carried on by such
individual” less deductions, which are inapplicable to this case. 27 26 U.S.C. §
1402(a). “A tax is imposed on ‘self-employment income’ in order to fund social
security benefits for self-employed individuals.” Patterson, 740 F.2d at 929 (citing
26 U.S.C. §§ 1401, 1402(b)). For those who are self-employed, “it is the
counterpart of the taxes imposed on wages of employees by the Federal Insurance
Contributions Act (FICA).” 28 Steffens, 707 F.2d 481 (citing Newberry v. Comm’r,
76 T.C. 441, 443 (1981)). To be self-employment income, “there must be a nexus
between the income received and a trade or business that is, or was, actually
carried on.” Newberry, 76 T.C. at 444 (emphasis added). In addition, the income
“must arise from some actual (whether present, past, or future) income-producing
activity of the taxpayer before such income becomes subject to . . . self-employment
27
The legislative history of the self-employment-tax provisions shows Congress included the
possibility self-employed individuals could continue to receive income from their trade or
business after retirement. See S. Rep. No. 81-1669, at 30 (1950), reprinted in 1950
U.S.C.C.A.N. 3287, 3319.
28
The Self-Employment Contributions Act (“SECA”), 26 U.S.C. §§ 1401-1403, “imposes the
equivalent of the sum of the employee and employer FICA taxes for employees.” Umland v.
Planco Fin. Servs., Inc., 542 F.3d 59, 61 (3d Cir. 2008).
37
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taxes.” Id. (emphasis added). “The self-employment tax provisions are broadly
construed to favor treatment of income as earnings from self-employment.” Bot v.
Comm’r, 353 F.3d 595, 599 (8th Cir. 2003).
In enacting 26 U.S.C. § 409A, Congress titled it “Inclusion in gross income
of deferred compensation under nonqualified deferred compensation plans.” The
statute defines a “nonqualified deferred compensation plan” as “any plan that
provides for the deferral of compensation,” other than exceptions not applicable to
this case. 26 U.S.C. § 409A(d)(1). A plan provides for a “deferral of
compensation” where, “under the terms of the plan and the relevant facts and
circumstances, the service provider has a legally binding right during a taxable
year to compensation that . . . is or may be payable to . . . the service provider in a
later taxable year.” Treas. Reg. § 1.409A-1(b)(1) (emphasis added). “The term
‘plan’ includes any agreement or arrangement, including an agreement or
arrangement that includes one person.” 26 U.S.C. § 409A(d)(3). The
consequences of not including deferred compensation under a nonqualified,
deferred compensation plan are interest and a penalty of “20 percent of the
compensation which is required to be included in gross income.” 26 U.S.C. §
409A(a)(1)(B)(i)(II). “It is well settled law that the Commissioner of the Internal
Revenue Service, in determining income tax liabilities, may look through the form
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of a transaction to its substance.” Bradley v. United States, 730 F.2d 718, 720
(11th Cir. 1984).
The Tax Court concluded the Petersons do not dispute the 2008
Amendments to the Family Program and the Futures Program expressly
characterize them as “deferred compensation (i.e., related to Mrs. Peterson’s prior
labor).” T.C. Memo. 2013-271 at 9. Under the “Danielson rule,” that
characterization is controlling for tax purposes. Comm’r v. Danielson, 378 F.2d
771, 775 (3d Cir. 1967) (en banc); Spector v. Comm’r, 641 F.2d 376, 384-86 (5th
Cir. Unit A Apr. 1981) (adopting the Danielson rule). Our court has explained the
Danielson rule:
When a taxpayer characterizes a transaction in a certain form,
the Commissioner may bind the taxpayer to that form for tax
purposes. This is the rule: “a party can challenge the tax
consequences of his agreement as construed by the Commissioner
only by adducing proof which in an action between the parties [to the
agreement] would be admissible to alter that construction or to show
its unenforceability because of mistake, undue influence, fraud,
duress, et cetera.”
Plante v. Comm’r, 168 F.3d 1279, 1280-81 (11th Cir. 1999) (quoting Danielson,
378 F.2d at 775) (alteration omitted). Because Peterson had signed the retirement
Program agreements respectively in 1992 and 2005 permitting Mary Kay to amend
them prospectively, she necessarily had consented to the 2008 Amendments that
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expressly characterized the Family Program and Futures Program payments as
“deferred compensation” under a nonqualified compensation plan pursuant to
Section 409A of the Internal Revenue Code, 29 which makes the Danielson rule
applicable. 30 See Comm’r v. Nat’l Alfafa Dehydrating & Milling Co., 417 U.S.
29
The dissent asserts Peterson never consented to the 2008 Amendments to the Family Program
and Futures Program, which characterize Program payments as deferred compensation under a
nonqualified compensation plan pursuant to Section 409A of the Internal Revenue Code. But
that is precisely the type of change or clarification to which she agreed under the terms of the
two Mary Kay retirement Programs into which she voluntarily elected to enroll. Neither
standard Program agreement was personalized for Peterson other than to place her name at the
top of each agreement. Both the Family Program and the Futures Program contain identical
provisions permitting the Mary Kay Board of Directors to “amend, modify or terminate” either
Program “at any time and in any manner.” Family Program art. VIII, § 8.1; Futures Program art.
VII, § 8.1 (emphasis added). Consequently, by signing each Program agreement, Peterson
entered into separate Mary Kay retirement Program agreements specifically and unambiguously
providing Mary Kay could change the Program agreements unilaterally at any time and in any
way.
30
The Danielson rule was adopted by the former Fifth Circuit in Spector, 641 F.2d at 384-86,
and expressly adopted in this circuit in Bradley, 730 F.2d at 720, and Plante, 168 F.3d at 1280-
81. “Under the well-established prior panel precedent rule of this Circuit, the holding of the first
panel to address an issue is the law of this Circuit, thereby binding all subsequent panels unless
and until the first panel’s holding is overruled by the Court sitting en banc or by the Supreme
Court.” Smith v. GTE Corp., 236 F.3d 1292, 1300 n.8 (11th Cir. 2001). Nevertheless, the
dissent announces the Danielson rule does not apply in this case, because the facts are different
from those in Danielson and Plante. Such an approach would abolish our prior panel precedent
rule, since the facts of any two cases are rarely, if ever, identical.
Our circuit has applied the Danielson rule in cases involving various factual situations to
uphold an agreement. See, e.g., Plante, 168 F.3d 1279 (disallowing taxpayer to treat payment to
a corporation as a loan when unambiguous stock-purchase agreement stated taxpayer elected to
make a capital contribution, absent a showing of Danielson evidence); Bradley, 730 F.2d 718
(prohibiting taxpayers from characterizing funds received from the sale of real property as
payments on a continuing option rather than taxable interest income); Spector, 641 F.2d at 386
(recognizing taxpayer may challenge the form of his own transaction only upon presenting
“proof of mistake, fraud, undue influence or any other ground that, in an action between the
parties to the agreement, would be sufficient to set it aside or alter its construction”). Taxpayers
lose under the Danielson rule, when they “fail[] to submit any evidence to prove the existence of
a mistake, undue influence, fraud, or duress so as to merit release from the transaction form that
they employed.” Bradley, 730 F.2d at 720. The Petersons have presented no proof of mistake,
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134, 149, 94 S. Ct. 2129, 2137 (1974) (“This court has observed repeatedly that,
while a taxpayer is free to organize his affairs as he chooses, nevertheless, once
having done so, he must accept the tax consequences of his choice, whether
contemplated or not, and may not enjoy the benefit of some other route he might
have chosen to follow but did not.” (citations omitted)). 31
The Tax Court applied the Danielson rule and determined Peterson’s 2009
distributions from the Family Program and Futures Program were “subject to self-
employment tax pursuant to section 1401,” because the Petersons had “failed to
adduce proof sufficient to alter the construction of these unambiguous agreements
or show that they were unenforceable.” T.C. Memo. 2013-271, at 9 (citing Plante,
168 F.3d at 1280-81; Danielson, 378 F.2d at 775). The Petersons do not dispute
the Amendments to the Program agreements unambiguously characterize
undue influence, fraud, or duress that would release Peterson from her Family Program and
Futures Program agreements with Mary Kay.
31
The dissent represents the purposes of the Danielson rule are (1) to preclude unjust enrichment,
including the economic realities of a party’s unilateral, ex post facto altering the tax
consequences of an agreement and (2) to prevent the Commissioner from having to engage in
unnecessary “whipsaw” litigation. Unfair enrichment, involving economic realities, is
inapplicable to this case. Because Mary Kay had to comply with newly applicable Section 409A
of the Internal Revenue Code in 2008, this instead is a case of regulatory compliance. The IRS
can be “whipsawed” when it must “litigat[e] against two parties . . . to collect tax from only one
party.” Plante, 168 F.3d at 1281. Because the IRS seeks tax from the Petersons solely, its being
“whipsawed” is not an issue in this case. “[W]here parties enter into an agreement with a clear
understanding of its substance and content, they cannot be heard to say later that they overlooked
possible tax consequences.” Danielson, 378 F.2d at 778 (citation and internal quotation marks
omitted).
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Peterson’s post-retirement payments as deferred compensation. The undisputed
lack of ambiguity in the terms of the Program agreements necessarily precludes the
Petersons from “adducing proof which in an action between the parties would be
admissible to alter that construction.” Plante, 168 F.3d at 1280-81. When a
contract is unambiguous, Texas law holds the parties’ intent must be determined
from the contract terms alone. Friendswood Dev. Co. v. McDade & Co., 926
S.W.2d 280, 283 (Tex. 1996); see Valence Operating Co. v. Dorsett, 164 S.W. 3d
656, 662 (Tex. 2005) (recognizing, under Texas law, a written contract must be
construed in accordance with “the true intentions of the parties as expressed in the
instrument” (citations omitted)). 32 Therefore, the Danielson rule requires that the
Petersons are bound by the characterization of her 2009 Mary Kay, post-retirement
Program payments as deferred compensation, subject to self-employment tax.
B. Petersons’ Arguments
Throughout this litigation, the Petersons have argued her 2009 Family
Program and Futures Program payments constituted consideration for Peterson’s
ending her Mary Kay businesses and her agreement not to compete with Mary Kay
32
The NSD, Family Program, and Futures Program Agreements each provide Texas law controls
interpretation of the contract terms.
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post-retirement. 33 In essence, they represent it to be a sale of her domestic and
foreign businesses to Mary Kay. Based on this premise, the Petersons contend her
retirement Program payments did not derive from her previous Mary Kay business
and were not deferred compensation in substance, subject to self-employment tax.
These arguments are belied by the NSD, Family Program, and Futures
Program Agreements as well as the record in this case. There are no sales
agreements to evidence a sale of Peterson’s domestic and foreign businesses to
Mary Kay. 34 “A sale” is defined as “a transfer of property for a fixed price in
33
The Petersons specifically make this representation in their initial and reply briefs: “THE
PROGRAM PAYMENTS RECEIVED BY CHRISTINE PETERSON FROM MARY KAY IN
TAX YEAR 2009 ARE NOT SUBJECT TO SELF-EMPLOYMENT TAX WHEN THE
PAYMENTS . . . CONSTITUTED CONSIDERATION FOR PETERSON’S CESSATION OF
HER BUSINESS AND AGREEMENT NOT TO COMPETE.” Appellants’ Br. at 15;
Appellants’ Reply Br. at 4 (same).
34
Amici, 27 retired Mary Kay NSDs receiving Family Program and Futures Program payments
like Peterson, make the same argument that the noncompetition covenant is consideration for
payments under the Family Program and Futures Program for ending their Mary Kay businesses:
[U]nder the [Family and Futures] Programs’ agreements, each NSD expressly
promised, in exchange for receiving payments, not to compete with Mary Kay and
not to solicit any member of the Mary Kay sales force. The agreements also
explicitly state that the Program Payments represent consideration for Mary
Kay’s acquisition, at retirement, of the valuable goodwill and other rights
associated with the retiring NSD’s business. Each NSD’s business comprises a
highly developed network of beauty consultants and sales directors, the purchase
of which benefited Mary Kay by providing numerous customers and millions of
dollars in sales, revenue, and ultimately profit.
Br. of Amicus Curiae Play Shortstop LLC in Support of Appellants at 7 (emphasis added). Like
the Petersons, amici lift the noncompetition covenant from multiple pages of requirements in the
Family Program and Futures Program Agreements purportedly to establish consideration for the
sale of a NSD’s business on retirement, which the dissent adopts. Amici fail to recognize Mary
Kay NSDs are not required to retire at 65. They voluntarily participated in the retirement
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money or its equivalent.” Iowa v. McFarland, 110 U.S. 471, 478, 4 S. Ct. 210, 214
(1884). Nothing in the subject Agreements contains an express sales agreement or
evidence of vendible business assets.35
Moreover, the covenants not to compete that are one of many provisions in
the three lengthy NSD, Family Program, and Futures Program Agreements were all
broken by Peterson, when she became employed with another direct-selling
company within two years of her Mary Kay retirement. Although Mary Kay
reprimanded Peterson for obtaining what it viewed to be competing employment,
the only action it took against her was to preclude her from taking one of three
Programs, because the Family Program and Futures Program provide them a lucrative income
stream in retirement, which augments their highly financially successful, active Mary Kay years.
The amicus curiae brief was authored in part by the Petersons’ counsel. Id. at 3.
35
When the sale-of-business argument was made in the context of an insurance salesman’s
receipt of extended payments after terminating his business relationship with several insurance
companies, the Tenth Circuit reviewed the agreements with the insurance companies and found
no evidence of a sale of his business. Schelble v. Comm’r, 130 F.3d 1388, 1394-95 (10th Cir.
1997). That court concluded:
The Agreement does not refer to a seller, buyer or specific property to be sold. . . .
This [Agreement] language does not in any way refer to a sale. The Agreement
does not refer to a definite purchase price nor does it provide a basis of allocation
of payments to a purchase price of assets. There is no indication the parties
intended to treat the payments as a sale of an asset.
Id. at 1395. Consequently, the Tenth Circuit determined the insurance salesman’s after-
termination-of-employment, extended payments “were not proceeds from the sale of goodwill,”
were subject to self-employment tax, and affirmed the Tax Court. Id. But the dissent believes
Peterson’s Futures Program payments derive from the non-competition agreement in the Futures
Program Agreement. This is despite the fact that the revenue being generated by Peterson’s
foreign selling network is the result of her recruiting, training, supervising and motivating them
before her retirement.
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cruises to which she was entitled following her retirement. Significantly, she has
not missed one payment under the Family Program and Futures Program in her
retirement. On the facts of this record, the subject noncompetition agreements,
which the Petersons assert are consideration for the sale of Peterson’s businesses to
Mary Kay, were not determinative in Peterson’s receiving her post-retirement
commissions from her domestic and foreign networks she had trained, when she
was an active NSD for Mary Kay.
The Petersons’ argument that the Family Program and Futures Program
payments are not derived from Peterson’s prior Mary Kay business also is
undermined by the respective Agreements. 36 The Family Program Agreement
delineates the commission percentages Peterson would derive in retirement from
her network. This is the network of BCs, SDs, and NSDs Peterson recruited and
trained to sell Mary Kay products, which they would continue to sell. Under her
NSD Agreement, Peterson received stated percentages of her network’s sales
before she retired. The reason she entered into the optional Family Program was
so that she could continue to receive stated percentages of her network’s sales,
36
After an NSD retires, the selling skills she has taught her network determine the commissions
both she and her network will receive. This is the relation and derivation of the NSD’s prior
work, which establishes a productive selling network for Mary Kay. Through the Family
Program and Futures Program, Mary Kay provides a continuum of taxable commission payments
for an NSD into retirement. Therefore, NSDs are not fully compensated before they retire as
long as they receive taxable network-commission income derived from the sales skills they have
taught their network sellers.
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which derived from her recruiting and training her network sellers prior to her
retirement. Peterson could have continued working as an NSD and received the
percentages of sales from her network under her NSD Agreement, which did not
require her to retire at 65. When she executed the Family Program Agreement,
however, she committed to retirement at 65 and limited her receipt of percentages
of sales commissions from her network to 15 years, at which time she will be 80.37
The Futures Program provided NSDs incentive to develop a sales network in
other countries, which afforded Mary Kay expansion into foreign markets through
the leadership and training of its best, experienced producers. As a relatively
recent retirement program, the Futures Program provided the retired NSD
considerably less income after retirement than the domestic Family Program
commissions. 38 Nonetheless, it provided additional retirement, network-
commission income to a retired NSD for 12 years by augmenting percentage
commissions from the foreign network the NSD had recruited and trained, like her
domestic network under the Family Program. The percentage of foreign-network-
37
In Peterson’s case, the valuable advantage of the Family Program was that it guaranteed 15
years of percentages of commissions from her NSD network after she turned 65. Without the
Family Program, Peterson could become disabled or die; consequently, she and her family would
be unable to continue receiving her percentages of commissions from her network prior to her
becoming 80.
38
The Mary Kay foreign networks produced less income than the domestic networks, because
there were fewer of them, and they had not been in existence long enough to produce the sales-
commission income of the domestic networks.
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commission income was derived from the NDS’s work in other countries pre-
retirement. 39 Payments with the same character as prior commissions constitute
income derived from a petitioner’s self-employment. Erickson v. Comm’r, T.C.
Memo. 1992-585 at 6 (1992).
Despite the Petersons’ references to the clarification in the characterization
of the Family Program and Futures Program commission income under a
nonqualified plan as deferred compensation for tax purposes under the 2008
Amendments one month before Peterson retired in January 2009, no factual or
legal issue has been created. When she signed Family Program and Futures
Program Agreements, Peterson was notified Mary Kay could make changes to the
Programs at any time. She also was given the requisite notice of the effective date,
two months, by a Mary Kay letter dated September 26, 2008. Smoot, who handles
United States tax matters for Mary Kay, testified Peterson did not object after
receiving the letter informing her of this Amendment to the retirement Programs.
The fact this Amendment coincidentally became effective on December 1, 2008, is
39
Peterson recruited, trained, supervised, and coordinated a foreign sales network of some 23,000
sellers from whom she received substantial taxable percentage-commission income. Her foreign
network continued to sell Mary Kay products and produce income for Mary Kay, themselves,
and Peterson, based on the selling skills she had taught them, after her retirement. This foreign
sales income would not exist for Mary Kay, the foreign sales network, or Peterson were it not for
the investment of her time and energies to recruit and teach Mary Kay products and selling skills
to the foreign network sellers. To say the Mary Kay sales Peterson’s foreign sales network
produced after her retirement was not “derived from” her efforts is to deny reality.
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inconsequential. 40 The Amendment was noticed and effected in accordance with
the Family Program and Futures Program Agreements Peterson had executed with
Mary Kay.
The Petersons and amici argue against subjecting their retirement payments
under the Family Program and Futures Program to self-employment tax.41 They
40
To the extent the dissent states or implies Mary Kay’s notification to NSDs participating in the
Family Program and Futures Program that the characterization of Program payments for tax
purposes was directed at Peterson, who retired in January 2009, there is no support in the record.
In accordance with the Family and Futures Program Agreements, Nathan P. Moore, Mary Kay
General Counsel, notified all NSDs participating in the retirement Programs by a September 26,
2008, letter that Mary Kay had adopted Amendment No. 1 to the Family Program and Futures
Program to clarify the Programs complied with Section 409A of the Internal Revenue Code,
effective December 1, 2008, as required by the IRS for all corporate retirement plans. Moore’s
notification letter to NSDs explains the Family Program and Futures Program had been operated
with the intent of complying with the official IRS characterization since January 2005. Nan
Smoot, Mary Kay Director of United States Taxes, testified in tax court that, because the IRS
409A rules had gone through the procedural process involving several proposals, a comment
period, and revisions, affected plans were not required to comply until 2008.
Therefore, Mary Kay simply notified NSD Program participants it officially was required
to comply with the characterization by the IRS in 2008 for its tax reporting of Family and
Futures Program payments to retired NSDs. The fact Peterson retired one month later was
purely coincidental. Since her employment with Mary Kay, Peterson had been classified for her
tax reporting as a self-employed individual. It is hard to imagine a more ambitious, savvy and
sophisticated business person than Peterson, who made geographic moves to progress rapidly
through the Mary Kay ranks from BC to become a top NSD earner. She and her husband had
employed a financial planner, who testified at the tax trial, to advise them on how to best invest
and utilize her earnings for tax purposes. How she decided to invest and shelter her earnings was
entirely her choice, but it was her tax reporting of her considerable income from the Program
payments that was not acceptable to the IRS. Importantly, Mary Kay’s notification to NSDs
participating in the retirement programs was to inform them of the consequences of Mary Kay’s
IRS requirement to characterize Program payments as deferred compensation under a
nonqualified compensation plan so they could file their taxes accordingly to avoid incurring
interest and a 20 percent penalty. Implementing this tax characterization in 2008 by Mary Kay
was an IRS requirement.
41
Amici represent approximately 250 Mary Kay, retired NSDs currently receiving payments
from the Family Program and Futures Program; that number increases annually with about 20
NSDs retiring each year. Br. of Amicus Curiae at 1. Therefore, amici join the Petersons in
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primarily rely on two nonbinding circuit cases involving insurance salesmen,
whose payments after terminating their relationships with their insurance
companies were found not to be subject to self-employment tax. Gump v. United
States, 86 F.3d 1126 (Fed. Cir. 1996); Milligan v. Comm’r, 38 F.3d 1094 (9th Cir.
1994) 42; but see Schelble v. Comm’r, 130 F.3d 1388 (10th Cir. 1997) (concluding
representing our decision on self-employment tax on payments from the Family Program and
Futures Program will affect an increasing number of retired Mary Kay NSDs. But they fail to
recognize that characterizing their retirement-commission payments as nonqualified deferred
compensation subject to self-employment tax benefits them by preventing interest and a 20
percent penalty on Family Program and Futures Program payments, if the self-employment tax
is not paid. They apparently want to avoid self-employment taxes on these retirement benefits
by crafting an accounting, reporting method to recharacterize them, as the Petersons did. This is
not permissible under the governing tax law.
42
In 1997, Congress amended 26 U.S.C. § 1402 by adding subsection (k) for the specific purpose
of “codif[ying] the standard established in Milligan with respect to termination payments made .
. . to an ‘insurance salesman.” Farnsworth v. Comm’r, 83 T.C.M. 1153, 1159 & n.5 (2002)
(citing H.R. Rep. No. 105-220, at 458 (1997) (Conf. Rep.)). As codified in § 1402(k), the
Milligan standard holds that self-employment tax does not apply to post-termination payments
from an insurance company to its former insurance salesman, provided four requirements
inapplicable to this case are satisfied. See 26 U.S.C. § 1402(k)(2), § 1402(k)(3), 1402(k)(4)(A),
§ 1402(k)(4)(B). The Petersons concede § 1402(k) was intended to codify the Milligan standard,
which unambiguously applies only to contractual termination payments to former insurance
agents. Appellants’ Br. at 19-20. By urging the application of Milligan in this case, the
Petersons and amici invite this court to expand § 1402(k) beyond the confines of its text.
Appellants’ Br. at 20; Amicus Curiae Br. at 9. If Congress had intended the Milligan standard to
be applied outside the context of termination payments to insurance salesmen, it would have so
stated. Instead, it unambiguously limited the standard to the context of termination payments to
former insurance agents.
In addition, the legislative history of § 1402(k) states “[n]o inference is intended with
respect to the [self-employment] tax treatment of payments that are not described in [§
1402(k)].” H.R. Rep. No. 105-220, at 458 (1997) (Conf. Rep.), reprinted in 1997-4 (Vol. 2) C.B.
1457, 1928; see Ruckelshaus v. Sierra Club, 463 U.S. 680, 686 n. 8, 103 S. Ct. 3274, 3278 n.8
(1983) (“If Congress had intended the far-reaching result urged by respondents, it plainly would
have said so, as is demonstrated by Congress’ statement that a less sweeping invitation was
adopted.”). Moreover, if Milligan accurately reflected the generally applicable “derived from”
standard under § 1402(a), then § 1402(k) would be superfluous. See, e.g., Nunnally v. Equifax
Info. Servs., LLC, 451 F.3d 768, 773 (11th Cir. 2006) (“It is a cardinal principle of statutory
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insurance salesman’s after-termination-of-employment payments were subject to
self-employment tax). We distinguish these insurance cases on at least four bases.
First, their products are different. Insurance policies, whether they are for life,
automobiles, fire and casualty, or general coverage involve contracts with a
customer for a specific time period; they have to be renewed, when that term
expires. That is not the case with fungible cosmetic sales, which do not involve
contracts with customers or renewals. Second, the calculation of after-termination-
of-business payments for insurance salesmen is based on methods and concepts,
such as renewals, adjustments, and deductions, which are germane to the insurance
business. Third, while insurance salesmen and Mary Kay NSDs are independent
contractors, their means of operation are entirely different. Insurance salesmen
work singularly; the commissions they garner are the result of each salesman’s
individual work. In contrast, Mary Kay NSDs no longer are selling cosmetics but
lead and train their ever increasing networks, whose sales generate the NSDs’
commissions before and after their retirement, which meet the requirement under a
nonqualified plan for deferred compensation, derived from previous work as an
independent contractor. Fourth and most distinctive, the Mary Kay Family
construction that ‘a statute ought, upon the whole, to be so construed that, if it can be prevented,
no clause, sentence, or word shall be superfluous, void, or insignificant.’” (citation omitted)). We
decline to expand § 1402(k) beyond its text, as the Petersons and amici urge. The dissent,
however, ignores this legislative history and case law clearly limiting Milligan to insurance
salesmen.
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Program, for percentages of commissions from NSDs’ domestic networks, and
Futures Program, for percentages of commissions from their foreign networks, are
one of a kind. As Jill Wedding, Mary Kay Director of Consultants, testified at the
Tax Court trial, the Family Program and Futures Program are “unique” concerning
after-retirement programs for direct-sales companies. 43 For these reasons, we do
not consider the after-termination payments of insurance salesmen to be
comparable to the Mary Kay Family Program and Futures Program for the purpose
of determining whether commission payments received by NSDs in retirement are
subject to self-employment tax as deferred compensation under a nonqualified
plan. The Petersons “failed to establish that [Peterson] qualified for an exemption
to the [self-employment] tax” imposed on her 2009 deferred payments for the
Family Program and Futures Program. Patterson, 740 F.2d at 929.
On the facts of this case and controlling law, we hold the percentage
commissions received by Peterson, a retired NSD, under the Family Program and
Futures Program are subject to self-employment tax, because they are classified
specifically as deferred compensation, derived from her prior association with
43
We do not have the insurance agreements to determine if those provisions or the
quantity/quality test used in the insurance business has any genuine relevance to Mary Kay’s
unique product-sales operation. The obvious differences, however, are notable. For example,
the insurance cases, on which the dissent relies, do not involve sales networks in foreign
countries.
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Mary Kay. Because the Petersons did not pay the self-employment tax Peterson
owed for her 2009 commission payments from the Family Program and Futures
Program, “the tax court did not err in upholding the additional tax imposed by the
IRS,” including interest and penalties. Id. at 930. The appeal from the decision of
the Tax Court upholding Peterson’s self-employment tax for 2009, our Appeal No.
14-15774, is AFFIRMED. The consolidated appeal from the decision of the Tax
Court relating to tax years 2006 and 2007, our Appeal No. 14-15773, is
DISMISSED as improperly filed.
AFFIRMED IN PART; DISMISSED IN PART.
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ROSENBAUM, Circuit Judge, dissenting in part and concurring in the judgment in
part:
To be taxable as self-employment income, an individual’s income must be
(1) derived, (2) from a trade or business, (3) carried on by that individual. See 26
U.S.C. § 1402(a)-(b). Here the parties agree that the payments Christine Peterson
received under Mary Kay’s Family Security Program and Great Futures Program
(collectively, the “Programs”) are related in some way to the Mary Kay business
formerly carried on by Peterson. The only issue is whether the payments “derive”
from that business.
The Majority holds that they do based on the “Danielson rule.” Maj. Op. at
pp. 36-41. That judge-made rule permits the Commissioner of the Internal
Revenue Service to bind a taxpayer to her initial characterization of the form of a
transaction. See generally Comm’r v. Danielson, 378 F.2d 771 (3d Cir. 1967) (en
banc); see also Plante v. Comm’r, 168 F.3d 1279, 1280 (11th Cir. 1999). The
Majority asserts that, by operation of the agreements Peterson executed to enroll in
the Programs, she consented to Mary Kay’s characterization of Program payments
as “deferred compensation.” According to the Majority, she is therefore prohibited
from challenging that characterization by the Danielson rule. Because it is well-
established that “deferred compensation” derives from a taxpayer’s prior labor and
is subject to the self-employment tax, the Majority concludes that Peterson must
pay the self-employment tax on the program payments.
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Peterson, however, never characterized the payments as deferred
compensation. Instead, the agreements Peterson executed to enter Mary Kay’s
programs empowered Mary Kay to make unilateral amendments to the Programs.
Years after Peterson and Mary Kay entered into the agreements, Mary Kay
invoked that power to unilaterally characterize payments made under the Programs
as “deferred compensation.” The Danielson rule has never been applied on facts
like these. Nor should it be. Accordingly, I cannot agree with the Majority
opinion’s application of the Danielson rule here and respectfully dissent from that
portion of the opinion.
Because I would hold that the Danielson rule is inapplicable here, I would
apply the well-established Newberry test to determine whether there is a “nexus”
between the payments Peterson received under the Programs and her Mary Kay
business. Newberry v. Comm’r, 76 T.C. 441, 444 (1981). Such a nexus exists
between the Family Security Program payments and Peterson’s work as a Mary
Kay National Sales Director, so I concur in the Majority’s judgment holding that
the self-employment tax is applicable to these payments. On the other hand, there
is no such nexus between the payments made under the Great Futures Program and
Peterson’s Mary Kay labor, so I would hold that the self-employment tax is
inapplicable to those payments, and I therefore respectfully dissent from the
Majority’s judgment to the contrary.
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I.
The parties agree that if the payments made to Peterson pursuant to the
Family Security Program (“Family Program”) or Great Futures Program (“Futures
Program”) “derived” from her work as a Mary Kay National Sales Director
(“NSD”), they are subject to the self-employment tax. See 26 U.S.C. § 1402(a)-
(b); Milligan v. Comm’r, 38 F.3d 1094, 1097 (9th Cir. 1994). It is likewise well-
accepted, and again the parties agree, that “deferred compensation” necessarily
“derives from” a trade or business within the meaning of § 1402(a)-(b). See
Jackson v. Comm’r, 108 T.C. 130, 137-38 (1997) (holding that payments were not
subject to self-employment tax because they were not deferred compensation);
Milligan, 38 F.3d at 1099 (9th Cir. 1994) (same). The parties therefore agree that
if the Family Program and the Futures Program payments are deferred
compensation, they are subject to the self-employment tax. But the parties dispute
whether Program Payments are, in fact, deferred compensation.
A.
The Majority sides with the Commissioner of the Internal Revenue Service
(“Commissioner” or “IRS”) and holds that the payments are “deferred
compensation” under the Danielson rule. The Danielson rule permits the
Commissioner of the IRS to bind a taxpayer to the tax consequences of her
agreement, as construed by the Commissioner, unless the taxpayer “adduc[es]
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proof which in an action between the parties to the agreement would be admissible
to alter that construction or to show its unenforceability because of mistake, undue
influence, fraud, duress, etc.” Danielson, 378 F.2d at 775.
In Danielson, the stockholders of Butler County Loan Company (“Butler”)
decided to sell the company to Thrift Investment Corporation (“Thrift”) for $374
per share. 378 F.2d at 773. Thrift drafted the sales agreement and allocated $222
per share to the contract for the sale of stock and $152 per share to a covenant not
to compete because the allocation to the covenant provided favorable tax
consequences for Thrift. Id. After signing the sales agreement and receiving the
funds, each of the Butler stockholders reported the entire sum he or she received as
capital gains. Id. at 773-74. The Commissioner issued a notice of deficiency with
respect to the sum attributable to the covenant not to compete. Id. at 774.
In the Commissioner’s view, that portion of the payment was taxable as
ordinary income, that is, at a higher rate than capital gains. Id. at 774. Upon the
stockholders’ petitioning for a redetermination of the deficiency, the Tax Court
ruled in favor of the stockholders, holding that “the covenants were not realistically
bargained for by the parties and that the amounts allocated thereto by Thrift were
in reality that part of the purchase price of the stock which represented a premium
on corporate receivables.” Id.
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The Commissioner appealed the decision. Id. On appeal, the Third Circuit
formulated the Danielson rule and reversed the Tax Court, holding that the
taxpayers could not escape the tax consequences of the sales agreement’s explicit
allocation of $152 per share to the covenant not to compete. Id. at 774-79.
We’ve adopted the Danielson rule and applied it in factually similar
situations to the one found in Danielson. See Plante, 168 F.3d at 1280-81
(applying Danielson rule to hold a taxpayer to a Stock Purchase agreement’s
designation of a sum as a “capital contribution”); Spector v. Comm’r, 641 F.2d
376, 383-86 (5th Cir. Unit A Apr. 1981) (applying Danielson rule to conclude that
a buy-out agreement carefully and intentionally structured as a liquidation was a
“liquidation,” as opposed to “sale” subject to capital-gains tax). 44 We’ve also
added our own gloss to the rule, explaining that “[w]hen a taxpayer characterizes a
transaction in a certain form, the Commissioner may bind the taxpayer to that form
for tax purposes.” Plante, 168 F.3d at 1280.
Here, the Majority asserts that Peterson is bound by the Danielson rule
because she “consented” to the characterization of Program Payments as “deferred
compensation.” Maj Op. at 36-41; see also id. at 39 n.29. But Peterson never
44
Pursuant to Bonner v. City of Prichard, 661 F.2d 1206, 1209 (11th Cir. 1981) (en
banc), opinions of the Fifth Circuit issued prior to October 1, 1981, are binding precedent in the
Eleventh Circuit.
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consented to Mary Kay’s characterization in such a way that she could herself be
said to have characterized the Program payments in the Danielson sense.
Instead, Peterson entered into agreements to enroll in the Family Program in
1992 and the Futures Program in 2005, both of which contained provisions
permitting Mary Kay to later unilaterally “amend, modify or terminate” the
Programs “at any time and in any manner.”
Years later, Mary Kay exercised that authority by “amending” the
agreements to characterize the Program payments as “a non-qualified deferred
compensation arrangement” intended to meet the requirements of a non-qualified
compensation plan under Section 409A of the I.R.C. 45 According to the Majority,
45
The amendments became effective December 1, 2008, one month before Peterson
retired, approximately sixteen years after Peterson executed the Family Program agreement, and
three years after she executed the Futures Program agreement. In relevant part, the 2008
Amendments read,
“Section 10.9 is added to specifically reflect compliance with Section 409(A) of the
Internal Revenue Code:”
Internal Revenue Code Status. The Program [Plan] is intended to be a non-
qualified deferred compensation arrangement and is not intended to meet the
requirements of Section 401(a) of the Code. The Program [Plan] is intended to
meet the requirements of Section 409A of the Code and shall be construed and
interpreted in accordance with such intent. No person connected with the
Program [Plan] in any capacity, including but not limited to [Mary Kay] and any
affiliates of [Mary Kay] and their respective directors, officers, agents and
employees, makes any representation, commitment or guarantee that any tax
treatment, including but not limited to federal, state and local income, estate, and
gift tax treatment, will be applicable with respect to any amounts deferred or
payable under the Program [Plan] or that such tax treatment will apply to or be
available to a Participant on account of participation in the Program [Plan].45
Mary Kay Amend. No. 1 § 10.9, Family Program & Futures Program.
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Peterson “consented” to Mary Kay’s unilateral characterization of Program
payments as “deferred compensation” in the sense that she had previously
consented to Mary Kay’s authority to unilaterally amend the Programs. The
Commissioner argues, and the Majority agrees, that Peterson is therefore
prohibited from challenging the “deferred compensation” characterization by the
Danielson rule.
I respectfully disagree. To be clear, I do not, as the Majority suggests,
dispute that Peterson consented to Mary Kay’s amendment of the Agreements to
include the language in the 2008 Amendments as a matter of contract law. See
Maj. Op. at 39 n.29. Rather, I take issue with the Majority’s second-order
conclusion that Peterson’s consent to unilateral amendments to the Programs
somehow permitted Mary Kay to bind Peterson to its post-hoc characterization of
the Program payments for purposes of applying the judicially crafted Danielson
rule. Indeed, the Amendments did not purport to amend the Programs
substantively but instead to simply characterize the Programs as they existed
before the Amendments.
As an initial matter, no court, to my knowledge, has applied the Danielson
rule to bind a taxpayer to her counterparty’s ex post facto, unilateral
characterization of a transaction. Neither the Majority nor the Commissioner
points to any such authority. Instead, the cases applying the Danielson rule have
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done so where the taxpayer herself either (1) executed a document at the time of
the transaction explicitly characterizing a transaction in a particular form; 46 or (2)
intentionally structured a transaction in a particular form for tax purposes.47
Indeed, one of our sister circuits has held that the Danielson rule cannot be
“meaningfully applied” in cases where the transacting parties did not mutually and
specifically agree to a particular term in a contract. See Patterson v. Comm’r, 810
F.2d 562, 572 (6th Cir. 1987). In sum, I have not been able to find any direct
support, in this Circuit or anywhere else, for the Majority’s application of the
Danielson rule to bind Peterson to Mary Kay’s post-consummation, unilateral
characterization of the Program agreements.
Nor should the Danielson rule apply in this case. The Danielson rule serves
two purposes, neither of which is vindicated by the Majority’s decision. First, the
rule seeks to prevent a party from unjustly enriching itself by unilaterally altering
the intended tax consequences of a transaction after consummation. See
Danielson, 378 F.2d at 775. The Danielson Court explained as follows:
46
See, e.g., Plante, 168 F.3d at 1281 (applying the Danielson rule where taxpayer
executed stock purchase agreement explicitly characterizing a sum as a “capital contribution”);
Bradley v. United States, 730 F.2d 718, 720 (11th Cir. 1984) (applying the Danielson rule where
taxpayer executed a sale agreement and later attempted to argue that the transaction was not
“sale” but an “option” agreement); Danielson, 378 F.2d at 771 (taxpayers signed sales agreement
explicitly allocating portions of the proceeds of a sale to a covenant not to compete).
47
See, Spector, 641 F.2d at 383-86 (Danielson rule precluded a taxpayer from arguing
that a transaction was a “sale” where the taxpayer intentionally structured the transaction as a
“liquidation” for tax purposes).
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[T]o permit a party to an agreement . . . to attack [a]
provision for tax purposes, absent proof of the type
which would negate it in an action between the parties,
would be in effect to grant, at the instance of a party, a
unilateral reformation of the contract with a resulting
unjust enrichment. If allowed, such an attach [sic] would
encourage parties unjustifiably to risk litigation after
consummation of a transaction in order to avoid the tax
consequences of their agreements. And to go behind the
agreement at the behest of a party may also permit a
party to an admittedly valid agreement to use the tax laws
to obtain relief from an unfavorable agreement.
Of vital importance, such attacks would nullify the
reasonably predictable tax consequences of the
agreement to the other party thereto. Here the buyer
would be forced to defend the agreement in order to
amortize the amount allocated to the covenant. If
unsuccessful, the buyer would lose a tax advantage it had
paid the selling-taxpayers to acquire. In the future buyers
would be unwilling to pay sellers for tax savings so
unlikely to materialize.
Id. Thus, the first purpose of permitting the Commissioner to bind a taxpayer to
the form in which she initially characterized a transaction is to prevent unilateral,
ex post facto contract revisions. As a result, the rule discourages parties from
risking litigation by attempting to unilaterally reform their agreements post-
consummation, and it ensures that future parties can reliably allocate the tax
consequences of their transactions.
The Danielson rule also serves as a prophylactic to prevent the
Commissioner from pursuing unnecessary “whipsaw” litigation. See id. at 775;
Plante, 168 F.3d at 1281. If two taxpayers adopt divergent characterizations of the
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proceeds of a single transaction, the Commissioner faces the possibility of
“los[ing] out on revenue that logically should have come from one of the parties.”
N. Am. Rayon Corp. v. Comm’r, 12 F.3d 583, 587 (6th Cir. 1993). In these
instances, the Commissioner is “confronted with the necessity for litigation against
both buyer and seller in order to collect taxes properly due.” Danielson, 378 F.2d
at 775. So we’ve explained that the second purpose of binding taxpayers to their
characterizations of their transactions under the Danielson rule “is to prevent the
IRS from being ‘whipsawed’: litigating against two parties . . . to collect tax from
only one party.” Plante, 168 F3d at 1281.
Applying the rule here stands the first purpose for which the rule was
formulated on its head. Peterson, the taxpayer, made no attempt to alter the
express terms of the transaction that she and Mary Kay agreed to at formation; she
merely seeks review and enforcement of the terms of the Programs themselves.
Only Mary Kay has arguably attempted to alter the tax consequences flowing from
the substantive terms of the Programs to which the parties agreed.
In these circumstances, applying the Danielson rule does not prevent a
unilateral, post-consummation contract reformation. Instead, the Majority’s
application of the rule insulates Mary Kay’s unilateral, ex post
facto characterization of the Program payments from meaningful review. As a
result, today’s decision encourages parties to risk litigation by attempting
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unilateral, post-consummation contract reformations to avoid the tax consequences
of their transactions. Another result of today’s decision is that parties will be less
certain about the tax consequences of a transaction where the agreement contains a
unilateral amendment provision—whichever party has the power to amend the
agreement will be able to alter those consequences by simply re-characterizing the
transaction after consummation.
As a result, the Majority’s application of the Danielson rule here conflicts
with the first purpose the rule was meant to serve. See Danielson, 378 F.2d at 775.
The only way for us to vindicate the first purpose of the Danielson rule in cases
like this one is to set aside the Danielson rule and look through to the economic
realities of the transaction. 48
Nor does applying the Danielson rule in this case vindicate the rule’s second
purpose of preventing unnecessary whipsaw litigation. The Danielson rule was
never intended to entirely eliminate the need for the Commissioner to ever pursue
48
Responding to this point, the Majority contends that this case does not implicate the
first purpose of the Danielson rule—preventing parties from unjustly enriching themselves by
preventing them from re-characterizing transactions ex post facto—because Mary Kay did not
seek to unjustly enrich itself. Maj. Op. at 41 n.31. As an initial matter, I respectfully suggest
that the Majority’s conclusion that the first purpose of the Danielson rule is not implicated in this
case, whatever the reasoning, counsels against applying the Danielson rule at all. But in any
event, the Majority does not focus on the right party. The Commissioner here is trying to collect
taxes from Peterson, not Mary Kay. Thus, the Danielson concern here is whether Peterson, not
Mary Kay, is attempting to unjustly enrich herself. In other words, the purpose of applying the
Danielson rule in this case would be to ensure that Peterson does not unfairly shift tax liability to
Mary Kay via a post-hoc re-characterization of their transaction. I only suggest that applying the
Danielson rule here might permit Mary Kay to unjustly enrich itself to underscore my broader
point that applying the Danielson rule in circumstances like these actually incentivizes parties to
engage in the very post-hoc-tax-liability shifting the rule is meant to guard against.
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litigation against both parties to an agreement, as evidenced by the rule’s own
carve-out for cases where a taxpayer “adduc[es] proof which in an action between
the parties to the agreement would be admissible to alter [the Commissioner’s]
construction or to show its unenforceability because of mistake, undue influence,
fraud, duress, etc.” Danielson, 378 F.2d at 775.
Instead, the rule eliminates the need for the Commissioner to pursue
litigation against both parties in a very particular set of cases. Where a taxpayer
initially agrees to an express contractual characterization or form and later attempts
to re-characterize the term or form, the Danielson rule acts as a prophylactic to
prevent the IRS from having to pursue the taxpayer’s counterparty out of a concern
that a court will agree with the taxpayer’s ex post facto re-characterization. See
Plante, 168 F.3d at 1281-82 (the Danielson rule prevents the IRS from having to
pursue whipsaw litigation by preventing a party from “alter[ing] the express terms
of his contract by arguing that the terms did not represent economic reality”
(emphasis added)); see also Patterson, 810 F.2d at 572 (“The Danielson rule can
only be meaningfully applied in those cases where a specific amount has been
mutually allocated to the covenant as expressed in the contract.” (emphasis
added)).
The Danielson rule, however, has no application in cases where, as here, the
taxpayer does not seek to avoid an express contractual term or form. See Plante,
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168 F.3d at 1282; Patterson, 810 F.2d at 572. In these cases, the Commissioner
must resort to litigating the tax deficiency on the merits and, if need be,
“assert[ing] inconsistent positions and . . . assess[ing] deficiencies against more
than one person for the same tax liability if there is an accepted legal basis for each
assertion.” Gerardo v. Comm’r, 552 F.2d 549, 555 (3d Cir. 1977). In other words,
the Commissioner must go ahead and pursue whipsaw litigation. Indeed, the
reason courts permit the Commissioner to pursue whipsaw litigation is to protect
the public fisc from any whipsaw effect in cases where “there is an accepted legal
basis” for asserting a single tax deficiency against multiple parties. Id.; see also
Bouterie v. Comm’r, 36 F.3d 1361, 1374 (5th Cir. 1994) (holding that, when the
IRS asserts a single tax deficiency against multiple parties, each assertion “must
have a reasonable basis in fact and law”). In other words, courts permit the
Commissioner to pursue whipsaw litigation precisely because sometimes, as here,
more than one party is arguably liable for a single tax deficiency.
Here, Peterson never expressly agreed to a characterization of the Program
payments as “deferred compensation” in the Danielson sense. Instead, as the
Commissioner implicitly acknowledges, there is a reasonable legal basis to
conclude that Program payments are either (1) deferred compensation, in which
case Peterson is liable for the tax deficiency; or (2) payments for a covenant not to
compete, in which case Mary Kay would be responsible for incorrectly deducting
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the payments on its tax returns. In these circumstances, I would hold that the
Commissioner may not rely on the Danielson rule in lieu of pursuing actual
whipsaw litigation to resolve a genuine dispute about whether Peterson or Mary
Kay is responsible for the tax deficiency at issue. The Majority’s contrary
conclusion, in my opinion, does not vindicate the rule’s prophylactic purpose of
preventing unnecessary whipsaw litigation; it prevents necessary whipsaw
litigation. 49
In sum, I could find no precedential support for the application of the
Danielson rule in cases, such as this one, where a taxpayer did not expressly agree
49
The Majority responds that “[b]ecause the IRS seeks tax[es] from the Petersons solely,
its being ‘whipsawed’ is not an issue in this case.” Maj. Op. at 39 n.29. If the anti-whipsaw
concern underlying the Danielson rule is not implicated here, whatever the reasoning, that
counsels against applying the Danielson rule at all. In any event, I respectfully disagree that this
case presents no whipsaw concerns. “Whipsaw” is a concern whenever more than one party is
arguably liable for a single tax deficiency—if each taxpayer contends that he or she is not liable
for the deficiency, the IRS may be forced to pursue both parties in court to recover a single
deficiency. Here, Peterson and Mary Kay have adopted divergent characterizations of the
Program payments and, as I noted, the IRS has conceded that each could arguably be liable for
the single tax deficiency depending on the appropriate characterization of the payments. Thus, a
concern exists that the IRS could be whipsawed by Peterson and Mary Kay’s divergent
characterizations of the payments. My point is that the whipsaw concern here is materially
different than the one the Danielson rule was crafted to address. The Danielson rule seeks to nip
unnecessary whipsaw litigation in the bud by holding parties to their initial, agreed-upon
characterization of transactions. In other words, the Danielson rule was designed to prevent
parties from whipsawing the IRS by adopting divergent characterizations of transactions when
they initially agreed to a particular characterization. Here, however, Peterson and Mary Kay
never agreed to Mary Kay’s “deferred compensation” characterization at the outset. Instead,
Mary Kay unilaterally characterized the Program payments years after the transaction was
consummated via the unilateral amendment provisions in the Program agreements. We should
not apply the Danielson rule and permit the Commissioner to bind Peterson to Mary Kay’s ex
post facto re-characterization because Peterson is not attempting to pull a fast one on the IRS by
backtracking on an initial, mutual characterization of the payments.
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to a particular characterization or contractual form at the time of a transaction. Nor
do the purposes of the Danielson rule support the expansion of the rule to cover
such cases. For these reasons, I respectfully disagree with the Majority’s
application of the Danielson rule in this case and would hold that Peterson is not
bound by Mary Kay’s unilateral, ex post facto characterization of Program
payments as “deferred compensation.”50
B.
Just because the Danielson rule does not apply, however, does not
necessarily mean that the payments are not “deferred compensation,” and thus
subject to the self-employment tax. Instead, when the Danielson rule is
inapplicable, we look to the substance of the transaction to determine its nature.
See, e.g., Plante, 168 F.3d at 1280 (noting that, were the Danielson rule
50
The Majority contends that we are bound to apply the Danielson rule under Spector v.
Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 641 F.2d 376, 383-86 (5th Cir. Unit A Apr. 1981), Bradley v.
United States, 730 F.2d 718, 720 (11th Cir. 1984), and Plante v. Commissioner of Internal
Revenue, 168 F.3d at 1280-81; and that any decision not to apply the Danielson rule would
violate the prior-precedent rule. Maj. Op. at 40 n.30. In making this point, the Majority appears
to misunderstand my argument, framing my argument as premised on the proposition that we
need not apply prior precedent any time the facts of a new case are not identical to those of a
prior case. Id. To be clear, that is not my position. Rather, my point is that the facts of Spector,
Bradley, Plante, and every other case applying the Danielson rule, including Danielson itself, are
not just different from the facts here, they are materially distinguishable: in each of those cases,
the taxpayer herself either (1) executed a document at the time of the transaction explicitly
characterizing a transaction in a particular form; or (2) intentionally structured a transaction in a
particular form for tax purposes. See supra pp. 7-8. Here, Peterson did neither. And, as I
described above, applying the Danielson rule on the facts of this case disserves the two purposes
of the rule. Declining to apply the Danielson rule in this case, therefore, would not violate the
prior-precedent rule. Instead, it would merely recognize that the Danielson rule has not been
applied, and should not be applied, in the materially distinguishable situation where a taxpayer’s
counterparty ex post facto unilaterally characterizes a transaction to its benefit.
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inapplicable, we would apply a 13-factor test to determine whether a sum is a loan
or a capital contribution).
In Jackson v. Commissioner, 108 T.C. 130 (1997), the Tax Court
summarized what a traditional deferred-compensation agreement looks like. It
stated,
In a typical deferred compensation arrangement, an
employee wants to postpone receiving a portion of the
income to which he or she is entitled with the
understanding that the income will be paid at a later time,
usually upon retirement or other termination. In these
cases the employee chose to receive less than his or her
agreed compensation when earned with the
understanding that it would be paid out at some later
time. The employer ordinarily contributes the amount
designated by the employee to a fund established for that
purpose.
Id. at 137 (internal citations omitted).
Our sister circuits have provided additional guidance on the deferred-
compensation inquiry. For instance, in Gump v. United States, the Federal Circuit
held that the extended earnings an insurance salesman received after retirement
were not deferred compensation. 86 F.3d 1126, 1128-29 (Fed. Cir. 1996). The
Federal Circuit rested its conclusion on the following facts: the salesman received
all of the commissions he was entitled to prior to receiving the extended earnings;
the extended earnings were “not derived by holding back a portion of [the
salesman]’s salary”; and disbursement of the extended earnings was conditioned
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on the salesman’s qualified cancellation of his insurance relationships such that he
had no vested right to receive the extended earnings. Id. Likewise, in Milligan v.
Commissioner, the Ninth Circuit held that payments made to a retired insurance
salesman were not deferred compensation because “none of [the salesman]’s
earnings were deferred, i.e., he had no vested right to payment of an identifiable
money amount.” 38 F.3d 1094, 1099 (9th Cir. 1994).
Guided by Jackson, Gump, and Milligan, I would hold that the Program
payments Peterson received were not “deferred compensation” for three reasons.
First, Peterson was never asked to defer any portion of her income until a later
date. Second, before Peterson’s retirement, Mary Kay fully compensated Peterson
for all of the commissions she was entitled to receive under her NSD agreement.
Third, Peterson had no vested right to the Program payments. Instead, they were
conditioned on Peterson’s compliance with contemporaneous and future
obligations, more specifically, the covenant not to compete. Additionally, as
discussed above, both Program agreements contained a unilateral-amendment
provision permitting Mary Kay to “amend, modify or terminate the Plans at any
time and in any manner.” I have found no constraint in the agreements prohibiting
Mary Kay from reducing the Program payments at any time.
Distinguishing the insurance cases, the Majority suggests that the payments
here would be deferred compensation even on the merits because, unlike insurance
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agents who work by themselves, NSDs “lead and train their ever increasing
networks, whose sales generate the NSDs’ commissions before and after their
retirement.” Maj. Op. at 47-48. But in Milligan, the Ninth Circuit held that the
extended earnings payments were not deferred compensation despite the fact that
the employer could adjust the payments and “[t]he adjusted payment amount
depended not upon Milligan’s past business activity, but upon the successor
agent’s future business efforts to retain Milligan’s customers.” 38 F.3d at 1099.
Moreover, as the Majority recognizes, NSDs are compensated through
commissions on their networks’ sales. NSDs are not directly compensated for
leading and training their networks. Even if an NSD provided her network with
top-notch training and leadership, she would still receive no compensation if the
network did not sell any Mary Kay products. Thus, payments based on
commissions generated after an NSD retires cannot be deferred compensation for
prior leadership and training—NSDs like Peterson were never compensated for
those responsibilities, before or after retirement.
Because the facts here are materially indistinguishable from those in
Jackson, Gump, and Milligan, I would hold that Peterson’s Program payments are
not “deferred compensation,” and thus not subject to the self-employment tax on
this basis.
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II.
Even though I would conclude that the Program payments are not “deferred
compensation,” that would not conclusively establish that the Program payments
are not subject to the self-employment tax. Other types of income may still be
subject to the tax, so long as they “derive from a trade or business.” See 26 U.S.C.
§ 1402(a)-(b). Income “derives from a trade or business” whenever there is “a
nexus between the income received and a trade or business that is, or was, actually
carried on.” Newberry v. Comm’r, 76 T.C. 441, 444 (1981). Where income does
not meet the nexus test but instead derives from a former employee’s compliance
with a covenant not to compete, it is not subject to the self-employment tax.
Milligan, 38 F.3d at 1098 n.6.
Three of our sister circuits’ decisions illuminate the nature of the Newberry
nexus inquiry. First, in Milligan, the Ninth Circuit analyzed the nexus issue with
regard to “termination payments” made to Milligan, a retired insurance sales agent.
38 F.3d at 1098. Milligan and his employer entered into an agreement that
provided for termination payments, the amount of which were based on a
percentage of Milligan’s outstanding policies in the twelve months preceding his
retirement. Id. at 1096. Under the agreement, Milligan was eligible to receive
termination payments for five years only if he had worked as an agent for at least
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two years, returned all employer-owned property, and refrained from competition
with his employer for one year. Id.
On these facts, the Ninth Circuit held that the termination payments were not
subject to the self-employment tax because they did not “derive” from Milligan’s
prior business activity. Id. at 1098. The Ninth Circuit reasoned, “To be taxable as
self-employment income, earnings must be tied to the quantity or quality of the
taxpayer’s prior labor, rather than the mere fact that the taxpayer worked or works
for the payor.” Id. (emphasis added). As noted above, the Ninth Circuit first
concluded that the payments were not deferred compensation. Id. at 1099.
Nor, the Ninth Circuit held, did the payments otherwise “derive” from
Milligan’s prior business activity. The Milligan Court observed that the only link
between the quantity or quality of the agent’s prior labor and the payments at issue
was Milligan’s status as a two-year-plus independent contractor. Id. That link on
its own, the court held, was insufficient to satisfy the “derive” requirement. Id.
The Court explained that “[i]t is not enough that, had the taxpayer not performed
certain services (that were fully compensated for)—not been an independent
contractor, for example—the taxpayer never would have received the disputed
payments.” Id.
Notably, even though the amount of the payments was partially tied to
Milligan’s prior labor, the Ninth Circuit held that the termination payments were
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not tied to the quantity or quality of Milligan’s prior labor because the amount of
the payments was also subject to two adjustments that did not depend on
Milligan’s prior labor.
At most, the amount of the Termination Payments,
not the payments themselves, actually arose from
Milligan’s business activity. Milligan had a contingent
right to receive an uncertain amount of money or
nothing, depending upon the level of his prior business
activity leading to compensation in his final year as an
agent. The payment amount depended upon the level of
his commissions . . . . on personally-produced policies,
i.e., his previous value as a[n] . . . insurance agent.
However, in part, even the payment amount did
not depend upon the level of Milligan’s prior business
activity because the Termination Payments were subject
to two adjustments unrelated to any business activity on
Milligan’s part for [the employer]. The [employer]
adjusted the Termination Payments to reflect the amount
of income received on Milligan’s book of business
during the first post-termination year, and the number of
his personally-produced policies cancelled during that
year. If all of Milligan’s customers had cancelled their . .
. non-life policies during the first post-termination year,
then Milligan would have received nothing. The adjusted
payment amount depended not upon Milligan’s past
business activity, but upon the successor agent’s future
business efforts to retain Milligan’s customers and to
generate service compensation for [the employer]. In this
way too, the disputed Termination Payments did not
“derive” from Milligan’s prior services.
Id.
Similarly, in Gump, the Federal Circuit held that the monthly “extended
earnings” payments Gump, a retired insurance agent, received from his former
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employer did not meet the Newberry nexus test and were therefore not subject to
the self-employment tax. 86 F.3d at 1127. There, Gump was entitled to receive
extended earnings if he worked for the employer for at least five years. Id. The
extended-earnings payments were “calculated by reference to the agent’s policy
renewal fees for his last twelve months of service, subject to certain adjustments.”
Id. Like the Milligan Court, the Federal Circuit held that the extended-earnings
payments were not “deferred compensation.” Id. at 1128-29. In addition, the
Federal Circuit relied on several significant facts to conclude that the extended
earnings were not otherwise “derived” from the Gump’s former business activity.
First, the right to receive extended earnings was conditioned upon the
cessation of business activity; that is, cessation was “not just a condition that [had
to] be observed to preserve [Gump’s] eligibility for the [payments]; it [was] a
precondition to receiving them.” Id. at 1128. The court reasoned that the
payments did not arise or derive from the trade or business, but more accurately
derived from the cancellation of that trade or business. Id. Thus, the fact that the
payments, in a sense, were “rooted in” Gump’s employment agreement with his
former employer was not enough to establish the requisite nexus. Id.
Second, even though the amount of Gump’s extended-earnings payments
was tied to the level of renewal commissions generated by Gump in the last twelve
months of his employment, that fact alone was insufficient to demonstrate that the
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extended payments were tied to the quantity or quality of the Gump’s service. Id.
at 1129. The Federal Circuit reasoned that “the renewal commissions generated in
Gump’s last year determine[d] the amount of the extended earnings payment,
subject to adjustment, not the right to it”; thus, “[t]he only significance that [could]
properly be attached to this amount [was] that it was used as a benchmark to
determine how much he would receive if he complied with the agreement.” Id.
The Federal Circuit also noted that Gump’s right to the extended earnings
was not dependent his final twelve months of labor because even if he had lost all
of his customers, he would have been entitled to the payments (though, under the
benchmark, he would have received no money). Id. at 1130. In contrast, had
Gump not complied with other contractual requirements, by, for example, failing
to return his employer’s property at the end of his employment, he would not have
been entitled to any extended earnings. Id. The Federal Circuit held that the
amount of the extended earnings was therefore “not tied to the quantity or quality
of [Gump’s] labor in any meaningful way.” Id. (internal quotation marks omitted).
Third, the court in Gump relied in part on the fact that the payments were
subject to adjustments unrelated to the Gump’s previous business activities.
Notably, the employer “could make deductions from the payments if certain large
commercial policies were cancelled in the year following [Gump’s] last year of
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service. This adjustment in the amount he [c]ould receive [wa]s unrelated to the
actual quantity or quality of his labor.” Id. at 1128-29.
In Schelble v. Commissioner, the Tenth Circuit also addressed whether the
termination payments received by an insurance agent, Schelble, “derived” from his
prior business activity. 130 F.3d 1388 (10th Cir. 1997). The court held that,
unlike the payments in Milligan and Gump, Schelble’s termination payments did
“derive” from his prior labor under the “quantity or quality” test. Id. at 1394. The
court distinguished the termination payments Schelble received from those
Milligan and Gump received, reasoning,
Although the payments in Milligan and Mr. Schelble’s
payments have similar eligibility requirements such as
(1) a minimum [yearly] service requirement; (2)
relinquishment of company records and policies; and (3)
a covenant not to compete, Mr. Schelble’s payments have
distinguishing features related to Mr. Schelble’s prior
services. For example, unlike the plan in Milligan, Mr.
Schelble must have 400 outstanding policies at his
termination to be eligible for extended earnings
payments. In addition, in contrast to Milligan, the
amount of Mr. Schelble’s payments was computed based
on Mr. Schelble’s length of service for the Companies.
As an agent for the Companies for over fifteen years, Mr.
Schelble’s extended earnings payments were calculated
using a higher percentage than if he had only been an
agent for five or ten years. Furthermore, unlike the
payments in Milligan, Mr. Schelble’s . . . payments were
calculated solely on the percentage applied to service
fees paid to him during the twelve months preceding the
Agreement’s termination. No adjustments unrelated to
Mr. Schelble’s prior services were made in calculating
these payments. Based on these distinguishing factors,
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we conclude Mr. Schelble’s payments are sufficiently
derived from his prior insurance business to constitute
self-employment income subject to self-employment tax
under 26 U.S.C. § 1401.
Mr. Schelble also relies on Gump . . . . However, the
payment scheme in Gump is nearly identical to that in
Milligan and distinguishable from Mr. Schelble’s
payment scheme. For the same reasons we reject
Milligan, we also find Gump does not apply Mr.
Schelble’s case.
Id. at 1393-94 (internal citation omitted).
Applying the Newberry test to Schelble’s payments, the Tenth Circuit held
that a nexus existed between Schelble’s termination payments and his prior labor.
Id. at 1394. The Court first conceded that, as Schelble argued, the payments arose
from the cessation of his employment, not his prior labor. Id. But it concluded
that there was “[n]evertheless” a nexus because “the right to and amount of
payments are tied to the quantity of policies sold for the [employer], the length of
Mr. Schelble’s prior service and the amount of his prior commissions.” Id.
The Majority contends that Milligan, Gump, and Schelble are inapposite
because all three cases involve insurance agents and are therefore distinguishable
on four bases. Maj. Op. at 46-48. First, the Majority observes that, unlike sales of
Mary Kay’s cosmetic products, insurance policies have to be renewed. Id. at 47.
Second, the Majority notes that the calculation of post-retirement benefits for
insurance salesmen is based on methods and concepts that are germane to the
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insurance business. Third, the Majority suggests that, unlike in the insurance
cases, the Program payments here are deferred compensation on the merits. Id. at
47. Fourth, the Majority notes that the Mary Kay Programs “are one of a kind”
and “unique.” Id. at 48. In support of this last contention, the Majority observes
that one distinction between Mary Kay’s Futures Program and the insurance cases
is that the insurance cases “do not involve sales networks in foreign countries.” Id.
at 51 n.43.
I agree with the Majority that these are distinctions between the insurance
cases and Peterson’s case. But I respectfully disagree that these distinctions render
Milligan, Gump, and Schelble inapposite. The courts in Milligan, Gump, and
Schelble did not explicitly purport to limit their holdings to insurance cases; nor
does anything in their analyses suggest that their reasoning is limited to cases
involving insurance agents. Instead, each court started with the language of 26
U.S.C. § 1402(a)-(b), recognized the continuing vitality of Newberry (a case
involving insurance proceeds, but not retired insurance agents), and applied the test
to the post-retirement payments at issue. See Schelble, 130 F.3d at 1391-94;
Gump, 86 F.3d at 1127-30; Milligan, 38 F.3d at 1097-1100.
Nor is it clear to me why the distinctions highlighted by the Majority would
alter the applicability of these decisions. The fact that insurance contracts have to
be renewed unlike the fungible products sold by Mary Kay suggests only that
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insurance companies do not need their customers to affirmatively “re-up” as
frequently. To the extent that the Majority means to suggest that the renewable
contracts indicate that there is a difference in kind between (a) the relationship of a
retired insurance agent to his former customers and employer, and (b) the
relationship of a retired NSD to her former network and Mary Kay, I do not see a
meaningful difference or how any difference would impact our post-retirement
payment analysis.
I also do not think that it matters that insurance companies calculate post-
retirement payments to former insurance agents using methods and concepts
germane to the insurance industry. As described above, the Newberry nexus
analyses in Milligan, Gump, and Schelble turn on whether the payments at issue
are “deferred compensation”; whether the payments are for the cessation of
business; whether the payments are subject to adjustments unrelated to the former
employee’s prior labor; whether eligibility for the payments and the determination
of the amount of the payments are related to the quantity of the former employees’
work, beyond a requirement that the employee have worked some number of years
in order to receive the payments; and whether the amount of the payments is
dependent on the labor of employees that succeeded the former employee or on the
employee’s own labor. See Schelble, 130 F.3d at 1391-94; Gump, 86 F.3d at 1127-
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30; Milligan, 38 F.3d at 1097-1100. As it turns out, all of these inquiries have
meaningful application in the context of this case as well.
To the Majority’s suggestion that the payments here are deferred
compensation, unlike the payments in the insurance cases, I respectfully disagree
for the reasons described above. See supra at pp. 15-17. And, respectfully, the
Majority’s fourth distinction—that the Mary Kay Programs are one of a kind
because, among other things, they involve sales networks in foreign countries—
does not necessarily make them insusceptible to the general analytical framework
deployed in Milligan, Gump, and Schelble.
Notably, the Majority itself relies on an insurance case. The Majority cites
Erickson v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1992-585 (1992), for the proposition that
“[p]ayments with the same character as prior commissions constitute income
derived from a petitioner’s self-employment.” Maj. Op. at 45. I disagree with the
Majority’s gloss on the holding in Erickson—there, unlike the payments in
Milligan and Gump, the post-termination payments were directly tied to both the
quantity and quality of the former agent’s labor, with a guarantee that the payments
could not fall below a certain percentage. See Erickson, T.C. Memo 1992-585, at
*1. But, more importantly, either cases involving insurance agents are or are not,
as a class, inapplicable to non-insurance cases.
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Guided by Milligan, Gump, and Schelble, I would conclude that a nexus
exists between the Family Program payments and Peterson’s prior Mary Kay labor,
but not with respect to the Futures Program payments. Here, payments under both
Programs are tied to the cessation of Peterson’s prior Mary Kay labor. In order to
receive payments under the Programs, Peterson was required not to compete with
Mary Kay. This counsels in favor of holding that the payments are not derived
from Peterson’s prior labor. See Milligan 38 F.3d at 1098 n. 6 (observing that
payments derived from an employee’s cessation of labor and compliance with a
non-competition covenant do not meet the nexus test); see also Gump, 86 F.3d at
1128 (payments derived from a former employee’s cessation of labor are not
derived from the employee’s former labor even where the payments are “rooted in”
the employee’s former employment agreement). But it is not dispositive of the
“quality or quantity” nexus inquiry. See Schelble, 130 F.3d at 1394.
As for the quantity inquiry, I would hold that the payments under both
Programs are tied to the quantity of an NSD’s service, but only in the threshold
status sense that the Milligan court found insufficient, on its own, to establish that
payments necessarily “derive” from a taxpayer’s prior labor. To be eligible for
payments under both Programs, an individual must have served as an NSD for at
least 5 years prior to her retirement. If an NSD serves for 15 years prior to
retirement, she is eligible to receive payments at a rate of 60%, regardless of her
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age at retirement. If, however, an NSD retires prior to serving 15 years, the
percentage of commissions she receives is based upon her age at retirement,
varying from a 40% rate at age 55 to a 60% rate at age 65. Once an NSD reaches
age 65, she will receive payments at the 60%, regardless of whether she served for
5 or 25 years. In sum, an NSD’s eligibility for receiving Program payments at a
particular rate is dependent on her status as either (1) having served at least 5 years
and attained the age of 55; or (2) having served 15 years.
These eligibility requirements are akin to the two-year-plus status
requirement that the Milligan Court found insufficient to satisfy the nexus test on
its own. 38 F.3d at 1098. I agree with the Milligan Court that, without more, this
type of “link between the disputed payments and any business activity carried on . .
. does not satisfy the ‘derive’ requirement.” Id. As the court in Milligan
explained, “It is not enough that, had the taxpayer not performed certain services
(that were fully compensated for) . . . the taxpayer never would have received the
disputed payments.” Id. Here, the requirements that an NSD perform Mary Kay
services for 5 years and reach 55 years of age, or serve as an NSD for 15 years, are
threshold eligibility requirements for Program payments. Those status
requirements indicate only that the NSD performed services, fully compensated for
at the time, sufficient to receive the disputed payments. Therefore, while I would
conclude that a relationship exists between the quantity of Peterson’s prior labor
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and the Program payments, that relationship, on its own, does not satisfy the
Newberry nexus test.
But I would hold that the Family Program payments still meet the nexus test
because the amount of payments Peterson received under the Family Program was
directly tied to the quality of her Mary Kay labor. The amount Peterson received
under the Family Program payments was equal to 60% of the average of her annual
commissions for the three years in which she had the highest commissions among
the five years preceding her retirement. Like the payments in Schelble and unlike
the payments in Milligan and Gump, this amount was not subject to any
adjustments, let alone adjustments unrelated to Peterson’s prior labor. Schelble,
130 F.3d at 1393; Gump, 86 F.3d at 1128-29; Milligan, 38 F.3d at 1099. Because
the amount of the Family Program payments were not subject to any adjustments,
Peterson’s labor during her three highest commission years in the last five years of
service cannot be considered a benchmark akin to Gump’s final twelve months of
service—the quality of Peterson’s labor is determinative of the amount of her
payments. Cf. Gump, 86 F.3d at 1129-30. As a result, the amount of the payments
Peterson received under the Family Program was entirely dependent on the quality
of her prior Mary Kay labor.
In contrast, I would hold that the Futures Program payments do not meet the
nexus test because the amount of the payments Peterson received under the Futures
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Program is entirely independent of the quality of her prior Mary Kay labor. Under
the Futures Program, Peterson is entitled to receive 60% of the commissions she
would have received on wholesale purchases of Mary Kay products by individuals
in her network located outside the United States. In other words, the amount of
Futures Program payments Peterson is entitled to receive is entirely dependent on
the quality of other, non-retired Mary Kay laborers.
The Commissioner argues that the Futures Program payments still “derive
from” the quality of Peterson’s previous work because the amount of money that
her network generated after she retired reflected how well she had trained her
network while she was active. The Majority agrees. Maj. Op. at 45 n.36; 46 n.39.
I, however, disagree.
In Milligan, the Ninth Circuit held that the fact that Milligan’s employer
could reduce his payments based on how many of his former customers cancelled
their insurance policies in the year after his retirement indicated that “[t]he
adjusted payment amount depended not upon Milligan’s past business activity, but
upon the successor agent’s future business efforts to retain Milligan’s customers.”
38 F.3d at 1099. The Ninth Circuit determined that that counseled in favor of
holding that the payments did not “derive” from Milligan’s prior labor. Id.
Likewise, in Gump, the Federal Circuit held that because Gump’s former
employer “could make deductions from the payments if certain large commercial
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policies were cancelled in the year following his last year of service,” the payments
were “unrelated to the actual quantity or quality of [Gump’s] labor.” 86 F.3d at
1128-29. Here, the fact that Peterson might receive reduced payments under the
Futures Program based entirely on wholesale purchases by members of her former
international network similarly counsels in favor of holding that the Futures
Program payments are not tied to the quality of Peterson’s prior labor and therefore
not “derived” from that labor. 51
Instead, I would hold that the Futures Program payments derive from
Peterson’s compliance with the agreement’s covenant not to compete. The
majority contends that the payments could not derive from the covenant not to
compete because Peterson broke the covenant by working with Isagenix within two
years of retiring but continued to receive payments. Maj. Op. at 42-43. But I
respectfully disagree with the suggestion that the fact that Mary Kay chose not to
pursue breach of contract remedies against Peterson following her work with
51
The Commissioner argued that the payments under both Programs were also tied to
the quantity of an NSD’s service in that an NSD with 5-14 years of service and who was at least
55 years old could receive a higher payment rate the longer she worked. The Commissioner
argued that this is akin to the payments in Schelble, where the insurance agent was entitled to a
higher percentage of his commission based on his years of service. Schelble, 130 F.3d at 1393.
In Schelble, however, the percentage rate corresponded directly with the insurance agent’s years
of service. See id.(“As an agent for the Companies for over fifteen years, Mr. Schelble’s
extended earnings payments were calculated using a higher percentage than if he had only been
an agent for five or ten years.”). Here, in contrast, the rate at which a five-plus year NSD would
receive payments was tied directly to her age, not her years of service. Thus, an NSD that retired
at the age of 55 with 7 years of service would receive the same rate of Program payments (40%)
as an NSD that retired at the age of 55 with 14 years of service.
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Isagenix, bears on whether the Futures Program payments were consideration for
the noncompetition covenant. It suggests only that Mary Kay forewent its
contractual remedies or did not believe a true breach of contract had occurred.
Any conclusion to the contrary directly conflicts with the language of the
non-compete provision itself: “In consideration of the rights and privileges
contained in the Program and other valuable consideration referenced herein,
Participant agrees to faithfully observe and comply with the . . . [non-compete]
covenants and agreements for so long as Participant is entitled to receive awards
under the Program . . . .” On these facts, I would hold that the Futures Program
payments are derived from the non-compete agreements and are therefore not
subject to the self-employment tax. See Milligan 38 F.3d at 1098 n. 6.52
In sum, I would hold that the Family Programs meet the nexus test and are
therefore subject to the self-employment tax. I therefore concur in the portion of
the Majority’s opinion holding that the Family Program payments are subject to
the self-employment tax. The Futures Program payments, on the other hand, are
52
Without more, the “[i]n consideration of” language does not dictate the conclusion that
the Futures Program payments are “derived” from Peterson’s compliance with the Program’s
non-compete provision and not from her prior labor. Indeed, the noncompetition provision of the
Family Program contains the same “[i]n consideration of” language, and, as noted above, I
would conclude that those payments do derive from Peterson’s prior Mary Kay labor. The
difference, for me, is that unlike the Family Program, where the amount of Peterson’s payments
depends entirely on the quality of Peterson’s efforts in her final five years of her Mary Kay
employment, the amount of the Futures Program payments does not depend on Peterson’s prior
Mary Kay labor. It is the absence of any nexus between the Futures Program payments and
Peterson’s prior Mary Kay labor in combination with the “[i]n consideration of” language that
drives me to the conclusion that the Futures Program payments “derive” from Peterson’s
compliance with that Program’s non-compete provision and not from her prior labor.
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not, in my opinion, sufficiently related to either the quantity or the quality of
Peterson’s prior labor to meet the nexus test. Instead, those payments appear to be
derived from I therefore respectfully dissent from the portion of the Majority’s
opinion holding that the Futures Program payments are subject to the self-
employment tax.
For these reasons, I respectfully dissent in part, and I concur in part in the
judgment.
87